Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, November 18, 2015, Page A6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A6
Business
wallowa.com
November 18, 2015
Wallowa County Chieftain
Exhale Day Spa ready A Hot Time
to primp and pamper in the Olde
Additional weekend employees possible in the future Town this
week(end)
The spa also offers the Farm
House Fresh bath and body
care products as well as
([KDOH'D\6SDLQ-RVHSK Eminence organic skin care
offers a list of amenities you products.
Co-owner Anna Butter-
just can’t find anywhere else
in the county — massages, field hopes to add an outdoor
body scrubs, facials, ped- saltwater soaking pool in the
icures and other foot care, future.
“I think it would be very
as well an infra-red sauna.
By Steve Tool
Wallowa County Chieftain
Catch the Bus!
• Intercity Transportation to La Grande
Monday and Thursday Weekly ~ Cost $5.00
each way. Free access for veterans medical
appointments in La Grande.
• Mealsite Bus ~ providing transportation to
Senior Center for lunch ~ Cost $1.00 round trip.
• Tuesday & Thursday Shopping Bus
provides transportation for shopping and
errands throughout Wallowa County ~
Cost $3.00 from Wallowa/Joseph,
$2.00 Enterprise only.
C OMMUNITY C ONNECTION
OF W ALLOWA C OUNTY
Steve Tool/Chieftain
Anna Butterfield, left, and
Rachelle Winterton are co-
owners of Exhale Day Spa
in Joseph. The business
opened in July.
popular in both the winter
and summer,” Butterfield
said.
Butterfield has lived in
the area for over 30 years.
“I’ve always wanted to
have a space like this,” she
said. “I feel like our town
QHHGVDTXLHWGD\VSDHQYL-
ronment.”
She said she had wanted
T HE B OOKLOFT
AND
S KYLIGHT G ALLERY
Finding books is our specialty
541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com
ACROSS
DOWN
1. Powder mineral
5. Ten million (in India)
10. Culture medium and a gelling agent
14. Cain and __
15. Bullfighting maneuvers
16. Baseball's Ruth
17. Venice beach
18. Infirm due to old age
19. Attentiveness
20. Mortify
22. Whale (Norwegian)
23. Family Bufonidae
24. "A Passage to India" author
27. Ocean
30. Dad's partner
31. Owned
32. Swiss river
35. Female golf star Gibson
37. Base
38. A way to summons
39. Acquit
40. Male parent
41. Brendan Francis __, author
42. Rattan
43. Aromatic hot beverage
44. Inflorescence
45. Former CIA
46. Make lace
47. Airborne (abbr.)
48. Thieving bird
49. H. Potter's creator
52. Frequency
55. Nothing
56. More lucid
60. Riding mount
61. Deducted container weight
63. Molten rock
64. In this place
65. Ancient upright stone slab bearing markings
66. Rumanian Mures River city
67. Mentioned before
68. An heir (civil law)
69. Without (French)
1. W. Samoan monetary unit
2. Baby's feeding apparel
3. Queen of Sparta
4. Shut
5. Certified public accountant
6. Payment for release
7. Red twig dogwood
8. Basked in
9. Midway between E and SE
10. A way to detest
11. Mother of Cronus
12. In bed
13. Bolsheviks
21. Farro wheat
23. CNN's Turner
25. Farmers of America
26. Small amount
27. __ and Venzetti
28. Hers in Spanish
29. Belongs to sun god
32. Expressed pleasure
33. Small terrestrial lizard
34. Regenerate
36. Own (Scottish)
37. The cry made by sheep
38. Chest muscle (slang)
40. Explode
41. Notice
43. Pitch
44. Run due to the batter
46. Fight referee declares
47. Alternate forms of a gene
49. Shifted in sailing
50. One who cables
51. Elaborate celebrations
52. Expresses pleasure
53. Carbamide
54. Persian in Afghanistan
57. 1st capital of Japan
58. Welsh for John
59. Radioactivity units
61. Tanzanian shilling
62. Hyrax
to wait for her last child to
graduate before going into
business, but Exhale, locat-
ed at 601 B N. Main St. in
Joseph, was too good an op-
portunity to pass up.
Co-owner Rachelle Win-
terton of La Grande is proud
of the new business that she
shares with Anna Butter-
field.
Both are cosmetology
school graduates.
Winterton
graduated
from massage school in La
Grande and worked as a
massage therapist in the area
for several years before relo-
cating to Joseph in July.
The two women met
when Winterton began dat-
ing Butterfield’s son. Almost
immediately they began to
discuss opening a spa.
The project took well
over a year from planning to
fruition.
([KDOH 'D\ 6SD LV RSHQ
by appointment only, in or-
der to serve customer needs,
particularly in the realm of
privacy and personalized
care.
“When I’m with some-
one, that’s my person,” Win-
terton said. “I can’t be step-
ping away from them to deal
with everyone who comes
through the door.”
Winterton did almost all
the interior work herself,
from refinishing furniture
to painting the walls. A spa-
cious shower to rinse off
scrubs or sauna perspiration
also is available.
“This is really a perfect
space for an exclusive day
spa,” Winterton said.
Because the two owners
provide all the services of-
fered, neither feels the need
to add employees, although
a manicurist station or a
weekend pedicurist are fu-
ture possibilities.
“We’re pretty happy with
the way things are now, but
we’re open to expanding if
demand calls for it,” Winter-
ton said.
To make an appointment,
call 541-910-0012. Gift
cards also are available.
By Kathleen Ellyn
Wallowa County Chieftain
T
wo openings and a
handful of moves are
on my list to mention
this week, and you’re in luck
because most of them are
having special events in the
coming days.
First up is the Nov. 19
RI¿FLDORSHQLQJRI'DQGHOLRQ
Wines at 112
W. Main
Street in
Enterprise.
I teased
you last
week with a
mention of
BIZ
this business
BUZZ
and now you
can stop in
Kathleen
and take in
Ellyn
the marvel of
the long, skinny (10x110 feet)
shop adjacent to Wild Carrot
Herbals for yourself.
There will be wine tastings,
snacks, live music by Janis
Carper and, I’m betting,
socializing with a lot of your
neighbors.
The next opening has
been keenly anticipated since
The Local Loaf closed its
doors late last summer. Our
¿UVWTXHVWLRQRUPRDQZDV
‘where, oh where were we
JRLQJWRJHWRXUZRRG¿UHG
pizza!’
:HOOWKDWTXHVWLRQKDV
been answered and Silver
Lake Bistro has announced
they are opening their doors at
19 South Main St. in Joseph
on Nov. 21. Hours will be
11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and, yes,
WKHUHZLOOEHZRRG¿UHG
pizza, dinner specials, drinks
(including wine) and more.
Silver Lake Bistro
has been featuring a few
pizza experiments on their
Facebook page and, boy, do
they look good.
There has been some
VKXIÀLQJRIDGGUHVVHVRQ
Joseph’s Main Street, and you
can check out the moves the
same day you’re checking out
Silver Lake Bistro because a
number of Joseph businesses
will be having open houses
Saturday.
Missy’s Uptown Art is one.
A Joseph Main Street
standard, “Missy’s Uptown
Art,” has moved. After 10
years in its old location at 18
S. Main St. next to Valley
Bronze Gallery, Missy has
moved across the street and
downsized to her new 13 S.
Main St. gallery space.
'RZQVL]HPLJKWEHWKH
wrong word — maybe I
should say “cozied,” since
Missy Marshall will continue
to offer exactly the same
merchandise she had in the
other shop — including
framing services.
“The shop is bigger than it
looks,” Marshall said.
As usual, she will continue
WRIHDWXUH5REHUW'DZVRQ
Mary Edwards and many
more local artists.
Her regular winter hours
are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday
through Saturday, or you can
make a celebration of it and
check out her new digs during
her Open House Celebration
Nov. 21 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Valley Bronze Gallery
is expanding into the space
vacated by Missy.
“We took the carpet and
ceilings out and we’re going
to remodel it so it matches
the other side,” said Nancy
Parmenter, director.
“We’re very excited. We’ll
have new and exciting stuff
and we’ll be open seven days
a week in the gallery and offer
tours of the foundry daily as
well.”
Valley Bronze, like
Missy’s, will be holding an
open house celebration Nov.
21 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. You
won’t be able to see the new
expansion yet, but you will
be able to peruse the new art
in the gallery, sample some
snacks and put your name in
for door prizes.
“We just want to get some
local people in,” Parmenter
said.
For more information, visit
www.valleybronzegallery.
com.
$QG¿QDOO\DEHODWHG
mention of the opening of
Terri Malec’s “Edge of the
Wilderness” gallery, which
has been open for nearly
a year at 11 S. Main St. in
Joseph.
“I always liked being in a
gallery,” Malec said. “I had
my own gallery from 1987
to 1994 and I’d been in Kelly
Wick’s ‘Kelly’s Gallery’ and I
had a lot of work I wanted to
show, so I decided to jump in
and do it again.”
Malec’s gallery, though
tiny, manages to mix
numerous media, from
bronzes to paints and prints, to
pottery, to gift cards to goat-
milk soap — all displayed on
DQWLTXHIXUQLVKLQJVWKDWDOVR
are for sale.
Malec is working limited
hours right now — just 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays through Christmas.
After that it will be just
Saturdays.
To learn more, visit
the gallery’s site at www.
PDU\V¿HOGVWXGLRFRPRU
its Facebook page at http://
WLQ\XUOFRPTJRF]K
Please send your Biz Buzz
news tips to Kathleen Ellyn at
kellyn@wallowa.com.