Foothills Sentry April 2021

Foothills Sentry Page 6 April 2021 Learn more at eocwd.com Come visit us at our showroom 3024 East Chapman Avenue Orange, CA 92869 QUALITY BILLIARD PRODUCTS. EXPERT POOL TABLE SERVICE. Tuesday - Friday: 10 AM - 4 PM Saturday: 10 AM - 3 PM (714) 620-4001 Call/Text dkbilliards.com david@pooltableguru.com Appointments Available: In-store purchases on Billiard supplies Must mention coupon for discount. Expires 04-30-21 10% OFF 3 point pool table inspection with a scheduled Refelt service Must mention coupon for discount. Expires 04-30-21 FREE The Tustin Area Woman’s Club high school honorees of the month are Kristen Bold, Lauren Carlen-Jones and Beatriz Suentes Martinez. Kristen Bold, from Foothill High School, is majoring in pub- lic health or ethics, with biology. She aspires to be a surgeon, and has applied to over 15 colleges. Kristen is the president of the National Honor Society, holds a GPA greater than 4.5, and is heavily involved in community service. Lauren Carlen-Jones, a senior at Tustin High School, is ma- joring in communications. She has been involved in the Model United Nations Program for four years, and has traveled to Prague and Vienna for conferences. Lau- ren is a member of the National Honor Society and explores glob- al cultures though the THS Alli- ance Club. She is a member of the Tustin Dance Team, and has been in- volved with the Thistle Academy of Irish Dancers for over 10 years. Beatriz Suentes Martinez, from Beckman High School, is pas- sionate about her activities with Colorguard, an endeavor that in- volves skillful handling of flags, sabers and rifles. She enjoys being part of a team, meeting new people and is always available to help others talk through education or person- al issues. Her goal is to find a job she enjoys and help out her father, whose hard work, she says, has taken care of her family. TAWC announces Young Women of the Month Santiago Oaks Park hosted a “Safe Trails” day, Feb. 27, to promote good trail etiquette, answer questions and hand out promotional material. The canopy set up at the intersection of the Oak, Bumblebee and Grass- hopper Trails drew equestrians, hikers and mountain bikers. Photo courtesy OC Parks Cowboy Easter is back Cowboy Church will be resur- rected from the ashes of COV- ID-19 to reappear on Easter Sun- day, April 4, at 7 a.m. at the OPA horse arena. Hosted by longtime OPA resi- dent Cowboy Preacher Larry Day, the Easter sunrise service will feature music and song by Stacey Maxwell and her Bluegrass Musi- cian Friends, cowboy poems and exhortations, free cowboy Bibles, coffee and donuts. This cowboy service is held just once a year, but was can- celled last year due to coronavirus restrictions. Bring a chair, your dog, and your loved ones. Cow- boy Larry will also do live dem- onstrations with his favorite hors- es, Merlin the Buckskin, Pearl the Palomino Princess, and Jules the Red Head, blaze-faced, champion cow chaser. Kristen Bold Lauren Carlen-Jones Beatriz Suentes Martinez The beginning of spring signals a new start, a new beginning with new, endless opportunities. It has always been a signal to begin preparations for the new season. I prepare my garden boxes for spring planting, yet again, purg- ing them of the palm roots that seem hell bent on living in my cabbage patch. Every season is a repeat of my “battle of the palm roots,” invading the well- turned, nutrient-filled soil made special for the vegetable garden. Palm roots, the omnipresent “Wi- Fi” of my soil, occupying every nook and cranny except for the biobarrier-lined boxes, the “dead zones” spared of their reach. Or were they? Catching the corner of my eye, was it a root? Incredulously, the roots had defied gravity, grow- ing vertically and plunging into the soft, inviting soil. No mat- ter how much I did to compact the soil around the boxes to dis- courage the roots from invading, they were there. Roots are lazy, but they are also stubborn. They prefer the paths of less resistance, but upon encountering a barrier will rally all their will and fight to overcome it, so that they can car- ry on. Sometimes the only way to stop it is by triggering signals of the physiological biology at the meristematic root tip (wherein all cells can divide repeatedly and from which all primary root tis- sues are derived.) Reminds me of a friend from high school. Have you ever tried to help someone because you want what’s best for them? Or what you think is best for them? Only to have it backfire? These roots are no different. You can give them everything they need, but if they are set on their path it can be a battle for the ages. Thank you for joining me on my garden box rumination. My plan? Alter the meristematic root tips of my palms and leave my friend’s meristematic stem alone. Spring is in the air!

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy ODIzODM4