Oakhurst ORACLE April 2015 The Newsletter of the Oakhurst Community Association From the Architectural Review Committee W ith spring finally here, we all have plans to do a project to refresh or improve our property. Don’t forget the mailbox. Winter has been hard on a number of the mailboxes in Oakhurst. The snowplow, snow, and wind have caused many to lean. Make sure your mailbox is upright and in good condition. Remember, it is the first thing people see when driving by your home. It represents your property. Well-kept mailboxes improve the aesthetic look of the neighborhood. If you plan to make some changes to your Oakhurst home like exterior painting, adding a fence, replacing your driveway, changing your garage door style, or replacing your windows with a different style, you first need to consult the Oakhurst Rules & Regulations and Architectural Guidelines. These documents provide rules and requirements for making changes to your property. They also provide guidance on how to obtain approval prior to making them. The Architectural Guidelines provide specific information on changes that require approval and ones that do not. Make sure Modification Requests include all the required information as stated in the Guidelines and on the request forms. Doing so will aid the Architectural Review Committee (ARC) in completing the review and approval process in a timely manner. Most Modification Requests are processed using email or phone communication to clarify details and provide quick approval. Be sure to print your phone number and email address on the request form clearly so it will be legible after the form is faxed. Modification Forms are available on the Oakhurst website listed below. Do not use the Baum Property Management company forms located on their website. They do not contain the required information for Oakhurst. If you have a hardcopy of the Architectural Guidelines or Rules & Regulations, they are most likely outdated, as they have been revised. You should access the latest revision on the Oakhurst website or you can obtain a copy from the Property Manager. Remember, the Architectural INSIDE THIS ISSUE Guidelines have been put in place to protect your property values. If someone new moves into the neighborhood near you, ask if they Board Representatives......................2 are familiar with the modification rules and Architectural Guidelines. If Community Calendar ......................3 not, point them to the Oakhurst website at Help a Homeless Pet ........................5 www.oakhurstcommunity.org or the Property Manager. If you see a Classified Ads ..................................6 neighbor making a change to their property, ask if they submitted a Steck Dinner Night Out..................6 Modification Form requesting approval. If not, let them know that they Oaks Membership ............................6 need to submit the appropriate form in accordance with the regulations No Easy Street ................................7 and guidelines or they may face a fine. Alderman’s Corner ......................13] Keep in mind there is a minimum fine of $100 for modifying your Working Youth Directory..............14 property without the appropriate approvals. Boy Scout Holiday Flag Service ....18 As the neighborhood matures and the economy continues to Orca Swim Team ..........................19 change, maintaining the aesthetic quality of Oakhurst becomes more Swim Lessons ................................19 essential to ensure the highest possible property values. Keep the The Happy Gardener ....................20 exterior look of your home in good condition. Siding and trim often WVHS Car Wash ..........................21 need refreshing and landscaping can easily become overgrown. Cub Scouts Pack 643 ....................21 Everyone should have a vested interest to ensure that all properties What’s Happening Waubonsie ......23 positively affect the value of homes in Oakhurst. If you see property Youth Tennis ................................24 that is not up to your standard, quickly report it to the Property Warrior Summer Camps ..............27 Manager so that corrective actions can be taken. Warriors on the Course ................29 2 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 3 Oakhurst Oracle 2015 HOA Meeting Schedules Oakhurst Community Association meetings in 2015 will be held at the Oaks Clubhouse at 7:00 p.m. on April 28, July 28, September 22 and October 22. Oakhurst residents are welcome to participate. The Autumn Lakes Association meetings in 2015 will take place at the McCoy Street Fire Station at 7:00 p.m. on May 12, September 8 and November 10. Autumn Lake residents are invited to attend. Send articles for submission, non-profit club and group notices, working youth listings and classified ads such as For Sale and Lost & Found to Robin Church at newsletter@oakhurstcommunity.org COMMUNITY CALENDAR April - June 2015 04/10 Cub Scout Pack 643 Round-Up Steck Elementary, 7p 04/17 Free Yard Waste Pick-Up Ends 04/24 Cub Scout Pack 643 April Pack Meeting Steck Elementary, 7p 04/28 Oakhurst Community Association Meeting Oaks Clubhouse, 7p 04/29 Steck Dinner Night Out Event Jets Pizza, 10a-10p See flyer for more information. 05/02 Fischer Fun Run! Info: www.funrun.fischerptsa.org 8a, Mile Run/Walk; 8:30a, 5K Run/Walk 9:35a, Toddler Tumbler; 9:45a, Tween Dash 05/03 Oakhurst ORCA Swim Team Informational Meeting 1-3p, Oaks Rec Clubhouse DEADLINE IS THE 26TH OF EACH MONTH COMMERCIAL ADVERTISERS CONTACT Preferred Business Services, Inc. 630-585-9340 • Fax 630-585-8232 E-mail: fosterpbs@msn.com • pbspublications.com DEADLINE FOR AD COPY IS THE 15TH OF EACH MONTH Publication of paid advertisements in this newsletter are not an endorsement or recommendation of any advertised product or service. The Oakhurst Community Association is neither responsible nor liable for the content of any advertisement published, herein. 05/07- Seussical, the Musical! 05/09 WVHS Auditorium, 7p Ticket info: http://whvs.ipsd.org Special dinner theater, May 9, 5p 05/10 Happy Mother's Day! Libraries closed 05/12 Autumn Lakes Association Meeting McCoy Street Fire Station, 7p 05/24 Libraries closed on Sundays thru Labor Day 05/25 Memorial Day -- No School Libraries closed 06/07 Mid-American Canoe & Kayak Race 8:30a-3:00p, Fox River Call 630-859-8606 for details 06/08 Last Day of School! 06/10 Oakhurst Youth Tennis Program begins Waubonsie Warrior Summer Camps begin See flyers for more information. 06/14 Flag Day! 06/21 Happy Father's Day! First Day of Summer! 4 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle SUTFIN MECHANICAL • Furnaces • Air Conditioning • Water Heaters • Humidifiers • Air Cleaners • Boilers • Heat Pumps • UV Lights • Thermostats • Maintenance Plans Family owned and operated by a Naperville resident. 630-778-6100 Scan or Visit Sutfin Mechanical.com for cost-saving coupons! April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 5 Still LOOKING For A Match! By Robin Church Chandler Chandler is a beautiful, orange tabby kitten with white highlights on his chin and chest! This big, friendly guy is affectionate and confident. He loves to play with string toys, balls, feather toys, bottle caps, and stuffed mice. Chandler loves to buddy up next to his human pals. Phoebe Phoebe is a petite, orange tabby kitten with a curious spirit these days! This sweet little girl enjoys being petted. Once she warms up, she’ll want to stay close and mew for your attention, purring all the while. Her playfulness shines with toys on a string and noisy balls. Both kittens are spayed or neutered, current on vaccinations, dewormed, micro-chipped, FIV/FLV negative and available for adoption today! Email purrsnaperville@yahoo.com, call 630-815-4520, or visit them during store hours at PetSmart Naperville, 3111 111th Street, Naperville, Illinois. Walk-in adoption hours: Saturday and Sunday, 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Help a Homeless Pet! We are in great need of H-E-L-P, especially during the busy kitten season this spring. There are many ways you can become involved to help end the unnecessary killing of homeless pets. Email Judy Walker at tnrjudy@gmail.com or call Robin Church at 630-499-9899. • Volunteer your time! o FOSTERS DESPERATELY NEEDED for healthy/injured cats, nursing moms, kittens o Transport animals to and from PAWS Chicago for veterinarian care o Help at local adoption events • Donate an item on our wish list! o Dry cat food – Purina Cat Chow, Kitten Chow, Royal Canin Kitten o Wet cat food – Friskies pate or shreds – poultry flavors, grain-free brands o Gerber baby food – ham, chicken, turkey o Paper towels, newspapers o Kitty litter, litter boxes, scoops o New electric heating blankets o Towels, blankets, fleece fabric o 36”, 40”, 48” wire dog crates; cat carriers o Cat toys, food bowls o Gift cards: grocery/pet/hardware/fabric stores and gas stations Any donation to Feral Fixers is gratefully received and fully deductible by law as a 501c3 charitable organization. Thank you so much for supporting local animal rescue efforts! 6 Oakhurst Oracle Classified Ads WANTED - Middle school teacher looking for a stay-at-home mom to care for her newborn beginning in November and running through the 2015-2016 school year. If interested, please contact Beth at 630-788-9429. WANTED - Your unwanted coupons located in Sunday papers. Drop off box located at 3066 Anton Circle or call Sheila at 630-397-9377 for pickup. April 2015 FOR SALE Children’s computer furniture. Made is USA by Wild Zoo. Buddy Desk with attached 30.5 inch seat and attached hutch. Fits one or two children. Maple with black trim. Desk: 23”h x 44.5”w x 36”d (includes seat). Hutch 18”h x 44.5”w x 10.5”d. Like-new. Smoke-free home. $200 OBO. Call 630-585-0192. FOR SALE - Oakhurst pool bond. Asking $500; we split the transfer fee. Contact Janine at accesstotravelwheaton@yahoo.com for more information. FOR SALE - All-wood corner computer/TV armoire. Made in USA by Riverside Furniture. Warm oak. Four doors doublehinged to open flush with side of cabinet for convenient access. All drawers dovetail construction. 67”h x 54”w x 23”d. Like-new. Smoke-free home. $1,000 OBO. Call 630-585-0192. FOR SALE - Grey laminate boy’s bedroom includes platform bed with bookcase style headboard, desk with chair and dresser. Excellent condition. Perfect for youth through high school $475. Contact Buddy at 630-851-2428. FOR SALE - Oakhurst pool bond. Call for details at 630-820-3337. FOR SALE - Oakhurst pool bond. All dues are up to date $500. Call Maryanne at 630-269-0747. April 2015 7 Oakhurst Oracle No Easy Street By Ann E. Funck “Keep scanning the fields on both sides for deer,” she told him as usual. “They’re all over and take off across the roads without warning.” Our daughter Alison Lee and her fiancé Shawn were in her new Mazda with him at the wheel. It was Des Moines in November. He should spin his head around like an antsy owl. Suddenly a flying deer smashed against their windshield. Glass shattered through the car, showering Alison. Shawn punched the brakes as they swore and cold-sweated together. The half-grown deer was dead in the road; two adult deer appeared and nuzzled the younger one. It could have been an only deer. As Shawn started the car, Alison dialed the Mazda dealer on her phone to ask for a loaner. That afternoon they snagged a Ford Explorer loaner. The Mazda was repaired, and a month went by without more crippling confusion until Alison was walking her beagle “Penny.” She stopped by her parked Mazda and started it so the car would be warm on her way to work. “When I got out and shut my door, I heard a crash and thought it was a sheet of ice falling off the car,” she said. “During the walk I wondered how shutting the door of a cold car could cause ice to fall off the roof. I went around to the back of the car and saw the rear window shattered and fallen out. O. M. G.” It was as grim as it gets until driving her second loaner car: a Subaru which she hated. Unlike the commercial, “love” didn’t make her Subaru. “I’d researched cars online before I bought, and my Mazda had the highest rating for performance and safety. I didn’t think they made Subarus anymore,” she told me. “This loaner was a deathtrap on wheels. And it was a Limited Edition -- top of the line!” Alison’s co-worker drove a Ford Focus. She struck a deer several weeks after Alison’s killer ride. The bumper was damaged and replaced. This gal’s husband is a backwoods type and took advantage of the free meat and roasted the venison. He also mounted the smashed bumper to a wall in their garage and got the deer’s head stuck on the bumper, redneck-style. “She told the story, droning on and on,” Alison reported, “but I was done with the conversation when Honey Boo Boo got to the road-kill part. I didn’t want to know how the head was hung on the bumper. My IQ level had gone down a couple notches from just listening till then. I knew I’d better get back to work and refresh my brain cells.” The Des Moines suburb where Alison lives and works is halcyon, with areas that welcome wildlife, especially deer that fly sleigh-less. Car bumpers are deer magnets. Our daughter has joined the Deer of the Month Club at work. Every employee whose vehicle is struck by a deer is automatically registered. There’s another t-shirt. The mad-cow disease infestation in deer that we heard about a few years back must have let up -- at least in Iowa. Even the thought of culling the growing herds is illegal. They do know “where have all the flowers gone.” ‘Gone to whitetails every one. In a west Chicago suburb adjoining ours, there’s a lady who encourages the deer to pose in her yard. She serves a “mineral block” ordered online. They gather expectantly for her chopped apples, too. Their progeny has not yet inundated our suburb, giving us endeering stories. Alison was planning to cause a hullabaloo on the road, blaring her car stereo with the windows down. At least she’d give the animals a head’s up, for driving out loud. “But I was lying on the horn and the deer must be deaf; they don’t even look up. They just keep moseyin’ across the road. Sometimes a family of four ambles across and the cars on both sides are stopped.” She sent me a cell photo of a deer next to the street waiting for friends -- or to suddenly hitch a ride on the hood. “I have to calculate the speed of my car and the speed of the oncoming deer. Just last week I thought I saw something out of the corner of my eye and slowed down. Sure enough, a deer dashed in front of my car.” Our 15-year-old grandson Ryan is not looking forward to learning to drive ($340 at his high school) as he faces the prospect of deer run-ins. Our daughter wonders if her insurance will always pay out. “What if they tell me, ‘Three deer incidents and then we’re done’? I need Xanax just to get to work.” So Alison and Shawn now have their necks on swivels. Their restless eyes are always searching for the reckless eyes of deer in the headlights or antlers in the dusk. Fifteen years of Ann's monthly true tales are now in a book titled, A CHEAP SEXY CAR & More Serious Humor. Entertainment for everyone, it is 450 pages and $20 hand-delivered -- or $25 if mailed. For a copy, please email her at rfunck222@msn.com or call 630 820-9896. 8 April 2015 & Associates, CPA’s Accountants & Consultants • Individual and Business taxes • Taxes prepared by experienced CPA’s & EA’s • Tax Planning & Strategy • IRS and State Audit Representation • Competitive and reasonable rates SAVE 20% ON EXTERIOR Oakhurst Oracle When it's a prime time to paint call Preemo! Satisfaction Guaranteed Preemo Painting & Repair is a family operated business that has been serving Chicagoland suburbs for years specializing in cedar siding restorations and custom interior designs. Call now for a fast FREE estimate and receive 20% OFF EXTERIOR and 15% OFF INTERIOR WORK! Must book before May 15th. We offer a wide range of materials and services to cater to your needs. Fully Insured • References Available We pride ourselves in Quality & Excellence! Thank you for your consideration! Anthony Carroso 630.673.9555 Email: preemopainting@sbcglobal.net www.preemopainting.com Featured in Professional PAINTING CONTRACTOR Volume 10, Number 3 Fall 2000 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 9 Thomas Orthodontics Here... There... Everywhere For New and Current Patients! PHOTO CONTEST! Take Dr. Bob / Dr. Robb on vacation with you or take a creative photo with him... You Choose! Post on our FACEBOOK PAGE Thomas Orthodontics Naperville or drop photo off at our office between now through 7/31/15. Most creative / fun picture will win display and a Centennial Beach Gift Card! 3124 S. Rt. 59 • Suite 132 • Naperville, IL 60564 • 630-904-7600 211 W. Chicago Avenue • Suite 111 • Hinsdale, IL 60521 • 630-325-3330 4550 W. 103rd Street • Oak Lawn, IL 60453 • 708-425-1111 10 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 11 12 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle Kingston Builders, Inc. J & J Painting of Naperville, Inc. “A house is an investment that no one wants ruined by a bad paint job.” • Exterior painting and staining • Interior painting • Only top of the line products used • Fully insured • Reference available - “Past jobs speak for themselves!” • Group rates Start scheduling your exterior painting now! “NO ONE will beat our job quality!” CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 630-551-7302 We specialize in all aspects of new construction and remodeling. • • • • Room Additions Kitchens Decks Basements • • • • Bathrooms Interior Trim Exterior Trim Guaranteed Work Call JAY SCHMIDT for a FREE Estimate 630-327-9735 Email: kingstonbuilders@aol.com www.kingstonbuildersinc.com April 2015 13 Oakhurst Oracle r e n r o C Alderman’s Rick Mervine Alderman 8th Ward • www.MyWard8.com • AldermanMervine@aol.com 331-452-5136 FREE Yard Waste & Brush Pickup April 6 April 17, 2015 On your regular garbage pickup day. For two weeks each spring, residents can place yard waste from outdoor spring cleaning in 30 gallon Kraft paper bags and put them at the curb on your regular garbage day. They will be picked up without a sticker these two weeks only. This is also the beginning of the unbundled brush program for the year. Lay cut bushes and tree limbs between ½” – 4” in diameter, no more than 4 feet long with the cut ends toward the curb to be picked up for free through the first week in November. This cannot be contractor generated. Big Changes to Road Construction Sites in April If you weren’t able to make it to the Road Construction Open House in March, here is a brief look at what’s up for road construction in our area this Spring: • New York Street begins construction the end of March with paving of the lanes on the south side to begin about April 8th, weather permitting. We can expect to shift to the new lanes about mid-May. One lane open in each direction. This project completes the fall of this year. • Ogden Ave. Railroad Overpass bypass road construction begins in April with overpass construction following. One lane open in each direction. This project completes in 2016. • Rt. 59 construction continues with the building of the diverging diamond at the tollway interchange. New lane configurations are to be expected. This project completes the end of this year. • The city has been alerted to reconstruction of the railroad crossings at both Ogden Ave. and Montgomery Road this year, but no timetable is available. The city of Aurora engineers are actively lobbying for reduced construction times and to make certain they don’t occur at the same time. They would prefer during the Summer when there is reduced traffic, no school busses. Both crossings are in very bad shape. • Indian Trail bridge over the Fox River closed for reconstruction. This will be complete later this year. • New York Street and Galena Blvd. from Smith Blvd. to Lincoln will be open with reduced lanes during sewer separation work followed by making them both two way traffic. Work to be completed late summer. Paramount Theater Les Miserables is running through April 26th. After the opening weekend, Dean Richards of WGN called it “The must see show of the season.” Incredible sets and superior live orchestra and singing from the star cast. The new Broadway Series of locally produced shows for 20152016 has been announced: • Oklahoma! 9/16/2015 - 10/18/2015 • The Christmas Story 11/25/2015 - 12/27/2015 • Hairspray 1/20/2016 - 2/21/2016 • West Side Story 3/16/2016 - 4/17/2016 New Garbage Plan Rollout Begins April is the start of the conversion process to the new Refuse/Recycle plan. The week of April 6th, residents can expect mailed communications from Republic, the refuse/recycling hauler. These will include information about your options with the new program and how to make and communicate your selections. Residents will have 5 weeks to make their cart selection until May 15th. During this time, examples of the different size carts will be available locally for inspection at the Customer Service Center at Fire Station 8 and the Eola Library. A more complete education program to help with the selection and how the program works will be available by then both on the City’s web site and www.myWard 8.com. Full rollout will take up to 90 days starting July 1st. We can expect to receive our carts near the end of Summer based on the preliminary schedule I saw today. More as this rolls out. Winter Plow Damage Since it snowed again toward the end of March, there is still plow damage. If your parkway was damaged, either grass or concrete, please call Customer Service at 630-256-INFO (4636) and report it so crews can compile the lists they need to repair them this Spring. Most of that work will be done in April and May after the dirt fields open so make your report as soon as possible. You can also report this 24/7 at www.Aurora-IL.org, click on Customer Service. Kids are out playing now that the weather is better! Drive safely! Look up, focus on the road and Keep Them Alive, DRIVE 25! Remember, 20 MPH in the SCHOOL ZONE when children are present! It is my honor to serve our 8th Ward, Rick Mervine, 8th Ward Alderman AldermanMervine@aol.com (331) 452-5136 Customer Service Line: (630) 256-INFO (4636) (M – F, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.) 14 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle WORKING YOUTH DIRECTORY NAME ABINGTON WOODS Kevin Lubinski Nicholas Rodriguez ASHBROOK Friday Gervais Tori Hall Lucy Liu Achint Nagasamudra Alex Tabb Sonja Tabb Juliana Yaacoub AUTUMN MEADOWS Nikki Ellam Alexia Lyons Natalie Lyons Zachary Lyons BRECKENRIDGE Tara Dillinger Carla Dillinger Christian Freitag Natalie Freitag Andrew Kallas Bridget Lachat Richard Poterack Ally Reilly CARRIAGE ESTATES Madeline Butler Adam Krusic Jessica Groves Kim Groves HUNTERS GLEN Chelsea Dean INVERNESS Caroline Church Natalie Church Alexis Gottschalk Madison Herman Shelby Herr Lincoln Houghton Quincy Houghton Morgan Kemerling Casey Kemerling Jordan Masiak Remington Rook Katie Rumrey PHONE SERVICE 630-770-2254 630-820-6368 B,MH,P,Y,O,V B, T 630-820-3329 630-898-9295 630-851-1218 630-978-1781 630-978-1571 630-978-1571 815-341-1784 B,MH,P,V B,P,MH,V B,P,MH,V,T B,P,Y,O,V Y,O B-RC,MH B,P,V 630-851-9029 630-898-6160 630-898-6160 630-898-6160 B,P,MH,O,V B-RC,P,V B-RC,P,V B,Y,P,O 630-236-6320 630-236-6320 630-499-1839 630-499-1839 630-820-8790 630-236-7920 630-585-0384 630-585-5111 B-RC,P,V B,P,MH,V B,P,Y,O,V P,V P,V B,MH,P B,P,MH,O,V B,MH,P,O,V 630-373-5232 630-499-5431 630-851-8326 630-851-8326 B-RC,MH,P,V Y,P MH,V B,MH 630-962-9708 B,Y,MH,V 630-499-9899 630-499-9899 630-851-5169 630-585-6855 630-978-1060 630-715-0098 630-820-1971 630-499-0437 630-499-0437 630-236-6434 630-585-6788 630-898-1236 B-RC,P,Y,O,V P P,MH,O,V B,P,MH,O,V B,P B-RC,Y,P,O,V,SR MH,P B,Y,P,MH,O,V Y,P,O,V B,Y,P,MH,O,V B,P,MH,O B,MH NAME INVERNESS Jennifer Vickers Allison Vickers Emily Vickers Lauren Vivian Amy Walsh Abe Weisler Sam Weisler Jonah Weisler MAYFAIR Sarah Anas Bre Bush Katie Caputo Kayla Cordes Kendra Diehl Audra Diehl Julianna Ehrich Emily Flori Lucas Flori Scott Hoglund Amy Lenenfeld Kaitlyn Manion Hanna McIntosh Schuyler Staub Anna Supel Ginna White STANFIELD Julia Beer Nicholas Brunelle Natale Brunelle SUMMERFIELD Cara Bishop Hannah Buckner Alesia Degand Ashley Murray Tara Perillo Audria Wagenknecht Ellen Wagenknecht Taylor Westwood THE TOWNES Michael Cree THE WOODS Taylor Kolb Haley Valente PHONE SERVICE 630-820-5443 630-820-5443 630-820-5443 630-851-9179 630-820-1255 630-236-7522 630-236-7522 630-236-7522 B,MH MH,V,P P,O,V B,P B,MH B,RC,P,Y,O,V B,RC,P,Y B,RC,P,Y,V 630-692-0538 630-292-8859 630-699-5209 630-978-4641 630-229-0165 630-229-0165 630-585-0015 630-898-4505 630-898-4505 630-236-6242 630-236-9070 630-499-7428 630-820-2959 630-820-3661 630-375-1023 630-692-1862 B,P,MH B,P,MH,O,V,T B,P,MH,V B,MH,P,O,V B,P,MH,V B,P,MH,V MH,P,V,SR B,P Y,P,O P,Y,O,V B-RC,B,MH,P,Y,O,V,T B-RC,MH,P,V B,MH B,P,O B-RC, MH,P B-RC,MH,P,YO,V 630-585-2206 630-499-0581 630-499-0581 B,P,Y,O,V MH,O,P,Y,V,SR,T B,MH,O,P,Y,V,SR,T 630-978-1404 630-585-6312 630-236-8767 630-375-9101 630-615-0045 630-499-5837 630-499-5837 630-851-5067 B,RC,MH,P,V,T B,MH,P B,P,MH,V B,P,V B,Y,P,MH,V B,Y,P,MH,O,V B,Y,P,MH,O,V B-RC,MH,V 309-275-9656 B,MH,P,Y,O,V,S,R,T 630-585-5164 630-375-9473 B,MH,O,V P,Y,MH Notify newsletter@oakhurstcommunity.org to ADD, CHANGE, or DELETE a Working Youth Listing. The Working Youth Directory is a service for youth, ages 12 and above, living in the Oakhurst community. Parents: If you wish your child to be listed in this directory, please email newsletter@oakhurstcommunity.org. Include your child's name, address, neighborhood within Oakhurst, home phone number of a parent who will be responsible for fielding requests, and the service(s) you permit your child to provide. Be sure to talk with your child about personal safety before listing in this directory. Each monthly issue of the Oracle is posted online to the community association's website, www.oakhurstcommunity.org. B-RC: Red-Cross Certified Babysitter, B: Babysitter, MH: Mother's Helper, P: Pet Sitter, Y: Yard Help, O: Odd Jobs, V: Vacation Watch, SR: Snow Removal, T: Tutoring April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 15 16 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 17 18 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 19 20 Oakhurst Oracle the happy gardener April 2015 Article Source: Becca Massat The Growing Place make a difference with a garden Getting Started in the Garden This Spring pring is on its way (we hope) and with it, fresh green growth from the garden. We’ve compiled a few helpful tips and reminders to get you started or back into the swing of things. We know how long winter can seem so take time now for a little refresher course. S What is the difference between annuals, perennials, shrubs and trees? Annuals - These plants grow only one year and will not survive our winters. They can produce lots of flowers and depending on the type, may require regular fertilizing. Perennials - These plants come back each year, but may die back to the ground over the winter. Usually, perennials have a shorter season of bloom. When you’re picking out plants try to plant a variety of perennials that bloom at different times to give you a rich display throughout the season. Shrubs - These are plants with a woody stem that come back year after year and are generally not cut down to the ground. Some shrubs stay small and some can grow to the size of small trees. Usually, shrubs have several stems at the base. They also have a single season of blossom. Trees - These are single or multi-stemmed woody plants that are quite large and live a long time. Trees can grow anywhere from about ten feet high to more than seventy! Trees can have flowers and some have fruit. How much sun do I have? Spend some time observing your yard to see how much light each area gets. This is important to know in order to make sure you are placing plants in the right spot. When shopping at your local garden center, each plant should have a tag that will tell you what kind of light the plant prefers. Full Sun - This means six hours or more of sun anytime during the day, usually found on the south and west sides of buildings unless shaded by structures or trees Part Shade - Lightly filtered sun or three to five hours of morning and/or late afternoon sun, usually found on the east side of buildings and under the light shade of trees Full Shade - Less than three hours of sun anytime during the day, usually found on the north side of homes, between buildings or under trees with heavy shade. When do I plant? Each plant has its own requirements, so read the tag and ask garden center staff for advice. April is a great time to plant trees, shrubs, most perennials as well as cool season annuals and vegetables while soil is nice and moist. Plus, you have many months for roots to get established. Some annuals and vegetables, especially tomatoes, prefer warm soil to grow, so wait until midMay to plant them. You can plant all summer long, as long as you water carefully. Fall planting can also be ideal as warm soil and cool air are perfect for root growth. What about my soil? Before you get the shovel out, check the moisture of your soil. Squeeze a handful of soil. If it clumps into a solid mass it is too wet. If it crumbles, it’s ready to be worked. When you dig in wet soil, it can compact so that the air and water spaces are squeezed out. This means roots struggle to grow. If you have heavy clay soil, you may want to mix in compost to loosen the soil and add micronutrients. April 2015 21 Oakhurst Oracle Wash that Winter Grime Off Your Car! Nascar car wash is offering $2 off any $10 car wash and will also give the WV PTA $3 at the same time. It's a great way to get your car clean, save some money and give back to the WV PTA! Download your copy at http://ncw.uni2mobi.com/waubonsie-valleyhigh-school-pta You must have printed the code to receive the discount. The scanners will not be able to read the code from a cell phone. There is no limit to the number of times you can use the code. Share the link with friends and family. Promotion expires 8/31/15. Thanks for supporting the WV PTA! Valid on any Nascar car wash of $10 or more. Cub Scouts PACK 643 Invites you to join us for our: Fall Round Up Steck School April 10th • 7:00 p.m. April Pack Meeting Steck School April 24 • 7:00 p.m. Stop by and see what we are about! Dens now forming for Spring/Fall 2015. For information please contact: Ralph Nabicht 630-978-7188 Ralph.Nabicht@linium.com or Christopher M. Lunardini clunardini@momlaw.com 22 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle Comprehensive Pain Management for Patients Pain is very personal. No patient has exactly the same experience. Your pain may be the result of an injury, stress, disease, age or another medical condition. As such, no single treatment will adequately resolve every need. That’s why Valley Pain Care Centers offers a broad range of pain management services. Whether you need help targeting specific symptoms or you want a more holistic and functional medicine approach, our experienced team of practitioners can help. Conditions & Treatments Gregory Arnold, M.D. Director of Valley Pain Care Centers With our comprehensive services, we provide care for a variety of conditions, including: • • • • • • • • • Herniated or ruptured discs Pain in the arms and legs Back pain Muscle pain Lingering post-operative pain Nerve or neuropathic pain Cancer pain Shingles Reflex sympathetic dystrophy or complex regional pain syndrome • Failed back syndrome • Vertebral compression fractures • Osteoporosis To treat pain, we create plans that combine conventional techniques with: • Interventional pain management with precision injections • Functional medicine • Pain injections with the option of having sedation with an anesthesia provider Turner Pain & Wellness 1222 North Eola Rd. Aurora, IL 60502 630-499-8804 Jeremiah Loch, CRNA, PhD Vincent Tello, M.D. Through our holistic and functional medicine approach, we want to help patients: • Improve overall health and well-being • Understand how manual medicine, homeopathy, and botanicals can be used alongside conventional medical techniques and practices • Prevent future pain by targeting the causes of their pain • Create a personalized therapeutic approach to care Kiswaukee Community Hospital One Kish Hospital Dr. DeKalb, IL 60115 www.kishhospital.org 815-748-2987 St. Margaret’s Hospital 600 E. First Street Spring Valley, IL 61362 815-664-PAIN (7246) Valley West Community Hospital 11 East Pleasant Ave. Sandwich, IL 60548 www.valleywest.org 815-786-8484 www.valleypaincarecenters.com What’s Happening Waubonsie April 2015 23 Oakhurst Oracle PTA Fundraiser at White Eagle Golf Club Nets Over $20,000 Report by Nancy Springs ou know the signs that pop up every spring throughout the neighborhood displaying the name and graduation year of the resident senior in that house? Did you know that the PTA is responsible for every one of those signs? In order to help pay for items such as these, as well as many other programs the PTA helps support, the Waubonsie Valley PTA held their annual fundraising event on Friday, March 6th at the White Eagle Golf Club. The theme was March Madness. It was an evening filled with a lot of music and food, as well as an incredible number of items on offer for auction. Thanks to the hard work of the chairs, Cara Genzer, Teri Storin, Cindy Krug and co-presidents Janine McDonough and Jill York, the auction was a successful event. Over 120 people were in attendance and they were able to raise over $20,000. There was a silent auction, which this year offered online bidding so you could view and bid on items prior to the event as well as a selfie photo booth and an interactive brackets board which was a big hit. Their goal of having auction items of interest to everyone was fulfilled, with items of all types ranging from Chicago sports memorabilia to Disney hopper passes and Kane County Cougar tickets. There were baskets donated from various departments of the school which Y included tickets to Prism, the spring musical and Waubonsie sports camps in the summer. Lunch with Mr. Stipp was a very popular item as was a Waubonsie quilt which was handmade by Mrs. Thanepohn from donated shirts from the Waubonsie Valley Pep Club and Boosters. These two items alone brought in over $1,200. Billy White was the effervescent emcee and kept things lively throughout the evening. The monies raised go to a lot of other programs as well, such as $5,000 in senior scholarships and staff grants for classroom equipment, to building improvement projects and Waubonsie’s staff appreciation lunch. Recently, the PTA purchased an electric violin and handheld recorders for the music department and laptops for the College and Career Center. They are also involved in helping various events throughout the year like One Book One School and Senior Sailabration. We’re very lucky to have such an involved PTA that provides all the above mentioned things for our students. The fact that our kids have access to so many varied events and programs is due in large part to the fact that the PTA is taking such a proactive role in seeing to it that these things are available. Being involved in organizations like these is paramount to our school continuing to be successful, so the communities’ participation is a necessity. And, what better way to get involved then spend a night with friends at an event like this? 24 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 25 26 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 27 28 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 Come join us for a free trial day from 9am - 12pm! April 2015 29 Oakhurst Oracle Save the Date! Monday, June 8, 2015 Warriors on the Course The Waubonsie Valley High School Booster Club cordially invites you and a friend to attend the annual golf outing fundraiser! Back by Popular Demand No time to golf? Enjoy our Wine Tasting / Shop and Sip Event at White Eagle Club Sponsored by Glam & Glitz Wine Tasting at 4:00 p.m. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Dinner & Wine Tasting $75 per ticket Dinner Only $50 ALL INCLUSIVE PRICING for lunch, golf, White Eagle Country Club Registration begins at 11:30 a.m. Shot Gun Start at 1:00 p.m. Ready to register or become a sponsor? Sign up online at golfinvite.com/wvhs beverages on course, awards and dinner. Warrior Boosters $160 • Faculty & Staff $75 Register online at www.golfinvite.com/wvhs Need more information? Contact Billy White at wbillywhite@aol.com Hit the Putt of a Lifetime for $5,000! 30 Oakhurst Oracle April 2015 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle 31 32 April 2015 Oakhurst Oracle "Spring is a great time to buy or sell!” Contact me today for a Free Market Analysis. lÉâÜ bt~{âÜáà ax|z{uÉÜ |Ç extÄ Xáàtàx4 Michelle Perillo 630-615-0045 michelleperillo1@gmail.com RE/MAX Professionals Select 2272 95th Street Naperville, IL 60564 Follow this link to view Oakhurst properties www.michelleperillo.realtor/oakhurst Oakhurst Community Association P.O. Box 46 Aurora, IL 60507-0046 PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Fox Valley, IL 60599 Permit No. 386 TIME VALUE MAIL ~ DO NOT DELAY Printed by Alphagraphics • 1585 Beverly Court, Ste. 125 • Aurora, IL 60502 • 630.820.2200 • www.aurora.alphagraphics.com To advertise in this newsletter go to www.pbspublications.com. It’s affordable and it works!
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