Colony Barn Renovation Complete!


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Contributed by Mark Austin

After many decades of dreaming, years of planning and fundraising, and an incredible summer of building the Colony Barn at the Musk Ox Farm is ready to open its doors to the public.  In 1986 the project moved onto the property that had originally been the Lentz family farm, just outside of Palmer.  The Musk Ox Farm occupied the lower level of the original Colony barn where visitors have been welcomed to the property ever since. 

The hayloft above remained inaccessible, uninsulated, and partially exposed to the elements.  The dream was to create warm, dry, year-round workshop, studio, and classroom space; what has been created is so much more.   The gambrel roof was carefully removed from the old structure and set in the parking lot to be brought back into plumb and square after eight-and-a-half decades of wind, earthquakes, and frost heaving.  The building below had begun to show its age.  The original log structure was deteriorating and the unreinforced concrete foundation that it had been moved onto at some point in its history was cracked and failing. 

The plans were to raze the space below to make way for an efficient 21st century building while planning for the old gambrel roof to resume its perch back on top.  The new visitor reception, gift shop, and museum are a stunning sight to see.  The space is open and airy, and welcomes visitors to spend some time exploring.  The farm offices have moved inside this building as well where heating with wood will no longer be required-a huge leap forward in professional capacity.  The crown jewel of the project remains the original hayloft of the Colony barn.  Walking up the stairs or taking the silo ensconced elevator brings the visitor into this historic gem.  Entering the hayloft is like walking back eighty-five years.  The gorgeous old-growth Douglas fir trusses and ceilings are truly awe inspiring. 

There are modern touches in the lighting, the siding on the pony wall, and the flooring, but the original beauty is absolutely captivating.  Filtered light from the original barn wood walls enters the space through a full-length glass curtain wall, allowing the occupants to enjoy from the comfort inside.  Step out onto the large deck and take in the beautiful pastures dotted with musk oxen stretching to the tree line with the majestic Chugach mountains framing the incredible view to the south.

On Friday November 22, the Musk Ox Farm will welcome the community for the first public peek at this incredible addition to the Mat Su valley.  From 1pm until 7pm the doors will be open for all to come see.  There will be a formal ribbon-cutting at 3pm with some brief words to commemorate the new old Colony barn.



Stepping Up With Strings


Contributed by Kim Levesque, Mat Su Youth Orchestra

The Mat Su Youth Orchestra (MSYO) began at a time when there were few opportunities for developing musicians in the Valley to play in a community string orchestra. In 2010, conductor and music teacher, Kai West, had a vision to support music education in the community by providing a large-group setting in the form of a string orchestra where developing musicians can learn performance skills, build confidence, and perform with their peers in public venues. With the support and guidance of The Mat Su Orchestra, private instructor Debbie Davis, and accomplished strings musician, Judy Montalbano, the small community group was formed. 

The group has grown significantly over the years by word of mouth, adding music teacher Melanie Keenan, and a dedicated group of adult volunteers who strive to provide a quality program for string musicians who can read and play music at an early-intermediate to intermediate level. In January 2019, the group formally organized as a non-profit organization, and has submitted an application for tax-exempt status. This step will allow MSYO to expand the program, whose professionals work on a volunteer-only basis, to accommodate more musicians and accept public support. 

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MSYO musicians play violin, viola, cello and double bass; the orchestra also welcomes percussion and piano. The group has a great time exploring music by playing selections from many different genres, such as classical, jazz, Celtic, bluegrass, zydeco, pop, rock, Broadway musicals, folk, blues, Latin and spiritual; they are always looking for new musical scores to challenge developing musicians. Rehearsals provide opportunities to learn technical skills, and play cooperatively with other musicians to improve musicality with support from highly qualified music instructors and accomplished musicians. Musicians from throughout the community are invited to participate in the orchestra, which has a diverse group of members who love to have fun and play great music together.   

The Mat Su Youth Orchestra also welcomes opportunities to perform. They host two concerts a year, one for the holidays and another in the spring. Both concerts this year will be at the Valley Performing Arts, but you may also see MSYO at scheduled community events and festivals.  This year, the MSYO will be performing on December 14th at 3:00pm for the Nativity Display during Colony Christmas in Palmer. The location is available in the Colony Christmas schedule of events.

You will see members of the orchestra in school music activities, Valley Performing Arts productions, college orchestras, and the Mat Su Orchestra who plays at a more advanced level.  Our community has grown, and is now blessed with many opportunities for people to participate in quality theater, band, orchestra and other fine arts programs.

MSYO makes every effort to adjust their calendar to avoid conflicts with other musical groups and performances so our members may participate in a variety of arts activities. The Mat Su Youth Orchestra believes participating in as many musical opportunities as possible helps musicians grow in skill and confidence whether going on to perform professionally, on a community level, or for their own pleasure as a lifelong musician.

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For musicians wishing to play in the Mat Su Youth Orchestra, there will be a brief winter break after the Holiday concert in December. The MSYO 2019/2020 season will resume in January with new music in preparation for a spring performance. Rehearsals are held currently in Wasilla, Alaska on Thursday evenings.

A new website is under construction and will be launched by the end of the year to provide information about the group and its schedule. In the meantime, interested musicians may call (907) 373-6763 or email thewest@mtaonline.net with inquiries about the program.   

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Prophetic Art Show at Humdingers Pizza


Contributed by Martha Happs

 Prophetic Art Show

11/5/2019 - 1/7/2020

Humdingers Pizza

173 S Valley Way, Palmer

FREE Admission

Prophetic art is a personal revelation from the Holy Spirit expressed through

the artist’s skill level, co-laboring with the Holy Spirit to produce a work of

art. 

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Showing their "prophetic art" at Humdingers is Brenda Jaeger of Anchorage, Karen

Crandall of Big Lake and Martha Happs of Palmer.

Jaeger said, "Martha Happs invited me to participate in the first Prophetic Art

Show at Humdingers last year. I decided to meditate and ask for a painting to

come to me. I had a dream  of a large eye that had fiery red and yellow petals

around the center pupil. The center of the eye was alive, very deep and black,

going into space. This black eye shone and when I painted it a planet appeared

in the pupil on a golden orbit. Everything in my dream whirled around the shiny

vibrant center.  From this first painting "Cosmic Eye", a series was born. My

second painting at Humdingers is "Blue Sky" which came from a dream of expansion

and opening up." 

Crandall said her prophetic art work is an expression of her heart motivated by

the Love of Jesus. Layered collogues invoke a feeling of Gods love wrapping

around us and our hearts. 

Happs studied last winter with Matt Tommy and his Thriving Christian Artists

group. The group and study showed and talked about what was possible when you

listened to the Holy Spirit, co-laboring with the Holy Spirit and skilled at

your art form. Then "through us" we can bring the "Light"  into the world

through our prophetic art.

Jaeger is currently showing at Georgia Blue Galley, Anchorage and through Randy

Parsons Guitars, Ventura, California. Her work is in permanent collections such

as the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center, Dean Witter Reynolds, Standard Oil

and others.

Crandall is currently showing her work at Girdwood Center for the Visual Arts

(Art Gallery) in Girdwood.   

Happs is currently showing her original 2 1/2" x 2 1/2" mini paintings at Palmer

Museum of History and Art and also at the Willow Creek Studio in Willow.

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4th Annual Peace & Love Community Christmas Celebration & Potluck


Contributed by Lhing McNeal

12/8/2019 - 5PM

Kabayan Inc. Filipino-American Community of Mat-Su

Raven Hall, Alaska State Fairgrounds

2075 Glenn Hwy. Palmer

Tickets: $10 Early Bird, $15 @Door

 How would you like to experience the Philippines right here in theMat-Su? You don’t have to travel so far to have a glimpse of our culture.

Join us for our 4rth Annual Community Christmas Celebration. It’s an event for the whole family. This year, we will be covering different traditional dress from three regions of the Philippines, Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao and see why each region have its own unique costumes to represent. We will also have cultural dances from Alaska Federation of Filipino Americans group base from Anchorage and a dance presentation from our little ones.

Experience not just the culture, but also the food. As we Filipinos gather around food and that is why it’s a potluck, we are sharing ours and your special kind of cooking to the community. Filipinos here in the Valley came from different parts of the Philippines and every one has its own unique delicacies, so prepare your taste buds. This gathering is not complete without our traditional lumpia, pansit and roasted pig lavished with lemongrass and different spices. You better come hungry.

This event will also be a platform of our fundraising drive, Kabayan Cares Scholarship Program. We will be drawing the winner of our fundraising gun raffle on this event. The purpose of this scholarship is to help and provide one-time educational assistance for currently-enrolled high school seniors in the Wasilla and Palmer area.

All ticket purchased will be eligible for giveaways prizes drawing. Santa will be at the event. He will handout a goodie bag for children, ages 10 and under, so make sure you send us an email to register to have enough for everyone. Every parent will have an option to bring a gift for their children for Santa to give.

Come and join us and experience Philippines! Mabuhay!

This event is sponsored by: Mat-Su Health Foundation, Alaska Professional Construction, Viking Mechanical, The People’s Paper & Make A Scene Magazine, Valley Radio Q99.7, 95.5 The Pass KNLT-FM, Alaska Federation of Filipino Americans, MEA (Matanuska Electric Association) and Diversified Tires.

To register kids, please email kabayan.inc.matsu@gmail.com. Follow us on Facebook for updates. For ticket information, text or call, 907-232-2151 or 907-707-7696.



More Than A Meal


Contributed by Matthew Sheets

Giving from the Heart Thanksgiving Dinner

11/28/2019 - 11AM

Frontline Mission

Menard Sports Center

1001 S Clapp St. Wasilla

FREE Event

“If we didn’t have Frontline Mission, we wouldn’t be in a good place,” said Sarah, a young mother and patron at Frontline Mission, as she shared about her family a month before the annual “Giving from the Heart Thanksgiving Dinner”. *continue reading to see Sarah’s story*

Each year, Frontline Mission holds a Thanksgiving Day dinner for anyone in the Mat-Su Valley. Many may be home alone this Thanksgiving or unable to afford a Thanksgiving meal for their family. Frontline strives to strengthen the Mat-Su Valley by being a connecting place between the less fortunate and compassionate.

Frontline Mission’s Giving from the Heart Thanksgiving Dinner does just that! In 2018 Frontline Mission served almost 1,600 meals at the Menard Center in Wasilla on Thanksgiving Day, and is expecting even more to benefit from this meal in 2019. This year’s dinner will be from 11am-2pm on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday November 28th.

Through the Thanksgiving Dinner, Frontline is providing not only an opportunity for anyone in the community to have a place to go and spend time with others, but Frontline is also opening the door for people to come together as family and friends to volunteer and serve others. Having put this special dinner on for several years, Frontline has seen many volunteering families adopt this as a Thanksgiving Day Family Tradition. What better way to give back to the community than as a family providing a hot meal and serving others. More than 300 volunteers help make this event possible for our community. 

Frontline Mission meets the needs of those in the community not only through events like the Thanksgiving Dinner, but in the day to day operations at Frontline. Every week, Frontline provides hot meals, showers, laundry, free clothing, opportunities for online job search, breakfast bags for children and food boxes for families. It is through the compassionate in the community that Frontline is able to do what they do, as they do not receive any state or federal funding. Businesses, foundations and local individuals give to Frontline Mission every month and by so doing make a lasting impact in the community.

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Here is part of Sarah’s story:

John and Sarah, along with their little boy, Johnny, moved to Alaska from California just over a year ago to settle down on some land in a remote part of Alaska. Having only two suitcases and the clothes on their backs when they moved, they quickly fell on hard times. With no home on the property, John and Sarah were forced to seek a place to live until they were able to establish enough resources to build a small home on their land. Having limited clothing and resources, they heard about Frontline Mission from a friend in the community. They have been helped by the free clothes and hot meals that Frontline serves every week. It was especially important for   Johnny to get the nourishment and clothes he needed to develop as a healthy child. Sarah shared, “If we didn’t have Frontline Mission, we wouldn’t be in a good place.” Sarah spoke of the warm, friendly volunteers who graciously serve and make them feel welcomed at Frontline. When the family no longer needs some of the clothes they have received from Frontline, they look to give back in whatever way they can to help others who may find themselves in a similar situation. 

After some time, Sarah’s mom began to suffer from failing health and had no option but to move in with John and Sarah so they could help support her. John and Sarah express the value and importance of caring for family and the elderly in our community. John shared that Sarah’s mom has been able to get her needs provided for because of the services Frontline provides. Your support also helps provide services year round.

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If you want to know how you can support Frontline Mission, call 357-8600 or send an email at helpfrontlinemission.com.



Artist Tony Hepinstall's Flies


Contributed by Charice Chambers

Tony Hepinstall loves to fish. Mention anything related to the sport, and his eyes glaze over: He’s out casting his lucky cotton candy fly and bringing in the catch.. He loves to bank fly-fish along Alaska’s rivers, and it is with some pride that he admits catching a lot of fish this year: pike, trout and, of course, salmon. Ice fishing keeps him busy in the winter. His frigid forays onto Alaska’s frozen lakes have netted him several rainbow trout of over 14 inches in length.

Hepinstall credits his love of fishing to his grandfather. His best childhood memories include fly-fishing along the banks of wild mountain streams, dropping a line from a boat on a placid lake, and lots of instruction from Grandpa. According to both Hepinstall and his grandfather, the key to successful fishing is using the right fly to entice the fish to bite.

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Life hasn’t always been easy for Heminstall, who came to Alaska as a child with his mom and stepdad. During his teen years, Hepinstall lost his way and fell in with a bad crowd. He eventually realized that he needed a change and moved to the Valley. After some bumps in the road and some counseling, he found Wolverine Academy where with the help of others, he has turned his life around. The academy targets young adults and individuals with disabilities by providing them with support, guidance, housing and job assistance.

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Over the years, Hepinstall had many menial jobs, which he found unrewarding. With the guidance of the staff at Wolverine Academy, he decided to turn his greatest love into a business: fly tying! He took classes in Anchorage and honed his skills with the help of friend and mentor ,Mike Hudson. Hudson realized that Hepinstall had a great eye for color and design and taught him to build fly rods as well.

For the last year, Hepinstall has worked with Wolverine Academy support specialist, John Gould, to develop his company, Tony’s Flies. Their collaboration is a perfect fit as Gould operates his own small business as well. He is able to give Hepinstall not only guidance, but real world advice on what works and what might not succeed. Gould works with him on displaying his products as well as marketing aspects of promoting them. The two have a great relationship and Gould fondly refers to Hepinstall as the “cotton candy man”.

Hepinstall not only produces an exciting line of flies, but has expanded into fly-tied earrings as well. His designs are unique and delicate with an Alaskan flair.  He not only uses bright colors, but also produces many intricate designs using natural and neutral hues.

Today, Hepinstall is goal-oriented. He plans to get his own place and live independently, getting married in the future. He hopes to use his business and the lessons he has learned as a method to attain those goals.

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Hepinstall’s unique feather earrings, and oh-so-lucky fishing flies can be found at the Senior Center Gift Shop. For your holiday shopping convenience, hours have been extended from 10am to 4pm, Monday through Friday until Christmas.

Located at 1132 South Chugach Street in Palmer across from Palmer Junior Middle School, the gift shop is open to both seniors and the public.