FORT MYERS, FLA. – The town of Jackson Hole, Wyo., is in a valley at the elevation of 6,000 feet. It has an average snowfall of 200 inches.
Tim Shibuya would come from school during the winter and spot two black eyes peering from inside a snowbank. And then the snowbank would explode and Holly, Tim's Norwegian elkhound, would come bounding toward him with a welcome home.
"Every day,'' Shibuya said. "I don't have siblings. Holly was my sister for 14 years.''
He shook his head. "When she died … I don't think you get over losing a great dog,'' he said.
Shibuya also can talk nostalgically about being raised in Jackson Hole, rising in the morning, stepping outside and staring at the peaks of the Teton Range.
"I was unbelievably lucky kid, to grow up with the outdoor world at my doorstep,'' he said. "Fishing, hiking, boating, golf and, of course, incredible skiing. Whatever the season, it was paradise for a kid.''
There was one drawback: The baseball season started late.
"The state of Wyoming doesn't have high school baseball,'' Shibuya said. "The late spring makes it impossible for much of the state. Our baseball is American Legion.