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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Benches
for walkers placed in Tollgate
An informal poll
of one suggests that among the residential areas in and around Sisters,
Tollgate has more walkers per 100 residents than any other.
TPOA (Tollgate Property Owners
Association) last week started placing log benches along Lariat, the main
loop around the community, and Wagon Wheel, an extension off Lariat, also
used as an emergency fire road.
A second loop of Lariat, which
makes the main road into a figure "8" and confuses many guests as well
as some residents, will also be "benched," according to Betty Fadeley,
business manager for the nonprofit, residential sub-division.
"None of our cul-de-sacs will
have the half-log, wooden seats," she said
The benches were constructed
and installed by board member Steve Mathews with help from Rick Geraths.
"They're made from pine logs
and are pretty heavy," Mathews said. "The one in front of my place goes
about 250 pounds. That's where the board got the idea of having them placed
all over Tollgate. The others are around 150 pounds," he said. "We have
11 of them placed around the area so far."
Mathews is a retired teaching
artist who built his log home in Tollgate last year.
"We had a lot of leftover
juniper logs," he said, "so I began carving them into figures -- fish
and other things."
He donated many of his art
pieces to the Together With Children art auction, a local child care workshop,
to be held early in May at Black Butte Ranch.
Mathews taught art in Beaverton
at Aloha High School and at Portland Community College before retiring
here.
Helen "Seth" Sether has one
of the plain but handsome benches in front of her home and found occasion
to relax on it this past weekend, and "watch the world go by."
She is an avid gardener and
has a "showplace" for all to enjoy on her corner lot at Easy and Wagon
Wheel.
None of the roads in Tollgate
use "road, street or lane suffix designations." All are horse, cowboy
or covered wagon associated terms, mostly one word names such as Wagonwheel,
Lariat and Martingale.
Sether's home was built by
her son and son-in-law about five years ago where she and her majestic
white husky and part white wolf live.
The two can often be seen
walking the roads and pathways of Tollgate.
"Juel, that's my dog, can
go forever, it seems," she said. "But it'll be nice for me to find a bench
along the way and rest up instead of trying to keep up with my four-legged
friend."
Seth's daughter, Deb, is an
immediate past chairman of the Tollgate Association and currently acts
as vice chairman.
"Tollgate is virtually a land
island, surrounded on all sides by National Forest," Fran Berrey, secretary/treasurer
of the association, said. "That lends itself to getting out and walking.
"With only our one main entrance,
Tollgate Road off Highway 20, we have several emergency fire roads that
are gated. Each has a bypass or a walk-around stile so we can use the
magnificent, scenic trails and roads of our forests for much of our outdoor
activity.
"Many of our young people
bicycle to school along our roads and through the forest trails daily,
as long as the weather is in their favor," she said. |
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