April/May 2014 - Prescott Woman Magazine
Transcription
April/May 2014 - Prescott Woman Magazine
19 www.prescottwoman.com APRIL/MAY 2014 Your family’s source for HOME & HEALTH Subscribe Today! APRIL 2014 $4.00 “I Can fix it.” Special Edition ital Dig e e ing or Fr f een r c S ms . gra alify o u m Q m ho 00 Ma -89 nw me 8) 442 o W 2 l (9 Cal For a Woman’s Needs For Every Stage of Life You’re busy. And you’re always looking for a way to make the most of your time and resources. But when it comes to healthcare, no matter what stage of life you’re in, cutting corners is the last thing you should consider. That’s why the Women’s Health Pavilion is here . . . for you! The best of all worlds, it includes our 45,000 square foot Family Birthing Center, with the latest in patient- centered obstetrics — and the beautiful BreastCare Center, providing state-of-the-art breast health education, diagnostic screening, care planning and coordination. A center dedicated to meeting your healthcare needs, focused on every stage within the spectrum of women’s health. Expert care, with a personal touch, close to home. The Women’s Health Pavilion at YRMC. Just for you. The BreastCare Center at YRMC • The Family Birthing Center at YRMC 7700 EAsT FlorEnTinE roAd, PrEsCoTT VAllEY, AZ (928) 445-2700 • www.yrmc.org April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 3 4 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 5 6 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 7 Contents 22 April/May 2014 www.prescottwoman.com 42 26 Cover Photo by A Portrait Park by J 14 Health Today: “The Trifecta” at Sirius Health & Wellness 26 Women in Business: Kids Growing Strong with Jodi Gilray 38 Health Today: Restorative Dentistry with Dr. Robert Carlisi 16 Calendar of Events 28 Local Wedding Photography 20 Prescott Women, Water & Art 30 Spring Hair Styles 40 HOME IMPROVEMENT SPECIAL SECTION 22 Area Hike: Back to Juniper Mesa Wilderness 31 Spring Hair Tip April/May 32 Turn up the Voluma with Mind, Body & Soul Spa 34 Women in Business: Healthy & Beautiful from the Outside In 36 Health Today; Obesity in America 8 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 • Cover Feature: Christie Board Can “Fix It” • YCCA Member Profiles • YCCA Home Show • Prescott’s Alta Vista Garden Tour • Garden Gal: Landscapes Full of Fragrance 80 Turning Your Cottage into a Castle? Avoid a Home Improvement Horror Story & Get Your Happily Ever After Hiring a professional contractor for your home improvement project can save time, money and headaches. Unfortunately, homeowners can find themselves with unfinished work, fines and liens and other legal ramifications that can be costly. Consulting an attorney for advice on local zoning laws, contracts and liability, while following these tips can help you avoid a home improvement nightmare. • Home Renovation Ideas • Historic Home Tour Know what you want. It’s easy to get carried away when starting a home improvement project. 2014 • Spring Has Arrived at the Rancher’s Wife • Fowler Commercial Invested in the Local Economy 72 Ask The Experts: Prescott Tire Pros 74 YHS Walk for the Animals “A Howling Good Time” 80 Our History: Great Old Broads Saving Wilderness • Do you want to remodel your kitchen to accommodate company or your cooking hobby? Your home isn’t a magazine, functionality is just as important as style. Set a budget, before you get enchanted by a sales pitch and go overboard. Deciding on what you want first will save you headaches, money and buyer’s remorse. • Are you remodeling to save a struggling marriage, or to keep up with the neighbors? As with any major decision, renovating your home should not be a kneejerk reaction to unhappy circumstances. It’s pretty difficult to relax in a bathroom that put you and your family in serious debt. Know who you’re hiring. You may be liable for injured workers, improperly filed permits and fines for violating building code! With any and all contractors you need to make sure they are licensed, insured and bonded and that they have proof. If your contactor neglects to pay a subcontractor or for materials you may be held liable. Find out if they have any liens against them to see if they have a history of non-payment! Get everything in writing. Although it’s impossible to get an estimate that is always 100% accurate, ask for an itemized estimate for cost of supplies and labor. Don’t always go for the cheapest. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Remember, communication is key. Be open and honest about boundaries, behavior and expectations before you hire any contractor. Ask about their deal-breakers and express yours. Agree on expectations on work schedules and timelines to prevent delays and conflict. Your home improvement adventure doesn’t have to be a nightmare! To find out how to better protect your home, money and sanity, contact an attorney at Favour & Wilhelmsen for a consultation. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 9 Magazine Publisher Tim Callahan Layout & Design Breeanya Hinkel Sales/Design Team Tim Callahan Breeanya Hinkel Photography A Portrait Park by J Larry Kantor www.prescottwoman.com Send events/calendar info to: breehinkel@cableone.net Contact us: P.O.Box 542 Prescott, AZ 86302 prescottwoman@cableone.net 10 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 11 Contributors April/ May 2014 Hilary Dartt is a freelance writer who doubles as a stay-at-home mom to her three children. She grew up on California’s central coast, and earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Creative Writing at Long Beach State. In 2003, she moved to the Prescott area to work as a reporter at the Daily Courier, where she worked for four years before she and her husband started their family. Elisabeth Ruffner is a historian and writer whose lifelong activities as a volunteer and businesswoman have seen her engaged in library, historic preservation and open space concerns locally, state- and nation-wide. A recipient of many honors and awards, she wass most recently named a Culture Keeper in preparation of the 100th anniversary of Arizona statehood in 2012, as well as a History Maker by the Arizona Historical Society, Phoenix Chapter. Ruffner was the recipient of the 2010 Arizona Governor’s Award for the Arts, sponsored by the Arizona Commission on the Arts, for individual achievements in promoting the arts and culture in attaining quality of life, educational excellence and economic health in Arizona. Monica Kaplan, a Prescott resident since 1984, graduated from Northern Arizona University with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. She has written for several newspapers as well as been a radio news reporter. She and her husband Brad have two children, Rachel and Trevor. Breeanya Hinkel Sales & Design Associate Please call me to find out how Prescott Woman Magazine can help your business succeed! Advertising • Graphic Design Photography 928.458.0252 breehinkel@cableone.net Find us on facebook! 12 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 Lisa Watters Lain graduated from Prescott High School and went on to obtain her masters degree from Northern Arizona University. She married her college sweetheart, Ken, and has four children. Her garden advice can be heard each week on the “Mountain Garden” radio hour broadcast through KQNA 1130am & 99.9fm, also heard on NPR signals KJAZZ 89.5fm, KJZP 90.1fm. Throughout the week Lisa can be found at Watters Garden Center. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 13 Health Today Feature Story ‘The Trifecta’ Primary healthcare, exercise and diet come together for healthy results that last By Hilary Dartt Nurse Practitioner Debbie Krupnick offers a new approach to solving health problems, utilizing nutrition, exercise and support all under one roof. Officially, it’s called Sirius Health & Wellness, and it opened its doors during the last week of February. Unofficially, Debbie and her teammates, personal trainer Michelle Fain and registered dietitian Megan Holdsworth, call it “the trifecta.” During her 17 years as a Nurse Practitioner, Debbie saw the following scenario much too often: an overweight patient with diabetes, high cholesterol, or high blood pressure (or any 14 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 combination of the three) would come in for an appointment. Debbie would prescribe diet and exercise initially, and occasionally medication if needed. Often the patient would try a quick fix diet or exercise program, only to regain the weight later. “It’s about overall fitness and lifestyle. There is so much information out there, and here, we pull it all together and focus it for our clients.” - Megan Holdsworth “I thought, why not have diet and exercise in one office?”, Debbie explained during an interview at the new clinic in the Crossings in Prescott. “I can see the patient and give them a program they can sustain and continue at home.” Sirius Health & Wellness was born. It’s the only medical office in Prescott that has a full-capacity gym with a certified personal trainer and registered dietitian on staff. Debbie’s husband Kurt Krupnick, MD, a Hospitalist at Yavapai Regional Medical Center, is Sirius Health & Wellness’ medical director. “It’s about overall fitness and lifestyle,” Megan said. “There is so much information out there, and here, we pull it all together and focus it for our clients.” “We don’t make it scary,” Michelle added. “We make it fit their lifestyle.” In short, Sirius Health & Wellness’ model is designed to give patients – from children to seniors – what they need to get healthy and stay healthy long-term, through education and ongoing support. Once Debbie completes a physical exam and an EKG and clears the patient physically, Michelle designs a fitness program based on their current fitness levels and their likes and dislikes, and Megan designs a menu incorporating a wide variety of their favorite whole foods (or healthier versions of their favorites). Clients come back weekly so Debbie can monitor their vital signs and overall health, Michelle can work with them (twice each week) on their exercises, and Megan can check in on their diet and menu. “This way, there’s no break in their progress,” Debbie said, and Megan added, “We’re anti-quick-fix. We will not solve it with a pill or a drink.” “And you’re not going to lose ten pounds in the first week,” Michelle added. “The clients love it,” Debbie said. “They feel great. And that’s more important than watching the numbers on the scale go down.” Michelle explained that her workouts consist of a warm-up, stretching, cardio, and strength training that promotes core stability and mobility, and finally, a cool-down. “It’s all cue-based, depending on what they’re giving me,” she said. “I talk about what they like and dislike, and I’m not going to have them do things they hate,” she said. “That doesn’t promote them coming back.” She teaches clients how to perform the exercises at home, and calls them to follow-up between visits. Megan begins by having clients give her their five favorite choices from each meal, and she helps them build a menu around those choices. Her menus include breakfast, a morning snack, lunch, an afternoon snack, and dinner… with a focus on portion sizes. After an initial meeting, she goes grocery shopping with her clients and teaches them to shop the perimeter of the store – and when they shop in the aisles, she shows them how to make the healthiest choices. Michelle explained that most people who have desk jobs take only about 3,000 steps per day – when they should be taking about 10,000. And Megan said many of her clients skip meals and take in too few calories during the week, and binge on the weekends. This adversely affects their metabolism. (Continued on page 78) April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 15 Events Calendar of April/May 2014 CHECK OUT MORE EVENTS! TIM’S TOYOTA CENTER - PG 4 YCPAC - PG 13 APRIL 2014 Red Hot Patriot The Kick-Ass Wit of Molly Ivins April 3-12 Elks Opera House 117 E. Gurley Street, Prescott Don’t Miss this hilarious and moving tribute to Texas Original Molly Ivins--three time Pulitzer Prize nominee, humorist, political columnist and author. Molly Ivins often said she believed in the Bill of Rights the way some folks believe in the Bible. On her home state of Texas she wrote-- Good thing we’ve still got politics in Texas -- finest form of free entertainment ever invented. Fellow Texan Gail Mangham, actress, arts activist, and founder of The Artist’s Path portrays Molly. Performances at The Elks Opera House, Evenings at 7:30, April 3, 4, 5, 11, 12. Matinee at 2 PM on April 12. Tickets on Sale at www.ElksOperaHouse.com. Box Office open TuesFri 10 AM to 2 PM. 928 777 1370 The Artist’s Path Presents - The Changing Landscape of Journalism & Ethics. Sunday, April 6, 2:00pm Elks Opera House Includes Film, Symposium with guest Scholars/ Journalists, Photo Journalism Lecture & Competition and In Memoriam for Fallen Journalists. A Tribute to Johnny Cash Monday, April 7, 2014 The Palace Restaurant & Saloon 120 S Montezuma St Prescott, AZ 86303 Chuck Brown’s Johnny Cash Tribute, complete with lights, authentic costumes, and stage decorations faithfully recreates the look, sound, and vibe of a Johnny Cash concert when he was in his prime. He performs the show as if he IS Johnny Cash, and if you didn’t know better, you’d think you were witnessing the man in black himself. $28 for Dinner & Show (Tax and tip not included) Reservations start 16 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 at 5pm - Showtime 7:30pm 928-541-1996 www.historicpalace.com Liz Story in concert Friday, April 11 2014, 7:00pm Trinity Presbyterian Church 630 Park Avenue, Prescott Acclaimed pianist and recording artist Liz Story returns to Prescott on performing a concert in support of the families of out fallen firefighters. $20 adv, $25 door Tickets: www.chaparralarts.org presented by Chaparral Arts The Phoenix Symphony in Prescott Sunday, April 13, 2014 , 3:00 PM Yavapai College Performing Arts Center 1100 East Sheldon, Prescott The Phoenix Symphony will be performing a POPS concert, Bond and Beyond! Re-live the exciting moments from 50 years of iconic James Bond films. Debbie Gravitte - soprano Tickets are available through the Yavapai Symphony Association (928)776-4255 www.yavapaisymphony.org Granite Creek CleanUp Saturday, April 19, 2014 , 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM Granite Creek Park 554 N 6th Street, Prescott, AZ Join us for this important community-based event. The cleanup starts Granite Creek Park at 9am, with people disbursing around the watershed to clean up trash and separate it into true-trash and potentially reusable (upcyclable) materials. Trash clean up finishs at 11am, and upcycling materials and making art run through 1pm. www.PrescottCreeks.org Prescott’s 4th Friday Art Walk Friday, April 25, 2014, 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM Various Downtown Prescott Locations Prescottâs 4th Friday Art Walk Beginning at 5 p.m. On the 4th Friday of each month over 18 participating Prescott galleries keep their doors open to visitors and local alike for a night of fun, food, music and ART! For event information go to www.artthe4th. com A Tribute to Roy Orbison & Marty Robbins Monday, April 28, 2014 The Palace Restaurant & Saloon 120 S Montezuma St Prescott, AZ 86303 The Roy & Marty Show takes two wonderful talents in the music industry and recallsthe days of the roots of musical country blues. Come hear favorite songs by these two famed song writers, singers, and Grammy winners, performed by Phoenicians Kerry Jackson and Brant Hopkins. $28 for Dinner & Show (Tax and tip not included) Reservations start at 5pm - Showtime 7:30pm 928-541-1996 www.historicpalace.com MAY 2014 Prescott Noon Lioness Annual Fashion Show and Luncheon May 2, 2014, 11:00am Prescott Resort The theme this year will be “April Showers Bring May Flowers”. You are invited to come early to participate in the Silent Auction, Raffle, Mystery Tree and Boutique. The meal will include an Italian salad, herb roasted chicken and risotto. Desert will be Tiramisu. Coffee or tea is included. Tickets will be $30.00. Proceeds support local charities. No tickets will be sold at the door. For tickets or information contact: Judy W. 928-778-1038 or Judy R. 928-442-1031 36th Annual Whiskey Row Marathon Saturday, May 3, 2014, 7:00 AM to 1:00 PM Courthouse square and surrounding streets Are You Tough Enough? As an Arizona running tradition for 36 years, the Whiskey Row Marathon is among the toughest races in the country. Featuring rugged terrain, an altitude in excess of one mile above sea level and, on occasion, severe weather, itâs challenging, fun and offers a number of running routes for runners of all skill and fitness levels, including a marathon, half marathon, a 10k and a two-mile fun run. Proceeds from this race will go directly into the scholarship fund at the Prescott YMCA. This fund provides families in financial need to participate in childcare, swimming lessons, youth sports and gymnastics classes. Your participation in this race not only promotes your personal health, but also promotes the overall health of the Prescott Community. http://www.whiskeyrowmarathon.com/index.php Mustang Project Cruise The First Pony-Only Cruise of the Summer! Saturday, May 3, 2014, 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM Walmart parking lot, next to In-N-Out Burger, Hwy 69 at Prescott Lakes Parkway, Prescott “If you can push it, pull it, trailer it, or drive it, your Mustang should be at this Cruise.” Any Mustang Year, Any Mustang Model, Any Mustang Condition. NO judging. Paint & Polish NOT required. Bring your Mustang Show Car, your Mustang Daily Driver, your Mustang Clunker, your Mustang Lawn Ornament, your Mustang Neighborhood Eyesore, your Mustang Garage Queen, or any part thereof. Entry Fee is by Donation to Benefit the Yavapai County Jeep Posse. Dash Plaques - $5. Parking Starts at 8am. Pre-Registration would be appreciated at website. Admission is FREE to the public to view cars. www.MustangProjectCruise.com A Special Mother’s Day Concert for PAWS Saturday, May 10, 1:00PM Highlands Center for Natural History Join the Gurley Girls and special guests in a very special concert for the Prescott Area Women’s Shelter. Tickets:$15.00, $10 for Moms The Phoenix Symphony in Prescott Sunday, May 11, 2014, 3:00 PM Yavapai College Performing Arts Center 1100 East Sheldon, The Phoenix Symphony will be performing Grieg - Concerto in A minor (featuring Sean Chen piano, 2013 Van Cliburn Piano Competition winner) Britte - Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes Mozart - Symphony No. 41, the Jupiter Symphony Tickets are available through the Yavapai Symphony Association (928)776-4255 www.yavapaisymphony.org Chalk It UP! Prescott May 3 & 4, 2014, 10am-4pm Arizona’s premiere community street painting event will host the 6th annual festival. Artists of all ages and abilities create a weekend museum of pavement chalk art. Artist, volunteer, entertainer and sponsor information available at www.PrescottChalkArt.com or 928-308-8762. Kaleidoscope of Color 2014 Prescott’s Festival of Iris Saturday, May 17, 2014, 10:00 AM to 3:00 PM Mortimer’s Nursery 3166 Willow Creek Road PAIS presents its 15th annual Iris Exhibit and Sale. Free event open to public, features an amazing variety of iris in all the colors of the rainbow. Vote for your favorite iris. Stunning displays of blooms and arrangements. Planting and care demonstrations. Hundreds of potted Iris for sale. Local gardeners, who wish to participate in horticultural, or artistic design categories may pick up the rules form at Mortimer Nursery, or go to our web site http:// prescottirissociety.org and print the form. Visit the Yavapai College Sculpture Garden, 1100 E. Sheldon Street, Prescott, to see more irises in bloom. http://prescottirissociety.org PRESCOTT HIGHLAND GAMES Saturday, May 10, 2014 - Sunday, May 11, 2014 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM WATSON LAKE PARK 10th Annual Prescott Highland Games at Watson Lake Park, Hwy. 89 at Willow Lake Road. This is now a TWO DAY EVENT, all day Saturday, May 10th, 9:00 - 5:00, and Sunday, May 11th, 9:00 - 5:00. There is something for everyone, a real FAMILY event! Come and join us for a GREAT way to celebrate Mother’s Day weekend in beautiful Prescott! www.prescotthighlandgames.com 28th Annual Prescott Fine Art & Wine Festival Saturday, May 10, 2014 - Sunday, May 11, 2014 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM Prescott Courthouse Plaza, 120 S. Cortez St., 28th Annual Prescott Fine Art & Wine Festival The Festival features 140+ juried Fine Art participants showcasing and selling their exquisite work under the shade of 170 large elm trees at the Historic Courthouse Plaza in Downtown Prescott. Artisans present unique, hand-made creations offering visitors a distinctive shopping experience. Works available for purchase include: Oil, Watercolor, Acrylic, and Silk Paintings, Scratch Art, Ceramics, Mixed Media, Fiber Art, Glass, Metal, Stone, Wood, and Gourd Sculpture, Photography, and Jewelry. In addition to the spectacular collectors artwork, the festival also presents a wine garden featuring a variety of Arizona Vineyards & Wineries. There is also an interactive Kids Art Zone for budding young artists, and variety of delicious foods from choice Prescott area restaurants. Come join us in beautiful Prescott for a weekend that will satisfy your creative senses! Kings of Country Monday, May 19, 2014 The Palace Restaurant & Saloon 120 S Montezuma St Prescott, AZ 86303 World class tribute artist, Chuck Brown, performs an amazing quality show that honors the Kings of Country Music: Hank Williams, Merle Haggard, George Jones, Eddie Arnold, Charlie Pride, Conway Twitty, Johnny Cash... and many more. As a fan and enthusiast of TRUE country music, Chuck Brown honors these legends with respect and class. Supported again by Sky Daddy and his country band “Lonesome Valley”, this event is an extra special treat. $28 for Dinner & Show (Tax and tip not included) Reservations start at 5pm - Showtime 7:30pm 928-541-1996 www.historicpalace.com ABC’s of Medicare Educational Workshop May 21, 2014, 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Prescott Public Library- Founders B www.ehbinsurancegroup.com Know how the Medicare alphabet works, your choices and rights? You and your friends are invited to a complimentary seminar presented by Ernie Bobel, Jr., Medicare advisor-educator. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 17 PRESCOTT PUBLIC LIBRARY EVENTS Founders Suite of the Prescott Public Library Mad Women Poets Poetry Reading and Open Mic Thursday, April 10 6:00 p.m. The Mad Women Poets spotlight Poetry Month. In traditional round robin style, members read one or two poems in turn. Spanning four decades in age, they’ve been reading their poetry together since 2003, when they met at the Mad Linguist in Prescott’s McCormick Arts District. Coming from a wide swath of the continental U.S., the women endow their poetry with a rich diversity of experience. An open microphone for poetry follows the program. The Hollands Musical Concert Sunday, April 13, 2:00pm The Hollands are seasoned concert performers, engaging audiences with their intimate merrymaking. A full-time internationally touring family with a knack for engaging audiences and rousing a sing-along, they are 21st century nomadic travelers and frolic in the organic folk revival scene. Foundation Center Resources Training Monday, April 14, 9:30am This session provides an introduction to the Foundation Center’s online database, Foundation Center for Nonprofit Organizations. Learn to create targeted searches to develop foundation lists that will match your nonprofit organization’s funding needs. Register online or call 928.777.1526. Meet Local Author Ermal Williamson Tuesday April 29, 3:30pm Ermal Williamson is a poet and author of several wellreceived westerns. Hear him talk about his books and writing. Books will be available for purchase and autographing at the end of the presentation. Meet Author Jennifer Pharr Davis Sunday, May 4, 1:30pm Davis will talk about her new book, Called Again: A Story of Love and Triumph and her record-breaking trek across the Appalachian Mountains. Author of five books, in 2012 National Geographic named her one of ten Adventurers of the Year. There will be time after the presentation for questions and autographs. Universal Design with Christie Board Wednesday, May 7, 6:00pm Christie Board of Prescott’s Board by Board will talk about how Universal Design can improve your quality of life. Learn to design or remodel your home to make it easier and more comfortable to live there longer. Christie will show photos of design ideas that exemplify the aesthetics and accessibility of universal design. What’s New in: Elder Care! Sunday, May 18, 2:00pm Meet local author Cynthia Loucks, Yavapai College instructor. Her award-winning non-fiction book 18 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 But This Is My Mother! The Plight of Our Elders in American Nursing Homes (2000) received two book of the year awards in 2001 from the American Journal of Nursing in Consumer Health and Public Interest. There will be time for questions and autographs at the end of the presentation. Meet “The Duke” Ermal Williamson as John Wayne Tuesday, May 27, 3:30pm In celebration of John Wayne’s birthday on May 26, meet Ermal Williamson, John Wayne bodydouble on May 27. Williamson knows more about John Wayne than almost anyone as he played him in some very well-known Coors Light commercials. You can ask him questions you would ask John Wayne and he will stay in character and answer. Williamson will also answer questions about what it’s like to portray John Wayne. HERITAGE PARK ZOOLOGICAL SANCTUARY EVENTS 1403 Heritage Park Road, Prescott Eggstravaganza! Sunday, April 20th, 2014, 10am to 4pm Gates will open at 10am on Sunday, April 20th, 2014. Egg hunts will start at 10:30 with the 0-3 year old age group, followed by the 4-6 egg hunt at 11:00, the 7-9 egg hunt at 12:00 and the 10-12 egg hunt at 1:00. Animals will receive their own special Easter Egg hunt and there will be prizes for the animal “eggsperts” who complete the animal scavenger hunt. Eggstravaganza is sponsored by Great Circle Radio and Residence Inn by Marriott. Breakfast with the Tiger April 12, 2013, 9:00 to 10:30 Have breakfast with “Cassie” the Tiger. Enjoy a continental breakfast, learn about Cassie, view artifacts, and do a craft, all while the tiger is being fed. The cost is $15 for HPZS member adults and $20 for non-member adults, $5 for member children and $7 for non-member children. Reservations are required. Limited seats are available. For registration and more information, visit the HPZS gift shop for a brochure or call (928) 778-4242. Community Appreciation Day Saturday, May 3, 2014, 9am to 5pm To say “Thank You” for the community’s support, admission to the Sanctuary on this day is FREE! Come visit our 150 plus animal residents, experience interactive animal encounters, meet some animals up-close and play some fun games all at NO-CHARGE. Concessions will be available for purchase. This is a great time to bring your family and experience your local zoo. This event is sponsored by Great Circle Radio. Breakfast with the Mountain Lion May 11, 2014, 9:00am to 10:30am Have “Breakfast with Jade the Mountain Lion”. Enjoy a continental breakfast, learn about the mountain lion, view artifacts, and do a craft all while our mountain lion is being fed. The cost is $15 for HPZS member adults and $20 for non-member adults, $5 for member children and $7 for non-member children. Reservations are required. Limited seats are available. For registration and more information, visit the HPZS gift shop for a brochure or call (928) 778-4242. Zoo by Moonlight May 14, 2014, 8pm to 9:30pm It’s a full moon at the zoo, join us for a howling good time….bring your flash light or buy one at the Gift Shop for Zoo by Moonlight at Heritage Park Zoological Sanctuary! Zoo by Moonlight is held on every full moon from May through September from 8pm-9:30pm. It’s a great time to see the Sanctuary’s nocturnal residents out and about. Special admission prices: HPZS Members $3, non-members $5, children under 3 are FREE. For more information, please call (928) 778-4242 or visit HYPERLINK “http://www.heritageparkzoo. org” www.heritageparkzoo.org. Zoo by Moonlight is sponsored by Tim’s Toyota Center. WATTERS GARDEN CENTER EVENTS Inspiring Plants & Mountain Advice that Works April 5, 9:30am to 10:30am Learn all the mountain secrets to local garden success. This is an information pack class guaranteed to increase garden blooms and fruit this year. The first 10 students to bring $10 and a soil sample receive a soil test done on sight with advice on how to improve the garden. You will know exactly what to do in the gardens this year. Grow Your Own Groceries - Tomatoes to Fruits April 12, 9:30am to 10:30am This fun filled class has everything edible for the garden this spring. Plants, soils, best foods, care, culture, heirloom and non-heirloom plus more. We’ll have 100’s of tomatoes, demonstrations and hanging tomato baskets. This and everything else possibly pertaining to groceries this spring. 20% coupon off all tomato related items mentioned at the class. (Free) includes a coupon Landscapes Filled with Low Care Native Plants April 19, 9:30am to 10:30am This class coincides with our annual native plant sale along with a host of other Low, LOW, LOW water use plants that once established require little to no water and even less care. No other nursery has so many native and low care plants in the region with the horticulturalist to help you plant it right. (Free) includes a coupon Mood Altering Flower Gardening (Free) April 26, 9:30am to 10:30am Some flowers are easier to grow than others. Students learn which flowers provide the easiest care color for the mountains of Arizona. See this springs new rose collection with a focus on super easy to bloom flowers your grandmother only dreamed of. Learn all the fragrant details and more with this class. The Gift of Flight Looking for a special gift for that special person? Give the gift of flight for only $120 An introductory Flying Lesson includes: 30 minutes of ground school, 30 minutes of flight, Fly in our new Piper Sport For Information and Gift Certificates call: 928-771-0156 We offer Private, Commercial & Instrument Ratings April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 19 Prescott Women, Water & Art... From left to right, Jackie Herst, Paula Cooperrider, Mary Schulte, Nita Hull-Carlson & Carolyn Schmitz There’s something in the water! When we sent out invitations for Prescott artists to participate in the 3rd Annual, ONE MAN’S TREASURE fundraising event, twenty-four artists responded. Nineteen of them were women. Not only were these artists asked to donate a piece of original art for the event, they were also asked to meet a specific challenge: the challenge 20 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 of making art out of found objects, recycled materials, trash harvested from the Granite Creek Cleanup or a fine art piece representing our natural resources. While there may not be hard statistics to report, I would say that Prescott, per capita, has more powerful, persuasive and productive women artists than any other comparable community. In addition, as these women continue to create within their own specialties of ceramics, textiles, jewelry, welding, photography, and painting, they extend themselves by becoming a vital part of the Prescott community: a community that shares values and understands the importance of preserving our natural resources, not only for today but also for future generations. Prescott has a way of attracting artists and residents that appreciate living and preserving our precious natural setting and historic heritage. Prescott Creeks has led the way for over two decades to preserve our water resources, control pollution, conserve wildlife and protect our natural habitats. Each spring hundreds of residents participate in our Granite Creek Cleanup, removing volumes of material and debris from the creeks. Throughout the year thousands of residents, tourists and wildlife enjoy the restored Watson Woods Riparian Preserve of which restoration was planned and implemented by Prescott Creeks with vital participation from government and community members. This year’s participating women artists and their contributions are: Paula Cooperrrider “How Does Your Garden Grow?”; Edie Dillon “Shorebird”; Maryhelen Ewing “Vanity”; Jacqueline Herst “Water Wheel”; Juanita Hull-Carlson “Water”; Kim Kapin “The Red Bridge”; Anne Legge “Best View of The Sunset”; Joan Maloney “Oh, What A Night”; Lesley Aine McKeown “Anticipation”; Leslee Oaks “Garden Flower”; Christine Ryback “Sand Cast Concrete Leaf ”; Cindi Shaffer “The Whale”; Carolyn Schmitz “Date At The Dump”; Mary Schulte “Frogzilla”; Jody Skjei “Lean Back & Think Green”; Chelsea Stone “Lifesaver Necklace”; Karen Price “Zen Box” and Barb Wills “Eco Dyed T-Shirt”. One Man’s Treasure promises a splendid social gathering and unique art auction from which it raises funds to support Prescott Creeks. It will provide a platform for artistic and community involvement on a number of levels: supporting our artists, Prescott Creeks, our community and our heritage. Empowering, promoting, supporting, and encouraging women artists fosters public awareness of and interest in works of art with emphasis on fine art created out of cast away and recycled items that graphically illustrate that “one man’s trash can be another man’s treasure”. Don’t throw, toss or cast away anything if you can recycle it or turn it into a treasure for someone else to enjoy. The ONE MAN’S TREASURE, art auction and social event with wine and gourmet appetizers, will be held at: • • • • • • StructuredAcademicCurriculum StateApprovedCharterSchool StudentsK-8thgrade ServingtheNeedsofthe“WholeChild” CertifiedStaff TwoHomestyleMealsDaily • • • • • SamsungChromebooks LowStudenttoTeacherRatio GiftedEducation LeagueSports Transportationprovided for2nd-8thGrade Before&AfterSchoolProgramsAvailable|Open6:30am-4pm Prescott College – Crossroads Center Saturday, May 3, 2014 From: 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Tickets: $40.00 purchase at www.onemanstreasure.org Participate in Live & Silent Auctions Sip wine from Page Spring Cellars Mingle with these wonderful artists Clearly you should just go with the flow. “Water Wheel” by Jacqueline Herst OUR CREEKS: TREASURE – PRESERVE - CELEBRATE It is the water after all that sustains us and inspires all our wonderful, water-aware Prescott women artists to pursue their art and create TREASURES for us all to enjoy. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 21 Area Hike Feature Story Back to the Juniper Mesa Wilderness Bull Spring Trail #100 & The Oaks and Willows Trail #3 By Amanda Lane O ver 20 years ago I was forced out of bed on a chilly fall morning before the sunrise by my father who informed my little brother and me that we would be hiking to the top of Juniper Mesa today. It was an epic adventure that we all remember quite fondly. Last month, on a beautiful winter morning, I was able to take my dad back to the same trailhead to hike to the top of Juniper Mesa once again. It takes a little more than an hour from Prescott to reach the trail head parking lot. Take Williamson Valley Road, or county road 5, 20 miles north where it turns to a dirt road. Stay on road 5 another 14 miles until the road forks and take road 125 to your left. Continue another 10 miles on the 125 to a marked trailhead parking lot on your right, just before the locked gate. The Oaks and Willow trail #3 begins at the parking lot. The trail will fork at about ¼ mile. From here we decided to head right down The Bull Spring Trail #100. The trail is well maintained and has only a mild amount of elevation gain to the spring, about 1.8 miles down the trail. The spring feeds a trough that sits in an oak thicket below the mesa. We were shocked and excited to see the pipe dripping into a full trough of perfectly clear water. The quality of the water is unknown so I would not drink it unless treated. From here the trail will head up to 22 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 TUES-THURS 2-10 PM FRIDAY 2-11PM SATURDAY 11AM-11PM LUNCH SATURDAY TEQUILA & TAPAS TUESDAY 4-7PM $7 - 16oz Margaritas & Specialty Tapas LIVE MUSIC PATIO FRI & SAT OPENING SOON! WINE DOWN WEDNESDAY CHEF’S TABLE 4-7PM $2 Off All Glasses of Wine, $1 Off Noshes & Flatbreads AVAILABLE FRI & SAT NIGHTS TWO SEATINGS PER NIGHT: 5:30 & 7:30 Call to Reserve Today. Cork and Cuisine will feature a new local winery every month as well as create a new menu every month, based on what is in season. 2985 N. Center Court #B • Prescott Valley (928) 237-1510 | www.corkandcuisinepv.com www.facebook.com/corkandcuisinepv the mesa at just over 7000ft. The trail is mostly switchbacks, but still a rather steep and rugged climb. We took it slow and enjoyed the epic views as we climbed the mesa. Just under a mile from the spring we reached the top and the trail 20 intersection. Taking Trail 20 to the right, about 5 miles will take you to the Juniper Spring trail that I covered in the last issue, turning left will take you to trail #3. We took a left here and headed west across the mesa. The trail intersections are all well marked and the trail itself has plenty of cairns and trail makers that have been cut into the trees. Once you come to trail 3, you can go right to the east end of The Oaks and Willows trail that ends at road 7, or go left and follow the trail west across the mesa and down to the road April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 23 24 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 125 parking area. We went left across the mesa to finish the loop. The views are really incredible over this stretch across the mesa and the hiking is easy. The area has large amounts of old growth Utah and alligator junipers, huge pinion and ponderosa pine trees, as well as thickets of oaks. The trail made a sharp left and began a quick decent down George Wood Canyon off the mesa. The switchbacks down the canyon are rather steep and a little washed out in places. It made us glad we had decided to climb the other trail. From the bottom of George Wood Canyon you have about a 2 mile hike back to the parking area. Someone has built an access road to a new water catchment system at the beginning of the canyon that overlaps the trail for a little ways. Watch for the log in the road and cairns to the right to get you back on the trail, if you follow the road and reach the water tank you have missed the trail. The loop was approximately 6.5 miles and on the strenuous side. An easier adventure would be Bull Spring and back, for just over 3.5 miles. I asked my dad at the end of the day what he liked best about the hike and his response was perfect “you, just spending time, such a simple precious thing”. Too often we don’t take the time for a simple stroll in the woods with family or friends. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 25 Kids Growing Strong Pediatric Physical Therapy Promotes Healthy Development of Motor Skills and More Photo by Lauren Shepard By Monica Kaplan Photos by Janelle Hicks 26 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 Five days a week, for the past six years, Jodi Gilray has spent much of her time down on the floor, playing with children from infants on up. Though it may look like she’s just playing, with her motivating words and contagious smiles coaxing the kids to reach for a toy or walk on a balance beam, the doctor’s mental machinery is working overtime trying to figure out the puzzle of what their body language is telling her. Jodi is a pediatric physical therapist, with a thriving private practice in Prescott Valley. One misnomer of her profession, she says, is that pediatric physical therapy patients have been in a car accident, or have suffered an injury. While that’s why many adults seek physical therapy, children and their parents find their way to her office for vastly different reasons. “Most of the children I treat are delayed in their development. Most of the time, it starts as something small. Their parents have the best instincts, and they know when something is not right.” That something can be a baby whose head stays tilted to one side, called torticollis; it can be an infant whose acid reflux, difficulty breathing, prematurity, dislike of tummy time or poor muscle tone (stiffness or floppiness) causes them to move in a compensatory manner, affecting their muscular and skeletal development. “Babies have a way of adapting to everything, so how they’re held, fed, and positioned impacts the alignment of their spine, giving them movement experiences which are not always ideal,” Jodi explains. “It can cause motor delays or joint pain, most of which goes unnoticed until the child complains later in life. “That’s why you hear how all that tummy time is so important, and it is. There are many things on the market that avoid tummy time: we have the bumbo seats, the bouncy seats, the jumpers, the swings – all with a lot of sensory input that babies aren’t ready for. Really, they just need to be on their tummies to work on gravity and start balancing their muscles.” Gilray says that in the absence of a known neurological or developmental condition, “physical delays in the first year are usually because they didn’t get that foundation at the beginning to balance those back extensors or abdominals. “I analyze movements and see babies as these little skeletons with muscles, but luckily they come in cute little packages to play with.” Another area in which it’s important to seek physical therapy - and as early as possible - is children who walk on their tippy-toes, or even in-toeing or “...Getting kids to walk who were told they weren’t going to walk; getting kids pain-free when they’re young so they won’t have even more pain later as their bodies grow and get heavier. It’s definitely a passion; it’s not like working.” - Jodi Gilray out-toeing. “Most of the time it’s due to a lack of trunk strength – the abdominals and the back extensor complex, as well as the hips,” she says. “This occurs due to the compensatory or poor movement patterns they learned way back in the early stages of learning to roll or reach in sitting. Then, when the infant tries to stand independently without adequate trunk strength, they learn that if they go up on their toes it locks their joints and they’re more stable that way.” Many times toe-walking isn’t taken that seriously, Gilray adds, partly because kids look like they outgrow it as they get heavier and the heel is lower to the ground. “However the heel never makes contact with the floor in walking, which places significant tension on the lower back as these muscles never get grounded. “Within 10-20 years, they will 100 percent of the time have low back pain; it’s straight biomechanics.” While Gilray was working hard on earning her Doctorate in physical therapy from Northern Arizona University in 2004, she and her husband were also facing a devastating illness – her husband’s melanoma. He was diagnosed at 25, had surgery to excise it, and he and Jodi went on with life, getting married and having their two children. It came back, metastasized, and he died at 31 – six years ago. Being forced to walk the widow’s path and raise two children alone has been an intense struggle, of course, but Jodi says she feels she’s finally achieved peace with his death. “A lot of it is my career. Getting kids to walk who were told they weren’t going to walk; getting kids pain-free when they’re young so they won’t have even more pain later as their bodies grow and get heavier. It’s definitely a passion; it’s not like working.” The petite brunette is also passionate about helping other widows and widowers. Jodi started a Prescott-area widows’ group that meets twice monthly (Continued on page 79) April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 27 Jemimia & Jared Eikenberry •www.portaitpark.com Allison and Byron Flores • www.marchettiphoto.com Daniel & Michelle Greenberg • www.astorybookmoment.com Chia & Vincent Sliag www.marchettiphoto.com Meghan and Karl Sheltz • www.jenniferricephotography.com Johnny & Katy Francis • www.astorybookmoment.com Wedding Photography 28 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 y Stephanie & James McGill www.portaitpark.com Drew & Mike Chriss www.brooke-photography.com Krystal and Timothy Stapleton • www.jenniferricephotography.com Tiffany & Danny Compton • www.brooke-photography.com April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 29 SPRING 2014 Hair Styles 30 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 Salon St. Martin Model: Gillian Stylist: Joey Sarvis This page is brought to you by A Portrait Park by J Model: Laura Stylist: Jaime Collins 928.776.1311 www.portraitpark.com spring hair tip By Tara Hatcher, Master Stylist/Color Specialist Spring is here and summer is coming! Products are an essential step to keeping your cut and color looking fresh for maximum time. Here are some knowledgeable tips: For extra volume, body and a sun kissed shine, prep wet hair with Aveda’s Phomollient. Begin drying your hair upside down, dry the root opposite from how you want it to lay for extra volume. Add a dab of Confixor Liquid Gel for a smooth lightweight hold. Finish your style by smoothing frizz, flyaways and static, by adding two or three drops of our new Dry Remedy Moisturizing Oil to your ends and certain problem areas. Dry Remedy moisturizing oil adds up to 40% of moisture in the first use and can be used up to 4 times a day. It is AMAZING! A tip to prevent early fading of your hair color: After you use Aveda’s Color Conserve shampoo and conditioner, rinse with cool water to seal the cuticle to hold color. Add aveda’s Daily Color Conserve leavein conditioner on wet hair before styling to keep your color shiny bright and rich. Tip for damaged hair: Our Damage Remedy leave in conditioner is one of my favorites to repair the hair from heat/chemical damage. It strengthens the hair while protecting against further damage. Apply it to wet hair before combing because it also helps to detangle. Our stylists love to not only help you create a look, but to help maintain your look. We feature exclusively only AVEDA products at Salon St. Martin and our sister salon LaLa’s Styling Studio. Visit Salon St. Martin for the perfect look for you for 2014! Located at 371 Garden Street in Prescott. Call (928) 771-8343 for your appointment or visit www. SalonStMartin.com. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 31 Turn up the VOLUMA! Juvederm Voluma™ The ONLY FDA approved Hyaluronic Acid Filler 32 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 for Mid Face Volume Have you found yourself looking in the mirror and saying things like, “Wow, I’m looking old.” “I’ve been looking so tired lately.” Or, “I used to have cheekbones.” As we mature, we lose fat and collagen in the midface or cheek area. This fat loss results in laxity of the skin and pronounced nasolabial folds (also known as parenthesis) and/or exaggerated marionette lines. Juvederm Voluma ™, is the first and only FDA-approved hyaluronic acid(HA) filler, which is an injectable gel, that is the most natural correction for mid face volume loss. It restores a more youthful appearance in a subtle approach, by improving the natural contour of your face. The even better news is that Voluma lasts for up to two years; and, is the least invasive procedure to achieve facial contouring. Side effects are mild to moderate and generally last two to four weeks. Common side effects are temporary redness, bruising, and tenderness at the treatment site. As with all skin injections, there is a risk of infection; therefore, skin preparation and injection technique are important during application. Consumers need to know that there are many fillers on the market; however, none of these fillers compares to the natural aspect of hyaluronic acid. HA is already in our bodies. It is mostly located in the joints and tissue areas because it is hydrophilic – meaning, hydrating or water loving. The advantage of Voluma™ being so natural, is the fact that the patient will have a lower incidence of lumps, bumps, nodules or scar formation. It is the most natural fill in the market today. And, the post treatment result is immediate. In less than an hour, you can capture your youth once again. So, don’t allow that small voice in your head to tell you that you’re looking old. Turn up the Voluma™! For more information contact Mind, Body & Soul Spa at (928) 776-6474 or visit their website www.MindBodySoulSpa.com April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 33 Women in Business Healthy & Feature Story Beautiful From the Outside In Local Entrepreneur Finds Success and Fulfillment by Offering Natural and Organic Cosmetics to a Worldwide Clientele By Hilary Dartt Marj Melchiors started her mailorder company in 1997 to fill a niche: to provide people with a healthier alternative to traditional cosmetics, which often contain toxic ingredients. Seventeen years later, her Prescott Valley-based business has grown into an international distributor with a local retail store and a spa (set to open in mid-April) – and its success continues to exceed her expectations. Located at 8127 E. Florentine Road, Suite A, the NaturElle Spa & Boutique provides natural and organic skin care, hair care, body care, and makeup, as well as spa services. When Marj first opened her virtual 34 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 doors as Cosmetics Without Synthetics, Inc. in 1997, she advertised primarily through print, in magazines. People didn’t yet shop on the Internet, Marj explained, and “back then, natural cosmetics was a niche market.” The first two years “were very slow going,” Marj said. “I almost gave up.” In 1999, though, she launched her web site at www.allnaturalcosmetics. com, and business took off. “I had something no one else had,” Marj said. “And now I could reach people not only in the United States but also internationally.” The story begins in the late 90s, when Marj had two young daughters. She was a professional interior designer at the time, but decided she didn’t want to “It’s important to use natural cosmetics because the skin is the body’s largest organ. It’s proven that your skin does absorb what you put on it.” - Marj Melchiors “We carefully scrutinize the products we sell, and that’s why our customers have learned that they can trust us.” - Marj Melchiors work outside the home. “I’ve always had allergies,” she said, “and I bought my makeup at the health food store. It was natural makeup. I figured I was eating natural food, so why not?” At the time, she explained, not many makeup companies sold a variety of natural cosmetics, and even fewer advertised their products as being natural. “It’s important to use natural cosmetics because the skin is the body’s largest organ,” Marj said. “It’s proven that your skin does absorb what you put on it.” Research in the past ten years confirms the toxicity of many ingredients in cosmetics produced in the United States. Some of the ingredients are even banned in other countries, Marj explained, because of their health risks. Apparently the trend toward natural cosmetics is growing. A report from Transparency Market Research shows that the global demand for organic personal care products was more than $7.6 billion in 2012 and is expected to reach $13.2 billion by 2018. Although many chain stores and natural food stores carry skin and body care products they label as organic, Marj said, (Continued on page 78) EASY RIDER Why fight traffic and struggle to find parking when you can be an easy rider and let us get you there? We offer multiple trips daily to Phoenix Sky Harbor from many convenient pickup points in the Prescott area, so we’ve always got a shuttle that’s convenient to your travel plans. Plus, we offer plenty of free, secure parking. So, next time, get on one of our luxurious Mercedes Sprinters, and ride easy… 928-442-1000 ArizonaShuttle.com April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 35 Health Today Feature Story Obesity in America A Big Problem. We Can Help! lbs and I lost 50 lbs! We now enjoy our healthier life that is free from high Nancy and Douglas Rothrock, M.D. blood pressure medications, we are have dedicated their practices to no-longer pre-diabetic, we have normal helping people lose weight and “keep cholesterol readings and feel more energetic. it off!” The understanding of being Both myself and Dr. Rothrock were overweight and now being at a overweight when we took our first steps to healthier living with the “Ideal healthier weight and feeling great has Protein Protocol.” Dr. Rothrock lost 100 helped us devote every day to helping others achieve this same success in their lives. We help patients lose the weight and educate them on how to maintain their weight. We would like to share two success stories from many we have helped. Start TODAY on your new path to “Healthier Living” with our dedicated team at “Let’s Get Healthy 4 You!” “I began my journey about 18 years ago after my second son was born. I never had a weight problem until then. I gained 50lbs with each pregnancy and I did not lose all of it after they were born. Then life got busy with a full time job, football and baseball games; who had time to eat healthy? I was overweight most of my life and growing up our family “menu consisted of homemade Polish and Italian foods. Overall, I have lost a total of 80 pounds. The first 40 pounds I lost was prior to my learning about Ideal Protein. It was extremely difficult and took me two-and-a-half years to accomplish that goal. The last 40 pounds I lost was through Let’s Get Healthy 4 You!, using the Ideal Protein protocol, and it only took me about 3 months! The Ideal Protein method was so much healthier and easier. The biggest challenge for me was the first three days of the Phase one program. I experienced carbohydrate withdrawals and hunger, but then after that 3rd day those symptoms went away. Now, 3½ years later, I have kept my weight off by following Ideal Protein’s simple maintenance protocol. I will never go back to that weight again. I can rest knowing if I do put on a few pounds, all I have to do is get right back into phase one for a week or two and it will come off, quick and simple. I truly enjoy the healthy lifestyle I have chosen! ” 36 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 -Rosie Mallicoat I never realized I was putting on so much weight, I thought I was hiding it well. Then one day I got on the scale and Dear John! I was 199lbs! I couldn’t believe it I was so disgusted and embarrassed. That is when I started the Ideal Protein diet with Let’s Get Healthy 4 You! I found the program to be very easy with great tasting food. Before I knew it I had lost 70lbs, it took about 6months. I have kept it off for a year and a half now. I know that I will NEVER gain 70lbs back, but if I happen to gain a few, I know I have the tools to get the weight off in a short period of time!” -Lorraine Guzzo For more information visit Let’s Get Healthy 4 You at 1003 Division St., Suite #8 in Prescott, call (928) 708-9355 (WELL), or visit them online at www. LetsGetHealthy4You.com. GIF T CA RD April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 37 Health Today Feature Story Restorative Dentistry in a Friendly and Supportive Setting By Dr. Robert Carlisi For some, the biggest obstacle in going to the dentist is not going to the dentist, or waiting too long to do so. In other words, the longer one goes without having regular check ups, cleanings and procedures, the harder it becomes to make that initial visit. That kind of a cycle is hard to break. At our office, we cater to patients that need extra attention, care and encouragement; we want our patients to not only feel well attended to, but to feel that they can move forward with quality dental treatment regardless of their prior habits and history. Fortunately, modern dental procedures and chair side assistance can eliminate fear and lower anxiety in almost every patient, regardless of whether they are a child or an adult. We recommend several things that a patient can do, or to ask for, which can make things go more smoothly. To begin with, inform your dental team about your anxiety. Depending on your medical condition, different satisfactory 38 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 Caring. Pictured above: Dr. RobertCompassionate. Carlisi and Helen, RDA. Carlisi A true spirit of joy for dentistry. Restorative solutions can be found. Many patients during a procedure, or to acknowledge For the past eighteen years, Dr. Robert Carlisi has Dentistry find that being given the time tobeen express when need takeof aRestorative break. By Prescott’s firstthey choice in thetofield Your smile. passion. relax Dentistry. now, for information a limited time,as new themselves canOur immediately them. And providing wepatients proceed, receive Free Whitening—the perfect finishing touch 1995~ and steps Their ~ fearSince is recognized canperfect we smile. do our best them know for your Please callto for let details. be incorporated to meet them where what we are doing and how they are Robert J. Carlisi, DDS • OurPrescottDentist.com they 928.445.5877 are. Our staff• 919 is trained to do • progressing. Some want AZ to just “get in 12th Place Suite 9 • Prescott, 86305 whatever it takes to help reluctant or the zone.” To these patients, we provide Carlisi color ad Focus.indd 8/14/13 10:55:24 A AM fearful patients feel1 calm. We ask our earphone music and dark sunglasses. patients to indicate how they are doing lightweight blanket can also bring some My best advice to any patient is this: Come to see me before you are in pain. Let’s look at your unique situation and come up with a treatment plan that will bring you many years of a healthy, happy smile. added security and comfort. Although this is not the only recommendation, some anxious patients are good candidates for conscious sedation, with either oral medication or nitrous oxide (“laughing” gas). This helps a person’s anxiety decrease, so that the local anesthetic (“novocaine”) works better, as well as longer, which allows us to complete the procedure with the most comfort possible. The benefit of nitrous oxide is that the effect wears off immediately. The patient can drive to and from the appointment, whereas with available oral medication, the patient needs to arrange for transportation. My best advice to any patient is this: Come to see me before you are in pain. Let’s look at your unique situation and come up with a treatment plan that will bring you many years of a healthy, happy smile. Whether you are comfortable, or highly anxious about dental procedures, we care for your dental needs in a professional and empathetic environment. Please call to schedule an appointment today to give us the opportunity to serve you. Dr. Robert Carlisi, a graduate of University of Southern California School of Dentistry, has served Prescott as a dentist since 1995. His office is located off Willow Creek Road. 919 Twelfth Place #9 Prescott, AZ 86305. (928) 445-5877 (ourprescottdentist.com) April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 39 Home Improvement Home Improvement 2014 42 42 Cover Feature: Christie Board Can “Fix It” 48 YCCA Member Profile 50 YCCA Home Show 52 52 Prescott’s Alta Vista Garden Tour 56 Garden Gal: Landscapes Full of Fragrance watters garden center 62 40 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 58 Home Renovation Ideas renovations 62 Historic Home Tour 66 Spring Has Arrived at the Rancher’s Wife 68 Fowler Commerical Invested in Local Economy April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 41 Cover Feature Feature Story “I Can Fix That” 42 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 Faith, love, and laughter provide a foundation for multi-talented, multi-faceted Prescott woman to do a bit of everything, and learn a bit along the way. By Hilary Dartt Photos by A Portrait Park by J Christie Board has pretty much done it all. Among a list packed with remarkable experiences, she has run a marathon, raised a son, worked as a cosmetologist, volunteered for a humanitarian group helping orphans in Ukraine, planned weddings, earned a degree in religious studies, as well as kitchen and bath design, worked as an aerobics instructor, traveled and watched the Apollo Rockets launch from Cape Canaveral. “I’ve had a good life,” she said. “I have a good life.” Although she currently works as a nationally certified kitchen and bath designer, Christie, a self-described chatty, creative, fixer-of-things, has always had a diverse list of interests. She was born in Saint Joseph, Missouri, and at age five, moved with her family to Cape Canaveral, Florida, where she remembers watching space program launches from the beach. The love of design, of creating things, was introduced early on. “My mom was always redecorating the house, moving furniture around, wanting to tour model homes,” Christie said. “I did that with her a lot growing up. It was a fun way to spend an afternoon.” In high school, she loved tailoring and designing – sewing – classes, and ended up going to cosmetology school upon graduation. “I was chatty and creative, and I figured my parents wouldn’t let me go to college just to be in a sorority. I didn’t know what I wanted to study, so cosmetology school seemed like a good start.” In 1980, she went back to school and earned her degree in religious studies, which she said provided her with a great foundation for life. When her first marriage ended in divorce, Christie moved to Newport, Oregon with her 3-year-old son in tow. She met a couple who had a construction business. “They had brought this guy, Robert Board, onto their team, and they kept saying, ‘You should meet him, he is really nice, but he’s not your type,’” Christie said. “I was a mom, he was a single guy.” They met briefly on a jobsite one day. “He was standing up on a ladder, and I thought he was so cute. My friend was saying, ‘Don’t even think about it,’ but I just remember going, ‘wow!’” Their paths didn’t cross again for a while, until Christie asked her friends to build her a house. Robert was the superintendent on her job. “If I had known then I would eventually end up marrying him, I would have been much more friendly,” she said. “I am sure I could have gotten a few more upgrades!” Robert was definitely happy being single, and much later he told Christie she seemed like the kind of girl “you have to marry” – which meant he wasn’t interested. Within a few months, they had become friends, and Robert asked Christie to take ballroom dancing lessons with him. “I said yes,” she said. “But do not ever start taking ballroom dancing lessons with a single guy unless you’re prepared to marry him! Here you are touching each other, dancing together … it’s like two years of foreplay!” There was flirtation, but no romance. Each of them was convinced the other wasn’t “the one,” and as a single mom, Christie thought it was safer to keep their friendship platonic. The problem: “He was around so much, nobody else wanted to date me,” she said. So she told him he had to get in or get out. “He went away for a few days, but then he came back and said, ‘I’m in.’” They were married in 1993. Together they opened Board by Board Construction in Oregon, and soon established themselves as community fixtures. She became a “If I had known then I would eventually end up marrying him, I would have been much more friendly. I am sure I could have gotten a few more upgrades!” - Christie Board April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 43 Christie is the only nationally certified kitchen and bath designer in the Quad-City area. 44 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 certified aerobics instructor and was the fitness coordinator for the local YMCA. Christie continued working at a salon, and worked as an assistant for a fabulous interior designer. She volunteered, as well, and partnered with Robert in the construction company. In 1999, they had the opportunity to move to Prescott and decided to do so because Todd was about to enter high school and the education system seemed strong. Plus, the better weather was appealing and they had family here. Although the move was difficult, Christie relied on her faith and her belief that they were moving in the right direction. In the summer of 2005, after she and Robert became empty nesters, Christie made a spontaneous decision to travel to the Crimea region of Ukraine. Her best friend, who is on the board of a humanitarian organization that provides aid to orphans in Ukraine, had invited her along on several trips, and she finally accepted. “I went to the Ukraine very naively, and it changed my life,” she said. “To see these beautiful children who have so little hope for the future … as a mom it just breaks your heart. I spent that entire first trip crying. I am sure the kids thought I had mental health issues!” She has kept in touch with several of the children she met during her two trips, and loves knowing that the time she spent with them created a connection, even if it was just in the comfort of a hug or a smile. In 2008, Christie earned her degree in kitchen and bath design from Century College in Minnesota and decided to earn her national certification through the National Kitchen & Bath Association. The three-test process to become certified through the National Kitchen & Bath Association is rigorous. First, applicants must pass a two-hour written test, which gives them their associates’ degree in kitchen and bath design. Then, they must pass a six-hour test in each kitchen and bath design. Each test April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 45 46 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 “We have respect for each other’s talents and skill set. We both care passionately about our work, and we want our clients to be happy. The bottom line is Robert makes me look good. I could not do what I do without him.” -Christie Board is administered only once per year, and has a 70% pass rate. Applicants go to a testing center and are given a client and a scenario, and an original floor plan. During the six-hour testing period, applicants must create a full set of blueprints including plans for electric, plumbing, and elevations – as well as a specification sheet. Christie said the test was grueling. For six straight hours, she kept pencil to paper, designing the remodel. Fortunately, she passed the kitchen design test and the bath design test the first time around. “That was probably the most stressful thing I’ve ever done in my life, except riding in a Russian train,” Christie said. “But the continuing education really took our company in a different direction.” Christie is the only nationally certified kitchen and bath designer in the quadcity area. She has been asked countless times how they manage to live together and work together, and her answer is simple: “We have figured out how to divide our duties and not conflict our work and life.” “We have respect for each other’s talents and skill set,” she said. “We both (Continued on page 78) April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 47 Member Profiles: Established in 2002 NJ Builders, Inc. is a full service general contracting company negotiating both residential and commercial projects across all of North Central Arizona. A lot of work goes into planning and building your project and we believe you deserve the best service and quality for your hard earned money. We are a smaller company that only takes on a few projects at a time. This allows us to give each client the personal attention they deserve. We’re with you every step of the way, from working with you to find the perfect lot to helping you through the often overwhelming task of selecting exterior and interior finishes, Prescott Spas Steve and Helena Kasten are the owners of Prescott Spas in Prescott Valley, AZ. The Kasten family owns three HotSpring Spa stores in the San Francisco Bay area and have 27 years of experience in the spa business. Prescott Spas is a full-service spa and hot tub dealer, offering sales and supplies, as well as on-site hot tub service and warranty support. All staff members are professionally trained to better serve our customers. From sales to service, our staff is authorized by Watkins Manufacturing (makers of HotSpring Spas and Jacuzzi Hot Tubs.) Prescott Spas will have their products and services on display at the YCCA Home Show this year. Each year, Prescott Spas is proud to interact with fixtures, and equipment. We work closely with BlueLine Design to provide you with architectural design services or we’re happy to coordinate with an architect of your choosing. NJ Builders is excited to participate in the 2014 Yavapai County Contractors Association’s Home Show at the Tim’s Toyota Center. NJ Builders is locally minded and likes to stay connected to the community, both with family and the professionals within the home industries. What better place to stay connected than the YCCA home show when everyone is out on display at the same time. By employing our own labor force of skilled individuals we are able to keep costs down and ensure delivery of the highest quality product. Currently we the public and meet many new faces at the Home Show, Kasten said. Prescott Spas has been open since November 1, 2003. The spacious showroom has spas from all four of Watkins’ product lines, all three of Jacuzzi’s spa lines, MAAX Powerpool swim spas, three private “Soak Rooms” where customers may experience the spas, a coffee bar, and wonderful outdoor living furniture. In 2009, Prescott Spas became the authorized Jacuzzi Hot tubs dealership and service center for Northern Arizona. Prescott Spas is proud to now offer the #1 and #2 hot tubs brands in the industry to its customers! Our dealership currently services, but is not limited to, areas such as: Prescott, Sedona, Flagstaff, and Phoenix. Steve, Helena and their staff invite you to come in and meet them in the 48 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 perform the following major areas of construction in-house... foundation, rough framing, door & window install, trim carpentry, cabinet install, and stone masonry. When the use of subcontractors is required we use only the best companies to provide these services, companies we know and trust. For more information about NJ Builders, or to schedule a consultation, please call (928) 708-0292, or view some of their previous projects online at www.njbuildersinc.com . Prescott Valley store, just off Highway 69 on the south frontage road — look for the big yellow inflatable duck, “Webster”. For more information, please call (928) 775-9884, or stop by at 6947 E. 1st Street, in Prescott Valley. Online, visit them at www. prescottspas.com . April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 49 2014 Home and Garden Show Are you considering a home project? No matter what the size; whether it’s building a new home, remodeling your existing home or just fixing up something around the house, it can be a headache, a hassle, a cause of stress and a pain. The process would be so much easier if you could see the products you need side by side, all in one place, so you could compare them before you choose one, without having to drive from showroom to showroom. The Yavapai County Contractors Association (YCCA) annual Home and Garden Show will have the professionals you need to get the job done right. Home professionals with all kinds of expertise will be available to answer questions and discuss ideas for home projects. The 36th YCCA Home and Garden Show is taking place Friday, April 25th through Sunday, April 27th at the Tim’s Toyota Center in Prescott Valley. Admission is FREE and 50 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 there will be lots of drawings for prizes and merchandise. YCCA wants to invite you to stop by the show, meet the tradesman, see how products work and learn about new ideas in the market. If you have never attended a home show, put this one on your calendar for spring. “We expect this will be the best show we have ever had, said Sandy Griffis, Executive Director of YCCA. “Our home show is a great place to pick up knowledge and meet the people you need to get the job done.” You will be in heaven if you need home repairs, decorating ideas, landscaping, screen doors, windows, spas and saunas. Stop by the home show and have your head filled with wonderful ideas. The show begins at 9 a.m. on Friday and Saturday, closing at 5 p.m. both days. Sunday the show opens at 10 a.m. and the doors close at 3 p.m. To support our community partner, the Yavapai County Food Bank, YCCA asks that you bring a non-perishable food item to donate upon entry. See you at the home show. For more information, please contact Sandy at the YCCA at (928) 778-0040. “We expect this will be the best show we have ever had.Our home show is a great place to pick up knowledge and meet the people you need to get the job done.” - Sandy Griffis, Executive Director of YCCA April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 51 The Prescott Garden Tour June 14, 2014 52 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 By Mary Ann Mira & Ann Krsiean, Co-Chairs Do you love plants and gardening? Have you moved to Prescott from some other state where you could pretty much put a plant in the ground and it would grow? Have you experienced the challenges of our Prescott soil, lack of rain, intense sunshine, and the animals who also appreciate your garden? If you answered “yes” to any of those questions, then The Prescott Garden Tour is for you! The Prescott Garden Tour has evolved since 2004 as the major fundraiser for Alta Vista Garden Club, as well as a way to showcase best practices of gardening and allowing community members into exceptional private gardens. Members joined the Alta Vista Garden Club because of a mutual love of plants and gardening. We came together to learn more about the highlands of Arizona as a gardening zone and to share our knowledge with like-minded people. Multiple IRAs and 401(k)s? Consider a roll and take control. We, like the founders of Alta Vista Garden Club in 1951, are also interested in continuing to beautify the city. Some of our beautification projects funded by the garden tour have included: • Sharlot Hall Museum Rose Garden • Landscape support of Habitat for Humanity homes • Planting Arbor Day trees each year at schools, parks and public buildings • Donations and/or hands-on work at YRMC, Yavapai College Sculpture Garden, Heritage Park Zoo, Highlands Center for Natural History, and many other locations in the Prescott area. One of the major ways we support the beautification of Prescott is by recognizing exceptional private gardens which are open to the public during our biennial garden tour. Saturday, June 14th, marks the sixth Prescott Garden Tour sponsored and hosted by Alta Vista Garden Club. This year’s tour will feature five exceptional gardens which offer numerous unique approaches to gardening in Prescott. You will be provided with the opportunity to take a self-guided driving tour of these gardens where you will learn about An IRA here, a former job’s 401(k) there—are your retirement assets scattered? If so, it could be costing you time, extra paperwork and fees. Take control of your retirement assets and keep your tax-deferred status by rolling them into a Thrivent Financial Rollover IRA. You may get more investment options and save some money, too. Contact me today at 928-227-2700 to hear about our rollover IRAs and how they can benefit you. Eva J. Janckila, CLTC Financial Associate Securities and investment advisory services are offered through Thrivent Investment Management Inc., 625 Fourth Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55415, 800-847-4836, a FINRA and SIPC member and a wholly owned subsidiary of Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. Thrivent Financial representatives are registered representatives of Thrivent Investment Management Inc. They are also licensed insurance agents of Thrivent Financial. Appleton, Wisconsin • Minneapolis, Minnesota • Thrivent.com • 800-THRIVENT (800-847-4836) 25830G R1-12 201200082 April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 53 container gardening, vegetables and flowers, ponds and waterfalls, xeriscaping landscapes with plants and shrubs adapted to our area, and creating outdoor rooms. We salute the owners who have spent many seasons lovingly designing and maintaining their gardens and thank them for being willing to share their gardens with the community. To give you a taste of what you can expect to see, here is a brief description of each garden. • Perennials Gone Wild is a hilltop garden filled with brilliant season• • • • long colors attracting bees, butterflies and birds. It also features colorful containers full of vegetables and herbs. For the Birds will have you pulling out your binoculars to appreciate this bird haven and certified wildlife habitat while appreciating a panoramic vista of some of Prescott’s peaks. Discover the imaginative uses of metal work for plantings and birds. Historic Habitat is a garden in one of Prescott’s historic areas which has maximized the geographic terrain of the lot to create varied garden types, including a unique rooftop garden. Tranquility in the Pines features a Zen meditation area in the ponderosa pines, a stone waterfall and pond, along with imaginative use of re-purposed items such as antique chandeliers and bird cages. Go Native highlights more than an acre of native plants, trees and grasses in the Bradshaw Mountain foothills. Set among the plantings are unique metal sculptures and yard art. 54 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 Classic ~ Distinctive ~ Livable Kitchen and Bath Design Christie Board Certified Kitchen and Bath Designer Prescott, Arizona NKBA 928-442-1387 www.boardbyboard.com The Essence of Good Design will always be about People and how They Live. In addition to enjoying these wonderfully landscaped gardens, you will meet related professionals and educators to add to your knowledge and understanding of the unique features in each garden. We are also pleased to announce that local artists and musicians will add to the ambience of each garden setting. So if you love gardening, please join us for the Prescott Garden Tour! Tickets are limited. They can be purchased in advance for a $10 donation at Bella Home Furnishings, Jay’s Bird Barn, Mortimer Nursery & Landscaping, Watter’s Design & Garden Center, Prescott Valley Nursery and The Native Garden. Tickets are also available by contacting Debbie @ 928-443-8909 or email: greenoldthings@hotmail.com. On the day of the tour, the program with maps for the self-guided tour and wristband entry IDs will be available between 8:00 and 11:00 AM in front of the Yavapai College Performing Arts Center at Yavapai College off Sheldon Street in Prescott. Personalized and Compassionate PEDIATRIC PHYSICAL THERAPY Newborn and Up • Family Environment JODI GILRAY, PT, DPT, C/NDT Specializing in Biomechanics • Developmental Kinesiology Sensory-Motor Development • Postural Alignment • Developmental Gait Dr. Gilray treats a variety of conditions ranging from minor to significant due to congenital, developmental, neuromuscular, skeletal, acquired disorders or other unidentified conditions including any complaints of pain. She works with families to provide suggestions on activities, toys, positions and provides treatment that will help your child move and explore his/her environment while encouraging proper alignment and promoting development, all through play. Visit www.pathways.org for more info about your child’s development. Call today for an appointment! (928) 771-9327 3050 N. Navajo Drive #110 • Prescott Valley, AZ 86314 Most insurances accepted including AHCCCS, CRS and CMDP April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 55 Garden Gal Feature Story Landscapes Full of By Lisa Watters Lain, Arizona’s Garden Gal What is the first thing we do when spotting a flower? Of course, most of us smell it. Children especially identify the sight of a blossom with an anticipated fragrance. Humans can identify hundreds of odors, many of which can trigger strong reactions and emotions. While we can be surprised, disappointed, or even repulsed by a plant’s odor, fragrance is an important component of gardening. The botanical reason for plant fragrance is simple . . . it is there to attract pollinators to the blooms. White or pastel blossoms seem to have stronger scents; a trait that helps them compete with their more brightly colored cousins. But, fragrance is not limited to blooms. The essential oils that provide the perfume can be found in other plant parts such as foliage, seeds, and bark. Herbs are especially good examples. Almost all herbs are fragrant. Among the most fragrant are sage and rosemary with undeniably pervasive fragrances. Creeping thyme is used as a ground cover in stepping stone walkways simply because when stepped on it releases its Fragrance fragrance. Of course, fragrant plants need to be placed where they can be appreciated. Here are factors to draw on when choosing the best sites for your scented beauties: specimens in containers. Location, Location, Location A Trellis to Climb Our prevailing mountain wind comes from the Southwest and forcefully directs plants’ aromas. Also, scent intensity varies as the day progresses and humidity levels and air temperatures change. Arbors, especially over garden gates and pergolas, bring fragrances up to nose level. Walks and Entryways Passers-by enjoy the aromas from blooms as well as the aromas released from scented leaves as they brush by them. Porches, Patios and Decks Anywhere you have seating is a great place to enjoy fragrant plants, especially evening blooming plants like jasmine and moonflower. A solitary bench in a fragrant garden is an invitation that is hard to resist. Container Gardens Create your own portable plant aromatherapy units by using fragrant 56 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 Open the Window Bearing the aromas of fragrant plants really enhances a breeze encouraged to enter your home. Many of today’s hybrid plants are bred for exceptional appearance. In the process, unfortunately, the traits that provide fragrance have become diminished. Some newly introduced roses have little fragrance compared to the varieties our grandmothers grew. Having cleared the air on that issue, if you would like to bring some fragrance to your garden, here are some plants that are sure to satisfy different tastes. Bloomerang Lilac - Enjoy classic lilac fragrance for months instead of weeks! This revolutionary new kind of lilac blooms in spring and then again throughout the summer. It goes through a rest period in the heat of the summer, but does flower again. This compact, mounded variety fits easily into any landscape, and is ideal as a foundation planting or as part of a mixed border. You can even include it in perennial beds. Keiko Itoh Peony - A cross between a traditional English bush and the much larger tree peony, these exceptional intersectional hybrids offer the best of both parents. Enormous flowers and foliage like those of a tree peony, accompany a prolific blooming habit with vigorous growth. The exceptionally strong stems can hold up to 50 large blooms without staking. Blue Light Clematis - This climber produces hoards of distinctive blue and violet double flowers the size of your hand. Well suited to small spaces and container gardens, it is equally suited for climbing through a trellis. Easy to grow, it also claims excellent disease and pest resistance. Viburnum - Whichever variety of this shrub you have by the front entrance to your home, it will invite guests to take a moment to stop and “smell the flowers”. There are many more plants that offer their fragrances for your consideration. For the entire list of fragrant locals visit us at the garden center and ask for a copy of my “Fragrant Plants for Local Gardens” list; it’s free for the asking. Until next issue, I’ll see you at the garden center. Throughout the week Lisa Lain can be found at Watters Garden Center, 1815 W. Iron Springs Road in Prescott, or contacted through her web site at www.wattersgardencenter.com. April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 57 Renovations Made Simple! Tips & Tricks from the Pros By Tom Reilly, Architect/Owner Renovations Storage…it’s never enough, is it? There are several different types of storage and each storage space has its own style. The room usually defines the type of storage needed, and a basic common sense understanding of the items stored there. I want to take a minute and talk about my favorite storage place…not the shop or the man-cave…the kitchen. All of it - from pots and pans, to cooking utensils, spices and staples, to stock all at the fingertip, ready to create a culinary (portion-controlled, of course) delight. Now, this is where storage meets fun. My wife and I love to cook and spend time doing just that. It all starts with what is on the shelf and in the fridge. Kitchens today have a myriad of storage options that can be selected from, based on your type and style of cooking, and the size of the space. Starting with a pantry that can be anywhere from 5 to 50 square feet of closet. Roll-out pantry shelves offer a more compact solution. We prefer a Storage pantry of about 20 square feet with 5 shelves. The bottom two shelves are 16” deep, the top three 12” deep. The bulky stuff is below and smaller items on top. The majority of our nonperishable staples reside here. Some items, (like that crystallized jar of honey), remain for quite some time, thus reflecting the need to maintain storage spaces. Cabinets with roll-out shelves are very handy in the lower cabinets; middle shelf, lower shelf, either or both, depending on your budget and your ability to bend. All manner of fold-out, roll-out, and slide-out storing options are available, and can, in most instances, be retrofit into your existing cabinets as well. Remembering our kitchens are a 3-dimensional space, let’s not overlook that space over an island or peninsula counter. From the ceiling, one can hang pots and pans, spice drying racks, garlic and chili pepper braids. This allows easy access to the tools and ingredients needed to prepare that mouthwatering meal. Now about drawers - some need to 58 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 be deep and some need to be shallow. Food storage containers (my wife hoards Tupperware) in our house need deep drawers. The miscellaneous cooking utensils (AKA the junk drawer) need a shallow configuration, making those small meat thermometers easier to find. Spice drawers are usually shallow and a bread drawer is usually deep. Where these are all placed depends on how you cook and what you cook. Upper cabinets store the cups, saucers, dishes, and plates used to serve the savory creations that begin in the kitchen storage and, combined with your inspired culinary skills, produce most a scrumptious meal for family and friends. Kitchens today have a myriad of storage options that can be selected from based on your type and style of cooking, and the size of the space. Empty Nester Seems like a lonely term, “Empty Nester,” at first blush. It is a relatively new phrase, coined in the early 1960’s to describe a parent(s) whose children have reached adulthood and left home. It takes some getting used to. For my wife and me, it was about new-found free time. Weekends were no longer back-to-back soccer games; weeknights we no longer filled with homework help and just listening to what our kids’ day was like. Not lonely though…we still talk to our children at least 2 or three times a week and the loving connections are still nourished. Still…back to us. What a great time in our lives to explore new hobbies, or re-engage P.K. (pre-kids) interests. The two or three bedrooms kind of stare back at us looking for the same opportunity to be re-engaged. For us, one became a guest bedroom where my wife was able to take family heirlooms from storage and create a space that speaks comfortably to our family history. The other room is our shared office/sewing room. By changing out the flooring, lighting, and wall color, we were able to make this space ours. We are still working on the play room. Our (Continued on page 61) April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 59 Outdoor Living Outdoor living in good ol’ Prescott, Arizona, where outdoor living is a year round experience. And there are so many ways to make it happen. Outdoor living, when I grew up, was on the patio, uncovered, with a picnic table my Dad made, and then we augmented this with lawn chairs. Our picnic table didn’t have an umbrella so no relief from the sun or protection from the rain. Hot sun or even the slightest rain drove the whole outfit indoors. Cold evenings were another challenge. Once the BBQ coals faded, the evening was over. The last roasted marshmallow was eaten and the smores were done, if it was warm out we would linger; cool we went inside. Fast forward to today and we are seeing all manner of outdoor living solutions in all manner of housing types. Urban, suburban, rural, all present unique opportunities to enjoy the great outdoors at home. Urban dwellings such as apartments, condos, and townhomes usually have a patch of ground for a BBQ and some outdoor furniture. This may be associated with a yard area, deck, or a veranda. I refer to a veranda as a covered space. These spaces are usually a pre-determined size and offer the more urban dweller a daily dose of that wonderful out-of-doors. The suburban dwelling, usually a lot smaller than one acre, has more options. Now-a-days, the patio is usually covered. Often the outdoor living space Urban, suburban, rural, all present unique opportunities to enjoy the great outdoors at home. has a fire pit, a gas fire ring (some very cool options here), and even a fireplace. Sitting outside on a warm summer morning with coffee just before engaging your day can set the tone for your outlook on the day’s tasks ahead. This setting can be gracefully achieved with an elegantly designed post and beam covering that is solid, keeping the rain off of you, or a ramada style that is open to keep the rain off, but designed to shade the sitting or gathering area. Decks for homes in our mountainous terrain are very popular. We have completed several. Most frequently and quite recently, we have covered outdoor decks built 15 years ago or so. This brings new life to many homes. When originally constructed, scant consideration was given to the deck’s orientation to the sun and wind. Usually, these were constructed based on access from a kitchen or living space and with little consideration given to the impact our environment can have. Often these decks were constructed with wood, and rarely the correct type of wood, therefore requiring tons of maintenance. Because of this, they very often fall into disrepair, or are rarely used. New owners see the possibilities and want to restore these spaces as a useful and pleasant addition to indoor living. Replacement decking is usually a composite product made from recycled plastic and wood particles. When installed correctly, these products last 60 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 a long time and require little or no maintenance. Often these products come in a variety of colors that will complement your existing home’s color scheme. When we design and build new decks, we almost always use these products. While initial cost is higher than a cedar deck, the lack of maintenance over the years allows you to quickly recover that investment. Rural outdoor living (on parcels greater than one acre and usually up to 35 acres), have a different perspective to living the outdoor lifestyle. From separate casitas, to small pavilions, and all manner of spaces mentioned above, the outdoor lifestyle is often a strong component on the larger lots. We have seen some wonderful spaces created adjacent to barns, with small kitchens and areas for entertaining likeminded friends. The barn, for some folks, is as popular a place as the kitchen for gathering and enjoying the rural lifestyle. Whether you live in the city, subdivision, or a small ranch, outdoor living can be a wonderfully restorative respite. This is the time of year to begin that outdoor planning process. In a few months you could be living your dream. For more information about these and other projects visit Renovations at 142 South Alarcon Street in Prescott, call 928-445-8502 or visit their website at www.renovationsaz.com (Continued from page 59) goal is to have a functioning library/ den. This allows one of us to read while the other watches a show on TV in the living room, and it also doubles as a movie room when the grandkids come to visit. Transforming spaces can be an exciting way to open up and re-task your home. Making two bedrooms into one, or expanding your living space into an adjacent bedroom can make you fall in love with your house all over again. Often our clients may want to make other home improvements. Interest in gourmet cooking has really taken off of late. Kitchens that were once conducive to parents and children, quick dinners, and fast breakfasts are transformed into an elegant and efficient space conducive to two cooks, or bakers, or one of each. You decide. Another popular home remodel is expanding the master bedroom into a master suite. By utilizing an adjacent bedroom space, we can often expand the master bath into a spa-like environment, or add that extra closet space. Some of our clients like the additional space as a relaxing escape, a place to read the latest magazine, ponder your next trip, or enjoy a quiet glass of wine. When the kids come back now, it is usually for a short visit. They have a comfortable home to stay in and now that they lead lives of their own, you are still teaching them how to move forward. When they get where you are, they will still have a solid role model to look up to. After all….is that not what it’s all about? EQUAL HOUSING LENDER WE THINK LIKE A HOMEOWNER Laurie Sandi BK# 0906222 Julie LAWTON SCOTT COLLETTE HUCK 928.899.0870 928.710.6329 928.899.0403 NMLS# 203321 NMLS# 269506 NMLS# 234537 • Conventional | Jumbo | FHA | USDA • Second Home & Relocation Specialists • Serving Arizona For Over 40 Years • Local Lenders Using Local Vendors 140 N. MONTEZUMA • PRESCOTT AZ 86301 • WWW.HOMEOWNERSFG.COM HOMEOWNERS FINANCIAL GROUP USA, LLC YRMC PhysicianCare Ponderosa Pediatrics have trusted their children’s Just for Kids! Parents healthcare to our friendly, board certified pediatricians, certified pediatric nurse practitioners, and thoughtful, caring staff for over 28 years. Your child’s health is always our top priority backed by the full support of YRMC’s vast spectrum of quality healthcare services. Appointments available: Monday – Friday, 8:00 am to 4:30 pm Saturdays, 8:00 am to 10:30 am Walk-in clinic available: Mon – Fri, 7:45 am to 9:00 am Mon – Thur, 4:00 to 7:00 pm 2120 Centerpointe West Dr Prescott, AZ 86301 (928) 778-4581 ponderosapediatrics.com April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 61 P RESC O T T HISTORIC HOME TOUR 2014 Saturday, May 3 62 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 Across Arizona, a number of cities, towns and historic precincts have showcased their respective historic neighborhoods by way of a home tour. This allows both residents and visitors alike to enjoy and realize the value of our community. The participating homes are open for tours (either partially or fully) and frequently provide printed information describing the architectural features of the homes, as well as important individuals who may have lived there. The City of Prescott Historic Preservation Office is working with a committed group of volunteer residents and sponsors to revive historic home tours that highlight Prescott’s historic past and rich heritage. The home tour this year will be held April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 63 Attendees will receive a map detailing locations of open homes and historical information about each house participating on the tour. 64 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 ReceptionTent Porta Pottys First Aid 1 0 2 S PLEASANT ST 0 Proposed Road Closure 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 12 Vendors 10 UNION ST 13 128 127 S MOUNT VERNON AVE 14 140 15 16 133 17 18 19 20 21 22 142 23 20 ft clear aisle Proposed Road Closure E GOODWIN ST 12 11 10 9 24 8 7 Vendors 6 5 4 3 2 1 Participants Vendors Aisleways Detour signage Barricades 201 Historic Home Tour Map 0 50 100 Feet 200 Ü on Saturday, May 3rd. The ticket booth, located in the Kelly Law Firm parking lot at 425 E Gurley St., will open at 9:30 am. The tour will begin at 10am and last tickets will be sold at 3pm, with houses closing for tours at 4pm. Attendees will receive a map detailing locations of open homes and historical information about each house participating on the tour. The area of this year’s tour covers the 100 and 200 blocks of S. Mount Vernon Ave., the 100 and 200 blocks of S. Pleasant St. and Union St. All homes will be staged with volunteers positioned to help usher all of the visitors through the homes and ensure the care of each home on the tour. There will be a fee of $15 charged for the tour, and proceeds from the event will be split between the neighborhood participants to assist with Halloween/ holiday expenses and the Prescott Downtown Partnership for their sponsorship and serving as the primary host of the event. As part of the home tour event there will be a small street fair featuring local vendors, including artists and merchants, and booths with information that could prove useful for historic home owners. A selection of refreshments and snacks will be available for purchase as part of the event. The hope is that this tour will be the first of subsequent historic home tours in other Prescott neighborhoods interested in showcasing homes while, at the same time, raising money for local charities and neighborhood projects. April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 65 Spring Has Arrived at the Rancher’s Wife! By Tamra Kelly, owner Springtime is not just a season, it is also a time for ideas of rebirth, rejuvenation, renewal, and regrowth. This means a fresh start, and what better way to begin spring than by updating the look of your home. Just a few simple changes can breathe life into your favorite spaces. This year’s interior design trends are all about creating perceptible impact from simplicity, because the looks are concomitantly more bold and accessible than ever before. A few simple refinements of your home décor can be sophisticated enough to last for a long time to come. Having the confidence to mix things up a bit in colors and finishes when trying bold trends means having a broader interpretation of design styles. To expand your imagination beyond the stereotypical ideas of “traditional”, “rustic”, “industrial” or “country” décor will present a diverse array of stylistic influences. Choosing items that speak to you individually will prevent you from conforming to a rigid or overdone look. Don’t fret when combining colors, textures and finishes C into your masterpiece. You can unleash your originality and create a personalized, cohesive look. In room colors, spruce up the lighter gray and beige colors in favor of deeplysaturated hues. Consider thinking outside the box with navy and plum. Navy is actually considered a new neutral for its ability to blend with other colors and styles. If a darker wall shade seems too radical, start small with pillows or rugs or even piece of furniture like a sofa or sectional. Use this as your focal point and create a great area from there. hoosing items that speak to you individually will prevent you from conforming to a rigid or overdone look. 66 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 In fabric, velvet, earthy suede and even textured corduroy have made their way back to give simple cottons and linens a break. If you want to get really close to nature, animal hides, such as cow and deer, are very popular and come in a variety of colors, tones and sizes. These materials are durable yet elegant, and effortlessly rise to the demands of popular darker color schemes for 2014. In patterns, floral prints are in - aren’t they always! Whether your style is natural, eclectic, sleek or bold you can create a mix of patterns to create an overall modernize look. In accent pieces, leaving behind the clutter is most attractive to the eye. Appreciation of larger artwork, photos and wall hangings having personal significance is priceless. Include sculptural pieces that add not only personality but proportionality to your walls. With the use of natural textures such as jewel tones, metal, stone and horns create uniqueness to any room in your home. In addition, they provide fabulous focal points and delightful discussion topics when showing off your new style. Speaking of natural textures, natural materials can be incorporated in any area of your home including wall art, fabrics and furnishings, but especially in fabulous window treatments. In using natural wood to create a new style or refresh any existing décor honey tones and caramels are surpassing the historical walnut, cherry and mahogany tones keeping things on the lighter side. For more information visit The Rancher’s Wife - Your full service home décor store and more! At 156 S. Montezuma, Prescott, Arizona, call 928778-7233 or visit their website at rancherswifeaz. com TOGETHER: A BETTER WAY TO FIGHT CANCER. At Arizona Oncology, we know each cancer is unique. Together with The US Oncology Network, we bring the expertise of nearly 1,000 physicians nationwide to the delivery of our patients’ care. As the largest group of medical professionals in Arizona dedicated exclusively to cancer, Arizona Oncology touches the lives of more cancer patients than any other provider in the state. We believe together is a better way to fight. Visit ArizonaOncology.com or call 855-234-HEAL for more information. From L to R Board Certified Medical Oncologists Peter Mathern, MD, Paul Kuefler, MD, Pamela Miel, MD, Deborah Lindquist, MD, and Michael Vu, MD, PharmD 13060569 Ver4.indd 2 7/1/13 1:41 PM Enhance your Beauty with Permanent Makeup done Naturally! Eyebrows, Eyeliner, Lips and more custom designed and as unique as the face they are created for... Corrections and Removal of permanent makeup done poorly... For a free consultation; call Amber at 928-925-3026 or book online at www.pmbyamber.com Quality Work At A Fair Price Amber April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 67 Fowler Commercial The Women Behind the Scenes Launch Company to the Front of the Pack Commercial real estate is a fast moving business and around Prescott and Prescott Valley, nobody has been out in front of the pack more than Fowler Commercial Real Estate. Fowler Commercial LLC is a name built upon the reputation of its founders, Jack and Eileen Fowler. Jack Fowler, CCIM has been involved in the local real estate business since 1990 and his education, skill and experience in real estate are key parts of the reputation he has built as a leader in commercial Real Estate. Jack is the owner and Broker of Fowler Commercial LLC and earned the coveted CCIM designation in 2001. He maintains the highest standards of professionalism in commercial real estate. However, behind the scenes is the company’s backbone - a tight knit group of women, who, with their education, dedication and achievements brings this company to the forefront of the industry. Each of the ladies behind Jack and Fowler Commercial has their own unique abilities and each support the other in a variety of ways. What makes this group so outstanding is the respect and admiration they each have for the other and their professional careers. 68 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 Angie Sumner, Associate Broker, came to the company just after the real estate market hit bottom and through many personal struggles, she has kept her goal of becoming one of Prescott’s best commercial Brokers. She earned her Broker license in 2013 and is now working toward receiving the prestigious CCIM designation as her next career achievement. She is well respected and is one of the most sought after commercial Brokers to consult. She is known for her honestly, dedication to clients and working very closely with her clients to get properties listed and sold or leased. Cheri Lewis, Associate Broker, assists all of the Agents in market analysis, new listings, purchase contracts and most importantly tracking the sale through escrow to make sure all deadlines are met and issues are resolved. With 16 plus years of experience, she knows real estate and keeps everything in the office organized and on track. She too is a Broker and is consulted by all the agents in the office for her knowledge of all aspects of the real estate business. Dawn Cooley, Office Manager, is the life of the business. Her cheerful and tenacious attitude keeps the office upbeat and running smoothly and effectively. She is well versed in customer service and assisting the Agents in the many facets of advertising and marketing. The saying “No stone left unturned” truly applies to her. Nothing, if given to her, is left undone. Eileen Fowler, Property Manager, is a one woman force when it comes to her Carlisi Restorative Dentistry Your smile. Our passion. ~ Since 1995~ Caring. Compassionate. A true spirit of joy for dentistry. For the past eighteen years, Dr. Robert Carlisi has been Prescott’s first choice in the field of Restorative Dentistry. And now, for a limited time, new patients receive Free Whitening—the perfect finishing touch for your perfect smile. Please call for details. Robert J. Carlisi, DDS • OurPrescottDentist.com 928.445.5877 • 919 12th Place • Suite 9 • Prescott, AZ 86305 Carlisi color ad Focus.indd 1 8/14/13 10:55:24 AM ...a tight knit group of women, who, with their education, dedication and achievements brings this company to the forefront of the industry. April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 69 “We work well together as a team with our clients and customers”. - Jack Fowler, owner Magic 99.1 & The Flooring Shack are giving you a chance to Win an iPad mini Enter the keyword “FLOORING” at magic 991.com LISTEN AT MAGIC991.COM Hootie & The Blowfish GOO ADELE GOO Matchbox 20 DOLLS Pink Sheryl Crow J O H N M A Y E R Maroon 5 JASON MRAZ *CONTEST RUNS APRIL 1ST MAY 31ST 70 Special Home Improvement Section • April/May 2014 ability to assist her Landlord’s in all aspects of their property management needs. She is well respected by her peers in the property management world and has a knack for maintaining open communication with Tenants and Landlords alike. Not only does she represent a number of Landlords, she also does the accounting for the company. Eileen has assisted and supported her husband Jack throughout his career and is an integral part of bringing Fowler Commercial to its current status. Just keep your eyes open and you are sure to see Fowler Commercial signs throughout the community, advertising properties for sale or for lease. These are a sign of the success this small, independent commercial real estate company has had in making their Client’s properties prominent. It is that team approach that gives Fowler Commercial LLC its effectiveness, Jack says. And while he gets outvoted in the office a lot more than he used to, Jack understands that having a solid team of experienced women professionals in his office is an asset to both him and the clients. “These are personal services we provide to our clients,” Jack said “customer service and working relationships are so important when it comes to dealing with real estate, “We work well together as a team with our clients and customers”. And to better serve our clients, we have added to our company three agents well experienced in the commercial Real Estate market. Patrick Baker, Associate Broker, specializes in commercial property investments. Dorian Lange, Realtor, PharmD, specializes in medical sales & leasing and investment in medical related properties. Ray Carter, Associate Broker, specializes in leasing and selling industrial properties in the Prescott Area. Fowler Commercial LLC is a local leader when it comes to buying and selling commercial property, vacant land and property management. Also assisting you in investment analysis for purchases and financial and market analysis of a commercial property. “Every one of our clients is taken care of,” said Lewis. “We are proud of the level of service we provide to our clients.” For a complete listing of all active properties available through Fowler Commercial LLC, please visit www.jfowler.com. For more information, please call Fowler Commercial LLC at (928) 775-4227, or stop by the office during business hours at 8098 E. Valley Road, Suite 1, in Prescott Valley. SPECIAL OUTDOOR ISSUE LOOK FOR IT IN JUNE & JULY www.prescottwoman.com Honor the Fallen Hotshots Experience Counts! BARBARA DENNEY Over 20,000 Procedures Licensed Esthetician and Permanent Cosmetic Technician for Over 25 Years! SPECIALS: Eyeliner or Eyebrow - $250 | Lips - $250 | Blush - $250 Lash Extensions - $75 | Lash Tint - $25 | Touch Up Procedures - $150-$250 Stay Firewise. Treatment for Skin Imperfections - Scarring, Camouflaging, or Areolas - Call for Pricing - MAKE YOUR LIFE EASIER WITH PERMANENT COSMETICS. CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT! (928) 443-5000 www.BarbaraDenneyPermanentCosmetics.com 1040 Whipple Street #102 • Prescott, AZ 86305 April/May 2014 • Special Home Improvement Section 71 Ask The Experts Feature Story Prescott Tire Pros Answers Your Questions Q How do I know when my tires need to be replaced? A: Anytime that the tread depth is less than 3/32 of an inch at any location on the tire. Also, any tire more than 7 years old is likely to need replacement. Well-maintained tires not only improve the quality of the ride and provide a smoother ride, but maintenance is vital to safety. Tire blowouts on the road can be dangerous to you and your family. Q What should I do when my Tire Light comes on inside my vehicle? A: The first thing you should do is check the air pressure on all tires, including the spare. Adjust, as needed, to attain the manufacturer’s recommended air pressure. Properly inflated tires can improve your vehicles gas mileage and increase the life of the tire. Q How often should I have my tires rotated? A: Tire manufacturers recommend rotating tires every 7,000 miles. Prescott Tire Pros recommends rotating every 4,000 to 5,000 miles to help extend the life the tire. At Prescott Tire Pros we rotate tires at no charge even if you didn’t purchase through us. Stop in anytime for air pressure & fluid check for free. The experts at Prescott Tire Pros have the experience and choices to fit every need from economy vehicles to high-end custom trucks and SUVs. For more information, or to schedule your tire service please call (928) 776-0205, or stop by the new and expanding shop at 1635 W. Iron Springs Road in Prescott. 72 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 like follow visit www.prescottwoman.com SUBSCRIBE TODAY! Only $22 for a 1-Year Subscription! YOUR FAMILY’S SOURCE FOR HOME AND HEALTH www.prescottwoman.com April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 73 74 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 Register Today! Saturday, April 26 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University By Stacy Hawthorne Animal lovers will be walking to raise money for the Yavapai Humane Society at the 3rd Annual Walk for the Animals, presented by Renewal by Andersen, Saturday, April 26, at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott. Hundreds of people - and their pooches - are expected to walk, or run, the 1-mile or 5K course at the Walk for the Animals, one of the region’s premier pet lover’s events. The event features a “Barketplace” of vendor booths; an animal wellness tent offering { } Form a team, strut your mutt, earn prizes, save lives, and have a doggone good time! www.yavapaihumane.org April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 75 low-cost vaccinations and microchips; music, prizes, a children’s area and, new this year, a “Strut Your Mutt” contest. Registration is $30 until April 1, $35 after April 1, and $40 on event day. Doors open at 8 a.m. and the opening howl begins at 9:00 a.m. Dress up your pooch and enter the Strut Your Mutt contest for just $5 when you register for the walk. Youth walkers (11-17) are only $20, and kids 10 and younger can walk with a registered walker for free. Even people who don’t want to walk can raise money and save lives by becoming a “Lazy Dog” and sleeping in on walk day. All proceeds benefit the Yavapai Humane Society, which saves thousands of homeless pets in our community. YHS’ no-kill ethic means that otherwise healthy and loving animals are given a chance to find their forever homes. Its 97-percent live release rate is one of the highest, not only in Arizona, but the nation. Every registered walker receives a T-shirt and a goody bag full of items from animalloving businesses. Walkers and team “packs” (fund-raising teams) can earn prizes based on their money-raising efforts. Top fund-raising walkers will receive prizes like a session at DogPatch Studio and more. 76 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 “A popular and fastgrowing event, the Walk for the Animals is a great way to enjoy the outdoors and celebrate the human and animal bond with fellow pet lover’s.” - Ed Boks, YHS executive director “A popular and fast-growing event, the Walk for the Animals is a great way to enjoy the outdoors and celebrate the human and animal bond with fellow pet lover’s,” said Ed Boks, YHS executive director. “It’s especially fun to invite friends, family and co-workers to walk with you as members of your pack.” Walkers can sign up as an individual walker, leader of a pack, pack member or lazy dog at yavapaihumane.org/walk. Yavapai Humane Society (YHS) is a notfor-profit organization committed to promoting and protecting the health, safety and welfare of all animals. YHS has served Yavapai County communities for more than 40 years and employs a no-kill ethic in its treatment of animals. Its 97 percent live-release rate is one of the highest in the nation. YHS has a shelter and pet adoption center in Prescott, a Cat Adoption Center in PetSmart, a Thrift Shop, and a separate spay/ neuter clinic offering low-cost spay/neuters and low-cost vaccinations. For more information, visit yavapaihumane.org. April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 77 The Trifecta (Continued from page 15) Once the clients begin implementing the diet and exercise programs Megan and Michelle create for them, “They feel better,” Michelle said. Currently, Sirius Health & Wellness offers several programs including: • • • • • • • • • A primary care clinic for children and adults A $40 walk-in sick visit. Additional fees may apply (strep test, urinary tract infection test, etc.). A “private gym.” Clients can use Health Savings Accounts to pay for personal training from Michelle because Sirius Health & Wellness is a medical office Private counseling with a registered dietitian. Again, clients can use Health Savings Accounts to pay for dietitian services because Sirius Health & Wellness is a medical office. A 12-week weight loss program. This program includes all 3 services, weekly – visits with Debbie, training with Michelle, and diet consults with Megan. Once the 12 weeks are over, Debbie, Michelle and Megan develop a follow-up plan with each client individually. A Bone Health Program, specifically geared toward people with osteoporosis or osteopenia. This program is designed to build stores of vitamin D and calcium naturally through diet and exercise. A Get Fit Get Healthy Program for children who want to live a healthy lifestyle. A Heart Health Program, which establishes a baseline and implements a program for improving high blood pressure, cholesterol and weight loss. A Cancer Survivorship Program to help cancer survivors get healthy and reduce their risk of recurrence. 78 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 In the future, Debbie, Michelle and Megan hope to add group classes and excursions including, for example, cooking classes and running and hiking groups. Each of the women has a passion for health and fitness. Debbie is a four-time marathoner. Michelle is a CrossFit trainer and a hiker, and Megan is a “major mountain biker.” “We all practice what we preach,” Debbie said. “We’re very passionate about fitness and nutrition.” And together, the three of them have come together to create “the trifecta” of health and wellness – a place where patients can come for care, exercise, and diet – with ongoing support and monitoring that ensure the positive results last. To learn more about Sirius Health & Wellness call 928.515.1755 or visit 3181 Clearwater Drive, Suite B Prescott, in the Crossings, or www.siriushealthandwellness.com Healthy & Beautiful (Continued from page 35) many of them still contain ingredients that could be harmful. That’s why everything she sells must meet specific criteria. In many cases, her store is the only place in the United States where her customers can buy the brands she sells. “We carefully scrutinize the products we sell,” she said. “And that’s why our customers have learned that they can trust us.” In addition to offering only products that meet her strict standards, Marj offers her customers an opportunity to purchase trial-sized products at $1$3 each before buying a full-sized, fullpriced item. Employees use the store’s sterile lab to create trial-sized samplings. “I never would have thought, all those years ago, that – voila! – I would have a store,” Marj said, adding that she now offers more than 700 products. “But here we are. It’s not a niche any more. More people know about it.” For more information about allnaturalcosmetics.com or NaturElle Spa & Boutique, visit www.allnaturalcosmetics.com or 8127 E. Florentine Rd., Suite A or call 888.586.9719. allnaturalcosmetics.com offers: Cosmetics - including foundation, concealer, lipstick, eye shadow, eyeliner, mascara and any other makeup traditional stores carry • Skincare - including anti-aging products, cleansers and moisturizers • Hair care - including shampoo and conditioner, styling products and natural hair coloring • Body care- including deodorant, body wash, toothpaste, sunscreen, shaving products and lotions • NaturElle Spa & Boutique offers: Spa treatments - including facials, waxing and makeup artistry • Gift products - including jewelry and hand bags • Educational group classes on natural cosmetics (makeup, skin care, body care and hair care) • In addition to products for adults, NaturElle Spa & Boutique offers 2 lines of cosmetics for a younger clientele, both brands Marj has created and developed: • Meisha™: earth-friendly natural makeup for teens. Meisha makeup includes pressed and cream eye shadows, blush, eyeliner pencils, glitter gel and lip gloss. • Little Earth’s Beauty: a line of products geared toward 4-9 year-old girls, including lip and eye products as well as body glitter, all made with safe ingredients. “I Can Fix That” (Continued from page 47) care passionately about our work, and we want our clients to be happy. The bottom line is Robert makes me look good. I could not do what I do without him.” Although she admits, “There are some moments,” she said, for the most part, “We have it figured out.” Creativity is always close to her heart, and it plays a role in her life wherever she can find a space for it. “About once a year I take on a wedding,” she said. It’s just another avenue of design and since I don’t have a daughter it fulfills that need to plan a wedding.” From elaborate wedding programs and seating charts to a “fun Christmas letter,” Christie loves graphic design, too. And her current ultimate career goal is to design the interior of a hotel. Christie is also a member of a local PEO (Philanthropic Educational Organization) chapter. It’s an international organization that provides scholarships, grants and loans to women pursuing higher education. “I think life should be cute,” she said, half-joking. But on a more serious note, Christie said, “I think it’s important to keep your sense of humor. You’ve got to be able to laugh at yourself … and just laugh.” Kids Growing Strong (Continued from page 27) at local restaurants (LoveNeverDies. Prescott@gmail.com). “I know how a lot of them are feeling day-to-day, and I know what words we sometimes get from non-widowed people that hurt, even though it wasn’t meant to hurt. I don’t mind sharing anything I’ve learned over the years because nothing was available when I was first widowed. I had to rebuild my life. I want to make a lonely journey a little less lonely for others.” Jodi says that the loss of the 19 firefighters is what actually spurred her to start the widows’ group. “At first I was reluctant because of my workload with being a single parent and my practice. But I knew the need was here. These women need to hear from someone who is on the same journey that hope matters, and that you can be happy again and you can smile and laugh again. “You will never stop loving or missing him,” Jodi adds quietly, “but you are enough for your kids, and they will know their dad through you.” (The Prescott-area widows’ group is a regional chapter of the national non-profit organization, Soaring Spirits Loss Foundation (sslf.org). Jodi Gilray’s pediatric physical therapy practice can be reached at (928)7719327.) April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 79 Our History Feature Story Great Old Broads Saving Wilderness By Elisabeth F. Ruffner Of the 9.1 million acres of wilderness under the legal definition of wilderness, created by the United States Congress as The Wilderness Act, and signed by President Lyndon Johnson in 1964, nineteen areas are within Yavapai County. Many new areas have been designated nationwide over the years, now totaling 757 areas encompassing 109.5 acres of federally owned land in 44 states and Puerto Rico. Wilderness areas are administered by four federal agencies, and are chosen from existing federal land designations, under the following criteria: minimal human imprint, opportunities for unconfined recreation, contain at least five thousand acres, and have educational, scientific or historical value. Yavapai County Wilderness Areas fit well under the definition of wilderness under the law. 80 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014 “A wilderness, in contrast to those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor and does not remain.” Caring for wilderness is a formidable task and the agencies have never been staffed nor funded to the optimum level. So once again, as in many concerns, volunteers in this country address the issue. We have a national non-profit dedicated to a cause, using the voices and activism of elders to protect and preserve wilderness and wild lands. The Great Old Broads for Wilderness was created in 1989 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Wilderness Act. Two Great Old Broads for Wilderness, living in Prescott, and venturing into grand challenges many times, are Jenny Lea Cobb and Audrey Mae Wingate. These two dedicated women work as stewards of wild lands in the region. The Yavapai Broadband, of which Cobb and Wingate are co-leaders, follow the national precepts of conservation, education, and proposing wild lands for today and future generations, working not only on trails but also on flora and fauna. The nineteen Yavapai County Wilderness Areas are: Apache Creek, Agua Fria, Arrastra Mountain, Castle Creek, Cedar Bench, Clear Creek, Fossil Springs, Granite Mountain, Hassayampa You Will The James Family Heart Center River Canyon, Hell’s Canyon, Juniper Mesa, Mazatzal, Pine Mountain, Red Rock-Secret Mountain, Sycamore, Tres Alamos, Upper Burro Creek, Wet Beaver and Woodchute. Most recently, Cobb and Wingate have worked in the Cedar Bench Wilderness, on trails, partnering with the Arizona Wilderness Coalition and the United States Forest Service. Their weekends include maintenance of trails, clearing brush and improving access, preparing for removal material from illegal deer blinds in trees, and repairing and building cairns. The two women have also partnered with the forest service in numerous other areas, maintaining wild lands for today and the future. For more information about visit www. Wilderness.net/NWPS/stateview?state=AZ - the site not only lists the wilderness assets in the state but includes maps as well. Forest Service offices in Prescott and Chino Valley also provide extensive maps. World class cardiac care is a heartbeat from home at the James Family Heart Center at YRMC West. Your personal care team includes world-class heart surgeons, highly-trained physicians, clinical practitioners, nurses, therapists and technologists who combine their unique individual talents to get you back on your feet and doing what matters most to you. Our Heart-Healing Environment Features: • ExtensivePatientEducationandConsultation • CardiacCatheterizationLaboratory and Angiography Department • AdultCardiothoracicSurgery • VascularSurgery • InterventionalRadiology Services • CardiopulmonaryServices • AnAdvancedPatient BloodManagementProgram 1003 WilloW Creek road • CardiacRehabilitationand PresCott, arizona 86301 PreventiveMedicine (928)445-2700 www.yrmc.org April/May 2014 • Prescott Woman 81 82 Prescott Woman • April/May 2014