Coast Weekend July 16, 2015

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Hear live music at Sou’Wester Pink Floyd tribute band to rock out Astoria Event Center

Conformity Contortion, Ray Prestegard play Portland-based Pigs on the Wing perform a two-night concert July 17 and 18 SEAVIEW, Wash. — The Sou’Wester Lodge welcomes musicians Sara Lund and Thollem as they roll through on tour as the band Conformity Contortion. The band will perform at 8 p.m. Thursday, July 16 Lund has been providing beats and exploring rhythm since age 11. She is best known for her work as the drummer for Unwound (1992-2002). Thollem is known internationally as a wildly diverse keyboardist and has been on tour for years, releasing more than 40 albums of his own and in collaboration with others on 19 different vanguard labels. At 8 p.m. Saturday, July 18, the Sou’Wester will host Americana multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Ray Prestegard. Prestegard loves playing music, singing and entertaining. He has all his life, from Texas to the Northwest. Bringing to the stage vintage amps and instruments made in the 1930s to the 1970s, Prestegard plays blues, rock, folk and country, covering clas-

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Ray Prestegard will perform Americana music at the Sou’Wester Lodge on July 18.

sics like “Wagon Wheel� and Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues� as well as playing original tunes. He plays several instruments during his shows, including guitars, banjos, dobros, ukuleles, harmonicas and more. The shows are free and open to the public. The Sou’Wester Lodge is located at 3728 J Place.

ASTORIA — KCRX 102.3 FM welcomes Portland-based Pink Floyd tribute band Pigs on the Wing back to the Astoria Event Center for a special two-night run of classic Pink Floyd tunes at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 17 and 18. Following last year’s soldout Astoria concert, Pigs on the Wing returns with an even bigger production, performing two full sets and a different, full, cover-to-cover Pink Floyd album each night. Each night will feature a set list spanning the range of Pink Floyd’s career that Floyd fans and classic rock fans alike will not want to miss. Tickets are available at http://astoriapigwing.brownpapertickets.com. A limited number of specially priced twonight-pass tickets are available for $30. Single night advance tickets are $17 each and are recommended as the demand for last year’s show exceeded the capacity of the Astoria Event Center. The show is open to all ages both nights, and is general admission only. Seating is limited; early arrival is recommended if

After Party Friday, July 17 KALA 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria Pink Floyd cover band Pigs on the Wing invites the public to an after-show party at KALA on July 17. After the Astoria Event Center concert, meet and hangout with the band, view vintage Pink Floyd videos and listen to old Floyd vinyl. Cocktails and light fare will be available. There is no cover charge or show tickets needed; the event is open to all. KALA will be open at 9 p.m.; the Astoria Event Center concert is slated to end at 11 p.m. you require a seat for this show. Imagine the energy and electric intensity of “Dark Side of the Moon�-era Pink Floyd — in an intimate theater or rock club environment. Pigs on the Wing has been delivering just that spellbinding experience to wide-ranging audiences since 2006. Pigs on the Wing brings an intense, high-energy experience to the table that is

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Portland-based Pink Floyd tribute band Pigs on the Wing will perform a two-night concert Friday and Saturday, July 17 and 18 at the Astoria Event Center.

both true to the original and unapologetic in its interpretation, something which the band members believe has set the group apart from the other tributes from the beginning. Since its inception as a one-off performance of “Dark Side of the Moon� to the band’s current touring production, which has included live renditions of the infamous “Wizard of Oz� sync, full performances of multiple Floyd albums, and music from every era of Pink Floyd’s career, Pigs on the Wing heavily emphasizes the rock dynamics and psychedelic intensity of 1970s-era Floyd. None are bigger Floyd fans than the members of Pigs on the Wing themselves. As vocalist Keeley St. Clair put it in

Concert 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 17 and 18 Astoria Event Center 255 Ninth St., Astoria http://astoriapigwing. brownpapertickets.com $17 in advance $30 two-night pass All ages a recent interview in Oregon Music News, “I think I can speak for everyone in the band in saying that we take good care to be stewards of the music that we admire so much as a band ... It’s a big responsibility to play such well-loved music.�

SHOW RUNS THRU SEPT. 12, 2015 Thursdays to Saturdays 7pm (July 9th-Sept. 12th) and Sundays 2pm (7/19, 8/16, 9/6)

Tickets on sale ONE HOUR before all shows!

RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED For discounts to Shanghaied in Astoria, go to our website

www.astorstreetoprycompany.com YEAR ROUND THEATER! 129 W. BOND ST (UNIONTOWN) ASTORIA (Behind the Chamber of Commerce)

INFO: CALL 503-325-6104

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coast

JULY 16, 2015

weekend

arts & entertainment

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COASTAL LIFE

Hit the ground running The Manzanita Beach Run/Walk celebrates 25 years

ARTS

Garden tours Music in the Gardens, Seaside Downtown Garden Walk set

FEATURE

On the Land North Coast Land Conservancy holds guided walks, hikes

DINING

Mouth of the Columbia Easygoing Guadalajara Taco Shop offers great atmosphere

STEPPING OUT........ .............................................................. 5, 6, 7 CROSSWORD........... ....................................................................17 CW MARKETPLACE........ ....................................................... 18, 19 GRAB BAG ....... ..........................................................................23

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on the cover Jason Hussa holds his son, Toby, 7, as Toby tries to net snails and small fish from a pond at the Seaside Mill Ponds during a North Coast Land Conservatory On the Land event. Photo by Joshua Bessex

See story on Page 12 COAST WEEKEND EDITOR: REBECCA SEDLAK COAST WEEKEND PHOTOS: JOSHUA BESSEX ADVERTISING MANAGER: BETTY SMITH

CONTRIBUTORS: JON BRODERICK DAN HAAG DWIGHT CASWELL MARILYN GILBAUGH RYAN HUME

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Learn how to create botanical drawings Dorota Haber-Lehigh to teach classes in Astoria, Manzanita ASTORIA and MANZANITA — Seaside artist Dorota Haber-Lehigh will teach a four-week sequence of Botanical Drawing classes this summer at the Columbia River Maritime Museum’s Barbey Maritime Center in Astoria and at the Hoffman Center for the Arts in Manzanita. Students will learn the fundamentals of botanical drawing using pencils, color pencils and other dry media while learning about native plants of the 3aci¿c Northwest region. They will develop basic drawing and observational skills through fun and engaging exercises, and drawing from observation will be emphasized. Students will learn how to incorporate line, value, shape, texture and color. Participants will learn the difference between scienti¿c botanical illustration and expressive botanical drawing by studying various artists. The instruction is designed for students 18 and up, and all skill levels are welcome. Basic materials will be provided, or students may bring their favorite sketchbook, pencil, eraser or color pencils. The Astoria classes will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. Thursday, July 23, 30, Aug. 6 and 13 at the Barbey Maritime Center. Cost is $40 for museum members and $65 for nonmembers. Register online at www.crmm.org/barbey-maritime-center The Hoffman Center for the

Arts classes will be held from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 4, 11, 18 and 25. Weather permitting, students will work in the Hoffman Gardens. Tuition is $60 for the series or $20 per session. You can register for the workshop at http://hoffmanblog.org The Hoffman Center will also host an artist’s reception at 3 p.m. Saturday, July 18 to feature the works of Haber-Lehigh. Haber-Lehigh is an artist, educator, linguist and a forager with a passion for native plants. She lives in Seaside and is the author of two coloring/reading books: “ABC of Native Plants of the Coastal Paci¿c Northwest´ and “Native Berries of the Coastal Paci¿c Northwest.´

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“Evergreen Huckleberry” by Dorota Haber-Lehigh.

Coast Weekend welcomes comments and contributions from readers. New items for publication consideration must be submitted by 10 a.m. Tuesday, one week and two days before publication.

To submit an item, contact Rebecca Sedlak Phone: 503.325.3211 Ext. 217 or 800.781.3211 Fax: 503.325.6573 E-mail: rsedlak@dailyastorian.com Address: P.O.Box 210 • 949 Exchange St. Astoria, OR 97103 Coast Weekend is published every Thursday by the EO Media Group, all rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced without consent of the publisher. Coast Weekend appears weekly in The Daily Astorian and the Chinook Observer.

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 3


Hitting the ground running The Manzanita Beach Run/Walk celebrates 25 years on Saturday, July 18 Ask a 100 different runners why they enjoy running, and you’ll get 100 different answers: Running makes you feel healthy, you get to be outdoors, it makes you feel smarter, it increases happiness, it helps improve sleep. But there is one answer you’ll hear from all runners: the people. Runners come from all different walks of life to get together and share their common passion. There is no better place to see that particular camaraderie on display than at the annual Manzanita Beach Run & Walk set this year for Saturday, July 18. The beach run celebrates 25 years in 2015 and does it in style. Besides the main event, there will be a barbecue, beer and wine tastings, live music, and, of course, prizes. Set against the backdrop of Neahkahnie Mountain and a beautiful 7-mile stretch of beach, it’s easy to see why the event entices runners from not only the Pacific Northwest, but from around the U.S. Jeremy Mulcahy-Hill, assistant director at North County Recreation District, is already running. As organizer of the beach run since 2013, he has witnessed the event’s attendance swell considerably. What began in 1990 as an informal gathering of runners has grown into a family-friendly destination event. “It started with Larry and Janice Zagata, owners of the Ocean Inn in Manzanita,â€? Mulcahy-Hill said. “Larry put it together as a fun run for everybody, and Janice had just VWDUWHG ZRUNLQJ KHUH DW WKH GLVWULFW DV Âż WQHVV GLUHFWRU ´ ,Q ZKDW ZDV D QDWXUDO Âż W WKH UXQ attached to NCRD and stayed that way after Janice Zagata departed the district. 7KH Âż UVW \HDU RI WKH UXQ KDG DERXW DW tendees. As word spread, attendance steadily grew to an average of around 140 runners per year. 2013 saw 335 runners hit the Manzanita beach while 2014 peaked at 385. 2015 promises to build on that growth. Mulcahy-Hill noted that preregistrations are already pointing to matching last year’s attendance totals. “The last three

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weeks (before the run) is when we really start getting more people,� he said, adding that runners can register up to and during the day of the event. As July 18 draws nearer, Mulcahy-Hill and NCRD volunteers fine-tune the event to ensure everything is on track. “We’re up about five in the morning the day of the race,� he said. “We set up the tents, check the timer, put the preregistration packets out, get the race chute all set up.� The run kicks of at 8:30 a.m. and consists of three stages: a 5K run/walk, a 10K run, and a 25K relay. Due to a new arrival on the beach near Nehalem Bay State Park, the course is slightly different than in years past. “In the past, we’ve had them all head south, straight towards the jetty, but with the snowy plover restricted area, we’re sending runners towards the mountain,� Mulchay-Hill said. From there, the course will loop back around and head south towards the jetty, avoiding the nesting area. Turnaround points for the 5K and the 10K will be marked along the way. The run is an all-ages event, and families are encouraged to join in. “We’ve had runners from 3 years old all the way up to 92,� Mulcahy-Hill said. “It’s all skill levels. There have been runners who have had their first run here and have gone on to do marathons.� He added that dogs are welcome too, though leashes are required. 2015 brings some new additions for after the run, including a barbecue lunch prepared by NCRD volunteers and beer poured by Nehalem Bay Winery. There will also be root beer for kids and bonfires,

What began in 1990 as an informal gathering of runners has grown into a family-friendly destination event.

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Runners take off at last year’s Manzanita Beach Run/Walk. The 2015 race celebrates 25 years on Saturday, July 18.

s’mores, and live music for runners and cheerers to enjoy. Additionally, the first 350 runners gets an event T-shirt, prizes will be raffled off and families will be given the opportunity to participate in a local treasure hunt. “The treasure hunt gives families something to do and gets them out to see the area,� Mulcahy-Hill said. “It entices them to get into the community. At the end of the day, we’ll have a drawing for the gift certificates from the businesses that helped out.� Each participant of the treasure hunt gets a tri-fold map with a list of local sponsors and instructions leading them on their quest. Though the run itself is usually over within two hours, Mulcahy-Hill expects people will linger and enjoy the convivial nature of these additions. Thinking about running but not sure

Coastal Life Story by DAN HAAG

Entry fee is $35 through Friday, July 17, $40 for day of the race. Proceeds go toward support of NCRD programs. For race details and updates, visit www.facebook.com/ BeachWalkRun. You can also email fitness@ncrdnehalem.org or call 503-368-4595. where to stay? The Ocean Inn is providing incentive for one lucky couple the night before the race: a one-night stay at Ocean Inn, a massage courtesy of Longevity in Manzanita, dinner for two at Terra Cotta Cafe, and two entries in the run. An avid event runner himself, Mulcahy-Hill is quick to respond when asked what sets the Manzanita beach run apart from similar events. “For me it’s the scenery,� he said. “The biggest thing with a lot of races, if it’s a destination that’s gorgeous, people will always run it. What sets this race apart is the location. The town’s right here, it’s smaller and quieter, it’s family and dog-friendly. I think that really draws people to it.�


Stepping Out

THEATER

“Shanghaied in Astoria” 2 p.m., ASOC Playhouse, 129 W. Bond St., Astoria, 503-325-6104, $16 to $21. “The Bottom of the Lake” 2 p.m., Hannan Playhouse, 518 8th St., Raymond, Wash., 360-934-5569, $8 to $10.

Thursday, July 16 “Shanghaied in Astoria” 7 p.m., Astor Street Opry Company, 129 W. Bond St., Astoria, 503-325-6104, www. astorstreetoprycompany.com, $16 to $21. “Shanghaied in Astoria” combines vaudeville and musical into an entertaining look at local culture and folklore. “It Could Be Any One Of Us” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www.coastertheatre.com, $15 to $20, rated PG. A family of artistic failures wrangles over a will and a victim in the comedy “It Could Be Any One Of Us.”

Friday, July 17 “Cinderella” 7 p.m., Fort Columbia State Park, off Hwy. 101, Chinook, Wash., 360-836-4448, www.papatheater.com, $7.25 to $17.50, all ages. The enchantment of this fairy tale is reborn with Rodgers & Hammerstein’s originality, charm and elegance. “Shanghaied in Astoria” 7 p.m., ASOC Playhouse, 129 W. Bond St., Astoria, 503-325-6104, $16 to $21. “Little Shop of Horrors” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www.coastertheatre.com, $18 to $23, rated PG-13. “Little Shop of Horrors” is a rock musical about a timid florist, a sadistic dentist and a carnivorous plant. “The Bottom of the Lake” 7:30 p.m., Hannan Playhouse, 518 Eighth St., Raymond, Wash., 360-934-5569, www.willapaplayers.org, $8 to $10. “The Bottom of the Lake” is a production of four one-act plays, directed by Curt Harris.

Saturday, July 18

Wednesday, July 22 “It Could Be Any One Of Us” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $15 to $20.

Thursday, July 23 Mystery Dinner Theater 6 p.m., Ocean Park Lutheran Church, 24002 U St., Ocean Park, Wash., 360244-5700, www.peninsula-players.com, $20 to $150. The Peninsula Players presents “I’m Getting Murdered in the Morning,” a dinner theater mystery.

AUDITIONS Thursday, July 16

Five One-Act Plays 7 p.m., River City Playhouse, 127 Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-244-0318, www. peninsula-players.com. Auditions will be held for five one-act plays: “The Son Also Rises, A Willy Loman Redux”; “Scamming Grandpa”; “Creative Writing”; “The Open Door” and “The Widows of Oysterville.”

“Cinderella” 7 p.m., Fort Columbia State Park, off Hwy. 101, Chinook, Wash., 360-836-4448, www.papatheater.com, $7.25 to $17.50, all ages.

Friday, July 17

“Shanghaied in Astoria” 7 p.m., ASOC Playhouse, 129 W. Bond St., Astoria, 503-325-6104, $16 to $21.

Saturday, July 18

“It Could Be Any One Of Us” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www.coastertheatre.com, $15 to $20, rated PG.

Five One-Act Plays 7 p.m., River City Playhouse, 127 Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-244-0318.

Five One-Act Plays 7 p.m., River City Playhouse, 127 Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-244-0318.

Sunday, July 19

MUSIC

Thursday, July 16 Basin Street NW 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Dave Drury on guitar, Todd Pederson on bass and friends perform mainstream jazz classics. Dallas Williams 6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1539, no cover, 21 and older. Dallas Williams plays folk music and Americana. Music Jam 6:30 p.m., Astoria Recreation Center, 1555 W. Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-468-0390, free. The Astoria Senior Center offers string band, bluegrass and country. Floating Glass Balls 7 p.m., Bill’s Tavern, 188 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2202, no cover. Floating Glass Balls play bluegrass, Caribbean, folk, swing and country. Drew Gale 7:30 p.m., Merry Time Bar & Grill, 995 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-468-0852, no cover, 21 and older. Drew Gale plays acoustic guitar. Conformity Contortion 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-2542. Conformity Contortion pair up to play explosive, improvised drum and keyboard music. The Horsenecks 8 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. The Horsenecks plays old time music with a bluegrass edge.

Friday, July 17 David Drury 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. David Drury plays jazz guitar. Tom Trudell 6 p.m., Shelburne Inn, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash. Tom Trudell plays piano. Maggie & the Cats 6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1539, no cover, 21 and older. Maggie & the Cats play blues, funk and rhythm-n-blues. Pigs on the Wing 8 p.m., Astoria Events Center, 255 9th St., Astoria, 503-791-5843. Pigs on the Wing are a Portland-based Pink Floyd tribute band. Their Astoria show last year sold out.

“The Bottom of the Lake” 7:30 p.m., Hannan Playhouse, 518 Eighth St., Raymond, Wash., 360-934-5569, www.willapaplayers.org, $8 to $10.

Five One-Act Plays 2 p.m., River City Playhouse, 127 Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-244-0318.

Monday, July 20

Sunday, July 19

Cedar Teeth 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311. Cedar Teeth blends rough and rusty rock-n-roll with lyrical American roots music.

“Sleeping Beauty” 9:45 a.m., Liberty Theater, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-325-5922, www.liberty-theater.org, grades 1 to 12. Auditions will be held for the Missoula Children’s Theatre production of “Sleeping Beauty.”

Jet Black Pearl 9:30 p.m., Voodoo Room, 1114 Marine Drive, Astoria, 21 and older. Jet Black Pearl (Jetty Swart) is a one-woman dynamo on accordion, flute, toy piano, loop station.

“Cinderella” 2 p.m., Fort Columbia State Park, off Hwy. 101, Chinook, Wash., 360-836-4448, www.papatheater.com, $7.25 to $17.50, all ages.

pow ered b y

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MUSIC CONTINUED Saturday, July 18

Bruce & Friends 6 p.m., Elks Lodge 1937, 110 N. Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash. Bruce Smith plays rock-n-roll and Texas blues. George Coleman 6 p.m., Shelburne Inn, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-4150. George Coleman plays pop, jazz, folk and rock music on his 12-string guitar. Tom Trudell 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Barbie G. 7 p.m., Charlie’s Chowder House, 1335 Marine Drive, Astoria, no cover. Barbie G. plays acoustic folk. Cedar Teeth 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311. Pigs on the Wing 8 p.m., Astoria Events Center, 255 9th St., Astoria, 503-791-5843. Ray Prestegard 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-2542. Ray Prestegard plays 60s covers and traditional songs from Kentucky. The Bret Lucich Show 8 p.m., American Legion 99, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-5111, $5. Bret Lucich plays a little bit country, a little bit rock-n-roll and a whole lot of soul, performing a variety of music styles for dancing and listening – big band, country, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, soft rock and jazz instrumentals. Neil Darling Band 9 p.m., San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-5080, 21 and older. The Neil Darling Band plays gypsy soul, rock, blues and folk. Misé & Grand Lake Islands 9:30 p.m., Voodoo Room, 1114 Marine Drive, Astoria, 21 and older. An evening with Misé (rock) and Grand Lake Islands (indie, Americana and folk).

Sunday, July 19 Jennifer Goodenberger 11:30 a.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Jennifer Goodenberger plays classical and contemporary piano. Kitchen Music 1 p.m., Long Beach Grange, 5715 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash., 360642-2239. Enjoy traditional, folk, bluegrass, country, blues and pop music. Music in the Gardens 1 p.m., Hoffman Gardens, 595 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, free. Music in the Gardens features Joe Wrabek, playing guitar and original country tunes. Brad Griswold 6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361539, 21 and older. Brad Griswold offers a night of folk and bluegrass. Evensong 6 p.m., Cannon Beach Community Church, 132 E. Washington St., Cannon Beach. Evensong features Jennifer Goodenberger and Wes Wahrmund. The Cabin Project 8 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422311, no cover. The Cabin Project is an orchestral indie pop band. The Lonesome Heroes 8 p.m., Fort George Brewery, 1483 Duane St., Astoria, 503-325-7468, no cover. The Lonesome Heroes plays folk, indie and alternative country music.

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Monday, July 20 Burgers & Jam 6 p.m., American Legion Post 168, 1216 S. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2973. The legion offers burgers and music every Monday. Dana Lyons & Anne Feeney 7 p.m., Blue Scorcher Bakery Café, 1493 Duane St., Astoria, 503-338-7473, $10 to $20. Iconic environmental folk singer Dana Lyons teams up with political activist and folk musician Anne Feeney for a concert tour. The Cabin Project 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311.

Tuesday, July 21 Brian O’Connor 5:30 p.m., Shelburne Inn Restaurant, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash. Acoustic guitarist Brian O’Connor plays an eclectic mix of jazz standards. The Cabin Project 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311.

Wednesday, July 22 Paul & Margo Dueber 5 p.m., The Bistro, 263 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661. Paul and Margo Dueber perform folk and Americana from the 70s and 80s. The Coconuts 6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 21 and older. The Coconuts play swing, jazz, country, bluegrass and folk. Jam with Richard Thomasian 7 p.m., Port of Call Bistro & Bar, 894 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-325-4356. All musicians and styles are welcome to jam with the Port’s house band. Casey Neill 8 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422311, no cover. Casey Neill plays indie rock, pop rock, Celtic and Americana. Jazz at KALA, 8 p.m., KALA, 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-338-4878, $12. Vocalist Kelley Shannon and acclaimed pianist George Colligan play jazz.

MARKETS

Manzanita Farmers Market 5 to 8 p.m., Corner of Laneda Ave. and 5th St., Manzanita, 503-368-3339, www.manzanitafarmersmarket.com. Featuring fresh produce and farm products, live entertainment, kids’ activities, wines and handcrafted items.

Saturday, July 18 Svensen Flea & Craft Market 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wickiup Grange, 92683 Svensen Market Road, Svensen. An indoor flea market featuring antiques, toys, household items, handmade goods and other great stuff to recycle, refurbish, reuse and re-enjoy. United Way Rummage Sale 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Astoria Armory, 1636 Exchange St., Astoria, 503-3251961, www.clatsopunitedway.org. United Way of Clatsop County is holding their first annual rummage sale to help community families. Long Beach Grange Indoors Market 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Long Beach Grange, 5715 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-4953, www.longbeachgrange.org. Saturday Market at the Port 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Harbor front at Howerton Way, Port of Ilwaco, Wash., www.portofilwaco.com. Shop for produce, regional arts and crafts, plants and cut flowers, kettle corn, donuts, sausage, baked goods and more. SummerFest Noon to 5 p.m., Pacific Ave., downtown Long Beach, Wash., free. SummerFest is full of family friendly activities. Entertainment provided by Orchid the Jellyfish and Grandmer Mermaid, and music with Tropical Storm.

Sunday, July 19 United Way Rummage Sale 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Astoria Armory, 1636 Exchange St., Astoria, 503-3251961, www.clatsopunitedway.org. Astoria Sunday Market 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 12th St., downtown Astoria, 503-325-1010, www. astoriasundaymarket.com. The market offers locally made products by farmers, craftspeople and artisans. Live music with the Double J & the Boys. Svensen Flea & Craft Market 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wickiup Grange, 92683 Svensen Market Road, Svensen. SummerFest 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Pacific Ave., downtown Long Beach, Wash., free.

Thursday, July 16

Tuesday, July 21

River People Farmers Market 3 to 7 p.m., Astoria Indoor Garden Supply, 1343 Duane St., Astoria, www.riverpeoplemarket. org. Features fresh produce, flowers, plant starts, eggs, meat and ready-to-eat food. There is live music and kids’ activities.

Wednesday, July 22

Friday, July 17 Long Beach Grange Indoors Market 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Long Beach Grange, 5715 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-4953, www.longbeachgrange.org. Features farm-fresh eggs, home-baked goods, prepared food, handcrafted items, goat milk products, woodcrafts, honey, nuts, art and jewelry. New vendors welcome. Puget Island Farmer’s Market 3 to 6 p.m., Stockhouse’s Farm, 59 W. Birnie Slough Road, Cathlamet, Wash., 360-849-4145, www.stockhousesfarm.com. Shop for organic produce, fresh bread, pizza, desserts, kim chi, jams, meat and honey. Columbia-Pacific Farmers Market 3 to 6 p.m., downtown Long Beach off Hwy. 103 and 3rd St., Long Beach, Wash., 360-244-9169. Fresh produce, seafood, meat, eggs, dairy, local baked goods, flowers, plants, prepared foods and live music.

Cannon Beach Farmers Market 2 to 5 p.m., Cannon Beach City Hall, 163 E. Gower Ave., Cannon Beach, www.cannonbeachmarket.org. This market offers fresh produce, pasture-raised meat, organic cheeses, artisan food and a children’s program.

Seaside Farmers Market 3 to 7 p.m., American Legion 99, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-7393, www.seasidemarket.org. Seaside Farmers Market features fresh produce, meat, cheeses, seafood, live music with Shirley Smith, kids entertainment.

EVENTS

Thursday, July 16 Sandsations 10 a.m., Bolstad beach approach, Long Beach, Wash. free, all ages. Solo master sand artists start sculpting demonstration sculptures. Writers at Work 6 p.m., Seaside Public Library, 1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-6742, www.seasidelibrary.org. This group meets every third Thursday and is designed for writers to meet and share ideas with local authors.


EVENTS CONTINUED

Thursday, July 16 (continued) Trivia Night 6:30 p.m., Uptown Café, 1639 S.E. Ensign Lane, Warrenton, $2 person per game. Each night ends with a rollover jackpot question. Author Reading 7 p.m., Cloud & Leaf Bookstore, 148 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-2665. Author Justin Hocking will read from his memoir “The Great Floodgates of the Wonderworld.” Oregon Trail Presentation 7 p.m., Seaside Public Library, 1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-6742, www. seasidelibrary.org, free, all ages. Author Nancy Bell Anderson will give a presentation on her book “Little Belle Crosses the Oregon Trail,” a glimpse into the founding of the state.

Editor’s Pick: Saturday, July 18 Seaside Beach Run 7 a.m., 12th Ave. at the N. Promenade beach access, Seaside, www. seasidebeachrun.org, free to $40, all ages. The 49th Seaside Beach Run/Walk includes 5/10k beach runs, 5k walks and a free Kid’s Sand Dash and treasure hunt, followed by awards and picnic at Goodman Park. Registration is required.

Columbia River Tribute 9 a.m., Clatsop Community College, 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria, 503-894-0187, rmcclelland@clatsopcc.edu, $15 to $30.

Guided Canoe Tours 1:30 p.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4425, www.nps.gov/lewi. Take a kayak or canoe tour along the riverbanks of the Lewis and Clark River and hear about the historical park. Tours are free with park admission and reservations required.

Gun & Knife Show 9 a.m., Clatsop County Fairgrounds, 92937 Walluski Loop, Astoria, 800-659-3440, www.collectorswest.com, $6, 18 and older. Attendees will never know what they’ll find at the Collectors West gun and knife show. A parent must accompany children under 18.

Canoe Adventures 2 p.m., Sunset Pool, 1140 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-3311, www.sunsetempire. com, $20 to $30 per trip. Join canoe trips along the river and upper estuary system near the Necanicum confluence. Registration required.

Music in the Gardens & Tour 10 a.m., multiple gardens, Long Beach Peninsula, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422507, $20. Music in the Gardens showcases eight local gardens. There will be live music, food and beverages. Maps are provided with tickets.

Golf Tourney 2 p.m., Gearhart Golf Links, 1157 N. Marion Ave., Gearhart, 503-738-3538, www. gearhartgolflinks.com, $50 to $60, 21 and older. Aloha shirts and Mai Tais are welcome at the “Summer’s Here… Right?” golf tournament.

Clamshell Railway Days 10 a.m., Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum, 115 S.E. Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360642-3446, $5. Celebrate Clamshell Railway Days with lectures, model railroads from clubs, the kids craft caboose, bus tours and more.

Reptile Man Returns 3 p.m., Manzanita Branch Library, 571 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-6665, free, all ages. Bring the whole family and learn all about some awesome animals from the Reptile Man.

Sunkat Feline Convention 10 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside, 425-882-3061, www.sunkats.org. The Sunkat Feline Fanciers, a CFA affiliated all breed cat club, will have their annual cat show.

Community Skate Night 5 p.m., Astoria Armory, 1636 Exchange St., Astoria, $3 admission, $3 skate rentals, all ages. Community skate night is every Friday. All ages welcome.

Book Signing 2 p.m., Cannon Beach Book Company, 130 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361301. Local authors Honey Perkel and Gloria Linkey will sign copies of their books and chat with readers.

Manzanita Beach Walk/Run 6:30 a.m., on the beach at Laneda Ave., Manzanita, www.raceroster.com, $35 to $40, all ages and levels. Join in this annual walk/run along one of the most scenic runs of the region, from the cliffs of Neahkahnie Mountain south to Nehalem Bay Jetty. Race starts at 9 a.m. Sandsations 8 a.m., Bolstad beach approach, Long Beach, Wash. free, all ages. Watch teams sculpt from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Judging and awards at 3 p.m. Angora Hiking Club 9 a.m., meet at 6th Street Parking Lot,Astoria, 503-861-2802. Washington State Park interpretive specialist Aaron Webster will lead a moderately difficult hike at Seaview Beach and Beards Hollow.

Sunkat Feline Convention 10 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside, 425-882-3061, www.sunkats.org. CHIP-in Cathedral Tree Trail 1 p.m., Astoria Column, 1 Coxcomb Drive, Astoria, 503-741-1600, www.astoriaparks. com, all ages. Join CHIP-in and the staff from Lewis and Clark National Historic Parks for a day of service and trail work. Bring gloves, gardening tools, and wear long pants and closed-toed shoes.

Tuesday, July 21

Sandsations All day, Bolstad beach approach, Long Beach, Wash. free, all ages. Demo sculptures will be completed. At 5 p.m. attend free lessons, then a beach bonfire with s’mores for first 100 people, and fireworks at dusk.

Saturday, July 18

Clamshell Railway Days 10 a.m., Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum, 115 S.E. Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360642-3446, www.columbiapacificheritagemuseum.com, $5.

Guided Canoe Tours 2:30 p.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4425, www.nps.gov/lewi.

Friday, July 17

Columbia River Tribute 7 p.m., Clatsop Community College, 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria, 503-894-0187, rmcclelland@clatsopcc.edu, $15 to $30. Clatsop Community College will host its second annual Tribute to the Columbia River conference featuring guest speakers. Space is limited and early registration is recommended.

Gun & Knife Show 9 a.m., Clatsop County Fairgrounds, 92937 Walluski Loop, Astoria, 800-659-3440, www.collectorswest.com, $6, 18 and older.

Guided Canoe Tours 2 p.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4425, www.nps.gov/lewi. Artist Reception 5 to 7 p.m., White Bird Gallery, 251 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2681, www.whitebirdgallery.com. White Bird will host an artist reception for Randall Tipton, Tom Cramer and Boni and Dave Deal. Elks Fundraiser Dinner 5 p.m., Elks Lodge 1937, 110 N. Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., www.youcaring.com/ tallelks, $12. Elks Therapy Program fundraiser dinner includes pork chops, pie and live music. Event is open to members and guests.

Sunday, July 19 Songbird Walk 9 to 11 a.m., meet at Les Shirley Park parking lot, Cannon Beach, 503-436-0143, all ages, free. Sponsored by Ecola Creek Awareness Project, local birder Susan Boac will lead a songbird walk from Les Shirley Park along Ecola Creek to the Cannon Beach Lagoons. Participants should bring binoculars.

ABATE Chapter Meeting 5:30 p.m., Astoria Moose Lodge, 420 17th St., Astoria, 503-325-3566, www.northcoastabate.com. Join the north coast group of motorcycle enthusiasts who want to ride, have fun and provide community support.

Wednesday, July 22 Angora Hiking Club 9 a.m., meet at Youngs Bay Restaurant, 1820 S.E. Front St., Astoria, 503-325-4315. Bob Westerberg will lead an easy road cleanup. Neahkahnie Hike 10 a.m., Oswald West State Park, Arch Cape, 503-738-9126, www.nclctrust.org, free. Nadia Gardner and Katie Voelke will lead a difficult, three-mile hike on the Arch Cape and Falcon Cove trail. Registration required.

CLASSES Friday, July 17

“BAALL” Process Workshop 7 to 9 p.m., RiversZen Yoga Center, 399 31st St., Astoria, 503-440-3554, www. riverzenyoga.com, $25. Taught by Becky Eshelman, participants will learn ways to gain clarity, decision-making and discover their intuition.

Saturday, July 18 HiiH Paper Making Class 3 p.m., HiiH Barn Studio & Showroom, 89120 Lewis and Clark Road, Astoria, 503-493-4367, www.hiihlights.com. Artist Lam Quang will give an overview of handmade paper, demonstrating Eastern and Western techniques.

Tuesday, July 21 Colored Pencil Techniques 9:30 a.m., Astoria Art Loft, 106 3rd St., Astoria, 503-325-4442, www.astoriaartloft. com, $80 to $150. Develop different pencil techniques using wax, oil and water-soluble pencils with a variety of compatible materials.

Wednesday, July 22 Colored Pencil Techniques 3:30 p.m., Astoria Art Loft, 106 3rd St., Astoria, 503-3254442, www.astoriaartloft.com, $80 to $150. Native Berries Class 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., CCC Seaside Campus, 1455 N. Roosevelt Drive, Seaside, 503-338-2408, www.clatsopcc. edu/schedule, $35. Dorota Haber-Lehigh will show how to recognize and identify native plants. Bring a journal for sketching. Class meets Wednesdays and Saturdays.

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 7


Astorian jazz vocalist returns Breathe, ask, allow, listen, love at RiversZen Former Kelley Shannon, pianist George Colligan to play at KALA Becky Eshelman to lead personal growth workshop July 17 ASTORIA — RiversZen Yoga and Resistance Stretching Studio will offer a “BAALL” (Breathe, Ask, Allow, Listen, Love) Process Workshop from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, July 17. The workshop costs $25. The workshop will be led by Becky Eshelman, who is an intuitive, a person who works with intuitive counseling, spiritual guidance, relationship and family healing, energy work, mediumship and mystical listening. The BAALL method is a physical, spiritual and personal system of growth for those who like to “play” their way out of the frantic pace of life’s distractions. During the course of the day it’s easy not to hear our intuition, our inner voice; that’s when we get off our path. In this Playshop and supportive environment, attendees have the opportunity to tune in to what is most important by learning ways to gain clarity, empower decision making and

BAALL Process Workshop 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, July 17 RiversZen Yoga Studio 399 31st St., Astoria http://RiversZen.com $25 discover their gifts. The workshop aims to give attendees insight into daily life choices. Participants might be asking these types of questions: Who am I? What kind of person do I want to be? What if my life doesn’t look like I thought it would? How do I bring more of my gifts to the table? And how can intuition play a part in the process? The BAALL process seeks to nourish the creative spirit, gain clarity on direction, dismantle

what holds you back, discover and enhance your intuitive gifts, strengthen your healing abilities and connect you with dynamic like-minded people. Read more about the BAALL process at www.baallprocess.com On Saturday and Sunday, July 18 and 19, Eshelman will also offer private, by-appointment-only readings and sessions at RiversZen. Ten-minute card readings are available from 9 to 10 a.m. One-hour sessions are available from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will include intuitive guidance/coaching, card reading, energy work/reiki and medical intuitive reading. Single sessions are $65, two sessions are $120. For more information go to www.illuminated-life.com. To schedule your session, visit http://RiversZen.com or call RiversZen at 503-440-3554. The RiversZen Yoga and Resistance Studio is located at 399 31st St. on the Astoria Riverwalk.

mariePOWELL shoalwater cove gallery

ORIGINAL FINE ART on the waterfront l port of ilwaco marie-powell.com l 360.244.0800 8 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

ASTORIA — KALA presents vocalist Kelley Shannon and internationally acclaimed pianist George Colligan for an intimate evening of jazz at 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 22. Shannon and Colligan perform standards and originals by both artists. Doors open at 7:30 p.m.; admission is $8. Cocktails and light fare will be available at the bar. It’s a heck of a homecoming for a globetrotting songbird who ¿rst spread her wings in the company of Astoria’s famous coterie of painters. Shannon broke out her vocal chops as a teen at former Astoria art gallery in Astoria The Paci¿c Rim. Owned by her mother, Patricia Shannon, the gallery hosted Friday night jazz sessions. Currently residing in Baltimore, Maryland, Shannon spent numerous years on the Portland jazz scene. It was there a few years back that she met George Colligan in a club. She describes their music collaboration as “That immediate kitten-and-a-string energy, real happy. The fascination factor was there right away. He’s just an incredible player.” Colligan boasts an incomparable resume as one of America’s elite jazz pianists. He has appeared on over 100 albums since 1992 as sideman, composer or bandleader, including appearances with Cassandra Wilson, Don Byron, Buster Williams and Lonnie Plaxico, and served on the faculty of The Julliard School and Portland State University. At the upcoming KALA show, “I don’t even know what’s gonna happen but I know it’s gonna be wonderful. It’s a beautiful conversation,” says Shannon. The two enjoy an improvisational chemistry and possess the technical chops to bring their bipartite vision to life. KALA is located at 1017 Marine Drive. For more information, call 503-3384878.

Submitted photo

Former Astorian and jazz vocalist Kelley Shannon will return to perform an intimate night of jazz at KALA on July 22.

Submitted photo

Elite jazz pianist George Colligan will perform with Kelley Shannon at KALA on July 22.

Jazz night 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 22 KALA 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria 503-338-4878 • $8


GARDEN TOURS Find inspiration for your own garden at the Music in the Gardens Tour on the Long Beach Peninsula July 18 and the Seaside Downtown Garden Walk July 26

N

orthwest gardens are looking their best now, which means it’s time for garden tours. This year there are two excellent and very different tours on successive weekends. The ¿rst, 6aturday, July 18, is the Music in the Gardens Tour on the Long Beach 3eninsula. 1ext 6unday, July 26, you can tour the urban gardens of 6easide. 2n both tours you can enjoy creative and refreshing gardens and, if you’re a gardener, ask questions and collect information. That is, get ideas for your own garden, Quality and diversity are the bywords on the Long Beach tour. 6ince 2 6 this tour has been showing gardens creatively adapted to local conditions, which include everything from wind and rain to elk and bears. Eight gardens will display everything from roses to cabbages, and ² a ¿rst for any local tour — a home wetlands restoration project.

While strolling the grounds at these venues you can munch goodies and listen to music as diverse as the gardens. Long beach musicians will contribute, of course, and Acustica World Music from across the river will also play, as will the folk duo Winterlings and guitarist Terry Robb, both from Portland. The garden of Rita Nicely and Ken Golling is a series of outdoor “rooms” (including the new “Buddha Garden”) surrounding a lodge-like home. There’s a meditation alcove, a small pond that feeds a stream that empties into a frog pond, and a variety of meticulously tended native plants and perennials. Berries are picked early to avoid attracting bears. “We worked with nature,” says Nicely, “and on nice days we can sit on the porch with our wine, watching the sunset, and on the other side of the house we can watch the sunrise over Willapa Bay.” Two gardens are side-by-side. That of Ginger Bisch is a more traditional garden, be¿tting the B&B it surrounds. Next door, Marla McGrew says that she and husband Gary, “recycle or repurpose whatever we can.” You’ll ¿nd whimsical pots and trellises made from old wooden ladders, and both gardens have the latest garden craze: chickens. Elsewhere on the tour you’ll see a classic

The garden of Rita Nicely and Ken Golling features meticulously tended native plants and perennials. The couple’s garden will be one of eight on the Music in the Garden tour on the Long Beach Peninsula.

cut Àower garden, a bird watcher’s paradise, and an “aromatherapy deck” with jasmine, gardenias and pinks, covered with multi-layered sails that dance in the wind. The “High Tide Hilton” isn’t an hotel, but it’s a garden ¿lled with fun regional art, driftwood gates, and what is perhaps the best outdoor kitchen on the peninsula. Perhaps the most unique stop on the tour is the “,sle of Bev” restoration project. 2wners Kelly Rupp and Bev Arnoldy (hence the name) have worked to restore this former Willapa Bay cannery site to its original state, including planting hundreds of native plants and dredging a pond. About an hour south of Long Beach, the city of 6easide welcomes visitors with its urban gardens. There are over 1 of these small gardens in the downtown core (bounded by Avenue A, 8.6. Highway 1 1, )irst Avenue, and the Prom), and the city also provides 66 hanging baskets. Many of these small gardens are included on the Downtown Garden Walk, which is sponsored by the

Music in the Gardens: The tour is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, July 18. Tickets cost $20 and may be purchased at The English Nursery (corner of highways 101 and 103 in Seaview) or at Peninsula Landscape Supply (15289 Sandridge Road, Long Beach). More information at http://watermusicfestival. com/music-in-the-gardens-tour

Seaside Downtown Garden Walk: This walk takes place at 9 a.m. Sunday, July 26. Free, or $8 with the breakfast and talk. No reservations are needed for the walk, but are necessary for the breakfast: call 503-717-1914.

Continued on page 15

the arts

VISUAL ARTS • LITERATURE • THEATER • MUSIC & MORE The peninsula garden of Rita Nicely and Ken Golling features a frog pond.

Story and photos by DWIGHT CASWELL

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 9


Musical duo sings of labor, environment Dana Lyons, Anne Feeney to perform at Blue Scorcher ASTORIA — Environmental singer Dana Lyons has teamed up with notorious labor hellraiser Anne Feeney to launch Teamsters and Turtles: Together at Last! Starting in Lyons’ hometown of Bellingham, Washington, the musical duo took off July 1 and are sweeping south on tour. Lyons and Feeney will perform in Astoria at 7 p.m. Monday, July 20 at the Blue Scorcher Bakery & Cafe, located at 1493 Duane St. Ad-

mission is a suggested donation of $10 to $20, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds. For more information, call 503-338-7473. The duo is touring to dispel the myth that unions are at odds with environmentalists. Through song and story, Lyons and Feeney will work to bring together labor activists and environmentalists into a movement for justice, peace, equality and sustainability.

Feeney, a Pittsburgh-based agitator, performs music that she says is designed to “comfort the afÀicted and afÀict the comfortable.” Not many women have chosen to walk the path of Woody Guthrie, but Feeney has made a career of it for the past 35 years. Lyons is the singer/songwriter best known for his outrageous hit comedy songs “Cows With Guns,” “RV” and “Ride The Lawn.”

Dana Lyons & Anne Feeney 7 p.m. Monday, July 20 Blue Scorcher Bakery & Cafe 1493 Duane St., Astoria 503-338-7473 $10 to $20 suggested donation

Submitted photo Submitted photo by Julie Leonardsson

Pittsburgh-based agitator Anne Feeney will perform with Dana Lyons on July 20 at Blue Scorcher Bakery & Cafe.

Bellingham, Washington-based singer/ songwriter Dana Lyons is known for his dynamic performances of comedy, ballads and love songs.

White Bird Gallery opens new exhibition CANNON BEACH — White Bird Gallery will open its summer art show with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday, July 18. The show features new paintings by Randall Tipton, wood carvings by Tom Cramer, and raku-¿red ceramics by Dave and Boni Deal. The show will run to Aug. 25. Randall Tipton is an Oregon artist who has been painting for over three decades. He works in oils on canvas as well as with various water media on paper and yupo surfaces, creating

paintings that use the landscape as a guiding orientation. At its core, Tipton’s work suggests something fundamental and primal, drawing from the transcendental relationship we have with the natural world. His compositions interpret the complexity of scene in deep layers of color and gesture, using soft tones and expressive brushwork that is often achieved through a trial-and-error process. Tipton’s process is informed by the improvisational aspects of Abstract Expressionism as a

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more direct link to the unconscious. His introspective paintings also stem from a belief in the restorative qualities of nature. Alluding to a dreamlike state, his emotive compositions challenge the relationship between foreground and background as elements of light and depth create a degree of abstraction among his recognizable scenes. Tipton studied painting with Richard Diebenkorn at the Santa Fe Institute of Fine Arts. His work is included in several prominent collections such as the U.S. Embassy in El Salvador and Newsweek. Cramer is a well-known Oregon artist who creates meticulously carved, painted and gilded wood reliefs. The native Oregonian gained recognition throughout Portland in the 1980s and 1990s for his landmark outdoor murals, wildly painted art cars and carved miniature totems — all of which are bright, bold and lean toward American pop-culture. Cramer’s recent wood reliefs are more intimately approached than his previous public works. He draws from the deep histories of spirituality and cultures from places such as India, Egypt and Europe. Merging aspects of painting and woodcarving, Cramer’s pieces are labor-intensive vignettes that allude to timelessness and emotional experience, rather than any direct representation. In Cramer’s intricate relief surfaces and gilded textures there

Submitted photo

“Amoeba” by Tom Cramer. Submitted photo

A tree triptych by Dave and Boni Deal at White Bird Gallery.

Submitted photo

“Shade and Sunlight” by Randall Tipton.

is a sense of the in¿nite nature of reality, as he blends a inÀuences and such contradictory things as order and chaos, irrational mental states, romanticism, industrialism and an array of musical, literary, visual and cultural ref-

erences to turn the viewer on to an expanded view of themselves. Boni and Dave Deal are a husband-and-wife team who have been creating raku vessels and wall plaques for over 40 years. Their collaborative piec-

es are mainly classic ceramic forms embellished with themes of Northwest Àora and fauna, created at their rustic home-studio in the Cascade Mountains. Dave Deal is a master at wheel throwing, building and ¿ring the ceramic vessels with precision while Boni Deal uses her expertise to create elegant surface design and texture to each pottery piece. The Deals’ nature-oriented ceramic art is also notable for the integrity of process — pieces are created with water from a creek, no electricity, and often use a kick-wheel, before being raku-¿red. The exhibit will include large-scale vessels with heron motifs, wall triptychs and platters inspired by landscape scenes, and their signature leaf motif pottery, which uses real leaves pressed into the clay surface leaving behind an incredible real-life impression of maple, fern and gingko leaves. Some of their newest pieces also use batik methods and wax resistance to achieve detailed landscape designs on the pottery surface.


Join Angora Hiking Club on guided walk

Learn how ‘The Soil Will Save Us’

SEAVIEW, Wash. — Angora Hiking Club invites walkers and hikers to join Washington State Park interpretive specialist Aaron Webster for a walk to view the waves, currents and tides and how they interact to de¿ne Washingtonœs beautiful and sometimes dangerous Long Beach Peninsula coast. Walkers will meet at 9 a.m. Saturday, July 18 at the Sixth Street parking lot in Astoria. From there, attendees will carpool to 38th Place in Seaview, Washington, arriving at about 9:30 a.m. at the beach to meet Webster. There is roadside parking along 38th Place approaching the Discovery Trail entrance to the beach, with no fees or time limits posted. This guided, level walk is about 3 miles south to Beardœs Hollow. Possible birds to see are terns, gulls, eagles, cormorants, pelicans, peregrines, osprey and dunlins. A return walk back to 38th Place should result in approx-

SEASIDE — The Friends of the Seaside Library will host Kristin Ohlson, author of “The Soil Will Save Us,â€? at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 23. There will be book sales and signings presented by Beach Books. Thousands of years of poor farming and ranching practices and modern industrial agriculture have led to the loss of up to 80 percent of carbon from the worldÂśs soil. ,n “The Soil Will Save Usâ€? journalist and bestselling author Kristin Ohlson makes an elegantly argued, passionate case for our “great green hopeâ€? — a way in which we can not only heal the land but also turn atmospheric carbon into beneÂżcial soil carbon and potentially reverse global warming. The granddaughter of farmers, Ohlson has long had an appreciation for the soil. A chance conversation with a chef led her to the crossroads of science, farming, food and

Submitted photo

Angora Hiking Club members pose for a photo during a past hike.

imately a three-hour sojourn total. Wear sturdy shoes, bring bug repellant, water and sunblock lotion. There are restrooms at BeardÂśs Hollow. Annual dues to for Angora Hiking Club members is $7. Membership is not required to participate in the hikes. AngoraÂśs annual schedule of hikes and where they occur is

available at www.AngoraHikingClub.org For additional club information, contact chief guide Bob Westerberg at 503-3254315 or Westysr@charter.net. Hike leaders are Jim and Kathleen Hudson, available at 503861-2802. Webster is available at 360-642-3029. Organizers ask that potential hikers call if they plan to participate.

Seaside Public Library hosts Portland author Kristin Ohlson

Submitted photo

Kristin Ohlson, author of “The Soil Will Save Us,� will speak at Seaside Public Library on July 23.

environmentalism. She discovered that there is a vast kingdom of creatures under our feet — billions of microorganisms in a tablespoon of soil—that take the carbon dioxide that plants pull from the

atmosphere and turn it into life-giving soil carbon. ,n her book, Ohlson introduces visionary scientists, farmers, foodies, ranchers and landscapers whose work shows that the earth can be healed. She offers the hope that problems like climate change, air and water pollution, and food quality have the same lowtech solution: through the soil. Ohlson is a freelance journalist, author, essayist and Âżction writer who lives in Portland. She has written for The New York Times, Salon, Smithsonian, Oprah, Utne, and many other publications. “The Soil Will Save Usâ€? was a Âżnalist for the 2015 Oregon Book Award. The Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway. For more information call 503-738-6742 or visit www. seasidelibrary.org

Astoria Artists’ St udio Tour July 25 - 26, 2015 • 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Free, self-guided tour of local artists’ studios. Buy art from the artist! Tour brochures with maps available early July at Dots ‘n’ Doodles

Art Supply, RiverSea Gallery, Imogen Gallery, Old Town Framing, Luminari Arts,Tempo Gallery and online at www.AstoriaArtists.org.

Presented by the Astoria Society of Artists and sponsored by Columbia Memorial Hospital 1#." #.#)( & 5 ( ( # & -/**),. ,)' Ų-.),# #-/ & Ų,.- ( ." ĹŤ#.3 ) Ų-.),# Ĺ… SPONSOR

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July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 11


spend the summer

ON THE LAND

Mike Paterson shows Toby Hussa, 7, and his father, Jason Hussa, a sample from a pond in the Seaside Mill Ponds during a North Coast Land Conservatory On the Land event.

Discover the natural history and biological diversity of the local area with the North Coast Land Conservancy’s guided walks to fens, bogs, coastal prairies and dunes this summer Story by JON BRODERICK Photos by JOSHUA BESSEX A handful of sure-footed hikers pause on a promontory EeloZ 1eahkahnie 0ountain its Easalt Ă€anks risinJ alZays suddenly from the sea and disappearinJ today in a summer foJ aEoYe Around them nestinJ Formorants huJ the Fliffs Juillemots Jather on the roFks EeloZ a sea lion sZims in the sZells Âł, had no idea this Zas here ´ someone marYels Âł, loYe to hear people say that ´ says their Juide .atie 9oelke the e[eFutiYe direFtor of the 1orth &oast /and &onserYanFy (Yen those Zho for deFades haYe e[plored the 1orth &oastÂśs EaFk roads and trails enMoy neZ disFoYeries Zhen they Moin the 1orth &oast /and &onserYanFyÂśs summer 2n the /and outinJs

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Growing conservation

Toby Hussa, 7, smiles as he holds a snail he caught from a pond at the Seaside Mill Ponds during a North Coast Land Conservatory On the Land event.

A sculpin caught from a pond at the Seaside Mill Ponds.

12 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

7his day 9oelke has Moined 1adia *ardner orJani]er of the )riends of &ape )alFon 0arine 5eserYe to desFriEe the FonneFtion EetZeen land and sea Zhere a uniTue opportunity e[ists to proteFt FontiJuous natural haEitat stretFhinJ from offshore seas to Foast ranJe summits 7he 1&/& has reFently assumed FonserYation of aFres of forest and subalpine meadow on 2nion 3eak part of what the 1&/& Falls the ³&oastal (dJe ´ that mountain ranJe with its watersheds that stretFhes between 7illamook Head and Nehalem %ay 9oelke enYisions like *oY 2swald :est and 6tate 3arks 6uperintendent Samuel Boardman before her a natural reserYe spanninJ it all :hen harYest prohibition starts in January 2016 in the &ape )alFon 0arine 5eserYe 12 sTuare miles of oFean habitat will adMoin the proteFted land of 2swald :est State 3ark 7he North &oast /and &onserYanFy hopes one day to e[pand and FonneFt its 2nion 3eak reserYe to Freate a remarkable Tuilt of FonneFted and proteFted natural habitat

‘I feel so strongly about conservation because the land I grew up in has been developed, paved and lost to conservation forever. I don’t want to see that happen to the North Coast.’

SinFe 2012 2reJon has desiJnated four other Foastal marine reserYes ² at &asFade Head 2tter 5oFk &ape 3erpetua and 5ed¿sh 5oFk ² but none of these haYe the potential to adMoin suFh siJni¿Fant and diYerse FonserYed habitat ³7he North &oast /and &onserYanFyœs loFal role in priYate land FonserYation ² seekinJ to link toJether other proteFted areas suFh as state parks and marine reserYes ² makes it possible to take a systems approaFh to FonserYation rather than a willy-nilly one ´ e[plains 9oelke ³7he Jreater the FonneFtiYity of natural systems the Jreater resilienFy those systems will haYe throuJh time ´ Carla Cole discusses a hemlock tree during an NCLC On the Land foraging event July 7.

The balance of accessibility

(Yeryone who loYes wilderness feels the tension thouJh between publiF aFFess and habitat FonserYation ³, feel it myself all the time , loYe to tromp around outside but itœs dif¿Fult to deFide where thatœs appropriate ´ says 9oelke ³:e donœt want to mistakenly loYe plaFes to death ´ AFFess to N&/&œs proteFted habitat is therefore limited Some of it is fraJile Some of it unsafe Some of it is seldom Yisited eYen by land FonserYanFy staff None of it howeYer has been taken from publiF aFFess sinFe the land

N&/& manaJes was always priYate in the Âżrst plaFe ,n an effort thouJh to responsibly inYite the publiF into some of its FonserYed land oYer the ne[t few years N&/& will be buildinJ a publiF trails network at &irFle &reek its larJest habitat reserYe 9oelke worked as a Âżeld bioloJist for the 8 S )orest SerYiFe the Bureau of /and 0anaJement and the 2reJon 'epartment of )ish and :ildlife before MoininJ N&/& in 200 She Jrew up amonJ the oak trees east of SaFramen-

Carla Cole, natural resources project manager with Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, holds duckweed during an On the Land foraging outing July 7.

to &alifornia 7hose trees are Jone now ³, feel so stronJly about FonserYation beFause the land , Jrew up in has been deYeloped paYed and lost to FonserYation foreYer , donœt want to see that happen to the North &oast ´

Discover hidden gems

7houJh opportunities to Yisit FonserYed land are limited and as yet none e[ists to e[plore the reserYe at 2nion 3eak the North &oast /and &onserYanFy inYites the publiF to disFoYer other Âłhidden Forners´ of its FonserYed land by partiFipatinJ in its 2n the /and outinJs Naturalists e[pert in eaFh speFiÂżF habitat Juide the two-hour trips to fens boJs Foastal prairies and dunes to desFribe the natural history and the bioloJiFal diYersity proteFted there 5emaininJ 2n the /and outinJs in July inFlude a trip to the ButterÂżeld )en a 00-aFre wetland riFh in natiYe Franberry inseFt-eatinJ sundew and sphaJnum moss BrinJ your loups and maJnifyinJ Jlasses 7hen leJendary loFal naturalist founder of the North &oast /and &onserYanFy Neil 0aine leads a patient obserYant trip to the Sitka spruFe swamp near &irFle &reek <ou miJht brinJ a foldinJ Fhair and binoFulars ,n AuJust reJistration is now open Yarious outinJs will take hikers to e[amine N&/&Âśs restoration proMeFt at :arrentonÂśs &lear /ake to wander throuJh the reFoYerinJ forest at the headwaters of Boneyard &reek to obserYe new eYolYinJ wetland near 7hompson &reek and to stroll the transition from open Foastal prairie to anFient Sitka spruFe forest beside NeaFo[ie &reek As summerÂśs end approaFhes September outinJs will enMoy birdinJ and wildlife spottinJ at :halen ,sland in the middle of Sand /ake estuary or behind the dunes at the NeaFo[ie :ildlife &orridor 2n the /and also offers one more FhanFe to obserYe up Flose the new wetlands at 7hompson &reek 0aybe the Âżrst Foho will be runninJ by then (aFh outinJ is free but limited to small Jroups of 1 or Carla Cole, natural resources project manager with Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, shows some of the plants that can be foraged near Creep and Crawl Lake during the so 5eJister in adYanFe online at nFlFtrust orJ or by FallinJ North Coast Land Conservancy’s On the Land foraging event July 7. the North &oast /and &onserYanFy ofÂżFe at 0 - - 126

Aug. 6 – Clear Lake Walk ‘I feel so strongly about conservation On the Land Aug. 8 – Boneyard Ridge Hike because the land I grew up in has www.nclctrust.org Aug 15 – Stanley Marsh Walk 503-738-9126 been developed, paved and lost to25 – Neacoxie Forest Walk Aug. Registration required 10 – Whalen Island conservation forever. I don’t want toSept. see at Sand Lake Walk Free Sept. 19 – Birding in the Dunes that22happen toConnection the North Coast.’ July – Land-Sea July 28 – Botany in Butterfield Fen Aug. 3 – Circle Creek Watch

Walk

Sept. 30 – Stanley Marsh Walk

Toby Hussa, 7, watches a small fish caught from a pond at the Seaside Mill Ponds during a North Coast Land Conservatory On the Land event.

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 13


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The Carne Asada Taco contains moist chunks of beef topped with onions and cilantro.

Beside the chalkboard menu are shelves and a case filled with a smorgasbord of mostly Mexican-made products like candies, phone cards, and remedies and ointments.

The easygoing Seaside restaurant offers more than just tacos and burritos

I was in a bit of a bind. I’d been working outside with two friends in Seaside and owed them a meal. It was after six o’clock, and we were hungry. I had to feed us quickly, well, and without breaking the bank. Furthermore, with the Fourth of July rapidly approaching, tourLVW WUDI¿F ZDV SLOLQJ XS LQ the streets and at the dinner tables. I circled the city and spied Guadalajara Taco Shop, whose dining room was relatively unencumbered. Just two blocks north from the tourist vacuum of Broadway and Holladay, Guadalajara Taco Shop is a world unto itself. It is calm and easygoing with large, west-facing ZLQGRZV WKDW ¿OO WKH GHHS dining room with natural light. Dressed with soft tones and mis-matched posters, sculptures and memorabilia, the decor is akin the walls of a 10-year-old’s bedroom — unpretentious and charmingly inconsistent. A teenage girl operated the register. Beside the chalkboard menu are VKHOYHV DQG D FDVH ¿OOHG ZLWK D VPRUJDVERUG RI mostly Mexican-made products like candies, phone cards and an array of pills, cremes, remedies and ointments I’d never seen at Safeway. I ordered for the group, getting a bit of everything to share — a burrito, enchiladas, tacos and pork ribs. I paid just over $30 and left with a cache of leftovers. Of the smorgasboard ZHUH WZR FOHDU VWDQGRXWV WKH ULEV DQG WKH ¿VK and lengua tacos. The Pork Ribs ($9.50) came with Spanish rice, refried beans and four corn tortillas. There were two ribs, each thick, about 8 inches long and topped with cilantro and diced onions. It was a solid, but not overwhelming amount of meat. That meat, though, was tender and just

Guadalajara Taco Shop is a world unto itself. It is calm and easygoing with large, west-facing windows that fill the deep dining room with natural light.

14 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

falling off the bone. Lightly seasoned with a (not at all spicy) red sauce, the pork partnered VR ¿QHO\ ZLWK WKH ULFH DQG EHDQV LW PDGH PH wonder: Why were pork ribs a rarity at Mexican restaurants? 0RUH FRPPRQ RI FRXUVH DUH ¿VK WDFRV ($3) and Guadalajara has made them its own. The cod is breaded, briskly fried and nothing in particular to write home about. But the creamy white sauce, with a pinch of pickle or dill, affords the dish its singular character. The Carne Asada Taco ($3) too was a little different than the norm. Topped with onions and cilantro, the chunks of beef were plentiful, moist and contained almost no chunks of fat — fine for not biting into a piece of chewy gristle, less so for rich taste. Overall, it was a little dull. Much more satisfying was the succulent

Lengua Taco ($3). Like the ribs, the beef tongue was slowly, achingly cooked, ready to pull apart thanks almost to gravity alone. It was salty and juicy, almost like it had been stewed. The Chicken Burrito with a smoky red sauce ($6) was serviceable, though hardly memorable. For an empty stomach (or wallet) it’s a substantial amount of food that, filled with rice, beans, meat and a few onions, satiates without distinction. To be clear: Guadalajara Taco Shop has better tastes to offer. I returned a few days later in hopes of discovering another. From the Shrimp section of the menu I ordered the Ala Diabla

mouth OF THE COLUMBIA COAST WEEKEND’S LOCAL RESTAURANT REVIEW Story and photos by THE MOUTH OF THE COLUMBIA • mouth@coastweekend.com

Guadalajara Taco Shop Rating: Â?Â?Â? 65 N. Holladay Drive, Seaside 503-738-4338

Hours: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday to Sunday. Price: $ – EntrÊes run from $5 to $14. Service: Order at the counter. Takeout available. Vegetarian / Vegan options: Vegetarians should do well, though vegans may struggle. Drinks: Soft drinks including Mexican Coke, Jarritos soda, juice and more.

(aka, the Spicy Shrimp, $14). Served again with corn tortillas, Spanish rice (pretty standard) and refried beans (lardy in the best way), the dish proffered an array of vegetables. With the buttery, garlicky (though not very spicy) shrimp were sautÊed onions, carrots, broccoli, cauliflower and mushrooms. The fibrous ruffage was a welcome edition to the shrimp, which were small but numerous. As I noshed during this second trip to Guadalajara, the ambiance shifted, becoming a bit more lively. It was still peaceful, not bustling, but again seemingly even further than two blocks from the strip of vintage Americana and tourism that is Broadway. Spanish speakers came both to eat and do business. Some wired money using the red Internex phone on the counter next to the cash register. Others had tacos and caught up over non-alcoholic, sparkling sangria. Indeed, alongside a few gems in the menu, the culture and auxiliary business orbiting Guadalajara’s kitchen have buoyed the 13-year-old, family-owned restaurant. The ambiance benefits too.

KEY TO RATINGS

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poor below average good & worth returning excellent outstanding, the best in the Â?Â?Â?Â?Â? Columbia-Pacific region


Garden Continued from page 9 Seaside Downtown Development Association. The two-hour stroll begins at Beach Books, at the intersection of Broadway and Holladay Drive, at 9 a.m. — or 8 a.m. if you want to enjoy a catered breakfast and a slide show talk. The gardener responsible for the design and upkeep of these gardens for the past 20 years is Pam Fleming, of Nature’s Helper Landscaping, and she will be your tour guide. She’ll take you along Broad-

way, past the classic buildings of the Gilbert Block, and when you come to the Necanicum River, she will gesture to the scene. “Take in the view,” she says. “The gardens connect to the old buildings, the trees, the river and our beautiful old Broadway Bridge. There’s a whole landscape. You can imagine you’re in some European city.” Begin to look carefully and you will see an amazing variety of plants, all of which Fleming can describe in detail. She can also tell you how she has coped with wind and salt air, how colors and textures contribute to garden design, and how she has chosen plant groupings that look

good year-round. Notice also how Fleming has designed the gardens so their colors complement those of the nearby shops, how herbs are featured in gardens in front of restaurants, and her little joke: in front of the bars there are thyme, nicotiana, and love-in-a-mist. The Downtown Garden Walk may be less comprehensive than Music in the Gardens, but no less informative. The two tours complement each other because they are both about the problem every gardener faces: how to create something of beauty out of the space and materials available. And if you steal an idea or two, who could blame you?

Photos by Dwight Caswell

Pam Fleming, of Nature’s Helper Landscaping, designed and has worked on the downtown Seaside urban gardens for the past 20 years. She will lead the SDDA Seaside Downtown Garden Walk July 26.

dinin g out D IR EC TO R Y

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503.755.1818 www.camp18restaurant.com Favorite stop to & from the Coast

GOLDEN LUCK

Marla and Gary McGrew use whimsical pots and trellises made from old wooden ladders in their peninsula garden.

503.738.6403 maggiesontheprom.com 581 S Prom, Seaside OR

1157 N. Marion Avenue Gearhart 503-717-8150 www.mcmenamins.com

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Breakfast & Lunch 600 Broadway Ste 7 & 8 -Seaside 503.717.1272

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July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 15


it’s summertime in

seaside

“You r L oca l Q u a lity Fu r n itu r e R e sou r ce ”

A NNIVERS A RY S A LE!

NAM E BRAND S •GRE AT P RI CE S •L ARGE S E L E CTI ONS •

W e pride ourselv es in of f ering bra nd na m es a nd the bestqua lity f urniture a tthe bestprices.O urselection is second to none.You don’tha v e to driv e to Portla nd to getv a lue,qua lity,a nd good prices.C om e v isitour show room and see w hatw e offer locally in Seaside. DELIV ER Y AV AILABLE

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Cla tsop Cou n ty’sla rg est a n d m ost com plete sh ow room isfilled w ith ba rg a in sa t sa le prices! 13 0 SO UTH H O L L AD AY • D O W N TO W N SE ASID E • 5 0 3 -7 3 8-89 9 9

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581 S Prom, Seaside www.maggiesontheprom.com 16 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

Submitted photo courtesy the Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum

The Pullman Passenger car Nahcotta will be open for tours during the Clamshell Railroad Days July 18 and 19.

Celebrate, remember during the Clamshell Railroad Days Find trains, talks, tours at museum ILWACO, Wash. — On Saturday and Sunday, July 18 and 19, join the fun and celebrate Clamshell Railroad Days at WKH &ROXPELD 3DFL¿F +HULtage Museum with expanded events and old favorites. From 1888 to 1930, the “Clamshell Railroad,” begun as the Ilwaco, Railway and Navigation Co., ran along the Long Beach Peninsula and was the primary transportation link from Ilwaco in the south to Nahcotta in the north. The railroad created a reliable route for the area’s major industries: oystering, logging and cranberry farming. A tide table, not a time table, governed the railroad schedule, allowing coordination with the steamers that met the train at either end of its daily journeys. On Saturday, museum doors open at 10 a.m. with model train layouts hosted by the Peninsula Model Railroad Club. Guests will include the Mt. Rainer N-scale club, the Portland Cascade-Z scale club, and Dean and Donna Mead’s fantastic Lego train among others. Kids will love the Kids Craft Caboose. At 1 p.m. Saturday, local

Clamshell Railroad Days Saturday and Sunday, July 18 and 19 Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum 115 Lake St. S.E., Ilwaco, Wash. 360-642-3446 $5, free for kids under 12 UDLOURDG KLVWRULDQ +DUU\ %HOO will give a lecture on the 1889 original Pullman-built train car, the Nahcotta. The train car will be open for tours both days. The $5 fee includes a souvenir pin and museum entrance for two days, free for kids under 12. The Clamshell Railroad Bus Tour runs at the museum from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, and stops include: McGowan (where participants will talk with McGowan resident historian Bill Garvin), Chinook, Megler, and Seaview. There is a $5 fee; reservations are required. 7KH &ROXPELD 3DFL¿F +HULtage Museum is located at 115 Lake St. S.E. For more information, call 360-642-3446.


The New York Times Magazine Crossword START AGAIN Answers on Page 20

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By PATRICK BERRY / Puzzles Edited by WILL SHORTZ ACROSS Hamlet Possible cause of red eyes Collared one Poker in a western College sports’ ____ Valley Conference Disease spread by bats Nefarious “Casablanca” role Bird involved in French government affairs? Fulminate Come together Leading the pack Glittering ballet costume? Brings up Was nosy “Prince ____” (“Aladdin” song) Flipper? Raced with runners “You can stop explaining” Tree with samaras “La Bohème” song in which Rodolfo regrets saying too much to his lover? Except for Site of Italy’s Blue Grotto Barclays Center player “I’ll obey your medical advice!”? Bath bathroom Prey for a dingo Coat of arms element 1969 Nabokov novel Don Everly’s singing brother Reaction to a slug Guarantee Harry’s 1948 Dixiecrat opponent Horror film featuring Ghostface Collared one Miss Woodhouse of Hartfield Stand-up comic’s need Echo tester’s word

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1980s auto Dies down Blender setting Polynesian idol ____-by-the-Sea, N.J. Rat Pack nickname Multitude Coverage provider, for short Particle in seawater

Clatsop Community College holds Tribute to the Columbia River Second annual conference to cover salmon hatcheries, ferries, bar pilots, Coast Guard, more ASTORIA — Clatsop Community College will host its second annual A Tribute to the Columbia River Conference this weekend. The conference takes place from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, July 17 and from 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, July 18 in the Columbia Hall Community Room (Columbia 219) on the CCC main campus in Astoria. A Tribute to the Columbia River is designed to celebrate

the impact of the Columbia River on the 3aci¿c 1orthwest, examine ways in which the river has evolved, anticipate and reÀect on how the river is likely to change and stimulate change, and promote the Columbia River as a symbol of strength and inÀuence for the area. The 2015 program includes: Richard Turner, a ¿sheries biologist with the 1ational

Marine Fisheries Service of 12AA, will talk about salmon and steelhead hatcheries in the Columbia River Basin. • Joe Leahy will provide a retrospective on the automobile passenger ferries that were a unique part of Columbia River history from 1921 through 1966. • Mark Paulson will introduce attendees to a history of the Columbia River bar pilots and why they are needed.

• Lt. Cmdr. Torrey Bertheau will provide an overview of the work of the U.S. Coast Guard in the lower Columbia River. • Local artists Kobe Kytr and Mary Garvey will perform songs of the Paci¿c 1orthwest and Columbia River. A Tribute to the Columbia River is open to the public. Participants may register for one or both days for a fee of

$15 per day. In addition, an optional catered dinner will be held at 6 p.m. Friday, July 17, and a breakfast will be available on at 8 a.m. Saturday, July 18 prior to the morning session. The cost for each meal is $15. Space is limited, and early registration is encouraged. Register by email rmcclelland@clatsopcc.edu, or call 503-894-0187.

A Tribute to the Columbia River 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, July 17 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, July 18 Columbia Hall Community Room Clatsop Community College 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria rmcclelland@clatsopcc.edu 503-894-0187 $15 per day

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 17


coa st w eeken d M ARK ETPLACE

Ap p -solu tely we ha ve you covered

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

Administrative Support Position 40 hours/week Salary Range is $11.50 - $13.50/hour, plus benefits (depending upon experience)

Reporter

Position Summary:

Clatsop Community Action is hiring for a full-time (40 hours/week) Administrative Support whose primary responsibility is to act as the social services agency receptionist and performs administrative/office support duties as assigned. The employee is the first person both clients and professionals encounter. The employee must provide information and referrals and advocacy where appropriate, in a warm, non-judgmental, professional manner. Accurate data collection and reporting is an essential component of this position. Bi-lingual Spanish and English is a plus. For Complete Job Descriptions for and How to Apply: Please include a cover letter, job application and resume with your current contact information and submit to: CCA, 364 9th Street, Astoria, OR 97103 or email to: ebruce@ccaservices.org. Any job offer will be contingent upon the results of an updated background investigation and drug screening.

WE DELIVER! Please leave a light on or install motion detector lights to make your carrierʼs job easier. Thanks! THE DAILY ASTORIAN

O u re-Ed ition in n ow a va ila ble 24/7 on a n y d evice everyw here you a re •iPa d •iPhon e •iPod Tou ch •A n droid •K in dle

THE DAILY ASTORIAN *Alla p p s a re free to d ow n loa d .M u stb e a su b scrib er to view e-Ed ition .

Ca ll 800-781-3211 to su b scrib e 18 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

Are you looking to make a difference in someoneʼs life? Coast Rehabilitation Services is seeking caring and compassionate people who are seeking rewarding opportunities as he/she assists adults with disabilities to lead quality lives of their choosing in a residential setting. Warrenton, Gearhart, and Seaside. Successful applicants must be at least 18 years of age, have a High School diploma or GED, and pass a criminal background check, pre-employment drug test, and pre-employment physical. You must also possess a valid driverʼs license. Applications can be obtained and returned at our admin office at 89451 Hwy. 101 in Warrenton,

Make a splash in business journalism by joining the reporting staff of the ambitious Coast River Business Journal, located where the Columbia River and Pacific Ocean meet. This is a highly dynamic and story-filled place, where Portlanders and Seattleites come to make their dreams of coastal living come true. You should arrive here with polished writing skills, a strong work ethic and robust curiosity to delve into the professional lives of some of the Pacific Northwestʼs most creative and imaginative business people. Working in partnership with colleagues at the Chinook Observer, The Daily Astorian, Seaside Signal and Cannon Beach Gazette, Coast River Business Journal produces a monthly print publication. With your geographical beat spanning Clatsop County, Ore., and Pacific County, Wash., you can choose to live on the Long Beach Peninsula, Astoria or Oregonʼs North Coast. While this position is managed from Long Beach, you will also sometimes work from our Astoria and Seaside offices. An important aspect of this job is providing business coverage to several publications, each with a different environment. There will be aspects of breaking business news, in-depth business reporting and “main street” business news. Part of your job will be to continue ramping up our online content for timely and expansive coverage of business news. Healthcare is one of our regionʼs rapidly expanding economic sectors and we want to hear your ideas about how to cover it in ways that are useful to those in the caring professions, as well as engaging for the community members they serve. We have a rising tide of young and second-career entrepreneurs starting new craft breweries, restaurants, retail stores, galleries and online businesses. You will need to be as engaged and creative as they are. Our traditional industries — tourism to forestry, seafood to homes sales/construction, farming of everything from organic vegetables to legal marijuana — all are wide awake and gaining renewed momentum in a fastexpanding regional economy. Weʼll expect you to dig well beyond the superficial and explain where these industries are going, and why. Our coast is comfortable and still affordable. It's a place where our reporters and their families purchase homes and settle in for careers that are richly connected to the Northwest interior. Part of your job will be exploring and explaining the growing ties between our coast and the cities of Puget Sound and northwest Oregon. We offer a competitive wage, a generous benefit package, and a warm and friendly office environment in Mac-based buildings. We work hard but have fun — the ocean beach is a short stroll from our Long Beach and Seaside offices. We enjoy world-class restaurants, fantastic salmon and deep-sea fishing, amazing wildlife and bird watching, and many other outdoor activities. Portland is two and a half hours; Seattle three hours. Benefits include Paid Time Off (PTO), insurances and a 401(k)/Roth 401(k) retirement plan. Send clips, resume and letter of interest to EO Media Group, PO Box 2048, Salem, OR 97308-2048, by fax to 503371-2935 or e-mail hr@eomediagroup.com.


coa st w eeken d M ARK ETPLACE 70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

Big Foots Steak House Immediate opening for Experienced servers and line cooks for fast paced restaurant, must be detail oriented. Dishwashers also needed. Apply in person at 2427 S. Roosevelt Seaside.

Clatskanie Peoples Utility District is seeking a Senior Electrical/System Design Technician. Compensation based on qualifications. Applications due 07/31/2015 & can be found at clatskaniepud.com

House Cleaner Wanted $15/hr, Cell phone, Mileage, and wellness Benefits. Organic Cleaning Needs Smart Phone and Vehicle www.KukuiHouse.com call 503.828.9889 Cannon Beach

Billʼs Tavern and Brewhouse is now hiring PT/FT line cooks, and bussers/dishwashers must be available nights and weekends. (503)436-2202 or pick up application at 188 N. Hemlock, Cannon Beach, OR. Clatsop County Staff Assistant District Attorneyʼs Office Range: $2,997 - $3,643/Month +Benefits Full-time position to perform professional administrative staff work for the District Attorneyʼs Office. Application materials and job description located at www.co.clatsop.or.us . Closes: 5:00 pm, Friday, July 17, 2015. AA/EOE

Franz has 1 opening for a dedicated individual to be a Route Sales Representative in ourAstoria depot. Qualified candidates will have at least 6 months of DSD and sales experience (food industry a plus). Will order, deliver; rotate and stock wholesale bakery products. Job Requires: excellent driving record, great customer service skills, and maintain a safe work environment. Days off: Wednesday and Sunday. Pay rate is $15.06 per hour, plus commission (85% during training). Excellent company paid Teamsters? Union benefits package. Apply online at franzcareers.com EEO/AAP FRONT OFFICE MANAGER Tolovana Inn is seeking A Front Office Manager to join our team. If you are friendly, dependable, trustworthy and detail oriented then Tolovana Inn is for you. Full-time, pay DOE, great benefits package. Please apply in person at: Tolovana Inn 3400 S. Hemlock Cannon Beach, OR 97145

Full time position in a busy Optometry Clinic. Will train someone who is a fast thinker, able to multi-task, can work will with others, and is looking for a long term career. Apply in person 819 S Holladay Seaside

Hiring! $500 Sign on Bonus! Full-time Day/Evening Cook Work Schedule: Mon, Tues, Thurs and Fri from 12pm-8pm! Please apply online at: www.teamavamere.com or in person, at facility! Suzanne Elise Assisted Living 101 Forest Drive Seaside, OR 97138 (503) 738-0307 *Avamere offers a full benefits package (including paid vacation!) for full-time employees

Helper(s) wanted refurbishing Astoria apartment. Demolition, painting, cleaning, etc. $10-15/ hour depending on ability. astoriaoregonapartment@gmail.com Immediate opening for part-time Medical Assistant in a busy clinic. Experience or completion of MA program is required. Appliacants must be commited to providing competant compassionate care and to be a willing team member. Fax resumes to 503-738-3466

Nehalem Valley Care Center, Wheeler, Or Offering free CNA CLASS! August 3rd – September 4th Must be enrolled by July 24th Call 5033685171 ext. 3116 or 3118 for details

• Sales Associate • Office Assistant • Express Lube Technician • Building Maintenance Join our growing team! Seeking great customer service skills and awesome attitude! Valid driverʼs license required. Proudly a drug free environment. Apply at 1605 SE Ensign, Warrenton, OR.

Housekeeping/Housemen and Supervisor Assistant. Full-Time/Part-Time needed. End of Summer Bonus! Applications at Gearhart by the Sea 1157 N. Marion. Starting wage $12 an hour D.O.E.

Ocean Spa in Cannon Beach is open and seeking energetic, responsible nail technicians, licensed massage therapists, and a licensed skin care technician to be a part of our team. Please call 503-436-0664 or email oceanspacb@gmail.com

Rogue Pub in Astoria Now Hiring Cooks! $10/hr. to start plus tips, benefits, and lots of perks. Fulltime. Bring resume to pub on Pier 39 or email to jobs@rogue.com SEASIDE OREGON JOB OPPORTUNITIES Retail Sales – 3 Positions available. Refer a friend! Outgoing, energetic, people wanted to work in a fast paced retail store. Excellent Customer Service skills a must! F/T Seasonal.

Barista/Clerk -2 positions available. Small coffee shop and C-Store Experience preferred. Food Handlers permit required. Days and Evenings. Customer facing position. Account Representative Inside sales and support duties. Looking for someone who is creative, computer literate and has excellent customer service skills. For quick consideration, send your resume to:

apply@thefreedomshop.com

70 Help Wanted

The RV Resort at Cannon Beach is seeking an outgoing, positive person with a sincere Spirit of Hospitality to join our team. Prerequisites include a team orientation, flexible and a multi tasking skill set. Our culture honors hard work, honesty, a sense of humor and individuality. At its core is a commitment to hiring for the Hospitality Attitude.

NOW HIRING Fultano's Pizza in Cannon Beach is hiring for all positions. All employees earn tips. Call 503-436-9717 ask for Sarah. Leave message.

Screen Printer No experience necessary, will train.

We're growing and we're hiring for the following positions:

70 Help Wanted

Seaside Shilo Inns Resort is now recruiting customer service associates to join our team. Positions in the hotel full and Part-time · House Keeping · Housekeeping supervisor · Room inspectors • Maintenance Techʼs • Houseman • Front Desk • Graveyard Janitorial Restaurant • All kitchen positions • Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner servers • Cocktail servers • Bartenders • Host/bussers Apply in person at 30 N. Prom, Seaside Oregon. HOME DELIVERY! Your Daily Astorian should arrive by 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. If it does not, please call us at 503-325-3211 or 1-800-781-3211. Seeking Experienced Alteration/Seamstress in Astoria. 20-25 hours weekly. Call 503-325-4907 South Jetty Inn Seeking experienced part-time housekeeper. Call Greg (503)861-2500 Apply 984 Pacific Dr., Hammond.

T.Paulʼs Supper Club and T.Pauls Urban Cafe Taking application for All kitchen positions, starting wage $12 to $15 DOE Apply with in.

In addition to offering a very competitive wage, the RV Resort offers many benefits to our employees. These benefits include paid vacation, medical, profit sharing/401K and more. Positions Currently Available: Front Desk (must have computer skills) Maintenance (pool maintenance experience required) Please apply in person at 340 Elk Creek Road, Cannon Beach. If you have any questions, please contact Michelle at (503) 436-2231. Tyack Dental Groupʼs Astoria office is seeking experienced, full time dental assistant to be a key part of our team. Highly competitive wages, vacation, holidays, retirement plan medical and dental. Radiology certification required. Tyack Dental Group 433 30th St. Astoria, Or 97103 (503)338-6000 jtyack@clatskanie.com CASH buyers are reading your Classified Ad.

70 Help Wanted CNA openings at Clatsop Care Center. Bring your enthusiasm to make a difference in the lives of our residents. We offer employer paid medical, dental, vision and life insurance upon eligibility. Current sign-on bonus available. EOE. Applications available on website www.clatsopcare.org or at 646 16th St. Astoria. Wanted: Truck driver local hauling day trips, class A CDL. Valid medical card, on/off road and heavy hauling experience. Full time for next 4 years Call 503-791-7038.

210 Apartments, Unfurnished Astoria:160 Columbia. 2 bedroom apartment, newly renovated, $850, deposits. All utilities included. No pets/no smoking. (503)680-4210 View our listings at www.beachproperty1.com Beach Property Management 503-738-9068

250 Home Share, Rooms &Roommates ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SPACIOUS, RIVER VIEW APARTMENT Close to downtown, hospital, college. Mature, working, or student individual preferred, non smoking, no pets Available July 15. $700/ month includes utilities, internet optional Respond too riverapt42@yahoo.com or Send reply to Box 231, c/o Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 ADVERTISERS who want quick results use classified ads regularly.

260 Commercial Rental Astoria: 3925 Abbey Lane, 800 square feet and up. Starting at $.50 square foot. (503)440-6945

Want to be a fish monger? Skipanon Brand Seafood has a great opportunity to deliver, set up and sell FRESH seafood at the Beaverton Farmers' Market on Saturdays from May-November. Requirements: Valid Driverʼs license, Positive communication skills, Pass Drug test, Stand for long periods of time, & Heavy lifting email a resume to Alana@skipanonbrand.com or mail to PO Box 400 Warrenton, OR 97146.

Astoria: 3925 Abbey Lane, 800 square feet and up. Starting at $.50 square foot. (503)440-6945

285 RV/Trailer Space 2000 Keystone Montana 5th wheeler trailer. $9,600 OBO. Lots of extras (503)458-5711

560 Trucks 1961 Studebaker classic pickup. 1/2 ton, V8, with O.D. low miles on total rebuild, to many extras to list! $12,000 OBO, Astoria (503)325-6409

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 19


CHIP-in and help clean up Cathlamet puts on 34th annual Bald Eagle Days festival Cathedral Tree Trail July 19 ASTORIA — Astoria Parks and Recreation’s Citizen’s Helping Improve Parks (CHIP-in) program will host its next park cleanup at Cathedral Tree Trail. Volunteers will meet at the Astoria Column on 1 Coxcomb Drive from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 19. “This CHIP-in day will be far different from what we have accomplished in the SDVW ,W LV WKH ÂżUVW RSSRUWXQLW\ we have had to work on the trail with volunteers,â€? Jonah Dart-McLean, maintenance supervisor for Astoria Parks and Recreation, said. “We have added a variety of vol-

U-Pic k 100% Natural

Blueberrie s Open Daily ‘til 6 pm

$2.00 lb. 113th & Sandridge N. Long Beach, WA

CHIP-in 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 19 Astoria Column 1 Coxcomb Drive, Astoria 503-741-1600 unteer work for 2015, and we hope that citizens can participate in supporting this beloved trail.� Volunteers interested in partaking in the CHIP-in event at Cathedral Tree Trail are asked to bring sturdy work gloves, weed whackers, hand pruners, or loppers if they have them. Volunteers are also urged to wear long pants and closed-toe shoes. CHIP-in has other volunteer opportunities available with monthly park clean-ups as well as park adoption. More information is available on the Astoria Parks & Recreation Facebook page and at www. astoriaparks.com. Interested persons may also contact Dart-McLean at 503-7411600 or at jdart@astoria.or.us

WORLD WAR II

CATHLAMET, Wash. — The Wahkiakum County Chamber of Commerce will present the 34th annual Bald Eagle Days Festival Friday and Saturday, July 17 and 18. When Congress passed the Bald Eagle Endangered Species Act, the Cathlamet Women’s Club decided to parade through Cathlamet in support of the majestic bird. Over the years, the annual event has grown into a festival drawing crowds of more than 3,000 people. The bald eagle is no longer endangered, and Wahkiakum County is proud of that many eagles can be seen in and around the area. The annual festival is a weekend of fun and offers one RI WKH EHVW ¿UHZRUNV VKRZV LQ the state of Washington. Each year the festival has a theme and the parade enWLWLHV GHFRUDWH ÀRDWV WUXFNV tractors, etc. in accordance with it. The theme for 2015 is The Mighty Mighty Columbia River. Trophies and other awards are handed out to category winners. Parade participants range from people walking their dogs to driving log trucks.

and more. The Cathlamet Fire Hall will hand out Popsicles DQG JLYH WRXUV RI WKH ¿UH GHpartment. • 7 to 10 a.m., Kiwanis’ Pancake Breakfast at Elochoman Slough Marina with eggs, sausage, orange juice and coffee. Friday, July 17 • The Bald Eagle Walk/ • All Day – Explore and Run registration will begin ¿QG KLGGHQ WUHDVXUHV ZLWK D at 8:30 a.m., and the 10k, 5k Family Geocaching Competiand 2-mile races will begin tion; pick up your passport at at 9 a.m. The run-walk chalthe Chamber of Commerce. lenge will begin and end at Prizes include a Kindle Fire, Submitted photo by Nick Myatt Cathlamet Pharmacy. The JLIW FHUWL¿FDWHV DQG PRUH America’s national bird, the bald eagle was UDFHV EHQH¿W :+6 WUDFN DQG • 11a.m. to 3 p.m., Rolly & declared an endangered species in the U.S. cross-country. 1967. With a rebounding population Ginny Armstrong Memorial in • 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Check thanks to the ban of the pesticide DDT, the Sidewalk Art Contest – Bank bird was reclassified from endangered to out a Reptile Road Show AnRI WKH 3DFL¿F threatened in 1995. In June 2007 it was imal Exhibit at the communi• 3 to 5 p.m., Trolley rides taken off the list of threatened and endan- ty center with snakes, lizards, between the marina to the gered species.  geckos and more. farmers market. • Noon, The parade begins • 3 to 6 p.m., Puget Island Saturday, July 18 and stretches from WahkiaFarmers market with live mu• All Day, Lots of events go kum High School to the masic, vendors, fresh meat, veg- on all day. Find food, arts and rina. gies and bread at 59 W. Birnie craft vendors on Main Street. ‡ WR S P :DWHUEDOO ¿JKW Slough Road. Enjoy train rides and root- with the Fire Department. • 5 to 8 p.m., Tsuga Art EHHU ÀRDWV DW WKH :DKNLDNXP • River Mile 38 Brewery Gallery will host its fourth an- Historical Society Museum. will open its beer garden at 6 niversary party at 70 Main St. Pick up your passport at the p.m., and from 7 to 10 p.m. it • 6 to 9 p.m., Trivia Night Chamber of Commerce for a will host a rock and soul live at River Mile 38 Brewery for Family Geocaching Competi- concert extravaganza and CD a Wahkiakum High School tion. Bradley House will host release party with Purefusion antiques and collectible sales. featuring Joshua Wright. cheer fundraiser. 7KH %DQN RI WKH 3DFL¿F ZLOO ‡ S P 7KH ¿UHZRUNV have a Kids Area with a Velcro show at the marina will light wall, face painting, dunk tank up the sky.

For more information visit http://www.cathlametchamber.com/bald_eagle_ days.php, call 360-7959996 or email wchamber@ cni.net This year’s schedule of events includes:

SPECIAL EVENT

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W EEK EN D O F JULY 18TH & 19TH

Sa turd a y 10a m -4 p m |Sun d a y 10a m -2p m • In vitin g E VE RY O N E to pa rticipa te in 1930’s-1940’s h om e-fron t orcivilia n dress • Idea s forh om e-fron t costum es:Civil defen se,loca l police orsh eriff officers,fire w a rden s,en em y a ircra ft spotters,Rosy th e Riveter,etc.N O W E APO N S PL E ASE ! • Add to th e a uth en ticity of th e W orld W a rII livin gh istory m ilita ry groups th a t w ill be presen t. • Civilia n a n d h om e-fron t pa rticipa n ts m a y represen t n a tion s,such a s th e U n ited Sta tes,Grea t B rita in , F ra n ce a n d Russia . • P a rticipa n ts a re even en coura ged to brin g out a n old-fa sh ion ed picn ic lun ch ! Sponsored by • An yon e w a n tin g to displa y a 1930’s or FRIENDS OF OLD W orld W a rII-era veh icle is a lso T STEVEN en coura ged to brin g it out! S OR If interested in dressing up in 1930’s-1940’sstyle clothing and costumes, or displaying a vehicle, you need to call the event coordinator: BillLu n d ,b etw een Ju ly 7-18 d u rin g d a ytim e ho u rsa t(503)325-5783

20 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

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OREGON’S DEFENDER

Don’t misss the wonderous musical machinations of Dave Drury & friends as they serve up oh-so generous portions of jazz flavored fare for your listening pleasure. WHEN: Saturday, July 25 7pm WHERE: CCC Performing Arts Center, 16th Franklin, Astoria TICKETS: $10 at the door

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Watch sand-sculptors in action at Sandsations

Sandsations Competition

Long Beach holds annual competition

Submitted photo by Robyn Unruh

On Saturday, July 18 during the 31st annual Sandsations in Long Beach, Washington, youth, novice, intermediate and master sculptors will have six hours to transform beach sand into imaginative sculptures.

LONG BEACH, Wash. — The 31st annual Sandsations kicked off Wednesday, July 15 and runs through Sunday, July 19. This sand-sculpting extravaganza is open to all ability levels from amateur to professional. On Thursday, solo master sand artists will pull their forms and start sculpting demonstration sculptures. The public is invited to watch, ask questions and pick up tips. On Friday, the sand artists add detail to their sculptures, which are finished that evening and will remain on view Saturday and Sunday for photo-ops and enjoyment. At 5 p.m., master sculptors will teach free sand sculpting lessons at the Bolstad beach approach. After the sculpting lessons, all are invited to a bonfire on the beach, with free

s’mores for the first 100 people. Fireworks will be set off at dusk for all to enjoy. Saturday sees the much-anticipated 2015 sand-sculpting competition take place along the shoreline, adjacent to the Long Beach boardwalk and near the Bolstad beach approach. Check-in and plot assignments for masters teams start at 6 a.m., and checkin and plot assignments for youth, novice and intermediate teams starts at 7 a.m. Last-minute registration is open from 6:30 a.m. to 7 a.m. Sculptors will have six hours to transform beach sand into imaginative sculptures,

Saturday, July 18 6:30 a.m. Last-Minute Registration 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Construction 3 p.m. Awards Ceremony Bolstad Beach Approach Long Beach, Washington sandsationslongbeach.com

starting at 8 a.m. with the outgoing tide and ending at 2 p.m. The public is invited to come to the beach and observe the sculptures before Mother Nature sweeps them back to sea. The awards presentation will take place at 3 p.m. near the Kiwanis tent on the Bols-

tad beach approach before the incoming surf slowly washes away even the largest sculptures. Judges vote on the best in the four categories of masters, intermediate, novice and family for overall appearance, creativity, teamwork, effort, design, suitability to sand, and intricacy. Prizes include commemorative artwork by event artist Don Nisbett of Ilwaco, Washington, cash prizes up to $900 and gift cards from event sponsors. Registration prices vary by level, with $1 per child under 12, $15 per family, $35 per novice team, $45 per intermediate team, and $65 per masters team. You can register online at sandsationslongbeach.com or in person at the Sandsations trailer located at the Bolstad beach approach, which also features T-shirts and more fun activities.

You Never Know What You’ll Find At A Collectors West Gun & Knife Show!

ASTORIA •JULY 18-19 Clatsop Co. Fairgrounds

92937 Walluski Loop

$6 • Sat:9am -5pm ;Sun:10am -3pm • Info:collectorsw est.com

T R EA SU R ES AW A I T Y O U A T

O N LY P U R E H A P P IN ESS

O n H w y 101 betw een Raym o n d & So u th Ben d 2870 O cean Ave Raym o n d W A 98577 (across from the sm allcem ent plant)

B rin g in th is a d a n d sa y “h igh ” fo r specia ld isco u n ts!

D AILY 10AM -8PM

m rd o o b ees@ g m a il.co m 360-875-8016 Anyo ne fro m a ny sta te , a g e 21a nd o ve r, c a n purc ha se pro d uc ts a t M r. D o o be e s.

This pro d uc t ha s into xic a ting e ffe c ts a nd m a y be ha bit fo rm ing . M a rijua na c a n im pa ir c o nc e ntra tio n, c o o rd ina tio n a nd jud g m e nt. D o no t o pe ra te a ve hic le o r m a c hine ry und e r the influe nc e o f this d rug . The re m a y be he a lth risk s a sso c ia te d w ith c o nsum ptio n o f this pro d uc t. F o r use o nly by a d ults tw e nty-o ne a nd o ld e r. K e e p o ut o f re a c h o f c hild re n.

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 21


Astoria poet releases new book at KALA Mary Lou McAuley examines longing, memory, regret ASTORIA — KALA presents Astoria poet Mary Lou McAuley on Thursday, July 16, in celebration of her new book, “The Other Door: Poems & Glimpses.” Doors open at 7 p.m., and McAuley will begin her program at 7:30 p.m. Following the reading, the evening includes a complimentary buffet of poached wild salmon, a fresh local fruits salad and more. Cocktails, beers and wines will be available for sale. There is an $8 cover. Of her ¿rst collection of poems, McAuley says, “Using personal experience, relationship and the natural

Submitted photo

“The Other Door: Poetms & Glimpses” by Mary Lou McAuley.

20

LANDSCAPE $

BARK

(U-HAUL)

per yard

WARRENTON FIBER

861-3305

Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm 389 NW 13th St., Warrenton

Open 7am

Daily!

Book Release 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July 16 KALA 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria 503-338-4878 $8

world, I use the lens of metaphor to invite others to watch with me, to really look and think about subjects like longing, memory and regret. “

The epigraph to the volume is from William Faulkner’s “Light in August,” which says: “Memory believes before knowing remembers.” “This is the underlying goal of my poetry and short prose pieces,” says McAuley, “to show nature and mystery, to inspire introspection and reconciliation, to explore and question what we have always believed to be our truth.“ She is working on a second book of poems and prose to be released next spring. KALA is located at 1017 Marine Drive. It is the multiuse performance space of HIPFiSHmonthly. For more information, call 503-3384878.

Submitted photo

Poet Mary Lou McAuley will give a reading at KALA on July 16 in honor of her new book, “The Other Door.”

Get Your Feet Wet at the 49th Annual

Seaside Beach Run! Saturday July 18, 2015 8:30 am on the Prom at 12th Avenue, Seaside

x 5K & 10K Races x 5K Prom Walk x Awards Picnic

x Kids’ Sand Dash x Treasure Hunt x Souvenir T-shirt

&Žƌ ĨƵƌƚŚĞƌ ŝŶĨŽƌŵĂƚŝŽŶ͕ Žƌ ƚŽ ƌĞŐŝƐƚĞƌ͗ Call ;ϱϬϯͿ ϳϯϴͲϴϯϬϰ,

or visit us online Ăƚ ǁǁǁ͘^ĞĂƐŝĚĞ ĞĂĐŚZƵŶ͘ŽƌŐ Proceeds support Clatsop County youth fitness opportunities.

S E R V I N G B R E A K FA S T, LUNCH & SUPPER

Org a n ica lly g ro w n flo w ers

European Style Coffeehouse by day, intimate bistro offering neo-regional cuisine by night. Regional selection of beers, wines and vintage cocktails available.

243 11th Street, Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-1787

www.AstoriaCoffeeHouse.com

We cater your event!

Weekly Specials: 5-8 PM Sushi & Martinis Mondays Taco & Margarita Thursdays (3 Buck Tacos)

22 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com

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GRAB BAG book shelf • glimpse • wildlife • pop culture • words • q&a • food • fun Nereocystis luetkeana

Bullwhip kelp By LYNETTE RAE McADAMS While it’s true the Pacific Northwest is famous for its forests, there’s one we often overlook — the offshore kelp forest that thrives beneath the surface of our churning coastal waters. Easily its most impressive member, and the most common seaweed to wash up on our local beaches, is Nereocystis luetkeana, known by the more familiar names of bullwhip

kelp, bull kelp, ribbon kelp, horsetail kelp, and sea otter’s cabbage. Actually a complex algae (specifically, the largest in the family of brown algae), bullwhip kelp can be found from Monterey, California, to the Aleutian Islands in Alaska and grows in large fields in the subtidal zone. The fastest-growing kelp in the world, it is an “annual” seaweed, changing from a single spore in the spring to a mature plant by au-

Photo by Lynette Rae McAdams

This massive tangle of bullwhip kelp washed ashore near Ocean Park, Washington.

tumn. During the summer months, when growth peaks, it can gain up to 10 inches per day to eventually reach a length of 120 feet. Nereocystis (Greek for “mermaid’s bladder”), clings to the rocky ocean floor with a holdfast, or rootlike structure, that keeps it tethered in place. From the holdfast grows a long stalk (called a stipe), that quickly becomes hollow as it reaches for the water’s surface. At the end of the stipe is the kelp’s airtight trademark bulb, which is filled with a gas containing carbon monoxide, and floats high in the water, keeping the kelp upright. Ribbon-like blades grow from the top of the bulb and spread out like hair across the surface of the sea, converting sunlight into food through photosynthesis. Underwater, groves of bullwhip kelp provide shelter for crabs, snails, shrimp, sea stars, sea anemones, and many other marine invertebrates. On the surface, its flowing ribbons are popular with sea otters, who like to snack on the kelp and then wrap themselves in the tendrils to keep from drifting away in the currents while they sleep. A complete source of trace minerals and protein, bullwhip kelp is entirely edible and has been harvested by humans for millennia. Indigenous people used the plant for food and also as a tool, weaving its long stipes into fishing lines and nets, and keeping the bulbs as storage for rendered fat and fish oil. Today, this kelp is still a prominent ingredient in many products, used especially to thicken ice cream, salad dressings, hand lotion and household paints. It is particularly delightful when pickled.

NW word

nerd

By RYAN HUME

Buoy >E Ɲ@ noun 1. a floating object, often affixed with a visible signal and anchored to the bottom of a lake, river or bay to mark channels, hazards and mooring opportunities among other things 2. Buoy Beer: an award-winning brewery and public house that opened its doors on the Eighth Street wharf in Astoria in 2014 3. Bell Buoy of Seaside: a family-owned fishmonger that has been operating for over 50

years and is located on west side of U.S. Highway 101 at the south end of town verb 4. To keep afloat, or conversely, to keep from sinking 5. nautical: To mark with a buoy 6. to be encouraged or to rise up Origin: The noun enters Middle English in 1296 as boye, meaning a beacon (to which it is probably related) or signal, borrowed either from the Old French boie or the Middle Dutch boeye, both of which arose from the West Germanic baukn. The verb as it relates to marking with a float derives from the noun’s meaning and appears in 1596. As the verb relates to

“lightness” or “rising up” first occurred shortly after, in the 17th century, and may have been influenced by the Spanish verb, boyar, meaning “to float.” “The 50-to-55-foot trawler had struck river buoy 40 near the Megler Bridge, according to a 911 call U.S. Coast Guard Sector Columbia River received at 12:21 p.m. from Astoria Dispatch. The fishing vessel was disabled but was not taking on water or in immediate danger of sinking.” —Chinook Observer staff report, “Boat strikes buoy, gets towed back,” The Daily Astorian, June 15, 2015 “‘The wait is nearly over. Buoy Beer Company, Astoria’s fourth brewery, will open at 4 p.m. Friday and be on tap this weekend at Fort George’s Festival of the Dark Arts and during the statewide Zwickelmania breweries celebration.” —Edward Stratton, “Buoy Beer taps the keg Friday,” The Daily Astorian, Feb. 13, 2014, P. A4

Bike Trip America

Astoria to New York Adventure update #1: June 18 to July 8 By MARILYN GILBAUGH The crew: Astoria teenage Boy Scouts Bryce Nurding, Ryan Tallman and Jonathan Williams. Gearhart’s Pat Wollner and Hawaii’s Don Child are the adult sidekicks, she at the wheel of a Suburban, Don on a bike. The journey so far: 21 days riding across Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana, almost 1,200 miles (1198.60 according to Nurding’s schedule) from Astoria to Glendive, Montana. The crew plans to arrive in NYC Aug. 15.

Highlights:

• Down one on day two: Mascot black lab Annie, deciding that long days in the Suburban plus no play time are not for her, has found a summer’s stay along the way more to her liking. Both Pat and Annie are happy with the decision.

Submitted photo courtesy Don Child

From left, Don Child, Jonathon Williams, Ryan Tallman and Bryce Nurding celebrate reaching the Continental Divide July 1 at Rogers Pass in Montana, at an elevation of 5,610 feet. After leaving Astoria June 18, the group is biking across America this summer to raise funds for Operation Comfort Warriors. They expect to reach New York City Aug. 15.

• No such thing as too much food: Burning 5,000-plus calories a day, there is no diet big enough to stop the crew from eating! • Lodging: The crew stays in prearranged churches, private homes, tents, camp grounds, state parks and ranches. They enjoy real beds and hot showers for the first time June 25, provided by the commander of American Legion Post 13 in Lewiston, Idaho. When they roll into town, a TV reporter greets them. • June 28 & 29: The crew climbs up Lolo Pass in the Rockies and down the other side into Missoula, Montana. Fundraising for Operation Comfort

Warriors reaches approximately $2,500. They receive a $200 check from American Legion Post 9 in Lincoln, Montana. • July 1: The group crosses the Continental Divide at Roger’s Pass, elevation 5,610 feet. All water from here on flows into the Atlantic. • July 2: They cross the last of the Rocky Mountains. Find out more: Daily or nearly daily (due to the whims of Internet connections) details, photos and videos are available on Bryce Nurding’s Bike Trip Across America Facebook page and on Don Child’s blog at donsbike.blogsite.com

July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 23


1605 SE Ensign Lane Warrenton, OR 503-861-1144 LumsToyota.com

Vehicle’s projected resale value is specific to the 2014 model year. For more information, visit Kelley Blue Book’s KBB.com. Kelley Blue Book is a registered trademark of Kelley Blue Book Co., Inc. • Lease a new 2015 RAV4 LE for $179 a month for 24 months with $2,000 down and $2,829 due at signing. Due at signing costs include first month’s payment, $650 acquisition fee and $2,000 down payment. Example based on model #4432C. Base Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price $25,080. Monthly payments of $179 total $4,296. Net capitalized cost of $23,442 based on down payment and dealer participation, which may vary by dealer. Lease-end purchase option is $19,238.00 • Lease a New 2015 Prius Liftback (Two) for $209 a month for 24 months with $2,140 down and $2,999 due at signing plus $1000 Toyota Financial Services (TFS) Subvention Cash. Due at signing costs include first month’s payment, $650 acquisition fee and $2,140 down payment. Lease includes $1000 TFS subvention cash. Example based on model #1223A. Base Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price $24,200. Monthly payments of $209 total $5,016. Net capitalized cost of $22,172 based on down payment and dealer participation, which may vary by dealer. Lease end purchase option is $17,165.00 • Lease a New 2015 Camry LE (Gas) for $189 a month for 24 months with $1,910 down and $2,749 due at signing plus $750 Toyota Financial Services (TFS) Subvention Cash. Due at signing costs include first month’s payment, $650 acquisition fee and $1,910 down payment. Lease includes $750 TFS subvention cash. Example based on model #2532A. Base Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price $22,970. Monthly payments of $189 total $4,536 Net capitalized cost of $20,631 based on down payment and dealer participation, which may vary by dealer. Lease end purchase option is $16,317.00. $1000 New 2015 Prius Liftback (Two) and $750 New 2015 Camry LE (Gas) subvention cash from Toyota Motor Sales (TMS) not applicable for cash back offers and must qualify for subvention cash though TFS. Payment may vary depending on final transaction price. Offers cannot be combined with any other offers, vary by region and are subject to availability. Security deposit waived. Closed-end lease. $350 disposition fee due at lease end unless customer purchases vehicle or decides to re-finance through TFS. Customer responsible for maintenance, excess wear and tear and $0.15 per mile over 12,000 miles per year. To qualified Tier I+ customers through TFS. Offers good in WA, OR, ID, and MT. For ID and MT state dealerships, a documentary service fee in an amount up to $350 may be added to vehicle price. For Washington state dealerships, a negotiable documentary service fee in an amount up to $150 may be added to sale price or capitalized cost. For Oregon state dealerships, a negotiable documentary service fee in an amount up to $100 may be added to vehicle price. Oregon state dealerships not using an electronic vehicle registration system may only apply fees up to $75 to vehicle price. Does not include taxes, license, title, processing fees, insurance, and dealer charges. See your local participating Toyota dealer for details. Must take retail delivery from dealer stock by 8/3/15. © 2015 Graham Oleson

24 | July 16, 2015 | coastweekend.com


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