For John and Ann Kirkham of Clinton, life is a moveable feast on a bun.
“There’s nothing like a plain, old-fashioned, standard good dog,” John Kirkham said.
The $7.4 billion sale of Puget Sound Energy to a consortium of private investors remains on track, a company official said Monday.
Despite some initial public opposition to the proposal, no objections were filed during the window provided following approval of the deal two weeks ago by a state agency.
Goosefoot organizers recently announced that Cash Store tenant Open Door Gallery + Coffee will transform the retail space formerly occupied…
The South Whidbey Record will switch to a tabloid format in January. The Record’s sister newspaper in Oak Harbor, The Whidbey News-Times, is also making the change.
Langley clothing designer Lynn Mizono has made her clothing available online.
A South End man is looking for people who might be interested in starting a natural foods outlet.
A Langley baker is returning to her roots.
Misty Moore has bought Langley Village Bakery on Second Street in Langley and reopened it last week.
Tucked away in a building on Main Street in Freeland is a brand new nail salon. At first sight the place looks like many salons: lots of tiny bottles of nail color sitting side-by-side in a display case, files and other paraphernalia neatly lined up for the next client.
One of the cottages at the Highlands in Langley is a featured home at the 2008 Skagit and Island Counties Builders Association Home Tour. During the tour, the Highlands is also hosting a sustainability fair.
Patients of a Langley doctor’s office are fighting to keep the Langley Clinic in town.
Dr. Stan Whittemore of the Whidbey Clinic announced in a letter to his patients earlier this month that he is retiring from medicine and has decided to close the practice at the Langley Clinic.
Edward Jones is a big name in the investment world, but Don Rowan gives the largest financial services firm in the U.S. a local and familiar face.
A love of expressive arts and dance helped connect two women from opposite ends of the world, and were the seeds that blossomed into an international collaboration.
Katherine Trenshaw, who lives in Great Britain, is a visual artist who attended one of Langley resident Emily Day’s 5Rhythms dance classes during a visit to Whidbey Island.
Day, the creator of Dancing Colors scarves and educational materials, said the women connected over their shared passions.
Registration is open for fall classes and workshops at Molly Cook’s Skylark Writing Studio.