Coast Weekend July 9, 2015

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Buddy Walk at the Beach registration and contest opens SEASIDE — While most people are excited when they approached high school graduation and look toward the future as full of possibility, young people with disabilities “age out of the V\VWHP´ DQG VXGGHQO\ ÂżQG WKHPselves without the support, programming and services they received during their school years. The Buddy Walk at the Beach is a Down syndrome and special needs awareness walk representing Tillamook and Clatsop counties. This year’s 11th annual walk is set for Sept. 19 at Quatat Park. Buddy walkers will be dressed in bright colors, promoting community awareness and will introduce an additional vision: To create a living, working, respite community for people with special needs and those who share their journey, a place where everyone can learn, grow and thrive on the North Coast. Sammy’s Place, an Oregon F QRQSURÂżW KDV DJUHHG WR sponsor this year’s Buddy Walk at

Submitted photo

The Buddy Walk, set for Sept. 19, will promote awareness about developmental disabilities and the vision Sammy’s Place has for those with special needs.

the Beach. Sammy’s Place values the uniqueness of each individual and will strive to create opportunities for everyone to discover and realize their full potential. The current Sammy’s Place board of directors have been diligent over the last 18 months, completing the work involved to broaden its mission from respite

ART CARDS, ARTISAN CRAFTS, GALLERY & WORKING STUDIO

to include living and work resources. Other immediate tasks for the board members will be strategic planning, including the JRDO RI UHDFKLQJ ORQJ WHUP ¿QDQcial sustainability. This group envisions to obtain North Coast acreage and to eventually build facilities where everyone is invited to contribute, regardless of their abilities. Sammy’s Place imagines opportunities that lead to community integration through ideas, such as organic farming, farmers market vending, animal husbandry,

farmstead cheese production and artisan crafts. The goal for this year’s Buddy Walk at the Beach is to raise $30,000 to support Sammy’s Place’s vision of establishing a living and working community for adults with special needs on the North Coast. Walkers can build teams to collect donations for the Buddy Walk and strive for big prizes. If you cannot make the Buddy Walk at the Beach, organizers encourage you to enter the contest by becoming a fundraiser; ask friends to donate to your page for Sammy’s Place and TXDOLI\ WR ZLQ RQH RI ¿YH SUL]es. First Place includes a $1,000 Visa gift card. To register or become a fundraiser for prizes, visit www.sammysplace.info. For more information, contact Julie Chick at chickj@charter.net, or call 503-368-5193. The majority of the donations will go toward building capacity in order to obtain the goal of a down payment for land and facilities for Sammy’s Place, and seven percent will go to the National Down Syndrome Society for its continuous efforts in promoting national awareness and research.

1133 COMMERCIAL ST. ASTORIA 503.468.0308

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Submitted photo

“X� by Roger Hayes at KALA.

Examine the line between advertising, erotica at KALA Roger Hayes opens ‘Art as Pornography’ ASTORIA — KALA presents “Art as Pornography,â€? a body of work culminating from over a two-year period by Astoria artist Roger Hayes. Through paintings and collage Hayes explores pornographic imagery, traveling the borders between pop art and erotica. The themes are glamor, gender and the lines between advertising and pornography. The glamor captures the sex appeal and allure of the wanted and plays with its various levels of salience. In the artist’s mind this ties together threads of similarity between fashion, horror, porn, GHÂżQLWLRQV RI JHQGHU DQG GHÂżnitions of dominance and passivity, that glamor alludes to. Astoria multi-media artist Jessica Schleif created the window treatment. A selection of images was also contributed

by Stephen Stefanov. Some strong imagery will be included in the opening reception, set from 8 to 10 p.m. Friday, July 10 at KALA, 1017 Marine Drive. The reception will include a no-host bar, complimentary appetizers and live performance. The show is for a mature audience of 21 and over.For more information, call 503338-4878.

Artist Reception 8 to 10 p.m. Friday, July 10 KALA 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria 503-338-4878 21 and over


coast

July 9, 2015

weekend

arts & entertainment

4 9 12 14

COASTAL LIFE

Active in the community Coast Guard wife Nayelli Dalida stays active with Zumba

ARTS

‘Shanghaied in Astoria’ This melodramatic musical celebrates 31 years

FEATURE

‘Cinderella’ PAPA presents an Enchanted Edition of this classic fairytale

DINING

Mouth of the Columbia Don’t overlook the quirky, hole-in-the-wall Kitchen

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

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on the cover Cinderella, played by Hope Bellinger, sings about the ball where she danced with Prince Christopher. Photo by Joshua Bessex

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RAYMOND,Wash. — A saxophone quartet, a children’s program and a Patsy Cline tribute have been added to the 2015-16 season of Sunday Afternoon Live. SAL is the Willapa Harbor organization delivering live entertainment for 12 years. Saxophone quartet Equus will perform award-winning classical music Sept. 13 at the Raymond Theatre. Equus is composed of Western Washington University students who won the 2015 Ladies Musical Club of Seattle competition in June. This new addition to the SAL schedule is free to the public. Caspar Babypants, a children’s program, will come to the Raymond Theatre Oct. 18, in the ¿UVW HYHQW IRU 6$/< RU 6XQGD\ $IWHUQRRQ /LYH IRU <RXWK 7LFNets will be $5 each. The brainchild of SAL’s newest board PHPEHU 'LDQQH )XOOHU 6$/< focuses on quality programs for children of all ages. Neither event is included in WKH 6$/ VHDVRQ WLFNHW 6$/ VHDVRQ WLFNHWV ZLOO UHÀHFW RQH FKDQJH KRZHYHU IRU February 2016. Diane Lines’ scheduled return to SAL has been canceled. Instead, a Patsy Cline Tribute by Sara Catherine :KHDWOH\ LV ERRNHG IRU )HE Lines reluctantly canceled her scheduled appearance due to surgery, which will not allow her enough time to complete the new program she had planned to perform in Raymond. Sara Catherine Wheatley vis-

its Raymond after appearing in Port Ludlow. Because she has a regular job in Nashville, she

does not normally do tours but KDV DJUHHG WR ³WDFN RQ´ WKH 5D\mond commitment, since she

Submitted photo

Sara Catherine Wheatley will perform a tribute to Patsy Cline on Feb. 21.

will be in the area. She received standing ovations at the 2009 and 2013 Patsy Cline series as well as from a sold-out crowd in Portland. “I am really excited about my WULS EDFN WR WKH 3DFL¿F 1RUWKZHVW ´ VKH ZURWH WR 9LUJLQLD Carlson at Sunday Afternoon Live. 6$/ VHDVRQ WLFNHWV DUH available for $65 for the seven VFKHGXOHG SHUIRUPDQFHV 7LFNets can be purchased by calling 360-942-3749 or 360-875-5207, emailing sal@reachone.com, mailing to P.O. Box 925, South Bend, WA 9858; or by PayPal at SAL’s website, www.sundayafternoonlive.org 6HDVRQ WLFNHW KROGHUV DORQJ with sustainers and show sponsors, are the foundation of SAL’s operating budget. Sunday AfterQRRQ /LYH LV D QRQSUR¿W RUJDQLzation.

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To submit an item, contact Rebecca Sedlak

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July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 3


Active in the community Coastal Life With a husband in the U.S. Coast Guard, Zumba instructor Karla Nayelli Dalida makes an effort to be involved in the local area

M

oving from one home to another, one city to another, is, for most of us, one of life’s more difficult trials. Yet for U.S. Coast Guard families it is a regular and frequent occurrence and an event they learn to accomplish with a certain confidence and equanimity. In the time it would take most of us to fill the new place with moving boxes, the average Coast Guard family has unpacked the boxes, arranged the furniture, enrolled the kids in school, and volunteered for half a dozen organizations. “I love to be involved in the community whenever we move,” says Coast Guard wife Karla Nayelli Dalida, Nayelli to those who know her. “It’s the best way to meet new people, especially those with kids the same age as yours, and it’s important for the Coast Guard wives who are self-employed.” Dalida provides child care for a local church, helps out at an elementary school, and has volunteered for fundraisers against cancer and — on Aug. 7 — to help a family that was victimized by thieves. She’s also self-employed as one of the area’s most popular Zumba instructors. Therein lies a story. Dalida’s early life was spent in San Diego. After her parents’ divorce, she attended high school in Calexico, California while living with family in Mexicali, the capital of Baja California. Every day she would walk across the border to school and back that afternoon to Mexico. In 1996, two years after graduating from high school, she moved to Hawaii, because it was, “an opportunity to see something new,” she says. While in Hawaii, she met and married Joseph Dalida, who was then in the Navy. They had their first son, Joseph, in Hawaii, and when his hitch was up, Joseph Sr. chose a career in the Coast Guard as an operations specialist. The new family moved to the Seattle area, where they bought their first home, and their other two sons, Julian and Javier, were born. Eventually the family found themselves

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Karla Nayelli Dalida teaches a Zumba class at Astoria Arts and Movement Center, located at 342 10th St.

Story and photos by DWIGHT CASWELL

The Dalida family have made Astoria their new home following Senior Chief Petty Officer Joseph Dalida’s transfer to town with the U.S. Coast Guard three years ago. Pictured from left, Javier, Nayelli, Julian, Joseph Sr. and Joseph Jr.

in San Diego where, Dalida says, “The licensed as an instructor. boys got to see where I grew up, and I “I have no dance background,” says was able to connect with all the family.” Dalida, “but I love dancing. Dance and fitIt was also in San Diego that she was in- ness together were perfect for me.” Since troduced to Zumba. then, Dalida has been licensed in Zumba, “I’ve always liked working out,” says Zumba Kids, Zumba Toning and Zumba Dalida. “I stayed fit after Step, a new take on step each child with home exaerobics. ercise videos.” The Dalida family One set of DVDs was moved to Astoria three a Zumba program. “Then years ago, where DaliFor more inforI discovered Zumba had da teaches six classes a mation about live classes,” Dalida week, plus Zumba Kids Nayelli Dalida’s says. In fact, San Diego classes during the school Zumba classes go had scores of Zumba year. Each class has 16 to http://karladalclasses. Dalida went to different music tracks, ida.zumba.com one class after another, with exercise programs finally focusing on her specific to each song. favorite. The instructor For each class meeting, began putting her up at she changes two or three the front of the class beof the songs on the list cause she knew all the because she wants to exercises to the dance music that is the keep it fresh. “Students can put more into heart of Zumba, and eventually she sug- it if they know all the songs,” she says. gested that Dalida take the training to be Anybody can take a Zumba class.

“There’s no right or wrong way,” says Dalida. “You can take it at your pace. If you have physical limitations, like you can’t jump, there are easy modifications. And if you mess it up, make it part of the dance.” The benefits of Zumba? “It’s a workout that improves your balance, coordination, and self-confidence,” says Dalida. “And it makes you feel sexy.” Dalida teaches two classes each at the Astoria Arts and Movement Center, the Hilda Lahti Elementary School in Knappa, and the Ilwaco Boys and Girls Club. On Aug. 7 in Seaside she will join seven other local Zumba instructors for Zumba instruction followed by a dance party to benefit the Campuzano family of Seaside. The Campuzanos had $30,000 dollars worth of possessions stolen in California in January while on their annual road trip to visit relatives in Mexico. “Zumba is for every age,” Dalida enthuses, “and you just have a better day when you start with Zumba.”


Stepping Out

THEATER

“Starlite Academy Production” 2 p.m., The Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy Ave., Tillamook, 503-842-3999.

Wednesday, July 15

Thursday, July 9 “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, soap operas and musicals with entertaining local culture and folklore. “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.

Friday, July 10 “Cinderella” 7 p.m., Fort Columbia State Park, off Hwy. 101, Chinook, Wash., 360-836-4448, www.papatheater.com, $7.25 to $17.50. Directed by Barbara Poulshock, this enchanted edition of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Cinderella” will warm the heart. Open Stage 7 p.m., Hoffman Center, 594 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-3846, www.hoffmanblog.org, $3 to $5, all ages. Open Stage for Music & Word is a forum and venue for local musicians, actors, storytellers and poets to share their arts. “Shanghaied in Astoria” 7 p.m., ASOC Playhouse, 129 W. Bond St., Astoria, 503-325-6104, $16 to $21. “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 this comedy.

Saturday, July 11 “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. “Starlite Academy Production” 7 p.m., The Barn Community Playhouse, 1204 Ivy Ave., Tillamook, 503-842-3999. Students of the Starlite Children’s Academy write and direct this year’s show. “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.

Sunday, July 12 “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.

“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.

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

DANCE

Friday, July 10 Spotlight Dance Cup 10 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside. The Spotlight Dance Cup: Pacific Northwest National Dance Finals is a week-long series of championship competitions by dance teams from around the Pacific Northwest.

Saturday, July 11 Spotlight Dance Cup 8:30 a.m., Seaside Civic and Convention Center, 415 First Ave., Seaside.

MUSIC

Thursday, July 9 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 plays bluegrass, Caribbean, folk, swing and country.

pow ered b y

Open Jam Night 7 p.m., South Jetty Dining Room & Bar, 1015 Pacific Drive, Hammond, 503-8613547, 21 and over, no cover. Bring your own equipment and instruments, and jam. 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.

Friday, July 10 David Drury 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria. David Drury plays jazz guitar. Ray Raihala 6 p.m., Urban Café, 1119 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-338-5133, no cover. Ray Raihala plays acoustic Americana with elements of folk, blues, country, soft rock. 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. Cannon Beach Chorus 7 p.m., Elks Lodge 1748, 324 Ave. A, Seaside, 503-436-0378, $20 seat, $120 table, advanced tickets. The chorus presents its Cabaret, featuring Gilbert and Sullivan. Open Mic on the Peninsula 7 p.m., Peninsula Arts Center, 504 Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., 360-901-0962, free. Bring an instrument, your voice or simply listen. Hondo’s Open Mic 7:30 p.m., Hondo’s Brew & Cork, 2703 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2234, no cover. Musicians, singers and comedians are welcome. Performers receive $1 off pints. The Bellfuries 9 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. The Bellfuries play a fusion of rockabilly, soul, country and pop. The Junebugs 9 p.m., San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-5080, 21 and older. The eclectic taste of the Junebugs ranges from Americana to modern hip-hop. Andrew Endres Collective 9:30 p.m., Voodoo Room, 1114 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2233, 21 and older. The Andrew Endres Collective is an instrumental trio playing jazz.

Saturday, July 11 Quinton & Griswold 1 p.m., Coffee Girl Café, 100 39th St., Astoria, 503-325-6900, all ages. Dave Quinton and Brad Griswold play folk, bluegrass, country and swing. 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.

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MUSIC CONTINUED

Saturday, July 11 (continued) Niall 6 p.m., Wet Dog Café, 144 11th St., Astoria, 503-325-6975. Niall Carroll plays pop, classic rock and folk music with vocals and guitar. Ray Raihala 6 p.m., T. Paul’s Supper Club, 360 12th St., Astoria, 503-338-5133, no cover. Tom Trudell 6 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Two Crows Joy 6 p.m., Café 101, 1815 S. Roosevelt Drive, Seaside, 503-738-9048. Two Crows Joy plays country Americana, rock, blues and old standards. Cannon Beach Chorus 7 p.m., Elks Lodge, 324 Ave. A, Seaside, 503-436-0378, $20 seat, $120 table. James Low 7 p.m., Peninsula Arts Center, 504 Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., 360901-0962, $12. The James Low band plays American roots music. Waikiki Beach Summer Concert 7 p.m., Cape Disappointment State Park Amphitheater, 244 Robert Gray Drive, Ilwaco, Wash., free. The Quick & Easy Boys play an electric show of original tunes including soul, funk, disco, honky tonk, blues and rock-n-roll. Hondo’s Open Mic 7:30 p.m., Hondo’s Brew & Cork, 2703 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2234. Countryside Ride 9 p.m., San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-5080, 21 and older. Countryside Ride plays country, honky-tonk, Western swing. The Bellfuries 9 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. Bar K Buckaroos 9:30 p.m., Voodoo Room, 1114 Marine Drive, Astoria, no cover, 21 and older. Bar K Buckaroos plays country music with a tribute to Buck Owens. Jake Ray & the Cowboys 9:30 p.m., Merry Time Bar & Grill, 995 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-468-0852, $5, 21 and older. Jake Ray and the Cowboys play classic country music.

Sunday, July 12 Richard T. & Friends 11:30 a.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, no cover. Richard T. & Friends performs a repertoire of blues. Music in the Gardens 1 p.m., Hoffman Gardens, 595 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, free. Music in the Gardens features The Ferret Family, performing a mix of classic tunes.

Editor’s Pick: Sunday, July 12 Sky Colony 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. Sky Colony blends folk, bluegrass, roots country, and even metal guitar with an emphasis on intricacy and harmony.

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Tingstad & Rumbel 2 p.m., Tillamook Nazarene Church, 2611 3rd St., Tillamook, 503-392-4581, $10 to $20. Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel will perform Americana. Brad Griswold 6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 21 and older. Brad Griswold offers a night of bluegrass on banjo, guitar and mandolin. The Hugs with US Lights 8 p.m., Fort George Brewery, 1483 Duane St., Astoria, 503-325-7468, no cover. The Hugs play garage, psych pop and rock music.

Monday, July 13 Burgers & Jam 6 p.m., American Legion 168, 1216 S. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503436-2973. The legion offers good burgers and good music every Monday. Sky Colony 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., no cover. Poney 9:30 p.m., Voodoo Room, 1114 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2233, no cover, 21 and older. Poney is a psychedelic hardcore, punk metal band.

Tuesday, July 14 Brian O’Connor 5:30 p.m., Shelburne Inn Restaurant, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-4150. Acoustic jazz guitarist Brian O’Connor plays a mix of jazz. Reverend Deadeye 8 p.m., Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422311. Reverend Deadeye and Brother Al play blues, gospel and garage.

Wednesday, July 15 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, 503-4361539, 21 and older. The Coconuts play swing, jazz, country 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. The Horsenecks 8 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-6422311, no cover. The Horsenecks plays old time music with a bluegrass edge.

MARKETS Thursday, July 9

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

Friday, July 10 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 produce, freshly baked bread, pizza and 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. Columbia-Pacific market offers fresh produce, seafood, meat, eggs and dairy, locally made baked goods, regionally-made packaged foods, flowers, plants, on-site prepared foods and live music.

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

Saturday, July 11 Tillamook Farmers’ Market 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Second Street and Laurel Avenue, Tillamook, 503-8422146, www.tillamookfarmersmarket.com. Tillamook Farmers’ Market is abundant with fresh produce, crafts, flowers, live music and special events. 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 fresh farm produce, regionally created arts and crafts, potted plants and cut flowers, kettle corn, hot donuts, handmade sausage and baked goods and more. Weekend Market on the Dock 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 1161 Robert Bush Drive, South Bend, Wash., 360-8758157. This market features live music, jewelry, food and many treasures. SummerFest Noon to 5 p.m., Pacific Ave., downtown Long Beach, Wash., free. SummerFest is full of family friendly activities including beach safety, balloon artistry, face painting and wagon rides. Entertainment provided by Orchid the Jellyfish and Grandmer Mermaid. The Maldives play live music. Consignment Auction 5 to 8 p.m., Long Beach Grange, 5715 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-4953, www.longbeachgrange.org. A preview of auction items will take place from 4 to 5 p.m. Visit the website for drop-off information.

Sunday, July 12 Astoria Sunday Market 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 12th St., downtown Astoria, 503-325-1010, www.astoriasundaymarket.com. Astoria Sunday Market offers locally made products created or gathered by the farmers, craftspeople and artisans. Live music with the Floating Glass Balls in the food court. Weekend Market on the Dock 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 1161 Robert Bush Drive, South Bend, Wash. SummerFest 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Pacific Ave., downtown Long Beach, Wash., free.

Tuesday, July 14 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 a wide variety of fresh produce, pasture-raised meat, organic cheeses and artisan food products. A children’s program will be offered during July and August.

Wednesday, July 15 Seaside Farmers Market 3 to 7 p.m., American Legion 99, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-7393, www.seasidemarket.org. Seaside Farmers Market features a variety of fresh produce, meat, cheeses, seafood and artisan food products. It offers kids entertainment, live music with Alena Sheldon.

EVENTS

Thursday, July 9 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.


EVENTS CONTINUED Friday, July 10

Artisan Fair 10 a.m., Oysterville Community Club, 3770 School House Road, Oysterville, Wash., 360-665-2829. The Artisan Fair will feature work by local artists, a raffle drawing and lots of fun. Proceeds go to the Oysterville historic school. Artist Reception 4:30 to 7:30 p.m., Long Beach Train Depot, 102 N.W. 3rd St., Long Beach, Wash. The public is invited to a Northwest Artist Guild artist reception to meet the artists participating in the guild’s summer show. Guided Canoe Tours 6 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 a unique perspective about the historical park. Tours are free with park admission and reservations required. Trivia Night 7 p.m., Baked Alaska, No. 1 12th St., Astoria, 503-325-7414, $2 person per game. Play the weekly trivia tournament in the lounge. KALA Artist Reception 8 p.m., KALA, 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-338-4878, 21 and older. KALA will host an opening artist reception for Roger Hayes’ show “Art As Pornography.” A no-host bar, live performances and appetizers provided.

Saturday, July 11 Guided Canoe Tours 9 a.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4425, www.nps.gov/lewi. Artisan Fair 10 a.m., Oysterville Community Club, 3770 School House Road, Oysterville, Wash., 360-665-2829. Wonders of Willapa 10 a.m., Willapa National Wildlife Refuge, 3888 Hwy. 101, Ilwaco, Wash., 360-484-3482, free. Celebrate the refuge’s trails with guided hikes. Book Launch & Reading 1 p.m., Beach Books, 616 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-3500, www. beachbooks37.com. Author Melissa Eskue Ousley will read from “The Sower Comes,” the final book in her young adult fantasy book trilogy. Sci-Fi Author Reading 2 p.m., Raymond Timberland Library, 507 Duryea St., Raymond, Wash., 360-942-2408, free. Author Karen Tully reads from her debut novel “The Faarian Chronicles: Exile.” Light refreshments provided. Artist Talk & Reception 4 p.m., LightBox Photographic Gallery, 1045 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503468-0238. Jim Lommasson will give an artist talk followed by the artist reception featuring his work in the show “American Fight Clubs.” Artist Reception 5 p.m., Cannon Beach Gallery, 1064 S. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503436-0744. An artist reception will be held for Stirling Gorsuch, Kirsten Horning and Sarah Baumert-Lippold for their new art show,“Sediment.” Astoria’s Second Saturday Art Walk 5 p.m., celebrate the arts in Astoria where businesses are open late, provide refreshments, entertainment and exhibit works of art or craft. See page 10.

UFC Fight 7 p.m., Merry Time Bar & Grill, 995 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-468-0852, www.merrytimebar.com, $10 to $13, 21 and older. Watch UFC’s Jose Aldo of Brazil versus Conor McGregor of Ireland in a fight for the heavyweight title. Pre-fight show begins at 5 p.m. Poet & Author Reading 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-2542, www.souwesterlodge.com. Sou’Wester presents an evening of poetry readings by Lisa Wells and author Joshua Wilkinson.

Ongoing Art show Showing through July 31, The Cove, Peninsula Golf Course, 9604 Pacific Ave., Long Beach, Wash., 503-325-1445. Astoria artist Marga Stanley is show a new art exhibition featuring new whimsical work on view now.

YOUTH

Sunday, July 12

Friday, July 10

Guided Canoe Tours 9:30 a.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4425, www.nps.gov/lewi.

A Magic World 10 a.m., Astoria Art Loft, 106 3rd St., Astoria, 503-325-4442, www.astoriaartloft.com, $120, 8 to 11. Students will learn how to create a fairy forest and about the secret life of fairies and make believe. Course is four weeks to July 31. Registration required.

Monthly Open Studio 11 a.m., HiiH Barn Studio & Showroom, 89120 Lewis and Clark Road, Astoria, 503-493-4367, www.hiihlights.com. Come to the monthly open studio tour to watch the HiiH process of making handmade paper lights.

Monday, July 13 Neacoxie Prairie Walk 10 a.m., Neacoxie Forest, Gearhart, 503-738-9126, www.nclctrust.org, free. Join Art Limbird and Melissa Reich for a walk exploring the unique prairie ecosystem of the Clatsop Plains. Registration required. Knochlers Pinochle Group 1 p.m., Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A, Seaside, all ages, $1 per session per person. Knochlers host regular play in the card game of pinochle every Monday. Prizes awarded.

Tuesday, July 14 Coastal Writers Critique 10 a.m., PUD Building, 9610 Sandridge Road, Long Beach, Wash, 360642-1221. This group discusses writing works in progress for support and inspiration.

Wednesday, July 15 Let’s Go Birding Bird Survey 8 a.m., Sunset Beach State Recreation Site, Warrenton, 503-861-3170 ext. 41, dane.osis@oregon.gov, all ages. Help monitor six distinct habitats in the park. Volunteers meet at the Fort to Sea Trailhead. Sandsations 10 a.m., Bolstad beach approach, Long Beach, Wash. free, all ages. The annual Sandsations weekend offers sand sculpting demonstrations, a beach bonfire, live music and fireworks. Trivia at Salvatore’s 6:30 p.m., Salvatore’s Café & Pub, 414 N. Prom, Seaside, 503-738-3334, free. Bring a team of up to five people or go solo for a fun night of trivia. Cannon Beach Reads 7 p.m., Cannon Beach Library, 131 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361391. This month’s selection is “The Lathe of Heaven” by Ursula K. Le Guin.

Thursday, July 16 Sandsations 10 a.m., Bolstad beach approach, Long Beach, Wash. free, all ages. Author Reading 7 p.m., Cloud & Leaf Bookstore, 148 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503368-2665. Author Justin Hocking will read from his memoir “The Great Floodgates of the Wonderworld.”

Saturday, July 11 Teen Art Reception 5 p.m., Barbey Maritime Center, 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2323, www.crmm.org. Teen art week culminates with an art reception and show to highlight and exhibit each teen’s creations.

Monday, July 13 Nature Adventure Camp 9 a.m., Lewis & Clark National Historical Park, 92343 Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, 503-861-4422, www.nps.gov/lewi, $140, grades 4 to 6. This is an opportunity for kids to explore the area’s trails, water and animals.

CLASSES Friday, July 10

“Cooking Up A Storm” 6 to 10 p.m., Tolovana Community Hall, 3779 S. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, www.tolovanaartscolony.org, $45. Soul Food with Lanicia Williams will be the first of three multi-cultural cooking classes facilitated by local chefs. Cost includes materials and meals.

Saturday, July 11 Medicinal Plant Workshop 1 to 5 p.m., Alder Creek Farm, 35995 Underhill Lane, Nehalem, 503-3683202, www.nehalemtrust.org. Lower Nehalem Community Trust will host a workshop on Clatsop-Nehalem Tribe medicinal plant first aid. Summer Workshops 4 to 6 p.m., Seaside Yoga, 609 Broadway, Seaside, 503-717-5129, $10 donation. Kathleen Dudley will teach a class on meditation. Beginning at noon, there will be a class on reflexology for mother and infant.

Sunday, July 12 Paint Party Workshop 2 to 5 p.m., Astoria Art Loft, 106 3rd St., Astoria, 503-325-4442, $25. Bring friends or come alone to a fun adventure in painting. Bring a beverage and leave with a suitable-for-framing painting. Registration required.

Monday, July 13 Writing Workshop 2:30 to 5:30 p.m., Beach Books, 616 Broadway, Seaside, 503-717-0112, $80. Sandra Claire Foushee will offer a four-session writing workshop on “Painting With Words: The Art of Visual Ideas,” designed to help writers articulate and visualize the rhythm of words. Registration is recommended.

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 7


Oregon Trail story retold at Seaside library Look into the world of ‘American Fight Nancy Bell Anderson shares story of ancestor from journals SEASIDE — The Seaside Public Library will host author Nancy Bell Anderson as she tells the story “Little Belle Crosses the Oregon Trail” at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 16. The event will take place in the Community Room. This story is taken directly from the journals of Arvazena Cooper and tells of the family’s ¿ve-month journey from Missouri to Oregon in 1863. Life in Missouri had become unbearable due to unrest and lawlessness, so the young Cooper family headed to Oregon. They traded their land for a covered wagon and oxen team, and along with other family members, began the perilous trip west. Their daughter, Little Belle, was only 16 months old when the expedition began. Cooper’s account of their trip tells of monotonous days traveling the plains, learning to make meals in uncomfortable circumstances, childbirth on the trail, dealings with Native Americans, and the challenge of caring for a young child in harsh traveling conditions.

‘Little Belle Crosses the Oregon Trail’ 7 p.m. Thursday, July 16 Seaside Public Library 1131 Broadway, Seaside www.seasidelibrary.org Submitted photo

Free

In 1863, the Cooper family traveled the Oregon Trail from Missouri to Oregon with their 16-month-old baby girl, Little Belle.

Their new life in Oregon was everything they had hoped for, and Little Belle grew up the oldest of 15 brothers and sisters. She eventually became a medical doctor and received her degree from the University of Oregon in 1897. She had a successful medical practice and co-founded The Dalles Hospital. Author Nancy Bell Ander-

son is a direct descendent of Little Belle and had the journals of Cooper passed down to her. Anderson’s re-telling of her ancestor’s life on the Oregon Trail is a glimpse into the founding of Oregon. The Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway. For more information call 503-738-6742 or visit us at www.seasidelibrary.org

Clubs’ at LightBox Photographic Gallery ASTORIA — LightBox Photographic Gallery will open the exhibit, “American Fight Clubs,” a photographic series by Jim Lommasson of Portland, with an artist’s reception from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday, July 11. Lommasson will give an artist talk at the gallery at 4p.m., immediately prior to the opening. Seating is limited; contact LightBox to reserve a seat at 503-468-0238 or info@lightbox-photographic.com Fight clubs are located in the forgotten corners of most American cities. They’re shoehorned into storefronts, basements or vacant warehouses, usually in the toughest part of town. Inside is a community of ¿ghters, trainers and hangers-on unknown even to the most ardent boxing fans. The gyms reek of sweat, pounding leather, pounding music, barking trainers and determination. The gyms are ¿ght factories, sweatshops, but sweatshops with a mission. The gyms are often a sanctuary where kids and young adults — many

The Coaster Theatre Playhouse Presents

It Could Be Any One Of Us JUNE 12 - SEPTEMBER 5, 2015

JUNE 19 - SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

Sponsored by The Ocean Lodge, Inn at Cannon Beach, Lodges at Cannon Beach, Probuild/Milgard, Leland E.G. Larson and U.S. Bank

Sponsored by The Ocean Lodge, Inn at Cannon Beach, Lodges at Cannon Beach, Candi & Jon Holzgrafe and Dennis’ 7 Dees

All performances begin at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $15 or $20

108 N Hemlock Street, Cannon Beach, OR 8 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

All performances begin at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $18 or $23

Tickets: 503-436-1242 or coastertheatre.com

Submitted photo by Jim Lommasson

“Costello Gym, Philly” by Jim Lommasson at LightBox Photographic.

of them drawn to the gym by chaos or violence in their own lives — can channel aggressive impulses in an environment that stresses discipline, hard work and respect. Jim Lommasson is an award-winning documentary photographer, the recipient of the Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University for his critically acclaimed book “Shadow Boxers Sweat, Sacri¿ce, and the Will to Survive in American Boxing Gyms.” Other awards include the New American Art Union Couture Stipend, Oregon Art Commission Fellowship and American Marketing Association’s Person of the Year. Lommasson is a 2012-16 Oregon Humanities Conversation Grant recipient for his public discussion “Life after War: Photography and Oral Histories of Coming Home.” His work is in permanent collections including Reed College, Yale University, Portland Art Museum, Seattle Arts Commission and Visual Chronicles of Portland. Lommasson, who grew up hearing ¿ght stories from his father — an amateur boxer — spent 10 years photographing gyms across America. “The ¿ghters became human,” he said, “and then they became my friends.”

Artist Reception 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday, July 11 LightBox Photographic Gallery 1045 Marine Drive, Astoria 503-468-0238 Lommasson recently completed a book project about American soldiers ¿ghting in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and their lives upon their return. The book includes Lommasson’s photographs, as well as photographs and writings by the soldiers. “Exit Wounds: Soldiers’ Stories — Life After Iraq and Afghanistan” is a traveling exhibit and a book project. Oregon State University Press published Lommasson’s second book “Oaks Park Pentimento” in 2009. During the artist talk, Lommasson will discuss his work and books. “American Fight Clubs” will be on display at the gallery through Aug. 4. Also in the gallery are new work from LightBox Darkroom members, presenting archival ¿ber silver gelatin prints. Complete show information is on the LightBox website at www.lightbox-photographic.com/shows LightBox Photographic Gallery is located at 1045 Marine Drive.


Thirty-wonderful years of ‘Shanghaied’ ocal thespians are hamming it up again. The original, infamous, historical, hysterical melodramatic musical hilarity of “Shanghaied in Astoriaâ€? — in its 31st year — opens Thursday, July 9 and runs through Sept. 12 every Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the Astor Street Opry Company Playhouse. “We like to say, this is our Thirty-Wonderful time to produce this show,â€? said director Nate Bucholz from the rehearsal stage last week. “And this year we’ve had 45 come out for auditions. It’s an amazing turnout!â€? How do they do it, year after year? According to Bucholz, “It’s because we have so much fun — everybody wants to be a part of that.â€? Part vaudeville, part soap opera, and part 1950s-style Hollywood musical, “Shanghaied in Astoriaâ€? has a little something for the ZKROH IDPLO\ 7KH VKRZ UHÂżQHG DQG SHUIHFWed over the decades, is the longest-running local theater production west of the Rocky Mountains. It incorporates local legend and tom-foolery with a dedicated and talented cast of both fresh faces and old-hands.

L

Bill Carr kisses the arm of ChrisLynn Taylor during a rehearsal of “Shanghaied in Astoria.�

From left: Ashley Kacate, Angela Lister, Jaime Baird and Jessica Villiard, give their best Uff Daa on stage.

Jones, Jessica Villiard, Ashley Cate, Aliyah Craig, Darlene Van Auken and Playhouse band members Phil Morrill, David Bennett and Bill Brookes. The show runs every weekend all summer, and that’s a bit hard for folks, so the large cast means that actors swap parts during the run. “We do a lot of rehearsing,� Bucholz continues. “We’ll run a scene, and then we’ll switch it out and do the same scene with a different set of actors. It’s a little time consuming, but everyone gets a chance to rehearse their parts. “I can hear them on stage right now — they’re warming up their voices.�

Fresh faces

Âł,ÂśP MXVW WU\LQJ WR ÂżJXUH RXW ZKHUH WR SXW all the women!â€? Bucholz says with a laugh. When asked what’s new this year, what exactly has been tweaked for public consumption, he is coy. “Well, we’ve got four Virginias this year, every one of them great. There are two new ones — Ashley Rowles, a total newbie to our stage and Lexi Blacksten, a veteran of three years but new to the 9LUJLQLD UROH $QG -RUGDQ *ULIÂżQ LV SOD\LQJ (ULF IRU WKH ÂżUVW WLPH WKLV \HDU 7KHQ ZH have Kimberly Waltemate from the Long A cast of thousands %HDFK 3HQLQVXOD ² LWÂśV WKH ÂżUVW WLPH VKHÂśV Included in the lineup this summer are acted with us. Bill Carr, Jason Hippert, Marcus Brown, “Everybody is enthusiastic about this Mark Galbraith, Dave Bergquist, LaMar year’s show — we’re going to have a really Blackner, Deac Guidi, Oscar Morales de good time,â€? Bucholz says. “But I can’t tell Leon, ChrisLynn Taylor, Lexi Blacksten, you everything, you know; we have a keep a Makayla Mestrich, Dena Tuveng, Ashley few secrets. You’ll just have to come out and Mundel, Josh Mendenhall, Tim Murphy, see for yourselves what’s new this year.â€? Jon Osborn, Elsa Nethercot, Zack Sandoval, If you are one of the unlucky people Stephanie Osborn, Eric Bredleau, Ron Wolt- who have not yet seen this example of comjer, Timothy Mendenhall, Charlotte Men- munity-building creativity, this may be the GHQKDOO -RUGDQ *ULIÂżQ +DOH\ :HVW $VKOH\ year you just give in and hoof it over to the Rowles, Austin Brown, Ellen Kachel-Bew- ASOC Playhouse, 129 W. Bond St., for a ley, Kimberly Waltemate, Arlene Holmes, North Coast phenomenon. Rosalina Fallin, Crystal Neher, Sara Berner, Be ready to laugh, cry, cheer for the heJamie Baird, Ali Craig, Josiah Haynes, Cal- roes and heroines, and boo the baddies. A vin Roy, Mae Loya, Christena Jones, Kylie good time is guaranteed for all.

The cast of “Shanghaied in Astoria� lets out a cheer on stage.

‘Shanghaied in Astoria’ 7 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 9 to Sept. 12 Box office opens at 6 p.m.; doors open at 6:30 p.m. 2 p.m. Sunday, July 19, Aug. 16 and Sept. 6 Tickets are $17 to $21 and can be purchased online at www.astorstreetoprycompnay.com or by calling 503-325-6104

the arts

Seats can also be purchased at the door one hour before each show, but reservations are recommended

VISUAL ARTS • LITERATURE • THEATER • MUSIC & MORE

Be sure to ask about group and family rates and senior and child discounts

Story by CATE GABLE • Photos by JOSHUA BESSEX

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 9


countryside are all rendered in translucent watercolor and acrylic. Watch Hazelton make it look easy as he gives live demos of his well-honed technique. Enjoy live music by Geezer Creak and refreshments.

July

11 ASTORIA — Downtown merchants and galleries will hold Astoria’s Second Saturday Art Walk from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday, July 11. Meet artists and mingle with fellow art lovers while enjoying refreshments and new exhibits.

ART BUSINESSES

1. Imogen Gallery 240 11th St. With gestural brush stroke and deliberate mark making, Bethany Rowland brings a new series of acrylic paintings to Imogen. Within this collection she explores a shared sense of place, the visible and the invisible, the remembered and the forgotten, the imagined and the numinous. Practicing an intuitive process, she depicts the power and sometimes quiet beauty of both landscape and its wildlife. 2. Old Town Framing Company 1287 Commercial St. Feast your eyes on deliciously detailed, large oil paintings by Rod Nichols. He studied painting and art history

“Reverie over Wind and Water” by Bethany Rowland at Imogen Gallery.

at Southern Illinois University, spent a year in a Paris chateau and attended New York School of Holography in Manhattan. Locally Nichols is known as a chef and food activist. 3. RiverSea Gallery 1160 Commercial St. In “Sticks, Stones & Crates,” Hickory Mertsching, a Portland artist noted for his allegorical still life paintings, continues his exploration of manmade detritus and ephemera colliding with nature. These provocative works, with their style rooted in 20th century Americana, present wildlife adapting to a habitat disrupted by humanity’s casual discards. The complexly layered compositions float within minimalist backgrounds, giving space for the viewer to consider

A painting by Ed Peterson at Tempo Gallery.

their narrative of climate change, the cycle of life and commoditization of the environment. Exhibiting in the Alcove is “Trees and Tides,” coastal forms in raised copper by brother-and-sister metalsmiths Nile and Michelle Fahmy. This dual show features vessels and sculpted shapes created by raising copper from a flat plane into a three dimensional form through thousands of hammer blows. Surface textures are reminiscent of tree bark, wave ripples or patterns in sand, and interiors are often embellished with gold leaf. 4. Tempo Gallery 1271 Commercial St. Tempo will feature “Visions of the West or Western Wandering,” a new show by artist Edward Peterson. Recently returned from a 4,000-mile driving trip of the West, Peterson was inspired to express his feelings about things seen through his windshield — in a somewhat abstract way. Each of the paintings has a strong message and personality.

A work by Zemula Fleming at Forsythea.

10 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

Peterson will be present and welcomes reactions and comments. Refreshments will be served. 5. KALA 1017 Marine Drive KALA presents Astoria artist Roger Hayes in a body of work, culminating over a two-year period. Through paintings and collage Hayes explores pornographic imagery, traveling the borders between pop art and erotica in “Art as Pornography.” Astoria multi-media artist Jessica Schleif created the window treatment. A selection of images is also contributed by Stephen Stefanov. The art show contains mature content and is open to ages 21 and over. 6. Ratz & Company 260 10th St. Showcasing the artwork and illustrations of owner Dave McMacken, the gallery will feature McMacken’s paintings and his early work in the rock ‘n’ roll biz, which garnered him a place in the Album Cover Hall of Fame.

A painting by Richard Hazelton at Luminari Arts.

7. Astoria Art Loft 105 Third St. Astoria Art Loft hosts an Open House with a Featured Artist Demo Program on from 3 to 6 p.m. Illustrator Jo Pomeroy-Crockett and writer Caroline Hinckley will talk about their coloring book “Color the Coast, Creatures of the Northwest.” This 20-page book is a Thinking Child’s Coloring Book. Sample pages will be available for children to color. There will be a raffle at 5:30 p.m. for one of the coloring books. Raffle tickets can be purchased for $1 for three tickets, with the proceeds going to the Clatsop County Animal Shelter in honor of Tabitha. Refreshments will be served. Many of the other loft resident artists will also their artwork in the gallery.

ALSO FEATURING ORIGINAL ART

8. Winnifred Byrne Luminari Arts 1133 Commercial St. Local favorite Richard Hazelton returns with fresh acrylic scenes of the area. Beaches, lighthouses and pastoral

9. Forsythea Home & Garden Arts 1124 Commercial St. Zemula Fleming’s show continues at Forsythea through the month of July. Her stunning portraits are inspired by Renaissance-, Byzantine- and medieval-style art, but you might think it’s the real thing. 10. Artists Alley at Pier 11 77 11th St. Find multi-media art, jewelry, paintings and more at the Pier 11 Mall. 11. Maiden Astoria 255 14th St. Astoria Photographer Kim Rose Adams is joining Maiden Astoria for art walk. Come get your Guilty Pleasure Mugshot taken by Adams and check out her amazing photography. Maiden Astoria will be serving goodies and drinks. 12. Barbey Maritime Center 2042 Marine Drive The Columbia River Maritime Museum presents Teen Art Week’s Art Show. These students have spent the week exploring local galleries and creating visual masterpieces in a variety of mediums including drawing, sculpture, textiles, digital design, photography and painting. Join in celebrating their hard work and creativity in both art creation and exhibition design.

“Garden” by Hickory Mertsching at RiverSea Gallery.

contined on page 11


ART WALK continued from page 10

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13. Adagio 1174 Commercial St. Timeless and on display are antique African masks and original Japanese woodblock prints from the Shin-Hanga and Sosaku-Hanga periods. Adagio’s collection of vintage Japanese silk haori “wearable art� now includes creations in Tencel by Barbara Hall and painted silks by Kavita. This month features local artist Brianna Lichnovsky with her enchanting “Folklings� cards and handmade flora dyed Habutai silk scarves.

17. In the Boudoir 1004 Commercial St. In the Boudoir envelopes all your senses with fine linens, lotions and soaps, gifts and specialty home decor, all beautifully presented in a welcoming, luxurious and visual atmosphere.

14. Sea Gypsy Gifts 1001 Commercial St. See new local handmade art, gifts, and home and garden decor. Refreshments will be served.

SUPPORTING PARTICIPANTS

15. Cargo 240 11th St. The store has been redone for summer. Find summer blankets, reads, mats, scarves and more. 16. Holly McHone Jewelers 1150 Commercial St. Holly McHone Jewelers creates individual custom-designed jewelry. Create something new with your own gemstones or find out how Holly can

Melissa Eskue Ousley releases ‘The Sower Comes’

SEASIDE — Award-winning RI &DSH )DOFRQ RYHUORRNLQJ Oregon Coast author Melissa Short Sand Beach in Oswald Eskue Ousley will launch the :HVW 6WDWH 3DUN DQG \RXÂśOO KDYH ÂżQDO ERRN LQ KHU \RXQJ DGXOW DQ LGHD RI ZKDW 'DYLGÂśV ZRUOG series, The Solas Beir Trilogy, ORRNV OLNH ´ VDLG (VNXH 2XVOH\ RESTAURANT PARTICIPANTS this July, kicking off a regional D IRUPHU HGXFDWRU Âł7KHQ DGG LQ 18. Astoria Coffeehouse & Bistro ERRN WRXU mythological creatures, some of 243 11th St. 6KH ZLOO UHDG IURP WKH ÂżQDO WKHP ZLWK D QDVW\ ELWH ´ ERRN Âł7KH 6RZHU &RPHV ´ DW (VNXH 2XVOH\ÂśV GHEXW QRYSUBMITTED PHOTOS “Crosscurrentâ€? by Bethany Rowland at S P 6DWXUGD\ -XO\ DW D HO Âł6LJQ RI WKH 7KURQH ´ ZDV D Imogen Gallery. ERRN ODXQFK SDUW\ DW %HDFK 1R $PD]RQ %HVW 6HOOHU DQG Books, located at 616 BroadZRQ D (ULF +RIIHU %RRN ZD\ )RU HYHU\ ERRN VROG $ZDUG DQG D 5HDGHUVÂś GXULQJ WKH ÂżUVW ZHHN RI LWV UH)DYRULWH ,QWHUQDWLRQDO %RRN lease — July 11 to 18 — the $ZDUG +HU VHFRQG ERRN LQ WKH author will donate $1 to ClatVHULHV Âł7KH 5DEELW DQG WKH 5Dsop Community College for YHQ ´ UHOHDVHG LQ UHFHLYHG student scholarships (up to Submitted photo VWURQJ SUDLVH IURP UHYLHZHUV $500) to assist students with “The Sower Comesâ€? is the third book in The DQG KDV DOVR EHHQ QRPLQDWHG IRU Solas Beir Trilogy by Seaside author Melis- VHYHUDO DZDUGV ÂżQDQFLDO QHHGV 7KH IDQWDV\ DGYHQWXUH RI sa Eskue Ousley. 3XEOLVKHG E\ 6HDWWOH DUHD EDVHG &DVWOH *DUGHQ 3XEOLFD7KH 6RODV %HLU 7ULORJ\ EHJDQ ZLWK Âł6LJQ RI WKH 7KURQH ´ D FURZQ FDQ EH 'DYLG KDG tions, the young adult imprint UHOHDVHG LQ +DXQWHG E\ QR FOXH DERXW WKH VDFULÂżFHV RI *D]HER *DUGHQV 3XEOLVKLQJ GUHDPV WKDW FRPH WUXH $EE\ÂśV KH ZRXOG EH IRUFHG WR PDNH WKH VHULHV LV DYDLODEOH ZKHUHYHU world was turned upside-down 1RZ EDWWOLQJ D W\UDQW LQWHQW ERRNV DUH VROG 0RUH LQIRUPDZKHQ VKH PHW 'DYLG WKH GRS- on stealing his throne, and WLRQ DERXW WKH WULORJ\ FDQ EH pelgänger of the mysterious IDFLQJ D QHZ HYLO WKUHDWHQLQJ IRXQG RQ WKH DXWKRUÂśV ZHEVLWH ART WALK MAP \RXQJ PDQ LQ KHU GUHDPV $I- WR ULS WKH UHDOP DSDUW VDYLQJ 0HOLVVD(VNXH2XVOH\ FRP WHU GLVFRYHULQJ WKDW KH ZDV WKH KLV ZRUOG PD\ FRVW 'DYLG HYlost heir to the throne of Cai HU\WKLQJ 7HUHQPDUH $EE\ DQG 'DYLG The ancient forests and 1 p.m. Saturday, July 11 EDWWOHG EORRG WKLUVW\ PRQVWHUV rocky coasts of Cai Terenmare Beach Books LQ D UDFH WR FODLP KLV ELUWK- ZHUH LQVSLUHG E\ WKH 2UHJRQ ULJKW &RDVW D WULEXWH WR (VNXH 2XV616 Broadway, Seaside \RXU KLSV DQG PRYLQJ \RXU The story concludes in OH\ÂśV EHORYHG 2UHJRQ melissaeskueousley.com IHHW ZLWK WKHLU QHZ DOEXP Âł7KH 6RZHU &RPHV´ DV WKH Âł,PDJLQH DQ LYRU\ FDVWOH DOO FRXUWHV\ RI /RV /RERV QHZ NLQJ UHDOL]HV KRZ KHDY\ perched on the south headland Free NH\ERDUGLVW KRUQ SOD\HU DQG SURGXFHU 6WHYH %HUOLQ %HUOLQ UHFRUGHG WKH DOEXP DW 0RGCA N N A B IS EM P O R IU M HVW 0RXVH PDVWHUPLQG ,VDDF B IG D isco u n ts W hile Su ppliesL a st %URFNÂśV SULYDWH VWXGLR ZKHUH $10 -1 gra m B u d Co n es Prices good thru Ju ly 12th 0RGHVW 0RXVH KDV EHHQ UHBig Ridge Farm s Bu d cording their next record for $15 -1 gra m / $25 2 gra m s the past two years; The Quick Blew ett Pass Farm s Bu d Submitted photo (DV\ %R\V ZHUH WKH ÂżUVW 3 g ra m sfo r the p rice o f2 g ra m s! Hear the Quick & Easy Boys perform July RXWVLGH EDQG WR UHFRUG WKHUH 11 at the Waikiki Beach Concert Series. Typhoon Y olon da Bu d O N LY The result is a record that • B u y 2 gra m s a n d receive a $5 d isco u n t P U R E H A P P IN ESS Russell says is different than • H a n d ro lled Do o beesWDNH DORQJ D FKDLU RU EODQNHW WKH EDQGÂśV ODVW DOEXPV LQ PDQ\ $2 per 1/2 gra m d isco u n t DQG OLVWHQ WR WKH EDQG ZLWK WKH ZD\V S u per pricin g o n AN Y 1/8,1/4 ,1/2, 3DFLÂżF 2FHDQ DV D EDFNGURS Âł7KH O\ULFV JURRYH DU& fu llo u n ce B u d &RPSULVHG RI YRFDOLVW rangements, instrumentation, EDVVLVW 6HDQ %DGGHUV JXLWDU- and dynamics are present in D AILY 10AM -8PM LVW YRFDOLVW -LPP\ 5XVVHOO HYHU\ VRQJ $OO WRJHWKHU WKH O n H w y 101 betw een Raym o n d & So u th Ben d m rd o o b ees@ g m a il.co m 360-875-8016 2870 O cean Ave Raym o n d W A 98577 and newcomer Casey Anthony songs are a dynamic, psyche- (across from the sm allcem ent plant) 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. on drums, The Quick & Easy GHOLF MRXUQH\ WKDW HPERGLHV 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 Boys will get you shaking WKH DWWLWXGH RI Âľ)ROORZ 8V 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.

Quick & Easy Boys play Waikiki Beach ILWACO, Wash. — PortODQG EDVHG SV\FKHGHOLF URFN PHORGLF SRS RXWÂżW 7KH Quick & Easy Boys continXH WR FHOHEUDWH WKH UHOHDVH of their fourth full-length DOEXP Âł)ROORZ 8V 2YHUERDUG´ ² ZKLFK VRXQGV OLNH Âł7KH %HDFK %R\V PHHWV 7KH %HH*HHV PHHWV 7KH )ODPLQJ /LSV ´ DFFRUGLQJ WR WKH EDQG ² E\ KLWWLQJ WKH URDG and touring in support of the DOEXP <RX FDQ KHDU WKH EDQG perform on an outdoor stage at the Waikiki Beach Concert 6HULHV 7KH SHUIRUPDQFH ZLOO WDNH SODFH DW S P 6DWXUGD\ -XO\ DW WKH &RQĂ€XHQFH Project amphitheater at Cape 'LVDSSRLQWPHQW 6WDWH 3DUNÂśV :DLNLNL %HDFK 5REHUW *UD\ 'ULYH 9LVLWRUV PD\

Inspired by Oregon Coast, awardwinning author launches third book

Book launch

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 11


‘Cinderella’ July 10 to Aug. 9

7 p.m. Friday and Saturday 2 p.m. Sunday

The Peninsula Association of Performing Arts presents an Enchanted Edition of this classic fairytale July 10 to Aug. 9 at the Fort Columbia State Park theater

Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Fort Columbia Theater Fort Columbia State Park, Washington papatheater.com/Cinderella-tickets

YLFLRXV VLVWHU -R\ SOD\HG E\ =RH 3RZHUV WKH SDLU LV XUJHG RQ E\ WKHLU FRQQLYLQJ PRWKHU NQRZQ VLPSO\ DV 7KH 6WHSPRWKHU Marrying somebody with a bunch of money — say, some- played by Cindy Flood, to make Cinderella’s life miserable. one like a prince — makes the possibilities of acquiring design- 7KH VWHSVLVWHUVÂś MX[WDSRVHG FKDUDFWHU QDPHV *UDFH" -R\" er footwear limitless. Step aside, you ugly stepsisters. Jimmy SURYLGH D FOXH WR WKH KLODULRXV IDVW SDFHG EDQWHU GHOLYHUHG Choo, line up the glass slippers. Here comes Cinderella. throughout the show. On Washington’s Long Beach Peninsula, the aptly named The sounds of a 22-piece orchestra Peninsula Association of Performing Artists present Rogers Âż OO WKH WKHDWHU ZLWK WKH HQFKDQWLQJ PX and Hammerstein’s “Cinderellaâ€? (Enchanted Edition). Open- sical score, thanks to the magical sounds LQJ )ULGD\ -XO\ WKH VKRZ UXQV IRU Âż YH ZHHNHQGV ² DW emanating from Sinfonia, a sophisticated p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday — preparing to orchestra computer/keyboard system. To enchant audiences of all ages. operate the equipment, a skilled musiCast auditions and rehearsals for Cinderella began in early cian must be able to follow the score, the April. The play is directed by the peninsula’s renowned and trea- computer screen and a keyboard all at the sured composer, teacher, director and music legend Barbara Poul- same time. shock. Her end goal is creating an atmosphere where cast, crew and Ron Thompson, experienced with audiences step back in time and enjoy the magic and the fantasy. the Sinfonia system, appeared at opening Both the location and the theater in which PAPA performs auditions. He was in charge of and perEHÂż W 3RXOVKRFNÂśV DLP 7KH SHUIRUPDQFH DQG WKH VHWWLQJ SURYLGH IRUPHG WKH PXVLF IRU VHYHUDO SDVW 3$3$ a perfect opening scene. A former military entertainment center productions. (circa 1930), the theater is located on the grounds of WashingBut more magic was in the air. This year, he landed the role ton’s 593-acre Fort Columbia State Park. A narrow road climbs, of the dashing heart throb, the Prince. He shared his Sinfonia twists and turns its way up, up, up, rising steeply through a for- knowledge with fellow musician Michael Johnson, who took HVW RI PDMHVWLFDOO\ WRZHULQJ WUHHV $GG D VZHHSLQJ YLHZ RI WKH RYHU DQG LV QRZ LQ FKDUJH RI WKH PXVLF WKH NH\ERDUG DQG WKH PLJKW\ &ROXPELD DQG YRLOD :HOFRPH WR D PDJLF NLQJGRP computer. The long hours put in by cast and crew, the big efforts and “Our Sinfonia program, our sound system and sound board WKH PLQXWLD OHDG WR WKH WDOH XQIROGLQJ DURXQG D FHUWDLQ RYHU worked scullery maid, who against all odds, captures the heart of a prince and, in doing so, the hearts of the audience. In the lead role, it’s Cinderella Ă deux. Two young women alternate WKH UROH RI WKH PLVWUHDWHG PLVV LQ HYHU\ RWKHU VKRZ :KHQ SOD\ ing not the lead, they join the ensemble. Cinderella One is Hope %HOOLQJHU ZKR KDV EHHQ LQ VHYHUDO 3$3$ SURGXFWLRQV DQG VWXG LHG YRLFH ZLWK 3RXOVKRFN &LQGHUHOOD WRR DV LQ DOVR LV &DUO\ .HRQH LQ KHU Âż IWK VHDVRQ ZLWK WKH FRPSDQ\ The troupe has rehearsed, memorized, blocked, staged, and GHVLJQHG VHWV FRVWXPHV DQG ZLJV 7KH\ KDYH VXQJ DQG WKHQ VXQJ DJDLQ 7KH\ KDYH GDQFHG DORQH LQ SDLUV DV DQ HQVHPEOH — and in the case of the court jester, played by Jacob Jackson, on his hands. Âł.HHS \RXU KHDGV OHYHO ZKHQ \RXÂśUH GLSSLQJ ´ FRDFKHG show choreographer Cindy Flood as Cinderella and the Prince rehearsed locking eyes and arms, whirling and dipping in a palace ball scene at a recent rehearsal. “It’s hard to breathe, sing, dance and breathe again all at the Cinderella, played by Hope Bellinger, finds her Prince Charming, played by Ron same time,â€? said Grace Scarborough. In her role as Grace, she Thompson, in the Peninsula Association of Performing Artists’ production of “Cinplays one of the two mean stepsisters. Along with her equally derellaâ€? (Enchanted Edition).

Story by MARILYN GILBAUGH

M Photos by Joshua Bessex

Top: Cinderella, played by Hope Bellinger, dances with Prince Christopher, played by Ron Thompson at the ball. Middle: Cinderella’s wicked stepmother, played by Cindy Flood, right, dances at the ball. Right: Cinderella’s fairy godmother is played by Jane Schussman.

12 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

DUH WRS RI WKH OLQH ,WÂśV DV JRRG DV \RX ZRXOG Âż QG LQ D KLJK HQG professional theater,â€? said Thomson, multi-tasking during a recent rehearsal as the tech crew worked out the kinks in lighting, music and microphones. 7KH QLPEOH DFWRUV NHHS WKLQJV OLYHO\ RQ WKH VWDJH RII WKH VWDJH DQG ZHDYLQJ WKHLU ZD\ WKURXJK the audience and back again. “Both DFWRUV DQG FUHZ KDYH D JUHDW VHQVH RI FRPPXQLW\ (YHU\RQH KHOSV HYHU\RQH HOVH ORRN WKHLU EHVW DQG WKH\ KDYH IXQ doing it,â€? said Flood, hurrying onto the stage to assist 4-year-old Mia Powers in her debut role as a cat. It’s got legs — as in history, gams, and gumption The theme of Cinderella is classic folktale. In her book “Cinderella Tales from Around the World,â€? Heidi Anne Heiner cites similarly themed stories RI &LQGHUHOOD $FFRXQWV FRQVHUYDWLYHO\ UDQJH IURP WR RYHU YHUVLRQV IURP DOO RYHU WKH PDS Western Europe, China, Egypt, Russia and Vietnam. The earliest myth based on a Cinderella theme is noted by Greek histoULDQ 6WUDER LQ WKH Âż UVW FHQWXU\ %& 0RYLQJ DKHDG VHYHUDO FHQWXULHV ,Q )UHQFK SRHW and Mother Goose fairy tales author Charles Perrault created

‘Both actors and crew have a great sense of community. Everyone helps everyone else look their best, and they have fun doing it.’

Cinderella, played by Hope Bellinger, dances with Prince Christopher, played by Ron Thompson.

Tickets available at Okie’s So get smart. Sharealso in the family-friendly magic of PAPA’s Thriftway Market in Ocean “Cinderella.â€? Step back in time to once upon aPark time‌ by cash or check

Bickering after the ball, Cinderella’s stepsister Grace, played by Grace Scarborough, pulls the other stepstister Joy’s hair, played by Zoey Powers.

info@papatheater.org ‘Both$17.50 actorsadults, and crew have a great sense of $7.25 children under 12 Discovery pass is not community.AEveryone helps everyone else required to park for the show look their best, and they have fun doing it.’

today’s familiar Cinderella storyline. The basics center on a super kind, astoundingly beautiful, miserable but game loneO\ RUSKDQ JLUO &LQGHUHOOD 7KLV LQ KRXVH VHUYDQW LV PHUFLOHVVO\ PLVWUHDWHG E\ KHU KHDUWOHVV FRQQLYLQJ DQG MHDORXV VWHSPRWKHU and two stepsisters. With the help of a fairy godmother, against the odds, Cinderella and a glass slipper capture the heart of a perfect prince. Together Cinderella, her prince and the slipper Âż QG HDFK RWKHU DQG PDNH D OLIH RI SHUIHFWO\ PDJLFDO DQG LQ WKLV case, musical happiness. Bet you’re familiar with the “happily HYHU´ DIWHU OLQH 7KH Âż UVW YHUVLRQ RI 5RJHUV DQG +DPPHUVWHLQÂśV Âł&LQGHUHOOD´ ZDV ZULWWHQ IRU WHOHYLVLRQ DQG VWDUULQJ -XOLH $QGUHZV DLUHG LQ 0DUFK 7KH VWDJH YHUVLRQ SHUIRUPHG LQ /RQGRQ LQ DQG FDPH WR WKH 8QLWHG 6WDWHV LQ $ VHFRQG WHOHYLVLRQ YHUVLRQ ZDV UHFRUGHG LQ DQG D WKLUG WHOHYLVLRQ YHUVLRQ VWDUULQJ %UDQG\ 1RUZRRG ZDV EURDGFDVW WR PLOOLRQ YLHZHUV LQ %DVHG RQ WKH VXFFHVV RI WKH WHOHSOD\ WKH 5RGJHUV and Hammerstein Organization came out with “Cinderellaâ€? (Enchanted Edition). Three songs were added, three acts were shortened to two, and dialogue was updated. Two of the songs FDPH IURP SUHYLRXV 5RGJHUV DQG +DPPHUVWHLQ FROODERUDWLRQV Âł/RQHOLQHVV RI (YHQLQJ´ ZDV FRPSRVHG IRU WKH SURGXF WLRQ RI Âł6RXWK 3DFLÂż F´ EXW GLGQÂśW PDNH WKH FXW 6DPH VWRU\ IRU Âł7KHUHÂśV 0XVLF ,Q <RX´ IRU WKH Âż OP Âł0DLQ 6WUHHW WR Broadway.â€? The third song, “The Sweetest Sounds,â€? was by 5LFKDUG 5RGJHUV +H ZURWH LW LQ IRU WKH Âż OP Âł1R 6WULQJV ´ It seems it pays to hold on to your old works, especially if your name is Rogers or Hammerstein. Inside the opening page of PAPA’s “Cinderellaâ€? playbill, it reads, “If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales. When I examine my life and my methods of thought, I come to the conclusion that the gift of fantasy has PHDQW PRUH WR PH WKDQ DQ\ WDOHQW IRU DEVWUDFW SRVLWLYH WKLQN Cinderella’s stepsisters Grace, left, played by Grace Scarborough, and Joy, played by Zoey Powers, complain after the ball. LQJ ´ 7KH VRXUFH RI WKLV DGYLFH" $OEHUW (LQVWHLQ July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 13


The Kitchen

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The Kitchen’s muffuletta sandwich includes mortadella, salami, ham, mozzarella and provolone coated with an olive oil spread of finely diced green olives, garlic, celery, cauliflower and carrot.

Don’t overlook Seaside’s quirky and inspired hole-in-the-wall Chances are you’ve passed The Kitchen numerous times while driving through Seaside. Whether or not you noticed the shacksized take-out box near the south end of Roosevelt Drive is another matter. The Kitchen truly is tiny, a hole-in-thewall that’s easy to overlook. But make no mistake: Though the name is hardly compelling, the food is. Each day from Tuesday to Saturday, owner and operator Jeanne Odonovan drums up two or three dishes. You’ll see them written on a whiteboard outside. Per her hours, it’s mostly lunchtime fare: soups and sandwiches and so on. But then again, most anything is possible; Odonovan seems to be limited by her own creativity and mood. If something on the day’s menu strikes you — like the African Lamb Meatballs that originally drew me in — pull on over and have a look. Sidle up to the Dutch door. Peer at the kitchen inside. It’s bright, clean and cute — much like Odonovan herself, who PL[HV WKH FRORUV RI KHU RXW¿ WV DQG DSURQV DV well as she does her spices. It would, of course, be wholly inappropriate to ask a lady her age. But based on some crayon art hanging from a cabinet made out to “Grandma,” it’s safe to assume Odonovan’s station. And that’s what The Kitchen offers: home cooking like your own grandma (or younger aunt) might make had she culinary designs and a well-stocked fridge. 2Q P\ ¿ UVW YLVLW , RUGHUHG WKH $IULFDQ Lamb Meatballs and a cup of the salmon chowder. As it was only moments before The Kitchen’s 5 p.m. closing time, Odonovan had run out of the accompanying saffron couscous. She made up for it by adding some fresh French bread and offering a little discount, plus half a small red pepper (a cherry bomb, I believe) that was stuffed with chèvre. It was one or two bites, and it was a delightfully bright, brash kick. The meatballs too, served in a thick red sauce, were garlicy and marvelous. Hints of cinnamon and orange invoked the sweet tang of the dish’s African namesake. With the succulent lamb, the subtleties of Odonovan’s spicing turned regular meatballs and red sauce into something more sublime. The smoked salmon chowder too was nuanced. The broth was creamy, rich and seasoned with basil. Smoked salmon permeated, both in healthy chunks and in being cooked down into the broth. The slowcooked potatoes too were falling out of their skins into a smooth, hearty paste. Against

14 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

the softness, celery offered crisp contrast. All together, after tip, the chowder and lamb meatballs ran me $11. For lunch, it ZDV UHIUHVKLQJO\ UH¿ QHG DQG LGHDOO\ VL]HG — enough to satiate without needing a nap. I returned a month later for Cuban stew and a muffuletta sandwich. As before, Odonovan threw in a few extras — a beef taquito with tangerine-avocado dip and artfully cut roasted onion — in my bag for no extra cost. Again, the pricetag after tip was $11. (It must be said: while Odonovan happened to be generous with me it might just as well have been the luck of the draw — don’t go expecting to get anything you don’t pay for.) At first glance, with bread hanging over

Pull on over and have a look. Sidle up to the Dutch door. Peer at the kitchen inside. It’s bright, clean and cute.

The Kitchen may be small, but it serves up big flavors.

the sides, the muffaletta looked a little slim. But looks can be deceiving. As I bit in past the fresh bun I discovered mounds of mortadella, salami, ham, mozzarella and provolone. They were coated with an olive oil spread of finely diced green olives, garlic, celery, cauliflower and carrot. The muffaletta was briny, salty, garlicy and staggeringly sumptuous. Imagine an Italian tasting plate of meats, cheeses, olives and the like, and you’re getting warm. That DIWHUQRRQ¶V PXIIDOHWWD ZRXOG EH P\ ¿ UVW DW The Kitchen, but it wouldn’t be my last. The accompanying Cuban stew was vegetarian and its less-fatty components made an ideal partner. In a thin tomato base and

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

The Kitchen Rating: 1820 S. Roosevelt Drive, Seaside 503-717-2496

Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. Price: $ – two-item lunches usually cost around $10. Service: Take-out only. A colorful one-woman show, orders take approximately 5 to 10 minutes Vegetarian/Vegan options: Menu-dependent, but dishes often lean on animal products. Drinks: None, unless you’re lucky.

spiced with cumin there were white and black beans, corn, squash, onions and rice. The stew was simple and comforting — maybe something like your grandma would make. A few weeks later I returned yet again, unable to resist another muffaletta. It was everything I remembered — and craved — from the first. With it I had a shrimp lobster bisque. This time it was $12, after tip. (Odonovan threw in a cup of ice tea, filled with infused berries, and a tasting cup of fruit salad.) The bisque, kind of like a chowder with only broth and meat, was decadently rich but one-note. Indeed, just about everything I tried from The Kitchen I quite enjoyed. Heartening just the same is Odonovan’s personality and chutzpa. You’re being cooked for and served by a single person with a singular vision. It’s almost like a food truck, only with a more versatile kitchen and rotating menu. So now, every time I pass through Seaside, I take an eager glance at The Kitchen’s offerings for the day.

KEY TO RATINGS

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


Hear alt-country at Peninsula Arts Center LONG BEACH, Wash. — The Peninsula Arts Center welcomes alternative country musician James Low for a concert at 7 p.m. Saturday, July 11. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Low started out in a one-stoplight town in Eastern Oregon that had a single AM radio station that went off the air every night at 6 p.m. Coming from a family steeped in music, Low toyed with a couple of instruments but mostly sang. Following his father’s lead, he starting writing songs, DQG DIWHU ¿QLVKLQJ VFKRRO KH

escaped to New York. Working in the kitchen at a roots and blues club, The Lone Star Roadhouse, he came under the sway of classic blues and country musicians like Rufus and Carla Thomas, Emmy Lou Harris, NRBQ, and Maceo Parker, while spending his nights at open mics in the West Village. Eventually he settled in the East Village and spent a few years playing bass in the country punk band Marlboro Country before returning to Oregon in 1995. In 2000, he released his

Farmerâ€? appeared on several independent radio charts including the Euro Americana ÂżUVW DOEXP D VSDUVH FRXQWU\ chart. It received four-star refolk affair titled “Mexiquita.â€? views in magazines like Mojo On a tiny boutique label, the and The Telegraph UK’s top release received a four-star roots records list for 2012, review in the All Music Guide becoming the most successful and positive reactions from release of his career. the local press, but it went Since 2014, Low has been largely unnoticed. A series of working out of his home stuVHOI ÂżQDQFHG DOEXPV LQFOXG- dio in Kuala Lumpur, Malaying “Blackheartâ€? in 2002 and sia, studying music compo“The Blackguard’s Waltzâ€? in sition at the Berklee College 2008 established a solid pedi- of Music Online, and touring gree as a writer, and Low’s ca- once or twice annually in the UHHU Ă€RXULVKHG LQ WKH PDQQHU United States and Europe. of a well-kept secret. The Peninsula Arts Center In 2012, the self-released LV ORFDWHG DW 3DFLÂżF $YH and promoted “Whiskey N. Tickets are $12 at the door.

360-901-0962 $12 For reservations, call 360901-0962 or use the form at www.peninsulaartscenter.org/ FRQFHUWV &RQFHUWV EHQHÂżW WKH Long Beach Peninsula Acoustic Music Foundation, a 501(c) Submitted photo QRQSURÂżW FKDULWDEOH RUJD- Hear alt-country musician James Low perform July 11 at the Peninsula Arts Center. nization.

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dinin g out

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S he lb u rn e In n , Re s ta u ra n t& Pu b 4415 Pa c ific W a y, S e a vie w, W a 3 60-642-4150 W w w.s he lb u rn e re s ta u ra n t.c o m

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 15


Grammy Award-winning duo play Tillamook Tillamook County Arts Network hosts Tingstad and Rumbel TILLAMOOK — Some artists fall in love with Tillamook County because of the place and others because of the people. Grammy Award-winners Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel fell in love with the people of Tillamook County at WKHLU ¿UVW FRQFHUW WKHUH LQ and have been returning ever since. Their upcoming conFHUW ZLOO EH D EHQH¿W IRU 7LOlamook County Arts Network. Tingstad and Rumbel bring to the stage a rare and admirable combination of talent, virtuoso musicianship and an entertaining style beginning at 2 p.m. Sunday, July 12 at Tillamook Nazarene Church. Tingstad and Rumbel have played the gamut of stages. From Carnegie Hall to National Parks, they are known

Submitted photo courtesy the artists

Grammy Award-winning artists Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel will perform their blend of Americana finger-style guitar with melodic woodwinds. The July 12 concert is a benefit for Tillamook County Arts Network.

for their original compositions and innovative treatments of

popular American standards. The duo also enjoy performing musical styles from around the world. A piece featuring Spanish or Caribbean rhythms may be followed by elegant interpretations of a classic Chinese lullaby or an Irish folk song. Their concerts take the audience on an instrumental journey of sound and imagination. The concert will show-

case Tingstad and Rumbel’s EOHQGLQJ RI $PHULFDQD ÂżQger-style guitar with melodic woodwinds creating a captivating musical experience, leaving the listener wanting more. Advance tickets are on sale now: $15 for adults and $10 for students by calling 503 7LFNHWV ZLOO DOVR be available at the door the day of the concert at $20 for adults and $15 for students. “Fishing Villageâ€? by Kathryn Murdock. Tillamook Nazarene Church is located at 2611 Third St. Tillamook County Arts Network is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded in 2000 to strengthen, illuminate and promote the visual, performing and literary arts in Tillamook County. TCAN believes that a strong, vibrant, livable community has a healthy arts and culture component. TCAN relies on its annual fundraiser to help support its effort on behalf of the county. Recently, TCAN entered into a partnership with Visit Tillamook Coast and now provides arts and cultural in- “Sunriseâ€? by Martha Lee. formation as part of the new outreach to visitors. For more information about TCAN, visit www.tillamookcountyarts.org

See work at old Long Beach Train Depot

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WAHKIAKUM CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 360-795-9996 • WCHAMBER@CNI.NET WAHKIAKUMCHAMBER.COM

16 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

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

Submitted photo

NW Artist Guild opens show

Open 7am

European Style Coffeehouse by day, intimate bistro offering neo-regional cuisine by night.

Submitted photo

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LONG BEACH, Wash. — Northwest Artist Guild embarks on its summer show at the old Long Beach Train Depot, 102 Third St. N.W. The show will run Friday to Sunday, July 10 to 12 and will include works from the guild members, including Martha Lee, Stan Riesedel, Betsy Toepfer, Kent Toepfer, Susan McCloud, Kathryn Murdock and other members. The guild has been working together as an art family for a little over two years and is steadily growing in numbers. Artists work in watercolor, pastel, acrylic and collage, with a mix from abstract to realism. The group has a total of four shows for 2015 with the next one at the Cove Restaurant in Long Beach in November.

Submitted photo

“Paint Chips� by Stan Riesedel.

The July show will be open from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. both days, with a public Artist’s Reception from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday, July 10. Light refreshments will be served, and visitors are encouraged to view work, meet artists, hear their stories and visit with friends.


The New York Times Magazine Crossword HEADS OF STATE By ELIZABETH C. GORSKI / Puzzles Edited by WILL SHORTZ Answers on Page 22

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ACROSS Monocle part Bridge support Many a Theravada Buddhist Indiana city where auto manufacturing was pioneered Ruler in Richard Strauss’s “Salome” Construction-site sight Art of flower arranging Red-wrapped imports Prince of Darkness Senate vote Tea made by Peter Rabbit’s mother Restriction on Army enlistees Part of CBS: Abbr. Bring in a new staff for Blender sound “The Untouchables” role Table d’____ Grouch “Fasten your seatbelts …” “Smack That” singer Jaunty greeting Shunned ones Pharma-fraud police ____ of time Half-____ (java order) Plains Indian Straw mats Senate vote Hoppy brew, for short Flawless routine City on Utah Lake Duds Astronomer who wrote “Pale Blue Dot” U.S. 66, e.g.: Abbr. Like Fr. words after “la” Boston iceman Plane folk? Pepper-spray targets Extols Comcast, e.g., for short

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Bio subject Trial that bombs, informally Piedmont city Stud money Interminable time G.E. and G.M. Singer Carly ____ Jepsen Ball-like Award accepted by J. K. Rowling and turned down by C. S. Lewis 85 “____ Ho” (“Slumdog Millionaire” song) 87 Big channel in reality programming 89 Man’s name that’s the code for Australia’s busiest airport 90 Genre of Oasis and the Verve 92 Works at the ballpark, maybe 94 Movie dog 95 Army-Navy stores? 97 Kind of tiara and cross 98 Leg bone 99 Okey-____ 101 Onetime Nair alternative 102 “____ a customer” 103 10 cc’s and 64 fl. oz. 104 The person you want to be 107 Give a thorough hosing 110 Away 111 What the buyer ends up paying 112 Old crime-boss Frank 113 “I Love Lucy” surname 115 Response to “Who, me?” 116 Eight-related 117 Smooth fabric 118 Lip 119 Head of a crime lab? 120 Prosciutto, e.g. DOWN 1 Hold up 2 Non-PC office purchase 3 Beautiful butterfly

again emcee the event, and specialty numbers will feature individual members of the summer chorus. Attendees may enjoy a buffet of lite bites with beverages, and a cash bar is also available. Specialty numbers include: “Anything You Can Do”, a duet from “Annie Get Your Gun”; “O mio babbino caro” from Puccini opera “Gianni Schicchi”; “Chattanooga Choo-Choo”; “A Nightingale

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Nickname for Thomas Jefferson Debt, symbolically It flows to the Caspian To a degree Campus grp. formed in 1960 Nickname for Abraham Lincoln Eat or drink Seed cover Not going anywhere Capital on the Congo “I heard you the first time!” See 18-Down What 15-Down is … or a hint to the answers to the four italicized clues in left-to-right order Black birds Hanoi celebrations Nickname for George Washington Union Pacific headquarters “The ____ Breathe” (2007 drama with Kevin Bacon and Julie Delpy) Minister (to) Nickname for Theodore Roosevelt “Kapow!” Guinness Book suffix Pay (up) Thumb, for one AARP and others: Abbr. Subject of semiotics Gillette products Apartment, informally Comment regarding a squashed bug High-____ image Cornish of NPR Consecrated, to Shakespeare Toaster’s need Like a stereotypical mobster’s voice Alphabet trio Four seasons in Seville “Am ____ believe …?” Worthy of pondering River through Yorkshire

Sang in Berkeley Square”; “Misty” and much, much more. Advance tickets are available for $20 each or $120 for a table of eight people. The location for the Cabaret is the Seaside Elks Lodge auditorium, 324 Ave. A, and the auditorium is accessible from the west parking lot. The proceeds from the summer Cabaret will bene¿t the Cannon Beach Chorus Scholarship fund. The Carol

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Cannon Beach Chorus to sing a cabaret SEASIDE — The Cannon Beach Chorus will feature “The Best of Gilbert & Sullivan” at the summer Cabaret performances at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 10 and 11. The chorus, under the direction of John Buehler with pianist Susan Buehler, will perform favorite choruses from “Pirates of Penzance,” “The Mikado,” and “H.M.S. Pinafore.” Longtime Cannon Beach resident Paul Dueber will

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Homme Memorial Scholarship is presented annually to graduating high school senior vocalists who plan to continue singing at the collegiate level. The 2015 scholarship recipients are Ellie Whitlock of Cannon Beach, who will be attending Paci¿c 8niversity as a music major in the fall, and Alyssa Hanson of Warrenton, who will attend Oregon State 8niversity with an interest in musical theater. For more information, visit www.cannonbeachchorus.org or contact 503-4360378.

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Truculent manner Where Northwestern University is N.F.L. ball carriers: Abbr. Barry of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” Stoked, with “up” Blank, as a tabula

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Sign up for Painting with Words SEASIDE — Sandra Claire Foushee, winner of the William Stafford Poetry Award, will offer a writing workshop, Painting with Words: The Art of Visual Ideas. This creative workshop is designed to help you articulate your conscious experience, to visualize and paint with images, listen to the rhythm of words as you write, to open your imagination. Writing can take the form of poems, lyrics, children’s or short stories, lyrical essays.

Foushee has been published in many literary journals, including Ploughshares and The Seattle Review. She has taught at Clatsop Community College, and Tillamook Bay Community College. The workshop will be held from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Monday, July 13 to Aug. 3 at Beach Books, located at 616 Broadway. Cost is $20 per session or $80 for four sessions. To register, e-mail sfoushee#paci¿er. com or call 503-717-0112.

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 17


coa st w eeken d M ARK ETPLACE 70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

$250 sign on BONUS

Dining Room Supervisor $15 per hour Full time year round position for the right person. Experience preferred

$14 per hour

The Lanai in Seaside is seeking Experianced front desk person. also seeking houekeepers. Experiance prefered but not requeired. Pay starting at $12 per hours. Apply in person at 3140 Sunset Blv. Seasde. 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.

Send reply to Box 233, c/o Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Busy construction company looking for hard working, dependable employee. Experience with welding and heavy equipment a plus, but not required. Must have a valid Driverʼs License and good past job references. Drug test required. Competitive wage $14-18 to start DOE. Call (503)861-0411 or send resume to bergeman_const@qwestoffice.net DUST off the old pool table and sell it with a classified ad.

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.

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

The Daily Astorian

Front Desk Regular, full time opportunity for the right person. Is that you, !!!!!!!!!! We would love to have you apply Send reply to Box 234, c/o Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Astoria Dental Group seeks full time, 5 days/week, business office assistant/data entry. Required skills include excellent multi-tasking, basic secretarial skills, familiarity with computer and muliline telephone. Starting pay $14 per hour with merit raises thereafter. Benefit package includes medical, dental, 401k, vacation and holidays. Please send resume to: Tyack Dental Group 443 30th St. Astoria, OR 97103 or e-mail jtyack@clatskanie.com

We urge you to patronize the local professionals advertising in The Daily Astorian Specialty Services. To place your Specialty Services ad, call 325-3211. Administrative Support Position 40 hours/week Salary Range is $11.50 - $13.50/hour, plus benefits (depending upon experience)

8 am - 6 pm or leave a message anytime or e-mail us: circulation@dailyastorian.com

Clatsop Community Action is hiring for a full-time (40 hours/week) Administrative Support

Please call if: • You would like to order home delivery • Your paper has not arrived by 5:30 pm Monday through Friday • Your paper is damaged • You have a problem with a news rack • You are going on vacation • You have questions about your subscription

We’re your newspaper 18 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

Escape Lodging Company is looking for “Escape Artists” to join our team. Our culture honors hard work, honesty, a sense of humor and individuality. At its core is a commitment to hiring for The Hospitality Attitude. In addition to offering a very competitive wage, Escape Lodging offers many benefits to our employees. These benefits include paid vacation, medical, profit sharing/401K and more. Positions currently available: •Front Desk •Housekeeping •Housekeeping Supervisor (experience preferred) •Maintenance

Specialty

Services

Customer Service Hotline

503-325-3211

70 Help Wanted

Position Summary:

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.

•••NEGOTIABLE WAGE••• •••HIRING BONUS••• •••SUMMER BONUS••• Positions are available at the Inn at Cannon Beach. Must be available to work a flexible schedule, including weekends. Please apply in person at the Inn at Cannon Beach (3215 S Hemlock, Cannon Beach). If you have any questions, please contact Terri at terri@innatcannonbeach.com or call (503)436-9085. CLASSIFIED ADS work hard for you. Try one today!

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

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

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 Auto Sales OCEAN CREST MOTORS Due to rebounding auto sales we are in need of two top caliber individuals to join our sales team. We are a multi franchise chain of 4 dealerships and have been in business since 1973. If you desire a chance to earn a high income in a rewarding career we would like to talk to you. You must be dedicated, hard working, goal oriented, persistent and assertive in order to succeed. Neat, clean, and well groomed appearance is a must. Call to set up apt. for interview as for Jim Thompson (503)861-3366

Construction Laborer needed for all phases of renovation project. Valid drivers license required, pay DOE. (503)861-0426 Astoria Parks & Recreation Have Immediate Openings: •Lifeguards •Recreation Leaders •Child Care Professionals Lifeguard employment requires completing the Ellis & Associates Course July 13th -15th 8am – 5pm. CCC college credit for this class! Lifeguard pre-screened applicants possibly free of cost. For more information call 325-7275 or visit www.astoria.or.us for position descriptions and online applications.

70 Help Wanted Reporter 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 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. 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 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

Housekeeping Supervisor Assistant. Full-Time/Year Round Competitive wage End of summer bonus! Bring Resume to Gearhart by the Sea 1157 N. Marion. D.O.E.

Housekeeping/Housemen End of Summer Bonus! Applications at Gearhart by the Sea 1157 N. Marion. Starting wage $12 an hour D.O.E. 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

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

Clatsop County Staff Assistant

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

Public Health Range: $2,997 - $3,643/Month +Benefits Full-time position to perform professional administrative staff work for the Public Health Dept. Application materials and job description located at www.co.clatsop.or.us Closes: 5:00 pm, Friday, July 17, 2015. AA/EOE

POSITION OPENING Administrative Specialist Cannon Beach Police Department The Cannon Beach Police Department is accepting applications for Administrative Specialist. Requirements: High school graduate or equivalent. Candidate must exhibit a professional attitude, enjoy working with the public, be flexible to changing priorities, problem solving skills and demonstrate confidentiality. Background in law enforcement is very desirable. Must be able to pass a law enforcement background check. Duties include performing accurate computer data entry and retrieval, generating reports and some accounts receivable. Taking and disseminating information generated from walk in and telephone requests. Monitor, initiate or respond to radio transmissions. Prioritizing responses to phone, walk-in and radio requests for service. Maintaining various records and other clerical tasks. Entering and retrieving confidential information through use of the Law Enforcement Data System. Position is part time with a minimum of 24 hours per week which requires work on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from 8:00am-5:00pm. Additional fill-in hours may be available. Position is included in the Cannon Beach Police Officerʼs Guild. Excellent Benefits package.

Application deadline is July 15th, 2015. Send resume and letter of interest to Chief of Police, City of Cannon Beach, P.O. Box 368, Cannon Beach, Oregon 97110, or email to schermerhorn@ ci.cannon-beach.or.us

POSITION OPENING Police Officer Cannon Beach Police Department The Cannon Beach Police Department is accepting applications for Police Officer. This is a full time position requiring shift work. The applicant must be 21 years of age and will be subject to personal history and criminal background investigations. The applicant must be a US citizen and show proof of graduation from an accredited high school or hold a GED. Possess or be able to obtain a valid Oregon Driverʼs license and have a good driving record. Must be able to perform the physical requirements associated with the position. Must have the ability to communicate effectively, both in writing and verbally. Be able to resolve situations by making appropriate decisions in highly stressful, rapidly evolving and violent situations; and respect diversity. The applicant must be of good moral fitness. A physical examination, (ORPAT) Oregon Physical Agility Test, and a psychological examination are required. The hourly rate for this position ranges from $20.50 to $26.17. Closing date is July 10th, 2015. For more information, please contact the Cannon Beach Police Department at 503-436-2811 or email police@ci.cannon-beach.or.us. Applications available online at www.ci.cannon-beach.or.us. ADVERTISERS who want quick results use classified ads regularly.

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

70 Help Wanted

70 Help Wanted

Bell Bouy Crab-Co. in Chinook Wa. seeking experianed full time office assiant. Pay DOE (360)777-8272 e-mail reume to dungy@centurytel.net

Wahkiakum County Engineer, F/T or P/T. Seaside Shilo Inns Resort is now recruiting customer service associates to join our team. Positions in the hotel full and Part-time

Starting hourly rate range $18.02 to $ 22.45 per hour Optometric Technician/Optician needed for our Seaside location. Must be able to multi-task, be very organized and have excellent patient care skills. Medical experience preferred but will train. Apply in person 819 S Holladay Seaside

70 Help Wanted

· 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.

Minimum Qualifications: Five years progressively responsible engineering and management experience involving a variety of assignments associated with public works activities, B.S degree in Civil Engineering or equivalent combination of education and experience, current Washington State Professional Civil Engineer License, valid WA State driverʼs license with a good driving record, or any equivalent combination of education and experience that demonstrates the knowledge, skills and abilities to perform the essential job functions. Open until filled. Submit cover letter, resume, & references to: Wahkiakum County Board of Commissioners, PO Box 586, 64 Main Street, Cathlamet, WA 98612, (360) 795-8048. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

T.Paulʼs Supper Club and T.Pauls Urban Cafe Taking application for All kitchen positions, starting wage $12 to $15 DOE Apply with in. CASH buyers are reading your Classified Ad.

Wahkiakum County Building Inspector/ Planner, F/T or P/T. Minimum Qualifications: Three years of progressive responsibility in the public or private sector in the field of land use / or development regulations including ICC Certification(s) in Building Code or Residential Code inspection; working knowledge of plumbing and mechanical codes. A combination of education and experience that demonstrates the knowledge, skills and abilities to perform the essential job functions. Open until filled. Submit cover letter, resume, and references to: Wahkiakum County Board of Commissioners, PO Box 586, 64 Main Street, Cathlamet, WA 98612, (360) 795-8048. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

Want an international experience without leaving home? Come work at Job Corps!

We're growing and we're hiring for the following positions: • 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. Warren House Pub in Cannon Beach is seeking a prep person for the kitchen, and a dishwahser/busser for summer employment Come on in with an application or leave resume, at 3301 South Hemlock, or call (503)436-1130.

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

Our students, and staff, represent numerous countries and cultures. Join our Tongue Point family and become part an amazing community unlike any other in Astoria.

GARAGE SALES are big success when advertised in the classified ads!

Current openings include:

260 Commercial Rental

•Academic Instructor (OR Teaching License Required) •Career Transition Specialist •Group Life Secretary (32 hrs/wk) •Recreation Advisor (30hrs/wk) •Recreation Advisor (Art Room) •Residential Advisor •On-Call Residential Advisor Apply today at: www.mtc.jobs For help with the application process, call Human Resources at 503-338-4961. Management & Training Corporation is an Equal Opportunity Employer Minority/Female/Veteran/Disability MTC Values Diversity! Tongue Point is a drug-free workplace and has a tobacco-free campus.

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

560 Trucks 1998 Dodge Pickup, V-10, great motor, quad cab, running boards, perfect interior. $2500. (503)3253330

580 Utility Trailers 2014 Continental Cargo 24ʼ (car hauler) side door, EZ lube hubs, GVWR 9800lbs. One owner, excellent condition. $6,500 (503)3386005

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 19


Two writers give reading at Sou’Wester Lodge Redmen Hall postpones exhibit, calls for entries SEAVIEW, Wash. — The Sou’Wester Lodge will host Lisa Wells and Joshua Marie Wilkinson for a reading at 8 p.m. Saturday, July 11. Portland poet and essayist Lisa Wells is the author of the book of essays “Yeah. No. Totally.” and the chapbook “BEAST.” She collaborated with photographer Bobby Abrahamson, Wells documented four small, rural towns in Oregon in the book “The West Behind Us.” She holds a Master of Fine Arts in poetry from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and is about to move to Singapore, where she’ll teach poetry at Yale-NUS College. Joshua Marie Wilkinson is the author of “Swamp Isthmus,” “The Courier’s Archive & Hymnal” and “Meadow Slasher,” among others. With Solan Jensen he made a tour-

SKAMOKAWA, Wash. — Redmen Hall River Life Interpretive Center is postponing its upcoming exhibit on the History of Lower Columbia River Commerce until the middle of 2016. The history of commerce on the lower Columbia is a major subject, and there are many entities wishing to participate. Organizers feel the exhibit

Astoria Visual Arts expands artist-in-residence program Submitted photo

Poet Lisa Wells and author Joshua Marie Wilkinson will do readings July 11 at the Sou’Wester Lodge.

documentary about indie-rock band Califone called “Made a Machine by Describing the Landscape.”

Having grown up in Seattle, Wilkinson now lives in Tucson, teaches at the University of Arizona and

runs a poetry journal called The Volta and a small press called Letter Machine Editions.

Hear live music at Fort George

plete with hooks and sparkle. The group is working on a new album to hopefully come out in 2015. The band features Davey Appaloosa on lead guitar and vocals, Skyler Weaver on drums, Danny Delegato on guitar and lead vocals, and Jacob Schoen on bass. Formed in the summer of

2013, Us Lights is an atmospheric, dark-pop band. The group’s music features moody synths, strong bass and drums, rich vocals, and intricate sampling. Us Lights’ debut self-titled EP came out in 2014. The band includes Michael Young, Ryan Hayes, Ryan Cross, Glen Scheidt and Travis Girton.

ASTORIA — Fort George Brewery welcomes two Portland bands to perform at 8 p.m. Sunday, July 12: The Hugs and Us Lights. The brewery is located at 1483 Duane St. The show is

needs more time to assemble and a longer exhibit time than is available this year. Organizers invite anyone who is interested in being part of the exhibit — sharing heritage information or demonstrations, or participating in talks about their experiences on the river — to contact Redmen Hall at 360795-3007.

open to all ages, and there is no cover charge. Formed in 2007, The Hugs play garage psych-pop. The band’s latest album, “Love Led You Here” from 2013, is full of lively pop songs com-

The Hugs and Us Lights 8 p.m. Sunday, July 12 Fort George Brewery 1483 Duane St.

Submitted photo by ARKWAGON

Us Lights will perform Sunday, July 12 at the Fort George Brewery.

20 | July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com

ASTORIA — Astoria Visual Arts’ Artist-in-Residence program began earlier this year and has been expanded to accommodate two artists at a time, rather than one. David Coyne of Astoria and H. Elizabeth Koch of Seaside have been selected for the upcoming three-month residencies, which run July 1 to Sept. 30. Coyne is a talented painter and illustrator. Inspired by visual narrative, fantasy and the meditative abilities of line work and brush marks, he enrolled as a teen in the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts to pursue his passion. He later received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from California State University, Long Beach. Coyne, who is adept at a host of visual arts, including drawing, oil painting, photography, sculpture and printmaking, plans to use his time in the studio to focus on expanding his portfolio, honing and building on his skills and techniques while producing new works on a larger scale. His work can be seen at www.davidcoyneart.com Koch, a recent graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago, works in multiple modalities of sight and touch. She focuses on carvings and textures, inspired by an intense relationship with the world around her. During her residency, Koch plans to work on a series inspired by and in relationship with a stand of old-growth Douglas ¿r located in the Fox Creek watershed near Saddle Mountain. Beginning with

studies of the macro-textures and microscopic elements of the trees, the series will explore the ecology of the ancient forest. Koch anticipates the work will culminate in sculptural forms, including wall-mounted and freestanding pieces. To view her work, go to www.heliziv.com The two artists will be able to work unencumbered in studios provided rent-free by Astoria Visual Arts, with generous support from Astoria Coffeehouse & Bistro, the Astoria Co-op Grocery, City Lumber, Dots ‘N Doodles Art Supplies and the Fort George Brewery. The AVA Artist-in-Residence program (AVA a-i-r) is designed to encourage the creative, intellectual and professional growth of emerging artists. While no exhibition, publication or performance is required of the selected artists, community responsibility includes a weekend open studio event before the end of each AVA a-i-r session. Finalists (currently limited to locally based artists) are chosen in a blind selection process on the basis of artistic merit by an independent panel of established working artists and arts patrons. AVA was founded in 1989 as a nonpro¿t membership organization to enhance, strengthen and promote the arts in the greater Astoria area. For more information about AVA or to support or learn more about the AVA a-i-r program, visit www.astoriavisualarts.org


Oregon Coast inspires local printmakers

Cannon Beach Gallery holds artist reception for ‘Sediment’ CANNON BEACH — In its new show “Sediment,” Cannon Beach Gallery will present the work of three printmakers who draw their inspiration from the natural environment of the Oregon Coast. Stirling Gorsuch, Sarah Baumert-Lippold and Kirsten Horning each demonstrate their technical skills, including monotypes and relief printing combined with Chine-collé, alongside their artistry through image. “Sediment” opened July 2, and there will be an artist reception from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday, July 11. The show will run to July 26. Each artist is a current member of the North Coast Printmakers Collective, which was founded around the work of printmaker Royal Nebeker and the facilities at Clatsop Community College in Astoria. All the artists in “Sed-

iment” credit the late Nebeker as being an important mentor. This is evident in the collective use of bold color choices and the dynamic layering to create depth and texture. Gorsuch pairs the natural elements of the Oregon coastline with considered geometric forms as a way of translating nature’s complexities, such as the moon’s power over the tides, the time of day or prolonged decay due to erosion. “My work records these associations in order to clarify how environments are continually shaped and reshaped throughout time,” he said. Gorsuch creates pieces through linocut and monoprint with a focus on stark contrasts of bold and muted colors. Baumert-Lippold primarily uses monotype to achieve deep color and texture us-

ing stencils and strips of wood for natural references through the wood’s grain. Her work is considered abstract, as she blurs the horizon of sea and sky within the rich colors. Horning favors the use of woodblock techniques, from the process of carving the wood to the richness of the inks used. This collection of work displays the mythical world on the backdrop of the natural world. “My work is a reflection of the beauty and diversity of the environmental condition of human experience,” she said. “Sediment” showcases the similarities of these artists — their processes and inspirations — yet highlights the strengths of each individual, displaying their own personal view on the world. Gorsuch has an established connection to the

Submitted photo

“Phaze Wavez” by Stirling Gorsuch.

Cannon Beach Gallery, a program of the Cannon Beach Arts Association; he participated in the gallery’s summer internship program for two years. This year’s intern, Alisa Vernon, will be gaining her experience working on this show, bringing things full circle. The show has received partner funding from the James F. & Marion L. Miller Foundation. Cannon Beach Gallery is located at 1064 S. Hemlock St.

Submitted photo

“Window in Time” by Stirling Gorsuch.

T he

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Cottage & Garden Tour tickets available Cannon Beach History Center and Museum fundraiser set CANNON BEACH — Attention Cannon Beach Cottage & Garden Tour fans: It’s almost time to put on your walking shoes to take a tour through Cannon Beach’s homes and gardens. Advance tickets are now available for purchase. The Cottage & Garden Tour is the Cannon Beach History Center & Museum’s annual fundraiser. It contributes a sigQL¿FDQW DPRXQW RI WKH QRQSURIit’s annual income. The event was started 11 years ago by author and historian Jill Grady, her colleague Connie Crow and several intrepid board members.

In its hey-day, the tour welcomed at most 60 people. It wasn’t until a few years ago when Cannon Beach’s Tourism and Arts Commission awarded the museum funding to promote the event that the numbers started to reach several hundred. The Tourism and Arts Fund is DZDUGHG WR QRQSUR¿WV LQ RUGHU to promote tourism and the arts. Thanks to the funds, the tour has expanded to include a concert and wine reception, as well as a Sunday garden tea. The tour gives you an opportunity to see the work of closet artists, private collectors,

Get Your Feet Wet at the 49th Annual

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and some of the best beach designs. The tour will begin at noon Saturday, Sept. 12 with a luncheon and lecture at the Tolovana Inn, located at 3400 S. Hemlock St. The luncheon will be prepared by tour favorite Culinary Capers. A round-table discussion moderated by museum board president Kimberley Speer-Miller will explore the history and stories of Cannon Beach. Tickets for the luncheon and lecture are $25. After the presentation, attendees are invited to begin the self-guided home and garden tour at 1 p.m. There will be selection of dream homes, cozy cottages, historic splendors, beachy cottages, and well-manicured gardens. Attendees are invited to tour homes around First Street and the Presidential streets. Maps will be available 10 minutes prior to the start of the tour. Tickets and maps may

Submitted photo

Submitted photo

A variety of historic homes and cottages are slated for the Cannon Beach Home & Garden Tour this September.

“Jellyfish,� a quilt by Constance Waisanen, will be raffled off during the post-tour celebration at the Cannon Beach History Center and Museum.

be picked on the day of the tour from the east-side porch of the Coaster Theatre. Tickets are $30. This ticket purchase includes the post-tour celebration at the museum. All attendees are invited to the Cannon Beach History Center & Museum for wine, live music, and hors d’oeuvres prepared by Sweet Charity. The quilt UDIÀH ZLOO WDNH SODFH DW S P Designed and created by local

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Yet here in the Northwest, perennials, shrubs and trees can throw a party in the garden for more than two seasons. Toss in a few bulbs, and a pinch of design tips, and you have a recipe for a luscious garden. Teashon will present the true stars of the Northwest garden. Tickets to this event are $20. Tickets for each event are available to purchase separately. Luncheon and lecture tickets are $25, Home & Garden Tour tickets are $30, and Garden Tea tickets are $20. A weekend event package is $60. Tickets will be available through the museum’s online gift shop at www.cbhistory.org or by phone at 503-436-9301.

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Tickets on sale ONE HOUR before all shows!

quilt artist Constance Waisanen, WKH TXLOW HQWLWOHG Âł-HOO\ÂżVK ´ LV a colorful exploration of the tide SRROV RI +D\VWDFN 5RFN 5DIĂ€H tickets are $5. 7KH ÂżQDO HYHQW ZLOO EH DQ English-style garden tea at the Tolovana Inn on Sunday, Sept. 13. Enjoy a selection of Oregon-made teas, homemade scones and other treats in a Ă€RZHU ÂżOOHG VHWWLQJ Debbie Teashon, owner of the Rainy Side Gardner and co-author of “Gardening for the Homebrewer: Plants for Making Beer, Wine, Gruit, CiGHU 3HUU\ DQG 0RUH ´ ZLOO EH giving a presentation entitled, “Life Beyond the Two-Season *DUGHQ 3DUW\ ´ $QQXDO SODQWV come and go, and we love their short-term bursts of color.

K I N S H A S A G L A S S D E N Y

R I M O K O M O K E B A N A A Y C A M Y S T R E O T E C R K O N H I A N D S C Y E I P A S A G A N R O U N D C A U D S I S T I A N P H E R I C Y D B R I A R S E N O K E N G O I D E A E T C O S T E A H Y O U S A S S

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

NW word

COLUMBIA BAR

nerd

Blackberry Mojito By RYAN HUME

By RYAN HUME

Baggywrinkle Photo by Matt Love

The Screw and Brew adds a little punk rock to Cannon Beach.

A GLIMPSE INSIDE An occasional feature by MATT LOVE

Screw and Brew I had an hour to kill in Cannon Beach before being interviewed for a top-secret documentary film. Why not kill that hour with a beer? Why not kill it inside the Cannon Beach Hardware and Public House, or Screw and Brew as it’s colloquially known. I’d never been there before, heard great things about it, and well, I also needed some batteries for my camera. I walked inside and took a seat in the bar area. I instantly dug the décor: funky, kitsch, utilitarian, a little Bohemian, a little cheeky, too. The condom packages posted on either side of a mounted, painted, crosscut saw blade were an especially amusing touch. Maybe Cannon Beach is a little more ribald than I thought. There was even a lending library near a window, which soothes my soul as an author. Naturally, I stashed one of my books in there. Maybe someone will steal it. An ale brewed in some desert city of Eastern Oregon appealed to me. I ordered it and looked over to a table hosting an attractive family of five with three children under the age of 8 or 9. Every one of the kids was fiddling on a fancy phone while the parents sipped margaritas in silence. Coloring is dead. The beer arrived, and it tasted good. The NBA finals were underway on television, and I heard someone waxing about the Portland Trail Blazers, circa 1977, and how Larry Steele was his favorite member of the franchise’s only league championship. My favorite Blazer on that legendary team was Herm Gilliam, quite possibly the last NBA player to wear white canvas Chuck Taylor hightops while winning a title. I glanced around some more. Almost all the servers sported tattoos. There was even a local young woman with a turquoise streak in her blonde hair. They looked good, kind of tough, kind of punk rock. Maybe Cannon Beach is a little tougher and punk rock than I thought. An hour elapsed, and it was time to hit the road. I walked to the truck and drove away. Five minutes later, I realized I had forgotten the batteries.

Matt Love lives in Astoria and is the author/editor of 13 books about Oregon, including A Nice Piece of Astoria: A Narrative Guide. They are available at coastal bookstores and through www.nestuccaspitpress.com.

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noun 1. nautical: Chafing gear, resembling a mophead, primarily constructed out of short lengths of frayed rope and knotted with two pieces of marline, hoisted into the mast stays and shrouds to buttress the sail from the rigging and prevent wear and tear; originally an improvised type of scotchman or batten Origin:

Also spelled “bag-o’-wrinkles,” “baggy rinkle,” “boogy winkle” and so on. No known use prior to the mid-20th century since standardization is not a concern of nautical slang. Though since it is associated with the tall ships of centuries past, it is logical to assume the term has been active on deck well before this date. The current spelling is noted by Merriam-Webster to first appear in 1951, though Richard Mayne, in his “The Language of Sailing,” claims the it was first attested by Burgess in his dictionary in 1961. There is no OED listing. Mayne goes on to theorize that the current spelling probably arrived from “bag-o’wrinkles,” which makes sense, as the expression seems as improvisational as the jerry-rigged sennit the word has come to represent as it traveled the seas from hyphenated idiom to compound noun.

For and About Women: On the Beach,” The Oregonian, March 2, 1965, P. 21

“‘They’re called baggywrinkles,’ the captain said. Made from old, unraveled bits of rope, baggywrinkles help protect the sails. When sails come into contact with standard rope, chafing can produce holes, so soft baggywrinkles provide a cushioning barrier between the sails and rigging.” —Rebecca Sedlak, “Out & About: Ahoy, from the Lady Washington,” Coast Weekend, June 14, 2015, P. 3

help but think that Papa would approve.

Now located at the historic 14th Street Pilot Station and rebranded as a Cafe and Public House, Clemente’s, a longtime Astoria stalwart, has entered its third and perhaps coziest incarnation yet. To the right of the door of the small dining room sits a 16-foot-long bar cut from old-growth Doug Fir that looks out onto Pier 14 and the mercurial river. The new menu still has plenty of martinis, but on a recent sunny afternoon, chef Gordon Clement had returned from a day off with some hand-picked blackberries and there was fresh mint behind the bar. In other words, all the fixing for an Oregon mojito. “Summer in a glass,” the bartender announced as she presented the final product. It’s said that when Ernest Hemingway wasn’t searching for German submarines from a wooden fishing boat off the coast of Havana around the onset of the U.S.’s involvement in WWII, he became quite the connoisseur of the mojito. With a rum drink in hand and a boat in the distance, I couldn’t

2 ounces Bacardi rum 1/2 ounce simple syrup 7-10 fresh mint leaves 4 lime wedges One handful fresh Oregon blackberries, to taste Soda water Ice Reserve a few blackberries for garnish. In the bottom of a cocktail shaker, muddle the limes, mint and remaining blackberries. Add ice and muddle again. Add the rum and simple syrup and shake until cold. Strain into a pint glass full of ice, then top with soda water. Garnish with lime and reserved blackberries. —Recipe courtesy of Saralee Cokley, bartender at Clemente’s Cafe and Public House, Astoria, Oregon

“Presently the [Columbia River Maritime Museum] is hoping to acquire enough funds to open the building’s second deck. That’s the upstairs to most of us landlubbers who don’t use such terms as bulkhead, baggywrinkle, artificial horizons, and all that.” —Maryetta, “Hostess House: News

July 9, 2015 | coastweekend.com | 23


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