Retiring teacher, coach urges Colony grads to ‘find their 68’
By Jeremiah Bartz Frontiersman.com A football coach using a hockey reference as the centerpiece for his keynote address may
April 29, 1949 - October 06, 2025 Patricia Christina (Chris) Fish, 76, passed away peacefully on 10/06/2025 in Middleton, Idaho; though her heart never left the Matanuska Valley in Alaska, where she spent most of her life. She was born in Findlay, Ohio in 1949 to Robert and Margaret Rehus. In 1960 her parents decided to have an adventure (Chris’s words) and move to Alaska. They packed the kids up and headed to a homestead in the Matanuska Valley. No running water, no electricity, but Chris showed her innovative side and learned how to bake gooey brownies, which her family devoured with big spoons. She really did walk 2 and ½ miles through the snow to the bus stop on Fishhook Road. Her sister remembers Chris holding her prom dress over her head while navigating the muddy road in rubber boots that weren’t tall enough to keep the mud out. She attended Palmer High School and was involved in many school activities, including Yearbook, Class Treasurer, choir and basketball cheerleader. It was there that she met and started dating Steve Fish. The family knew he was serious when he bravely drove his car through the snow drifts to come to dinner. They married in 1967, and in 1973 they took a chance and leased Fishers Y Grocery in Big Lake Alaska. A few years later they opened their own grocery store, Steve’s Foodboy, in a newly constructed mall. During the recession in the mid 80’s, they had to close the store. Steve got a job managing a store in Emmonak, Alaska, a small fishing village. Chris said it was a good thing she had the homestead as a reference for the two years they lived there. After returning to Palmer, Chris turned to her passion for sewing and bought Lil’s Fabric and renamed it Just Sew. She was credited, in the Alaska Business magazine, for changing it into a bright and colorful fabric shop. Seeing another opportunity, they bought the Arctic Kwik Mart and renamed it the In and Out Deli in Palmer. After 8 years they repurchased Steve’s Foodboy grocery store in Big Lake. Even after retiring in 2009, Chris continued living an incredibly busy and full life. She was a woman of strong faith and spent a large portion of her retirement involved in sharing that with others. We ask all that knew her to take a moment to share the memories you had with her and smile. She was honored to have all of you in her life. Chris is proceeded in death by her husband, Steve Fish. Her parents, Robert and Margaret Rehus, and her big brother, Barry Rehus. She is survived by her daughters, Michelle Broiles, Idaho, Robin Fish, New York. One grandson, Wyatt Broiles. Three sisters Becky Wallace, Idaho, Emily McMahon, California, and Amy Parsons, California. A memorial will be announced at a later date.