© 2018
1975 United States Women’s Lacrosse Touring Team
                                                                           Sandy Walker continued   By then though, I had entered the business world, had gone to graduate business school, and then moved to Kentucky for about 5 years. I went to work for a community development venture capital fund in eastern Kentucky. While there made great deep-rooted friends that to this day would unquestionably give away the shirt off their backs without asking why or if they would ever get it back During that time I did not do much in the world of lacrosse until I got to Colorado where I stayed for about 1 year before moving on to California. While in Denver, I coached the Colorado club teams and took them to USWLA National Tournament in 1985, the first time that Colorado went to the national tournament. Then I moved to the low desert 135 miles east of San Diego, CA and fell back out of the lacrosse scene again. While in the Imperial Valley, I was a part of a group that developed a 50 Megawatt biomass power plant, costing $154 million to build and 1,000 tons per day or wood to fuel to produce electricity for sale to the utility in southern California. I then went on to work in the field of low impact, low input, low cost wastewater treatment systems and spent considerable time as a renewable resource consultant, moving towards working in the field of sustainability, where I am now firmly focused. In 1989, I had Zane Graeme Walker Nilson, 9 pounds 10 ounces, 20.5 inches long.  My great gift.  Shortly thereafter moved to San Diego, where I coached the University of California at San Diego women’s lacrosse team for 2 years.    Moved back to Wayne for 2 years in 1999-2001, where I was permitted to coach Zane’s boys lacrosse team for 2 seasons.  I was told that I was the only woman that the Radnor league had allowed to coach the boy’s team.  You have to remember that Radnor was established in 1692 and precedence and history run deep there.   In 2001 got back in California, in east Sacramento County, California, on a small farm, raising cashmere goats, steers, peacocks, specialty stone fruit trees and way too many volunteer rabbits and squirrels. I named the farm WingWalkers because I feel like I am always walking on wings with the different projects I have going on there.   That does not happen very often in one’s life, but I recognize it because that is what happened with the US Lacrosse TT in 1975.  That tour was a convergence of people and circumstances that made something really extraordinary happen.