Follow this simple advice, and you'll probably do just fine here in the middle of the Idaho panhandle, where the lakeside city of Coeur d'Alene draws travelers and second-homers from all over the West.At the docks, you can catch a ride to the golf course, take a auto minute cruise on Coeur d'Alene Lake, hop on a float plane or rent a kayak. At McEuen Field, a youth baseball diamond between the main drag and the lake, you can sit in the bleachers, munch on a hot dog from the snack shack, then stroll down to the water's edge or up to the Moose Lounge for a cold one. At the Wolf Lodge Steakhouse on the eastern end of town, you and your beloved can share a ounce sirloin steak.Now that I've spent a few days here, I have an idea why many Southern Californians including more than a few Los Angeles cops have retired to northern Idaho, why so many travelers arrive every summer and why some stay away. Whenever somebody starts talking about "the light at the end of the tunnel," I'll think of Idaho for reasons I'll explain in a minute.The hub of action in Coeur d'Alene is the lak Ministers moved to quell swine flu hysteria last night, as concerns grew that the National Health Service might be overwhelmed by hordes of "unnecessarily anxious" people who could make a full recovery at home.Amid rising government worry about how NHS staff will cope as the virus spreads, health secretary Andy Burnham warned that panic itself could push services to breaking point. Health Department officials said there was a danger of a "panic pandemic" that could hinder the treatment of more serious cases.
Calling for calm, Burnham said that although swine flu presented a huge challenge for the country, it was not a life-threatening condition for the vast majority of people.He told the Observer that it was vital not to over-react and claimed the government had the situation under control. "It is very important for everybody to keep a sense of perspective," he said. "It has been a mild virus in the vast majority of cases, with relatively mild symptoms from which people recover fully fairly quickly.If people are made unnecessarily anxious, it makes the lives of NHS professionals, who are already under enormous pressure, far more difficult as people become unduly worried."He added: "People should be assured that we have been planning our response to a pandemic for a long time."Health officials are also concerned at rising levels of fear among parents who know that children are particularly susceptible to the Doctors last night tried to reassure families that the vast majority of young people would get better without a visit to their GP's surgery or a hospital.efront, where the 18-story Coeur d'Alene Golf & Spa Resort rises next to City Park. On a grassy expanse here, the Rotarians and the Kiwanis appear to be locked in a vicious struggle over who can provide more benches, playground structures and bandstand improvements. Wooden lifeguard towers overlook a family-friendly beach. Float planes, cruise boats and a gaggle of rental watercraft line the dock, and a sculpted moose stands sentinel at Independence Point, where local teens like to sunbathe and practice their slouches.Every few hours, though, the sun or the scenery overcomes one of them, usually a boy. He'll slowly back up, like a gymnast preparing for a floor exercise, then rush forward, hurl himself through the air, soaring over the concrete steps and the stenciled letters saying NO DIVING, then splash down into the water. They do the same from nearby Tubbs Hill, but from boulders and cliffs.Maybe the water exerts some sort of gravitational pull. The lake stretches south for miles and fills with all sorts of pleasure craft in the summer. Hiking and biking paths are threaded around its miles of shoreline.The city of Coeur d'Alene is neatly spread around the resort. The lakefront area's main drag, Sherman Avenue, is peppered with restaurants, a few motels and numerous galleries, including several that focus on glass art and Western art.Apparently, Coeur d'Alene's name comes from the early days of interaction between this area's Indians and the French speaking traders who eventually showed up. As this story goes, the American Indians were tough traders, so a settler concluded, in French, that these bargainers had "the heart Tastes are conservative here. The city is about white, and the county, Kootenai, voted for
Dani Zibell-Wolfe, vice president for tourism at the Coeur d'Alene Chamber of Commerce, inmid-June reported that hotel occupancy was running less than behind last year.Intumultuous times, maybe old-school American atmosphere sells better. Surely that should please John and Tina Hough, owners of the Roosevelt Inn. Their four-story bed-and-breakfast began life as a red-brick school in and remained an active campus until In fact, John Hough attended grade school there. Now, most of the rooms are named after former teachers, and the halls are lined with old class photos he same day I checked out the Roosevelt Inn, I wound up on one of the Tubbs Hill trails, shooting the breeze with the Holt family as they lazed and clowned on a big rock.She's trying to catch some fish. But the fish are jacking her worms," said Dallas Holt, 5, giggling, as his stepmother, Tiesha Holt, cast and cast again.aCoeur d'Alene was looking pretty good, and I was already imagining the Fourth of July fireworks But to appreciate this territory properly, you can't just stand and stare.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
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