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Sam Hefter and Willie take a ruin Wednesday at the Bark Park in Gold Hill. [Jamie Lusch / Mail Tribune]
A bunch of park-going canine and their human opposite numbers are hoping to haggle and thrift their manner towards $1,600 price of obligatory enhancements for the Gold Hill Bark Park.
Sam Hefter, who rallied group enhance to create the canine park at the Gold Hill Sports Park 5 years in the past, stated the well-loved inexperienced area is in want of a few enhancements in the type of benches, coloration and irrigation.
A storage sale of types, ‘Yardin’ in the Hill,’ will be held via park supporters and volunteers for the town’s CanDO group from eight a.m. to two p.m. Saturday.
Hefter and his doggy, a sociable white terrier named Willie, have been readily available Wednesday at the park, brainstorming the structure for Saturday’s shindig whilst taking part in the sunshine.
Hefter’s fondness for canine parks started with every other doggy, his past due dog good friend Lucy, who obligatory a spot to make pals. Admittedly anti-social, Lucy visited a handful of canine parks, which slowly introduced the one-time curmudgeon out of her shell.
When he helped get the canine park established in 2016 – principally starting up the concept for “some fence around a patch of grass,” Hefter stated he was once simply looking forward to a a laugh position for native canine enthusiasts to satisfy and a method to get Lucy round different doggies.
When the pandemic hit, the canine park become a kind of lifeline for dog-walkers all through the isolation of pandemic restrictions. When Lucy kicked the bucket round the similar time, Hefter nearly determined to not get every other canine.
“We had Lucy for 14 years. She could be ornery. If she saw a little daylight, she would bolt and run away, but then turn to make sure you were chasing her. We thought we were done with dogs when we lost her,” Hefter stated.
“One day I saw a cartoon in the paper about a guy who missed his dog and said he’d never get another. … That was it. Willie helped us get through the last three years during the pandemic and all that.”
Hefter stated the canine park was once an oasis of clean air and much-needed conversations all through an keeping apart time.
“Willie is like a four-legged Yoda. He’s helped us get through. He makes you want … to just be better,” stated the smitten canine dad.
“He’s such a good boy. I just feel like he deserves a nice park for him and all his dog friends to go to. I’ve been garage sale hunting — and having — all my life. It’s a good way to raise a few bucks and have a little fun. We don’t need a lot. We’re just hoping we can get a couple more benches and shade. Maybe a water spigot for the little dog side of the park.”
Hefter stated irrigation fixes would help unravel dry foxtails that motive accidents to canine at the park, and coloration would allow canine house owners to “stay a little longer.”
A marketing campaign of donation jars round the town (best two of 10 have been stolen, he quips) or even a jog-a-thon at native colleges helped with the early investment of the park — engaging in fencing for small- and big-dog spaces, a few benches and an enormous bone-shaped signal. He’s hoping for the same reaction to this weekend’s massive sale.
“It’s a great little park. It was the only place I got to see people for a while,” he stated. “We just want to make it a little nicer and keep the ball rolling, so to speak.”
Donations to the park will also be dropped off Saturday — 14747 Highway 234 — or made on-line at candogoldhill.org (famous “for bark park”).
To ship donations by the use of common mail, ship it to CanDO, P.O. Box 1009; Gold Hill, OR 97525.
Donate sellable pieces (no clothes, please) via losing off ahead of eight a.m. Saturday, or to donate ahead of Saturday, name 503-869-4189.
To reserve a sale or supplier area, electronic mail samhefter@gmail.com. Leftover pieces will be donated to Harvest Time Fellowship.
The sale is ready for eight a.m. to two p.m., and will happen at the similar time as an unofficial “citywide sale” going down at properties and companies round the town.
Reach reporter Buffy Pollock at 541-776-8784 or bpollock@rosebudmedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @orwritergal
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