$1.00 C ottage G rove S entinel SOUTH LANE AND DOUGLAS COUNTY'S MOST AWARD-WINNING NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1889 WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2017 PERSONAL i BUSINESS i BENEFITS i SURETY (541) 942-0555 PayneWest.com/Cottage-Grove SPORTS A guide to the best waterfalls in Cot- tage Grove B1. FACEBOOK.COM/CGSENTINEL • TWITTER.COM/CGSENTINEL WED 89º/57º For a complete six- day forecast please see page A5. CGSENTINEL.COM Sunshine and symphony at the park PHOTO BY ZACH SILVA/COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL Monday night Bohemia Park welcomed in a host of live music. The evening featured a Cottage Grove community band that was followed by the the Eugene Symphony under the new direction of conductor Francesco Lecce-Chong. This was the third year the the symphony has come to the park and performed outoors. See more photos on page 11. Inmate briefl y escapes jail Caven brings 'Sanity' to CG Mike Caven has been a resident of Cottage Grove and a fi refi ghter for the last 15 years. But when Caven isn’t on call at the station, he owns and operates a For The Sentinel small batch chocolate shop, Sanity Chocolate. From bean-to-bar, every step of the process is done by hand. While Caven plans on opening a chocolate manufacturing facility with a storefront in Cottage Grove this summer, his love for chocolate wasn’t always a business. “It was a hobby that got out of proportion very quickly,” Caven said. Caven was introduced to small batch chocolate making fi ve years ago, after touring a cocoa bean farm while on vacation in Kauai, Hawaii. Desiring an artistic outlet, Caven researched chocolate mak- ing on the internet. He took it up as a hobby a year ago which turned into a growing business. “I needed something that I could create. That’s the reward, seeing that raw bean transition from a bean into a bar that people want,” Caven said. The entire process to produce a single batch of chocolate takes three days. Caven gets his beans through brokers from around the world in sacks that weigh up to 150 pounds. He then sorts the beans, roasts and cracks the shells and then refi nes them. After the chocolate is produced, it’s aged and tem- pered in order to make it shine and give it its snap when breaking. Caven produces a variety of chocolate he sells in one to two ounce bars for $2 an ounce. Caven loves to add his own touch to each recipe, from making white chocolate to a Peruvian chocolate that tastes like apple pie. “The one thing about chocolate, especially bean-to-bar chocolate, is that you impart your skills, your touch into the chocolate in every step of the process. So, the fi nal product will taste different. You roast longer, refi ne longer, age longer, all of those things are going to make the chocolate taste different,” Caven said. Caven decided to move into a retail space in order to grow his business after originally selling his chocolate through a private buying club. He said that he believes that chocolate making is the next big trend. “Chocolate is 15 years behind microbrews, 30 years behind coffee, and it’s 2,000 years behind wine,” Caven said. Caven said he wants Sanity Chocolates to be a place where people can hang out and see chocolate Man quickly gets caught after successful fl ee By Eric Schucht By Zach Silva zsilva@cgsentinel.com Last Wednesday morning an in- mate from the Cottage Grove Mu- nicipal Jail escaped as he was be- ing moved from the building. The inmate, 28-year-old Zackery Scott Yocham, ran away from offi cers but was located and taken into custody about ten minutes later according to a Cottage Grove Police Department (CGPD) news release. Yocham, who was being held for a probation violation and a theft case, has been taken to Lane County Jail. In the ten minutes that he was out, he reportedly attempted to steal a car but after hearing the woman who was getting into the car scream, he ran away. CGPD is familiar with Yocham, who was born and raised in Cottage Grove, and they report that they have had multiple contacts with him over the years and have arrested him on multiple occasions. Please see CHOCOLATE PG. A6 Inmate Zackery Yocham photo courtesy of the Cottage Grove Police Department City of Drain gets new top administrator after long search Steve Dahl is on the job in Drain. The new city administrator began on June 5, taking the place of former cmay@cgsentinel.com city administrator Carl Patenode. “I didn’t take over for Carl in any way, shape or form,” Dahl said. “But I am now sitting in the big chair.” That big chair was occupied several times by Patenode who once retired from the position before By Caitlyn May SPORTS New coach Students stay busy with Summer Reading Spots Cottage Grove High School has hired a new boys basketball coach PAGE A3 PAGE B1 INDEX COMMUNITY Summer Reading coming back on in 2016 until the city council could fi nd a suitable replacement. Under Patenode’s reign as city administrator, the city of Drain put in place a 15-year plan that included infrastructure im- provements that will continue through his departure. The biggest of which includes a new wastewater treatment center. “I interviewed for the job and they hired me because of my background,” Dahl said. “My experience with Drain was not extensive before that.” Calendar ...................................... B11 Channel Guide ............................... B5 Classifieds ...................................... B7 Obituaries ...................................... A2 Opinion ......................................... A4 Sports ............................................ B1 AD 6x2 cgnews@cgsentinel.com (541) 942-3325 ph • (541) 942-3328 fax P.O. Box 35, Cottage Grove, OR 97424 Corner of Sixth and Whiteaker, Cottage Grove _______________ VOLUME 129 • NUMBER 33