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Hear medicine songs from the Northwest Brooke Duling and Andrea Mazzarella to perform at KALA ASTORIA — A powerful duo will assemble at KALA at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28 to perform “Medicine Songs from WKH 3DFLÂżF 1RUWKZHVW ´ %URRNH Duling, a local herbalist and healer, has gathered a large basNHWIXO RI VRQJV IURP KHU ZRUN with local plants and the four elements. Duling writes songs for the plants as an offering of gratitude for their medicine and
also as an expression and delivery of their medicine. Duling says that the songs call the spirits of the plants to her and that the resonance of the tones can deliver a powerful experience to the listener even if they have not had any type of experience with plant spirits. 'XOLQJ ZRUNV ZLWK WKH SRZHU RI sound vibration to heal the body
DQG KDV VXFFHVVIXOO\ ZRUNHG with individual clients with these songs. 7KLV ZLOO EH KHU ÂżUVW WLPH SHUIRUPLQJ WKHVH ZRUNV RQ stage for an audience. Her intention with the performance is to offer her songs to a larger group VR PRUH SHRSOH FDQ EHQHÂżW IURP the power of the songs. Andrea Mazzarella is an
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2 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
Celebrate Oktoberfest RAYMOND, Wash. — The 1RUWKZHVW &DUULDJH 0XVHXP LQYLWHV \RX WR WKH ¿IWK DQQXDO 2NWREHUIHVW IURP WR S P Saturday, Sept. 28. This annual event has fast EHFRPH D 1RUWKZHVW WUDGLWLRQ along the Willapa River. If you enjoy bratwurst with all the ¿[LQJV DQG ¿QH *HUPDQ EHHU you won’t want to miss this event. %H SUHSDUHG WR FRPH ZLWK your dancing shoes because one of the best oompah bands in the area will provide music. 'DQFLQJ GLQLQJ UDIÀHV OLYH music and fun await you. Call now to reserve your WLFNHWV RU SLFN XS WLFNHWV XS at the museum. It’s located at 314 Alder St. in Raymond, Wash. Call 360 942-4150 for details and visit www.nwcarriagemuseum.org
Submitted photo
Have a dance at the Northwest Carriage Museum’s fifth annual Oktoberfest.
Musician Andrea Mazzarella and herbalist Brooke Duling will perform “Medicine Songs from the Pacific Northwest� on Saturday, Sept. 28.
equally powerful addition to Dulingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s songs. Mazzarella is a noted local songstress with the duo Fever Damn, and she is DOVR D KHDOHU ZKR KDV ZRUNHG DV a massage therapist and is currently a yoga instructor. At this performance, Duling and Mazzarella will sing the audience through what is essentially a ceremony, beginning with a song for opening, and ending with Dulingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s beloved DQG VLPSOH Âł7KDQN <RX´ SLHFH %HWZHHQ VHOHFWHG VRQJV 'XOLQJ ZLOO VSHDN DERXW WKH PHGLFLQH of the plant sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s singing or tell D VWRU\ DERXW ZKHQ VKH ÂłIRXQG´ the song. At other times, songs will string together to carry the audience through the transition, creating a vocal landscape. Offering a unique form of music, performance and healing combined, these two light-hearted women have created a serious performance thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not to be missed. 'RRUV RSHQ S P 7LFNets cost $10 at the door. Libations and light fare will be available. KALA is located at 1017 Marine Drive in Astoria. Call 503-338-4878 for more information.
TEAA opens October show Michael Muldoon to show paintings GEARHART â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Oregon artist Michael Muldoon will be the featured gallery presenter and demonstration artist at the Trailâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s End Art Associationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s DUW ZDON UHFHSWLRQ IURP WR p.m. Saturday, Oct. 5. Refreshments will be served, and the public is welcome to browse WKH 7UDLOÂśV (QG $UW *DOOHU\ with an all-new exhibit for the October show, featuring photography, oil painting, acrylic, watercolors, jewelry and more. During the reception Muldoon will be available to discuss his painting techniques DQG VKRZ D YDULHW\ RI ZRUNV LQ progress. Muldoon has residences in ERWK &DQQRQ %HDFK DQG /DNH Oswego and paints in oils, with many of his paintings depicting local buildings and
events. He has studied at the Scottsdale Art School in Arizona and also with his mothHU %HWW\ %URZHU RI &DQQRQ %HDFK ZKRÂśV EHHQ DQ DFFRPplished artist in both oils and watercolor for more than 50 years. He continues to paint with her during the summer months on the Oregon Coast, DQG KH ORRNV IRU ZRUNVKRSV WKURXJKRXW WKH 1RUWKZHVW DV well as the Southwest to grow and mature with his oils. Currently he displays at WKH 7UDLOÂśV (QG $UW *DOOHU\ LQ *HDUKDUW DQG VXEPLWV DUW WR various shows and art fairs. To view more of Muldoonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s art, visit www.trailsendart.org/ MichaelMuldoon/index.html This monthâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s gallery show also features other members of TEAA and includes a wide YDULHW\ RI ÂżQH DUW RIIHULQJV
Submitted photo
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Quick Stopâ&#x20AC;? by Michael Muldoon.
including many of Muldoonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s RLO SDLQWHG Âł.HHSVDNH´ ER[HV There is also a gift shop with jewelry, prints and cards. Visit http://trailsendart.org for more information about the organization, and be sure to visit the *DOOHU\ DW $ 6W GXULQJ WKH DUW ZDON RU GXULQJ UHJXODU RSHQ KRXUV 1HZ PHPEHUV DUH DOways welcome. The show feaWXULQJ 0XOGRRQÂśV ZRUN UXQV through Oct. 26. For more information, call 503-717-9458.
coast
New in town
September 26, 2013
weekend
BY COAST WEEKEND EDITOR REBECCA SEDLAK â&#x20AC;˘ rsedlak@dailyastorian.com
arts & entertainment
4 9 12 14
COASTAL LIFE
Sunrise on the Columbia River A perfect moment in time, full of inner peace
THE ARTS
Sally Lackaff and Roger Hayes These two artists have contrasting artistic styles
FEATURE
Pacific Northwest Brew Cup The 12th annual beer festival comes to Astoria
DINING
Mouth of the Columbia The Mouth reviews The Cove restaurant
STEPPING OUT ........................................................................5,6,7 CROSSWORD...............................................................................17 CW MARKETPLACE ................................................................18,19 FIVE MINUTES WITH ...................................................................22
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on the cover Michelle Nicolazzi fills up a growler at Seaside Brewing Company with the breweryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s North Coast Red IPA, a big, malty red ale you can taste for yourself at the 2013 Pacific Northwest Brew Cup. Photo by Alex Pajunas
See story on Page 12
Hope during the Great Depression â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and Recession How much do you
know about the Great Depression? Big things stand out, no doubt: the stock market crash, Prohibition, the New Deal. But what was life like for regular Americans who lived in, say, Washington state?
The Appelo Archive Center in Naselle, Wash., helps answer that question with its free exhibit â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hope in Hard Times: Washington During the Great Depression.â&#x20AC;? The exhibit is part of a traveling program presented by Humanities Washington and the Washington State Historical Society. You can see the exhibit for yourself 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday to Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays until it closes on Saturday, Oct. 5. The Naselle Timberland Library and the Appelo Archive Center will also present â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Civilian &RQVHUYDWLRQ &RUSV ´ D ÂżOP LQ the PBS series â&#x20AC;&#x153;The 1930sâ&#x20AC;? at 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28. Interesting information abounds in the exhibit. For example, though the national (and global) economy plummeted in 1929, Washington stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s economy had been hit hard ever since the end of World War I: Many jobs, such as logging, derived from national resources, and when wartime high demand
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are a lot of attention-grabbing visual examples that can start conversations about history. One display case houses everyday items from the 1930s alongside their modern equivalents: salt and pepper shakers, curling irons, hairdryers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a typewriter, camera, map, record, greeting card and address book next to a cellphone. What perfectly illustrates the heart of the exhibit is the question, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Are things different now from how they were then?â&#x20AC;? The answer is more nuanced WKDQ \RX PLJKW WKLQN DW ÂżUVW While on the surface things
seem very different â&#x20AC;&#x201C; technology has changed a lot, for one â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the exhibit also subtly points out similarities: polarized political parties, economic concerns, failing banks, job layoffs, housing foreclosures. Washingtonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s unemployment in the 1930s was 33 percent; in 2011 it was 9 percent. A big difference, but the exhibit points out that social safety nets like food stamps,
Continued on Page 10
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To submit an item, contact Rebecca Sedlak Phone:
COAST WEEKEND EDITOR: REBECCA SEDLAK
decreased, so did peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s incomes. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hope in Hard Timesâ&#x20AC;? is centered around a series of interpretive panels that slowly tell the story of what Washingtonians went through. While the panels are text-heavy, the room surrounding them is full of objects and items that illustrate history. One section is completely devoted to quilting, which experienced a resurgence during the Depression because people had to be industrious with every scrap of fabric. The small exhibit would be a fun place to take kids. There
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September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 3
Coastal Life Story and photos by DAVID CAMPICHE
Sunrise on the great western river
E Above: Sunrise over the Columbia River. Top: Pilings off of Sand Island. Bottom: Leaving the Port of Ilwaco, Wash.
4 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
Enlightenment might just come down to a sunrise on the &olumEia 5iYer 2ther than a Àotilla oI ¿shing Eoats raNing the water, the river is relatively still. Well, not still: This river runs wild. Tide in. Tide out. $n hour in the slacN. My brother and I used to jig herring up and down during slacN water ± up and down liNe the tide. The silver salmon loved that action, and oIten we would catch a couple oI the sleeN, hard-mouthed ¿sh. -eIIery &ampiche loves to ¿sh. 5ecently he e[plained that it wasn’t just the trophy. It wasn’t only that lovely salmon. ³I liNe ¿shing,´ he said never a truer understatement . ³I liNe this ´ and -eII pointed his inde[ ¿nger at the sunrise. There was mist on the water, and the bright orb we call our sun was breaNing through, its rays tumbling liNe a 6u¿ dance. The color was brilliant enough that nothing ± not even a ¿ne digital camera ± would ever get it Tuite liNe it really is, or was, that ¿ne morning. $nd that, -eII e[plained, is why he and others ± I assume other sportsmen Ieel this way ± start this journey so early in the morning. 6tart the journey, weeN aIter weeN, in pursuit oI ¿sh, yes, but in pursuit oI something greater, something hard to de¿ne. I get a Ieeling in my chest, a Ieeling oI being consoled or comIorted, a Ieeling oI peace, as iI the world is perIect aIter all. $nd maybe, maybe, at this perIect moment in time, a sense oI bliss. Maybe. %ut certainly the unde¿nable is enough Ior me. There is also the holiness oI the great salmon, a history and aIIection that dates bacN to the )irst 3eople, in this case the &hinooN, Ior whom we named the salmon. We caught ¿ve ¿sh that morning. Three had adipose ¿ns. These ¿sh are called ³natives,´ and that nomenclature varies Irom a hatchery ¿sh. In this case oI a penned salmon, the ¿n is amputated when the salmon is a smolt, or just a couple oI inches in length. The angler is reTuired to let the native ¿sh go. We did 2ne was pounds and bright as a silver dollar. $s careIul as we were, when lowered Irom our net, the salmon turned bottom-side-up and sanN unceremoniously into the darN
depths oI the &olumbia 5iver. 3erhaps it revived later, but I don’t thinN so. 3erhaps it became a meal Ior a seal or sea lion. +ow can I really Nnow" In witnessing this waste, I’ve oIten wondered why the 2regon and Washington 'epartments oI )ish and WildliIe don’t insist that ¿shermen simply Neep the ¿rst two ¿sh they catch. Whether the salmon is big or small, &hinooN or silver ± just Neep the ¿rst two. 2n the surIace that solution seems better than returning a lot oI injured salmon bacN into the river. My younger brother has a ¿ne reputation Ior ¿nding salmon. He uses light gear and seldom loses a ¿sh. He loves the battle. -eII prepares his gear with precision, tying hooNs and leaders with all the attention oI a jeweler. He insists on buying the sharpest oI hooNs, and he replaces hooN and leader aIter catching a salmon. What I am talNing about is attention to detail. $nd asNing, what part oI that is art" There happens to be a great booN called ³=en and the $rt oI Motorcycle 5epair.´ I liNe to believe that there is an art to ¿shing, or at least a ]en to ¿shing. 2n a morning when the world seems at peace when the world is a pool oI TuicNsilver currents, then, there, it doesn’t matter all that much how one de¿nes the wonder oI sublime landscape. %ut wonder it is. 2nly minutes Irom our comIortable homes, Irom a warm bed or eggs and bacon and coIIee « only minutes away, the wonder oI the great western river waits. $nd maybe, just maybe, you might bring home a salmon. The art is in the cooNing
There was mist on the water, and the bright orb we call our sun was breaking through, its rays tumbling like a Sufi dance.
Stepping Out THEATER
Friday, Sept. 27
“Gramercy Ghost” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www. coastertheatre.com, $15 or $20. Nancy inherits a ghost from her landlady, the young and handsome ghost of a Revolutionary soldier killed in 1776, who has been doomed to an earthbound existence for something he failed to do in the war. As a result, Nancy’s life is turned upside-down, and mayhem results. But in the end, there is happiness for all in this charming comedy.
Saturday, Sept. 28 “Gramercy Ghost” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www. coastertheatre.com, $15 or $20.
Thursday, Oct. 3 “Gramercy Ghost” 7:30 p.m., Coaster Theatre, 108 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-1242, www. coastertheatre.com, $14 adults, $8 students. This is Talkback Thursday, where the audience can learn more about the production from cast and crew.
MUSIC
Thursday, Sept. 26 Brian O’Connor 5 to 8 p.m., The Shelburne Restaurant and Pub, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-6424150, www.theshelburnerestaurant.com, no cover. Acoustic jazz guitarist Brian O’Connor plays an eclectic mix of jazz standards and original compositions. Paul Dueber 6 to 8 p.m., Cannon Beach Hardware and Pub, 1235 S. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4364086, www.cannonbeachhardware.com, no cover. Paul Dueber plays 1970s-80s folk music, covering Simon and Garfunkel, Gordon Lightfoot, Phil Ochs, Ian Tyson and more. Basin Street NW 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, www.bridgewaterbistro.com, no cover. Dave Drury, Chuck Wilder and Todd Pederson play mainstream jazz classics. Redwood Son 8 to 10 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. Redwood Son plays West Coast Americana roots music, ranging from a state of darkness and pain to get-up-and-dance groove.
Friday, Sept. 27 Ray Raihala 6 to 9 p.m., T. Paul’s Urban Cafe, 1119 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-338-5133, no cover. Ray Raihala plays folk, bluegrass and Americana music with vocals, keyboard and guitar. Tom Trudell 6 to 9 p.m., The Shelburne Restaurant and Pub, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-6424150, www.theshelburnerestaurant.com, no cover. Tom Trudell plays piano. David Drury 6:30 to 9 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, www.bridgewaterbistro.com, no cover. David Drury plays jazz guitar. Crown Point 7 to 9 p.m., McMenamins Sand Trap, 1157 N. Marion Ave., Gearhart, 503-717-8150, www. mcmenamins.com, no cover, all ages. Crown Point’s style has been called “sweet alt-rock with a swirl of pop on top.”
The Thomasian Trio and Maggie Kitson 7 to 11 p.m., The Wine Bar at Sweet Basil’s Cafe, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503436-1539, www.thewinebarcannonbeach.com, no cover, ages 21 and older. The Thomasian Trio and Maggie Kitson play jazz, blues and classic rock. Redwood Son 9 to 11 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. Redwood Son plays West Coast Americana roots music, ranging from a state of darkness and pain to get-up-and-dance groove.
Saturday, Sept. 28 Troll Radio Revue 11 a.m., see Pacific Northwest Brew Cup under Events. Jennifer Goodenberger 6 to 9 p.m., Shelburne Restaurant and Pub, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-6422442, www.theshelburnerestaurant.com, no cover. Jennifer Goodenberger plays classical, improvisational, contemporary and contemplative originals on piano.
between the Grace Episcopal Church Food Pantry and the Clatsop Community Outreach Emergency Shelter in Seaside. For information, contact Charles Schweigert at 503-3251895 or schweigertstudio@yahoo.com Brian Johnstone 6 to 8 p.m., The Wine Bar at Sweet Basil’s Cafe, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361539, www.thewinebarcannonbeach.com, no cover, ages 21 and older. Brian Johnstone plays flamenco guitar, as well as jazz, blues and originals. Anna and the Underbelly 8 to 10 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. Anna and the Underbelly play indie folk. Yogoman Burning Band 8 to 10 p.m., Fort George Brewery and Public House, 1483 Duane St., Astoria, 503-3257468, www.fortgeorgebrewery.com, no cover, all ages. Yogoman Burning Band plays high-energy brass band style soul and ska.
Monday, Sept. 30
Ray Raihala 6 to 9 p.m., T. Paul’s Supper Club, 360 12th St., Astoria, 503-325-2545, no cover. Ray Raihala plays folk, bluegrass and Americana music with vocals, keyboard and guitar.
Anna and the Underbelly 8 to 10 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. Anna and the Underbelly play indie folk.
Tom Trudell 6:30 to 9 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, www.bridgewaterbistro.com, no cover. Tom Trudell plays jazz piano.
Tuesday, Oct. 1
Everything Fitz 7:30 p.m., Liberty Theater, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, 503-325-5922, www.liberty-theater.org, $15 to $30. Everything Fitz features high-energy fiddling and percussive step dancing by four young Canadian musicians. Their stage show combines a variety of musical styles, from traditional jigs and reels to bluegrass, jazz, Celtic and gospel. Night Time Friends 7:30 p.m., Seaside American Legion, 1315 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-5111, no cover. The Night Time Friends play contemporary and classic country and class rock-n-roll. Denver 8 p.m., Sou’Wester Lodge, 3728 J Place, Seaview, Wash., 360-642-2542, www.souwesterlodge.com, no cover. During the Tin Can Tourist Camp Out Weekend Rally at the lodge, guests and visitors can enjoy old-fashioned country originals by Denver. Medicine Songs from the Pacific Northwest 8 p.m., KALA, 1017 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-338-4878, $10 at the door. Herbalist and healer Brooke Duling will offer original songs of herbal healing and information about medicinal plants. She’ll be joined by Andrea Mazzarella, a singer (Fever Damn), former massage therapist and current yoga instructor. Libations and light fare will be available. Erotic City 9 p.m., San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-5080, www.sandunepub.com, $5 cover. Erotic City performs a tribute to Prince. The Distractions 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., Labor Temple Cafe, 934 Duane St., Astoria, 503-325-0801, no cover, ages 21 and older. The Distractions play classic rock-n-roll, influenced by such greats as The Rolling Stones, CCR, The Beatles, Steve Earle, The Replacements and Stevie Ray Vaughn.
Sunday, Sept. 29 Jennifer Goodenberger 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., Bridgewater Bistro, 20 Basin St., Astoria, 503-325-6777, www. bridgewaterbistro.com, no cover. Jennifer Goodenberger plays jazz piano. Consort of All Sorts 3 p.m., Grace Episcopal Church, 1545 Franklin St., Astoria, free. Local musicians perform music of the Baroque and early classical periods on copies of original instruments. The concert will feature pieces by Handel, Telemann and Haydn plus contemporary arrangements of English and Celtic tunes that have older roots. Donations (not required) will be split equally
Brian O’Connor 5 to 8 p.m., The Shelburne Restaurant and Pub, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360-6424150, www.theshelburnerestaurant.com, no cover. Acoustic jazz guitarist Brian O’Connor plays an eclectic mix of jazz standards and original compositions. Bruce Thomas Smith 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Moody’s Supper House, 20 N. Holladay Drive, Seaside, 503-738-4054, no cover. Texas guitar slinger Bruce Thomas Smith plays a solo acoustic show every Tuesday. Emma Hill 8 to 10 p.m., The Adrift Hotel, 409 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., 360-642-2311, no cover. Emma Hill plays Americana folk originals with an indie edge.
Wednesday, Oct. 2 George Coleman 5:30 to 9 p.m., The Shelburne Restaurant and Pub, 4415 Pacific Way, Seaview, Wash., 360642-4150, www.theshelburnerestaurant.com, no cover. Classical and 12-string guitarist George Coleman plays pop, jazz, folk and rock music. The Coconuts 6 p.m., The Wine Bar at Sweet Basil’s Cafe, 271 N. Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-4361539, www.thewinebarcannonbeach.com, no cover, ages 21 and older. Bill Hayes, Dave Quinton and Gary Keiski are the Coconuts, playing classic swing and jazz, country, bluegrass and folk. Music Jam 7 to 9 p.m., Moody’s Supper House, 20 N. Holladay Drive, Seaside, 503-738-4054. Bruce Smith and Bill Siewart host a music jam every Wednesday. Everyone is welcome.
MARKETS Includes recurring farmers markets, flea markets, auctions and street fairs.
Thursday, Sept. 26 River People Farmers Market 3 to 6 p.m., Astoria Indoor Garden Supply parking lot, 13th and Duane streets, Astoria, www.riverpeoplemarket.org. Featuring fresh, farm-grown produce, flowers, plant starts, farm-raised eggs, locally caught fish and ready-to-consume food. This week’s activity for children is “Make a Scarecrow,” and there will be live music by Alex Vavmenbet.
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 5
Stepping Out MARKETS continued
Friday, Sept. 27
Two Islands Farm Market 3 to 6:30 p.m., Stockhouse’s Farm, 62 W. Birnie Slough Road, Puget Island, Cathlamet, Wash., 360-849-4145, www.stockhousesfarm.com. Featuring fresh produce, goodies and more. Columbia-Pacific Farmers Market 4 to 7 p.m., Oregon Avenue South between Second and Third streets, Long Beach, Wash., 360244-9169, www.longbeachwa.gov/farmersmarket. Featuring produce, seafood, meat, eggs and dairy, baked goods and packaged foods, flowers and plants, live music and more.
Saturday, Sept. 28 Tillamook Farmers Market 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Second Street and Laurel Avenue, Tillamook, 503-842-2146, www.tillamookfarmersmarket.com. With fresh produce, crafts, flowers, live music and special events. Saturday Market at the Port 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Howerton Way, Port of Ilwaco, Wash., http://portofilwaco.com/events/saturday-market. Shop for fresh produce, regionally created arts and crafts, potted plants, and fresh and preserved food and snacks, while strolling the harbor front as the boats go by.
Sunday, Sept. 29 Astoria Sunday Market 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 12th Street between Marine Drive and Exchange Street, Astoria, 503-3251010, www.astoriasundaymarket.com. Enjoy live music in the food court while shopping for ready-to-eat food, fine art, crafts, gift items and fresh produce. The Clatsop County Master Gardeners will assist with plant problems if you bring a sample or photo to the booth. Indoor Winter Market 2 to 5 p.m., The Nehalem Beehive, 35870 Seventh St. (U.S. Highway 101, Nehalem, 503-3682337. There will be local produce and meats, baked goods, herbs, arts and crafts, teas, coffees, chocolates and other gift items, and prepared food.
Tuesday, Oct. 1 Cannon Beach Farmers Market 1 p.m. market opens, 2 to 5 p.m. all vendor booths open, South Hemlock and Gower streets, Cannon Beach, www.cannonbeachmarket.org. Offering a wide variety of fresh produce, pasture-raised meat, organic cheeses, wild-caught seafood and artisan food products.
EVENTS
Thursday, Sept. 26 Trivia Night 6 p.m., The Ship Inn Lounge, No. 1 Second St., Astoria, 503-325-0033, ages 21 and older. Ales & Ideas 7 p.m., Fort George Lovell Showroom, 426 14th St., Astoria, free. Lawrence Galizio, president of Clatsop Community College, will present “Bridging the Higher Education Divide.” Galizio will discuss the results of a recent study that focused on increasing economic and racial stratification of U.S. higher education. Seasonal beers are on tap; food and other beverages are available for purchase. Minors are welcome. Doors open at 6 p.m. R. Gregory Nokes Author Appearance 7 p.m., Seaside Public Library, 1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-6742, www.seasidelibrary. org, free. The Friends of the Seaside Library will host R. Gregory Nokes, author of “Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory.”The event will take place in the Community Room, and there will be book sales and signings presented by Beach Books.
Friday, Sept. 27 Pacific Northwest Brew Cup Noon to 10 p.m., the Riverwalk next to the Columbia River Maritime Museum, 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-791-7940, www.pacificnorthwestbrewcup.com, free admission, all ages.
6 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
This Oktoberfest-style beer festival features more than 36 distinct Northwest beers on tap and a variety of live music. Festival attendees can purchase a souvenir glass mug ($9), which is the official tasting glass for the weekend, and also purchase individual tastes of the various beers ($1 each). This is a family-friendly event with kids’ activities. Nicola Pearson Author Appearance 2 p.m., Adelaide’s Books and Coffee, 1401 Bay Ave., Ocean Park, Wash., 360-665-6050, free. Author Nicola Pearson will present “How to Make a Pot in 14 Easy Lessons,” a story about Joe, a potter who lives in the Skagit Valley area and has fallen in love with an English actress, Lucy. Charles Fitzpatrick: Pen & Photo Opening Reception 5 to 7 p.m., Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum, 115 S.E. Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., 360-6423446, http://columbiapacificheritagemuseum.com. The museum presents an exhibition of photographs and drawings by Charles Fitzpatrick (1884-1971). The photographer and artist moved to Ocean Park, Wash. in 1927. His postcards, photographs and drawings chronicle more than 40 years of life on the North Beach (now Long Beach) Peninsula. The exhibit runs through Jan. 5, 2014. This will also open a preview exhibit of the annual 6x6 Art Auction, including a limited number of raffle tickets for a chance to win your choice of one of the live auction art pieces; only 50 tickets will be sold at $20 each. Friday Night Mixer 5 to 7 p.m., Imogen Gallery, 240 11th St., Astoria, 503-468-0620, www.imogengallery.com. Enjoy a social time at the gallery, with art and lively conversation and an adult beverage. Trivia Night 7 p.m., Baked Alaska, No. 1 12th St., Astoria, 503-325-7414, $2 per person per game. Know more than the average trivia fan? Find out at the weekly trivia tournament in the lounge. Open Mic 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., Hondo’s Brew and Cork, 2703 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-325-2234, info@ hondosbrew.net, no cover. Musicians, singers and comedians are all welcome. Each performer will receive $1 off pints of beer or cider. Perform or just enjoy the show.
Saturday, Sept. 28 Hometown Tourism Day Dawn to dusk, Ecola State Park, Cannon Beach, free admission, including trails. Dawn to dusk, Fort Columbia State Park, U.S. Highway 101, just south of Chinook, Wash., free admission to the grounds, including trails. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, Fort Clatsop Road, Astoria, free admission and ranger programs; 10 a.m. South Slough Scramble fun walk/run; 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Family Fun at Netul Landing. 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Astoria Column, Coxcomb Drive, Astoria, free parking and free poster. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Hanthorn Cannery Foundation Museum (Bumble Bee Seafoods Interpretive Center), 100 39th St., Astoria, free admission. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Cape Disappointment State Park, Robert Gray Drive, Ilwaco, Wash., free park admission, $5 admission to the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum, 115 S.E. Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash., free admission, includes “Charles Fitzpatrick: Pen and Photo” exhibit and Smithsonian Magazine’s “Museum Day Live!” event. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Cranberry Museum, 2907 Pioneer Road., Long Beach, Wash., free admission and free postcard. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Fort Stevens State Park, Ridge Road, Hammond, free park admission, including museum and trails. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., World Kite Museum, 303 Sid Snyder Drive, Long Beach, Wash., $1 off admission (regularly $5 adult, $4 senior, $3 child). Noon to 10 p.m., Astoria Riverfront Trolley, Astoria, board at any trolley stop from Basin Street to 39th, $1 per ride, $2 all day, extended hours today. 1 p.m., Naselle Timberland Library, 4 Parpala Road, Naselle, Wash. The Appelo Archives Center presents a free showing of the movie “The Civilian Conservation Corps,” from the PBS series “The 1930s.” 1 to 4 p.m., U.S. Public Health Service Quarantine Station Museum at Knappton Cove, 521 State Route 401, south of Naselle, Wash., free admission.
1 to 5 p.m., Cannon Beach History Center, 1387 S. Spruce St., Cannon Beach, free admission, free postcard and free Sleepy Monk coffee. Golf Tournament All day, Gearhart Golf Links, 1157 N. Marion Ave., Gearhart, $340 team, $85 individual, $44 Gearhart Golf Links member. This is the first Glenn Bard/Bob Chisholm Memorial Golf Tournament. For registration and more information call 503-738-5420 or 503-440-9181; registration forms available at www.seasidefire.com or www.gearhartfire.com National Public Lands Day Regular park hours, all Washington state parks, free admission with no Discover Pass needed. Autumn is a great time to check out the area’s wonderful state parks. Go to www.parks.wa.gov to find parks and for more information. Saturday Morning Stewardship 9 a.m. to noon, Neawanna Point, at the Necanicum Estuary, Seaside, http://nclctrust.org. Join the North Coast Land Conservancy and help clean up the Necanicum Estuary. Bring gloves, sturdy boots, rain gear and water; NCLC will supply the tools needed. There is generally no access to public restrooms. Work continues in the afternoon, so if you want to make a day of it, pack a lunch and stay. For more information or directions to the work site, contact NCLC Stewardship Director Melissa Reich at 503-738-9126 or melissar@nclctrust.org SOLVE Beach and Riverside Cleanup 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Seaside Beach at the Turnaround, west end of Broadway, Seaside, www. solv.org. Help pick up trash and enhance watershed health at Seaside Beach before the fall rains wash litter downstream into storm drains, waterways and out to sea. By preventing trash from reaching the ocean, you are sending a gift of clean water, healthy people and abundant wildlife downstream. Check the website for a list of locations and to register.
Harvest Festival 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Riverview Education Center, 600 Washington Ave., Raymond, Wash., free admission and parking. There will be arts and crafts vendors, food, informational booths, entertainment and live music, plus a variety of children’s activities and local gardeners are encouraged to bring their excess produce to sell or trade. For information, contact Carol Staricka at 360-875-9466 or email carol.staricka@ghc.edu Pacific Northwest Brew Cup 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., the Riverwalk next to the Columbia River Maritime Museum, 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-791-7940, www.pacificnorthwestbrewcup.com, free admission, all ages, $9 mug, $1 individual tasting, live music. Dutch Oven Cooking Demonstration 12:30 p.m., Tillamook Forest Center, 45500 Wilson River Highway (Oregon Highway 6), east of Tillamook, 866-930-4646, www.tillamookforestcenter.org, free. Pioneer settlers in the Wilson River Valley prepared hot meals using Dutch ovens. Today, many outdoor enthusiasts still make it a part of their camping experience. Naturalists will demonstrate how to buy, care for and cook with a Dutch oven, and will prepare and share a culinary concoction. Glass Exhibit Opening Reception 1 to 3 p.m., Fairweather House and Garden, 612 Broadway, Seaside, 503-738-4003, http:// fairweatherhouseandgarden.com. The reception will open a show by Lonnie Feathers, who creates massive cast-glass “waterscape” panels. There will be complimentary champagne mimosas and croissants. Banned Books Week Film and Book Discussion 2 to 4 p.m., Astoria Public Library, 450 10th St., Astoria, 503-325-7323, http://astorialibrary. org, free, open to everyone, snacks provided. View Marjane Satrapi’s film “Persepolis” (PG-13), and participate in a discussion about the film, the graphic novel of the same name, and intellectual freedom. In “Persepolis,” Satrapi illustrates her experiences growing up in Iran during the Iranian revolution. In early 2013, Chicago school district officials issued a directive removing the graphic novel from all Chicago public schools. Students and teachers protested, and eventually the district eased the terms of the ban. Oktoberfest 5 to 8 p.m., Northwest Carriage Museum, 314 Alder St., Raymond, Wash., 360-942-4150, www.nwcarriagemuseum.org, $15. Listen to the oompah band and enjoy brats with all the fixings plus dancing, dining, raffles and other fun. Call to reserve tickets, or pick up tickets at the museum. Beer and wine will be available for purchase.
Stepping Out EVENTS continued
Saturday, Sept. 28 (continued)
William VanDorin Artist’s Reception 5 to 9 p.m., Bay Avenue Gallery, 1406 Bay Ave., Ocean Park, Wash., 360-665-5200, http:// bayavenuegallery.com. Meet artist William VanDorin at the opening reception of “Shifted Reality,” an exhibit of his surrealistic drawings and wooden sculptures. Gratitude Gathering 6:30 p.m., Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A, Seaside, 503-738-3311, www. sunsetempire.com, $20, tickets available at Sunset Pool, 1140 Broadway, or at Bob Chisholm Community Center. Join in a spirit of gratitude and celebration at a dinner and theater performance by Aza Cody, recognizing the great work volunteers do in the community.
Sunday, Sept. 29 Rubber Boot Stomp Rehearsal 10 a.m., Astoria Sunday Market, 12th Street between Marine Drive and Exchange Street, Astoria, 503-325-1010, www.astoriasundaymarket.com. Participants are asked to meet at the stage next to the Legion building near 12th and Exchange streets and stomp through the Market to the tune of RuPaul’s “Cover Girl” song. The actual stomp takes place Oct. 6 and kicks off the Rubber Boot auction. Pacific Northwest Brew Cup 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., the Riverwalk next to the Columbia River Maritime Museum, 1792 Marine Drive, Astoria, 503-791-7940, www.pacificnorthwestbrewcup.com, free admission, all ages, $9 mug, $1 individual tasting, live music. Didgeridoo Reiki Healing Circle 1:30 to 2 p.m., RiversZen Yoga, 399 31st St., Astoria, 503-440-3554, RiversZenYoga.com, free, for ages 18 and older. Starts with an informational presentation, then a guided meditation featuring the spiritual vibrations of the didgeridoo, painting tonal pictures of reiki symbols.
Monday, Sept. 30 Weekly Bird Survey 8 to 10 a.m., Battery Russell, Fort Stevens State Park, Jetty Road, off Ridge Road, Hammond, contact Park Ranger Dane Osis, 503-861-3170, Ext. 41, dane.osis@state.or.us. No birding experience required. Binoculars recommended. The survey will cover several diverse habitats within the park; access is by walking and driving.
Tuesday, Oct. 1 Timberland Reads Together Book Discussion 6 to 7:30 p.m., Ocean Park Timberland Library, 1308 256th Place, Ocean Park, Wash., 360-6654184, www.TRL.org, free, for adults. Join library staff for a discussion of Timothy Egan’s “Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis.”
Wednesday, Oct. 2 Lower Columbia Timebank Orientation 5 p.m., Clatsop Community College, Dora Badollet Library, 1680 Lexington Ave., Astoria, www.locotimebank.org. At its simplest level, TimeBanking is about spending an hour doing something you enjoy for somebody in your community, then at some point, having someone else doing something for you. For information, contact Colleen Rockwell at 503-861-2555. Wacky Wednesday Open Mic Night 7:30 to 10 p.m., The Rio Cantina, 125 Ninth St., Astoria, 503-325-2409, www.theriocafe.net, no cover, ages 21 and older. All acts are welcome. Call for more information.
YOUTH EVENTS
Thursday, Oct. 3
Read for the Record 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., Astoria Public Library, 450 10th St., Astoria, 503-325-7323, http:// astorialibrary.org, free, all ages. Participate in Jumpstart’s (www.jstart.org) premiere national
campaign, Read for the Record, presented in partnership with the Pearson Foundation. People across the country will read the children’s book “Otis,” by Loren Long, in support of Jumpstart’s mission to work toward the day when every child in America enters kindergarten prepared to succeed. Read for the Record events will be held simultaneously at the Astoria Public Library and the Seaside Library, 1131 Broadway, Seaside. The first 50 families receive a copy of this year’s Read for the Record book.
CLASSES
Friday, Sept. 27
Community Emergency Response Team Training 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sept. 27 and 28 and 8 a.m. to noon Oct. 5, 31402 H St., Ocean Park, Wash., free. Preregistration is required and is limited to 20 participants. The CERT program is an allrisk, all-hazard training course designed to help you protect yourself, family and neighborhood in an emergency situation. CERT members receive 20 hours of initial training free. The course is taught with classroom instruction for the first two days and practical exercises during the last day. Participants younger than 18 must have parent/guardian permission to attend. To register or for more information, contact Denise Rowlett at 360-642-9338 or email drowlett@ co.pacific.wa.us
Saturday, Sept. 28 Fort George Remodel Workshop 9:30 a.m., Fort George Lovell Showroom, 426 14th St., Astoria, $7 general, $5 LCPS members. The Lower Columbia Preservation Society will host a workshop by general contractor Tim Kennedy about the remodel of Fort George’s second floor. After Kennedy’s talk, there will be a tour of the Fort George buildings, with emphasis on the Fort George building’s second floor. For more information, call Pam Chestnut at 503-325-3245. Hexi Garden 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 28 and Oct. 12, Homespun Quilts, 108 10th St., Astoria, 503-325-3300, www.homespunquilt.com, $40. Vesta Eggleston will teach this class. Hexagons are easy with a 60 degree ruler. The secret is the piecing method. Reiki Level 1 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Waves of Change Wellness Center, No. 1 12th St., Astoria, 503-3389921, www.reflexology-works.com, $100. Angela Sidlo will teach Traditional Usui Reiki Level 1. Reiki is offered as a modality to relax and calm the body, reduce the effects of stress, reduce pain and contribute to overall health and wellness. Take Level 1 with Sunday’s Level 2 for $175. Call to register.
Sunday, Sept. 29 Reiki Level 2 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Waves of Change Wellness Center, No. 1 12th St., Astoria, 503-3389921, www.reflexology-works.com, $100. Angela Sidlo will teach Traditional Usui Reiki Level 2. Reiki is offered as a modality to relax and calm the body, reduce the effects of stress, reduce pain and contribute to overall health and wellness. Take Level 2 with Saturday’s Level 1 for $175. Call to register.
Monday, Sept. 30 Construction Safety for Historic Preservation 5 to 7:50 p.m., Mondays through Oct. 28, Clatsop Community College, Industrial and Manufacturing Technology Center, 6540 Liberty Lane, Astoria, 503-338-2411, www.clatsopcc. edu, $118 est. tuition/fees. Students will survey the history and theory of historic preservation and gain knowledge to apply historic preservation methods to renovation and restoration construction projects. For information, contact Lucien Swerdloff, 503-338-2301 or lswerdloff@ clatsopcc.edu Create a Micro Business 6 to 8 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays through Oct. 23, Clatsop Community College, 1651 Lexington Ave., Astoria, 503-325-2402, 503-325-2408, www.clatsopcc.edu/academics/ class-schedule, $75. Astoria Sunday Market Director Cyndi Mudge will teach this workshop, designed to help kick-start a micro business. This is a practical hands-on course for anyone wanting to start a small business, including individuals who want to create a full-time
business, supplement their income, fund a hobby or create a family project. Call or go online to register.
Tuesday, Oct. 1 Beginning Quilt Making 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Oct. 1 through 22, Homespun Quilts, 108 10th St., Astoria, 503325-3300, www.homespunquilt.com, $75. Emi Ishimo will teach. Learn to make a quilt, from cutting fabric to piecing to quilting to finishing the binding. Clatsop Cultural Coalition Grants 7 to 8 p.m., McTavish Room, Liberty Theater, 1203 Commercial St., Astoria, http://clatsopculturalcoalition.org, everyone welcome, formal nonprofit status not required. Check out the application form on the website and come to this session for coaching on preparation. For questions about the process or a project you have in mind, contact Janet Bowler, jlbowler@ charter.net or Jan Mitchell, 2janmitchell@gmail.com
Wednesday, Oct. 2 Tai Chi For Health 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays through May 28, Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A, Seaside, free. Tai Chi for Health focuses on the smooth movements of Sun (soon) Style Tai Chi with Qi Gong for energy. For information and/or to ride-share, call Michelle Berthelsen at 503-325-5848.
Nature inspires glass artist Art at Fairweather House & Garden
SEASIDE — Fairweather House and Garden presents an exhibition for artist Lonnie Feather from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28. The reception will include complimentary mimosas and croissants, and the show will run through December. Feather transforms light through massive, beautiful glass panels. Her public art Submitted photo works, powerful in scale and presence, are placed at Oregon “Wave,” a piece of cast glass by Lonnie State University, University of Feathers. Oregon and Multnomah County Justice Center among other life,” Feather says. “Our deep places. humanity and the secrets and Numerous public and pri- wonders of the microcosm and vate commissions also span macrocosm of our universe inher career, and her variety of spire my art and move me to mediums and techniques in- ¿QG WKH ZRUGV DQG LPDJHV WKDW clude painting on glass, glass connect us.” Feather works and lives in sandcarving, cast glass, murals, mixed-media, wood carving Portland and has exhibited her and stone sculpture. The artist art since 1982. Fairweather House and has selected a cast glass wave Garden is located at 612 Broadseries for her debut show. “Increasingly, my artistic way in the historic Gilbert Disenergies and life focus have trict of downtown Seaside. The been centered on the phenom- gallery features more than 140 ena of our physical world – na- Northwest artists. For more ture, the environment and the information, to go www.fairhuman spiritual connection to weatherhouseandgarden.com September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 7
Redmen Hall opens new show for fall
Be a local tourist on Hometown Tourism Day
Mike Cullom exhibits his photos, carvings in gallery
Parks, museums and more offer free or reduced admission
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Mark Hedeen Financial Advisor
8 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
Peacock Alley â&#x20AC;¢ Pine Cone Hill Coyuchi â&#x20AC;¢ Dash & Albert Rugs 1004 Commercial St., Astoria, OR 97103 â&#x20AC;¢ 503-325-4400
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To compare the dark, abstract art and music of Roger Hayes to the comparatively whimsical works of Sally Lackaff, few, if any, would guess these two SUROLÂż F DUWLVWV DUH D FRXSOH 0HHWLQJ WKHP RQ WKH RWK HU KDQG WKH\ DUH WKH SHUIHFW TXLHW FRXSOH UHVSHFW able looking, with no air of arrogance, and without ZHDULQJ WKHLU DUWLVWLF HFFHQWULFLW\ RQ WKHLU VOHHYHV 7KH\ DUH WKH UHDO GHDO Lackaffâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work literally covers Astoria, from the repainting of the Fort George mural at Exchange and 14th streets, to the bathroom of the Columbia River Coffee Roaster/Three Cups Coffee House, to the crow logo for the Festival of Dark Arts, hosted HDFK )HEUXDU\ E\ WKH )RUW *HRUJH %UHZHU\ $ 1RUWK west native, Lackaff spent her early childhood in the WKHQ ERKHPLDQ DUWV FRORQ\ RI &DQQRQ %HDFK 6KH returned as an adult to take on the artistic direction of the regionâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s legendary counterculture publication 7KH 8SSHU /HIW (GJH SXEOLVKHG E\ WKH HTXDOO\ OHJ HQGDU\ SXEOLVKHU DQG WKH ODWH IRXQGHU RI WKH 7RORYD QD $UWV &RORQ\ %LOO\ +XOWV Âł,W ZDV DQ DUWV DQG FXOWXUH QHZVSDSHU ,W ZDV IXOO RI DUW DQG SROLWLFV DQG EDVHEDOO DQG DOO NLQGV RI UDQ GRP VWXII ,W ZDV KDQGPDGH KDQG GUDZQ DQG IXOO of typos,â&#x20AC;? Lackaff says, laughing, lighting up the GLPO\ OLW OLYLQJ URRP RI WKH FRXSOHÂśV KXQGUHG \HDU old house in Astoria with her sweet smile and rosy FKHHNV She admits Cannon Beach has changed quite a bit IURP KHU FKLOGKRRG Âł, ZDV ERUQ LQ &DQQRQ %HDFK WR maternal and paternal families of artists, but early on PRYHG ZLWK P\ IDPLO\ WR SDUWV RI (XURSH DQG HYHQ WXDOO\ UHVHWWOHG LQ (DVWHUQ 2UHJRQ ´ VKH VD\V Âł$IWHU escaping from there, I returned to Cannon Beach as a young adult and subsequently met Roger, shifting to $VWRULD WR OLYH ZLWK KLP ´ Hayes came to Astoria in 1989 after a youth VSHQW LQ 'HWURLW +LV ZRUN KDV VKRZQ DOO RYHU $PHU LFD DQG (XURSH ,Q 0LFKLJDQ SROLFH FORVHG DQ exhibit of his work after Emilie Benes Brzezinski, VFXOSWRU DQG ZLIH RI -LPP\ &DUWHUÂśV IRUPHU 1DWLRQDO Security Advisor, was so offended at Hayesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; subject PDWWHU 7KH SLHFHV ZHUH HYHQ ZULWWHQ XS LQ D 1HZV ZHHN DUWLFOH RQ REVFHQLW\ DIWHU WKH LQFLGHQW 7R PHHW WKH VRIW VSRNHQ +D\HV ZLWK KLV JHQWOH PDQQHU RQH ZRXOG QHYHU JXHVV WKH WHQHEURVLW\ WKDW VLPPHUV EH ORZ WKH VXUIDFH â&#x20AC;&#x153;I started as an artist being highly concerned DERXW Âż JXUDWLRQ $QG WKHQ , HYHQWXDOO\ IRXQG P\ ZD\ LQWR PHDQLQJIXO DEVWUDFWLRQ , OLNH ERWK ERWK DV D FRQVXPHU DQG DV DQ DUWLVW ´ +D\HV VD\V Âł, VHHP WR KDYH DUULYHG EDFN DW D SODFH ZKHUH , DP YDOXLQJ Âż J XUDWLRQ 3UREDEO\ EHFDXVH RI WKH JOREDO WUDQVLWLRQDO VWDWH RI KXPDQ H[LVWHQFH $UW WKDW UHVRQDWHV UHVRQDWHV EHFDXVH LW WDONV WR KXPDQV , GRQÂśW WKLQN WKH UDWV DQG
stray deer are going to get anything out of it when FLYLOL]DWLRQ Âż QDOO\ FROODSVHV 6RPHZKHUH WKH PDU ULDJH RI DEVWUDFWLRQ DQG Âż JXUDWLRQ FDQ VD\ VRPHWKLQJ DERXW WKH KXPDQ FRQGLWLRQ 7KDW LV KRZ DUELWUDU\ FRQÂż QLQJ DQG UHVWULFWLYH WKH VRFLHW\ LV WKDW ZH OLYH LQ :H DUH KDUGO\ PXFK EHWWHU WKDQ OLYHVWRFN LQ D SHQ ´ Hayes starts to explain how he and Lackaff came WR EH WRJHWKHU Âł6DOO\ ZDQWHG PH WR FRPH WR DQ HDU ly show of hers, an artist grant show at the Cannon %HDFK *DOOHU\ 7KDW ZDV SUREDEO\ LQ , NQHZ 6DOO\ EHIRUH WKDW , ORYHG WKH ZD\ 6DOO\ PRVWO\ GUHZ LQ EODFN DQG ZKLWH <RX FDQÂśW JHW DQ\ FRROHU WKDQ WKDW ´ Both Hayes and Lackaff work in a variety of PHGLXPV DQG LQVSLUDWLRQV Âł, ZRUN LQ SHQ SHQFLO ZDWHUFRORU DQG DFU\OLF , KDYH DOVR GDEEOHG LQ VLJQ painting and carving, and as well I incorporate lots RI HPEURLGHU\ ZLUH DQG IRXQG REMHFWV LQWR P\ SDLQW LQJV 0RVW RI P\ DUWZRUN LQYROYHV VRPH HOHPHQW RI WKH QDWXUDO ZRUOG Âą ELUGV QDWXUDO SDWWHUQV DQG VR RQ , LOOXVWUDWH ERRNV PDNH Âż QH DUW IRU JDOOHULHV Âą ZKLFK DOZD\V LQFOXGH KDQG PDGH IUDPHV Âą DQG FUHDWH ORWV RI FRPPLVVLRQHG DUWZRUN ´ VD\V /DFNDII Hayes also uses a variety of mediums to express KLPVHOI 2QH RI KLV SURMHFWV D PXVLFDO JURXS RU perhaps more accurately, a wall of sound) called ([LVWHQFH +DELW ZLOO SHUIRUP OLYH LQ 3RUWODQG DW WKH 5HYLYDO 'UXP 6KRS RQ 2FW DQG DW WKH $VK 6WUHHW 6DORRQ RQ 1RY +D\HV VD\V PRYLHV KDYH LQVSLUHG KLV ZRUN Âł,ÂśP WDONLQJ PRYLHV OLNH *RGDUG %XQXHO 3DVR lini, Fassbinder, cheap B horror, George Romero, 7REH +RRSHU WKDW VRUW RI WKLQJ ´ +D\HV VD\V Âł0\ DUW tried to emulate this type of narrative: disruptive and VRFLDOO\ FHQWHUHG 3HUKDSV WKH QXPEHU RQH GHÂż QLQJ moment in my life as an artist was discovering the *HUPDQ ([SUHVVLRQLVW FROOHFWLRQ DW WKH 'HWURLW ,QVWL tute of Art, everything from Lovis Corinth, to Karl 6FKPLWW 5RWOXII WR (GYDUG 0XQFK WR (PLO 1ROGH ´ With such vast differences between their work, LQĂ&#x20AC; XHQFHV DQG WHFKQLTXH RQH KDV WR ZRQGHU LI WKH WZR KDYH HYHU FROODERUDWHG â&#x20AC;&#x153;We rarely collaborate, though we have in the SDVW ´ VD\V /DFNDII â&#x20AC;&#x153;We did quite extensively for a number of years,â&#x20AC;? +D\HV DGGV Âł,W VHHPV OLNH WKDW ZDV D WLPH WKDW ZDV focused primarily on creation, and there was a lot of H[SHULPHQWDWLRQ , WKLQN WKDW PRUH UHFHQWO\ ERWK 6DO O\ÂśV DQG P\ DUW KDYH EHFRPH PRUH VSHFLÂż F 6SHFLÂż F is good for getting a clear message out, but it isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t DV IHFXQG ,Q VRPH ZD\V FROODERUDWLRQ LV D VLJQ RI RSHQQHVV ,Q IDFW , KDYH FROODERUDWHG ZLWK PDQ\ DUW LVWV HYHU\ZKHUH , KDYH OLYHG , WKLQN WKDW ZKHQ , JHW EDFN WR FROODERUDWLQJ , DP PRUH JURXQGHG ´ 0RVW DUWLVWV DV DFFRPSOLVKHG DV WKHVH WZR DUH
would be in a large metropolitan area, so why do they stay in the PRUH UHPRWH ORFDOH RI $VWRULD LQ stead of the big city? Âł, JXHVV , VWD\ KHUH RXW RI KDE LW %XW WKHQ RQ WKH RWKHU KDQG GR you see anywhere that actually screams out â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;room available to the RULJLQDO DQG LQQRYDWLYHÂś" %H ing an artist really isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t what it was when I started showing in the early Âľ V 7KHQ LW KDG D UHDOO\ ORQJ WUDMHF tory that everyone expected would FDWDSXOW \RX WR WKH WRS 7KH WRS LVQÂśW really a very desirable place,â&#x20AC;? Hayes VD\V Âł-XVW VR \RX NQRZ ,ÂśYH EHHQ ZRUNLQJ RQ 3RUWODQG VLQFH , JRW KHUH LQ 3RUWODQG VWHDGIDVWO\ VKXWV PH RXW ,W LV DQ LQJURZQ QDUFLVVLVWLF VHOI FRQ WHPSODWLQJ HQYLURQPHQW WKDW LV WHUULWR ULDO DQG RYHU FRQÂż GHQW GXH WR LWV JURVV VKRUW FRPLQJV $VWRULD RQ WKH RWKHU KDQG LV IXOO RI QDLYH VHOI WDLORUHG RXWVLG HUV ZLWK D WHQGHQF\ WR LQQHU VSHFXOD tion and much lower standards than the backbiting incestuous camps WKDW GLYLGH XS 3RUWODQG ´ 7KRXJK ERWK DUH IXOO WLPH DUW ists, they also work â&#x20AC;&#x153;day jobs,â&#x20AC;? a VDG UHDOLW\ IRU WKH FUHDWLYH RI WR GD\ +D\HV ZRQGHUV DERXW PDN LQJ D OLYLQJ RII RI DUW Âł:RXOG , ZDQW WKDW" , GRQÂśW UHDOO\ NQRZ ´ Lackaff describes their work VLPSO\ DQG VXFFLQFWO\ Âł, FRQVLG HU P\VHOI SULPDULO\ DQ LOOXVWUDWRU Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve never strayed too far from YDULDWLRQV RI WKDW 5RJHU RQ WKH RWKHU KDQG LV LQGHVFULEDEOH ´
Sally Lackaff and Roger Hayes are a couple, but they have contrasting artistic styles. Photos by Amy Bugbee
Top inset: The logo for Fort George Breweryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Festival of Dark Arts, designed by Sally Lackaff. Left: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Phantasmâ&#x20AC;? by Roger Hayes, which showed at Imogen Gallery in January. Submitted photos
the arts
VISUAL ARTS â&#x20AC;˘ LITERATURE â&#x20AC;˘ THEATER â&#x20AC;˘ MUSIC & MORE Story by AMY BUGBEE
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 9
Sign up for a yoga retreat
Art a la cARTe calls for art
Go back to basics at weekend event
Nov. 9 event to benefit Liberty Theater
SEASIDE â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Seaside Yoga ReWUHDWV SUHVHQWV LWV 6HSWHPEHU %DFN WR %DVLFV DQG %HJLQQHUV <RJD 5HWUHDW ZLWK FHUWL¿HG yoga instructor Lisa Jennings IURP )ULGD\ WR 0RQGD\ 6HSW WR LQ 6HDVLGH â&#x20AC;&#x153;Guests will enjoy a reOD[HG ZHHNHQG JHWDZD\ with classes geared toward EHJLQQHUV DQG WKRVH ORRNLQJ WR JHW EDFN WR EDVLFV ´ VDLG Seaside Yoga Retreats founder Kristin Tschannen. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our intention is to create a safe, FDVXDO IXQ HQYLURQPHQW IRU yogis to connect and enjoy a special practice in a special SODFH ´ -HQQLQJV LV D FHUWL¿HG \RJD LQVWUXFWRU IURP /RV $QJHOHV DQG ZLOO ZRUN ZLWK SDUWLFLSDQWV WR KHOS WKHP EXLOG D foundation for their new or renewed practice. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Lisaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s approach to teachLQJ \RJD LV KHDYLO\ LQÃ&#x20AC;XHQFHG
by her spirituality, a passion for the philosophy of yoga, and its practical applications to life both on and off the PDW ´ VDLG 7VFKDQQHQ ³6KH believes yoga provides her students a strong foundation IURP ZKLFK WR SDVV WKURXJK OLIH¶V PDQ\ FKDOOHQJHV ZLWK JUDFH SHDFH DQG VWLOOQHVV ´ Along with yoga retreats, 7VFKDQQHQ DLPV WR EHJLQ KROGLQJ ZHHNHQG FODVVHV LQ 6HDVLGH FRPPXQLW\ VSDFHV DQG LV DFWLYHO\ ZRUNLQJ WR RSHQ D VWXGLR LQ 6HDVLGH +HU JRDO LV WR PDNH \RJD DIIRUGable and available to anyone living in or passing through Seaside who is interested in pursuing a practice. 7R JHW PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ RU WR ERRN RQH RI WKH UHPDLQLQJ VSRWV IRU WKH 6HSWHPEHU %DFN WR %DVLFV DQG %HJLQQHUV Yoga Retreat, visit www.seaVLGH\RJDUHWUHDWV FRP
ASTORIA â&#x20AC;&#x201D; On Nov. 9 the Liberty Theater will present Art a la cARTe, a fundraiser for the theater to be held this year for WKH ¿UVW WLPH LQ WKH QHZ 3DXOVRQ 3DYLOLRQ LQ WKH /LEHUW\ 7KHDWHU building. Art a la cARTe event will IHDWXUH PRUH WKDQ ZRUNV RI DUW DOO LQFKHV E\ LQFKHV DQG VLJQHG RQ WKH EDFN VR WKDW \RX buy the art because you love it. 7KH VDOH LV GLVWLQFWLYHO\ GHPRFUDWLF ZLWK RULJLQDO DUWZRUN ± ZKHWKHU PDGH E\ UHFRJQL]HG DUWLVWV RU XQGLVFRYHUHG WDOHQW ± VROG IRU WKH VDPH SULFH RI HDFK Last year, Art a la cARTe had PRUH WKDQ SLHFHV RI DUW GRnated by talented local artists and DUWLVWV IURP DFURVV WKH FRXQWU\ (ULF :LHJDUGW 1RHO 7KRPDV Charles Schweigert, Eric Jacobsen, Darren Orange, Marie 3RZHOO +D]HO 6FKOHVLQJHU &DUol Riley, Neal Maine and Dave Bartholet are just a few of the
artists who participated last year. Catered by chef Christopher +ROHQ RI %DNHG $ODVND WKLV event will feature delicious food and tasty Northwest wine and EHHU ZLWK OLYH ZRUOG PXVLF E\ Acústica World Music. This secRQG DQQXDO SURPLVHV RQFH DJDLQ WR EH D PDJLFDO IDOO DIWHUQRRQ with good food and friends. 7KH HYHQW LV FXUUHQWO\ ORRNLQJ IRU DUW VXEPLVVLRQV ,I \RX DUH LQWHUHVWHG DQG ZRXOG OLNH WR VXEPLW \RXU ZRUN FRQWUDFW /LEerty Theater Executive Director 5RVHPDU\ %DNHU 0RQDJKDQ DW director@liberty-theater.org or H[W 3DFNHWV DUH DYDLODEOH IRU SLFNXS LQ WKH /LEHUW\ %R[ 2I¿FH $OO FRPSOHWHG DUW PXVW EH VXEPLWWHG WR WKH /LEHUW\ 7KHDWHU
Photo by Alex Pajunas
As part of the $99 Art a la cARTe sale Nov. 9, benefitting the Liberty Theater, artwork will be auctioned off at the theaterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s new Paulson Pavilion. For the fundraiser, the theater is now seeking art submissions.
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Denver plays at Souâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Wester Enjoy original songs by Portland band SEAVIEW, Wash. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; 3RUWland-based country-western EDQG 'HQYHU ZLOO SHUIRUP DW the Souâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Wester Lodge on at 8 S P 6DWXUGD\ 6HSW GXULQJ the lodgeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tin Can Tourist &DPS 2XW :HHNHQG 5DOO\ Denver recently toured with -DPHV 0F0XUWU\ 7KH JURXS LV NQRZQ IRU LWV URXJK DQG WXPble sound and original songs. 7KH SHUIRUPDQFH LV IUHH
and open to the public. The Tin Can Tourist Rally is part of the QDWLRQDO &DPS 2XW :HHNHQG event and includes a travel WUDLOHU RSHQ KRXVH D FDPS¿UH DQG PRUH )RU PRUH RQ WKH EDQG YLVLW KWWS GHQYHUWKHEDQG FRP The Souâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;wester Lodge LV ORFDWHG DW - 3ODFH LQ 6HDYLHZ :DVK )RU PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ FDOO
Enjoy a harvest festival Vendors, belly dancing and more Thu rsda y t hrou gh S a t u rda y â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Til 1 0pm or L a t er!
10 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
1335 M a rine D rive,D ow ntow n Astoria
(503) 741 -3055
RAYMOND, Wash. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; *UD\V +DUbor College Riverview EducaWLRQ &HQWHU LV KRVWLQJ D +DUYHVW )HVWLYDO IURP D P WR S P 6DWXUGD\ 6HSW There will be arts and crafts vendors, a vast variety of food DQG EHYHUDJHV OLYH PXVLF IUHH SUHVVXUH FDQQHU JDXJH FKHFNV PDVWHU JDUGHQHU GHPRQVWUDWLRQV and childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s activities. A Civil War soldier will PDNH DQ DSSHDUDQFH DW S P $W S P WKH +LSV $KR\
Belly Dancing Troop will perIRUP ,Q DGGLWLRQ WKH 8 6 $UP\ ZLOO EH VKRRWLQJ 7 VKLUWV out of a cannon and will sponsor D IRRWEDOO DQG EDVNHWEDOO WRVV 7KHUH LV QR DGPLVVLRQ IHH 3DUNLQJ LV XS FORVH DQG SOHQWLIXO 7KH *+& 5LYHUYLHZ (GXFDWLRQ &HQWHU LV ORFDWHG DW :DVKLQJWRQ $YH LQ 5D\PRQG Wash. )RU PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ FRQWDFW &DURO 6WDULFND DW
NEW IN TOWN
Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s your Depression story? Continued from Page 3
XQHPSOR\PHQW LQVXUDQFH 0HGLFDUH DQG 6RFLDO 6HFXULW\ ± ZKLFK PDQ\ SHRSOH XVHG GXULQJ WKH PRGHUQ *UHDW 5HFHVVLRQ ± ZHUH DOO FUHDWHG LQ WKH ZDNH of the Great Depression. Overall, the exhibit wants to start a conversation about these topLFV RU DW OHDVW JHW \RX WKLQNLQJ DERXW WKHP ,W SODFHV WKH SUHVHQW DORQJVLGH KLVWRU\ DVNV \RX WR VWHS EDFN DQG REVHUYH My favorite part of the exhibit is the Depression-Era Story Board, where visitors are encouraged to write a note and VKDUH WKHLU RZQ PHPRULHV RU D IDPLO\ PHPEHU¶V VWRULHV RI WKH Depression and how it affected WKHP $ ORW RI WKH KDQGZULWWHQ QRWHV WDON DERXW EHLQJ IUXJDO DQG WKULIW\ 3HRSOH UHFDOOHG KRZ WKHLU PRWKHUV RU JUDQGPRWKHUV ZRXOG PDNH FORWKHV RXW RI Ã&#x20AC;RXU VDFNV DQG GLVKFORWKV RXW RI VWULQJ 6HYHUDO SHRSOH PHQWLRQHG KRZ PHQ ZRXOG NQRFN RQ WKH GRRU DQG DVN IRU IRRG LQ H[FKDQJH IRU DQ\ ZRUN WKDW needed to be done. Mothers ZRXOG LQHYLWDEO\ FRRN D PHDO IRU WKH VWUDQJHU DQG VHQG KLP on his way. Even when people are poor, they still share what little they have. That held true in DQG LW VWLOO KROG WUXH WRGD\ LQ
We are ready when you are. No one wants to have surgery. But isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t it nice to know the highest quality and latest technology are available at Providence Seaside Hospital? We welcome Holly Barker, M.D., as she joins Camilo Rosales, M.D., on our surgery team. Together they have vast experience in providing excellent, compassionate care. We are fortunate to have these high-caliber physicians in our community.
Holly Barker, M.D. General surgeon
Camilo Rosales, M.D. General surgeon
For more information please call
503-717-7000. Providence Seaside Hospital 725 S. Wahanna Road, Seaside, OR 97138 www.providence.org/northcoast
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 11
THE 12TH ANNUAL
PaciďŹ c Northwest
BREW CUP Pacific Northwest Brew Cup Friday to Sunday, Sept. 27 to 29 Astoria Waterfront at the Barbey Maritime Depot, just east of the Columbia River Maritime Museum Hours Friday: Noon to 10 p.m. Saturday: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission: free and open to all ages Souvenir tasting mug costs $9 Tasting tokens are $1 each www.pacificnorthwestbrewcup.com
Photo by Hugh McKenna
The setting sun provides a rim-lit effect on the crowd at the 11th Pacific Northwest Brew Cup on Astoriaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Riverfront last year.
12 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
A fun fest based on foam comes to the Astoria waterfront Sept. 27, 28 & 29
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Story by MARILYN GILBAUGH
n 2001, a couple of hundred people came to see what was going on outside Jennifer and Christopher Holenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Baked Alaska restaurant. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was Regatta weekend,â&#x20AC;? Jennifer Holen recalled. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We had all these visitors coming into Astoria for the event. We thought, â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Why not give them something else to enjoy?â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;? Thus was born the PaFLÂż F 1RUWKZHVW %UHZ &XS 7KH +ROHQV DORQJ ZLWK a few volunteers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the few having grown into a slew, today numbering more than 100 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; were on their game. 7KH 3DFLÂż F 1RUWKZHVW %UHZ &XS 2013, the 12th annual event, is now run by the Astoria Downtown Historical District Association (ADHDA) and is the associationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest fundraising event of the year. The ADHDA and the Brew Cup are a SHUIHFW Âż W %RWK ZHUH FUHDWHG EDVHG on community involvement and the preservation and healthy future of historic downtown Astoria. Brew Cup 2013 is ready to party. This year it takes place Sept. 27, 28, and 29: Hours are noon until 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. It all happens on the river bank of the mighty Columbia, just east of the Columbia River Maritime Museum and its Barbey Maritime Center. There is no entry fee. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s right, you read correctly: Event entry is free, and all ages are welcome. %UHZ &XS LV D Âż UVW UDWH EHHU ORYHUVÂś QLUYDQD There are close to 40 participating breweries, both local and regional. The breweries were selected by Fort George brew master â&#x20AC;&#x201C; aka â&#x20AC;&#x153;brew wranglerâ&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Jack Harris, who has been involved with the evHU JURZLQJ KDSSHQLQJ IRU Âż YH \HDUV (DUO\ LQ Harris reached out to breweries, inviting them to
participate in the Brew Cup â&#x20AC;&#x201C; mostly breweries in WKH 1RUWKZHVW EXW WKLV \HDU $ODVNDQ %UHZLQJ IURP Juneau will also be pouring. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We like supporting small town brew pubs, beers you wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t see in the supermarkets,â&#x20AC;? said Harris. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It used to be that Jack would go after the different breweries to participate; now the breweries are approaching him,â&#x20AC;? Chrisopher Holen said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s exciting to see the (Brew Cup) evolution.â&#x20AC;? In 2010, the Oregonian newspaperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s beer watcher, writer and blogger, John Foyston, dubbed the Brew Cup his favorite festival of the year. With endorsements like Foystonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, the Brew Cup has become one popular event. Commemorative beer mugs cost $9. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Last year we had 2,000 mugs, and we ran out,â&#x20AC;? Jennifer Holen said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was a cruise ship in town on Sunday, and we ended up substituting wine glasses. EvHU\RQH ZDV Âż QH ZLWK LW ´ â&#x20AC;&#x153;Then we ran out of beer. We had so many more people attending than we expected, well over 3,000,â&#x20AC;? added ADHDA Board of Directors President Dulcye Taylor. This year, the board has ordered 4,000 mugs and plenty of beer. 5HPHPEHU WR EULQJ SURSHU ,' 1R ,' PHDQV QR wrist band, and no wrist band means â&#x20AC;&#x201C; uh oh â&#x20AC;&#x201C; no beer! All beers at the event are draft beers, dispensed from a cask or keg, most often by a hand pump. There are no cans or bottled beers. Tokens are $1, and one token equals one 4-ounce-tasting of beer. Along with the tastings, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the Thar She %ORZV FRQWHVW ZKLFK DZDUGV WKH Âż UVW NHJ WR UXQ empty at the event. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also the much coveted
Brew Cup is a first-rate beer loversâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; nirvana. There are close to 40 participating breweries, both local and regional.
Peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Choice Award. The winner is announced at 8 p.m. Saturday. Women Enjoying Beer (WEB) provides tasting demonstrations, and Hondoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Brew and Cork will bring its home-brewing knowledge. 6XQGD\ LV NQRZQ WR WUXH EHHU DÂż FLRQDGRV DV *URZOHU 6XQGD\ )RU \RX DÂż FLRQDGR ZDQQDEHV Âż UVW JURZOHU is a wonderful word â&#x20AC;&#x201C; itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just fun to say. And using it will make you sound like you know more than you do. A growler is most often a half-gallon glass FRQWDLQHU WKDW \RX Âż OO XS ZLWK EHHU 2Q 6XQGD\ %HHU Cup attendees can either buy (for an additional but QRPLQDO FRVW RU EULQJ D FRQWDLQHU DQG IRU Âż OO LW up with any â&#x20AC;&#x153;take outâ&#x20AC;? beer that remains. If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not a brew devotee, no worries. Or even if you are, there are wines, hand-crafted hard ciders and soft drinks, too. Food vendors will offer an assortment of fares from which to choose. And donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t forget those Brew Cup-related T-shirts. Fort George Brewery beer guy and music group rounder-upper Brian Bovernizer says, â&#x20AC;&#x153;17 bands ZLOO SUHVHQW VRXQGV IURP DOO RYHU WKH 3DFLÂż F 1RUWK west, an eclectic group of artists as varied as the beer.â&#x20AC;? Get ready to put your hands together and get out and move. If youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not sampling lagers and ales, eating or dancing, there are activities for children of all ages but particularly the kiddos. Astoriaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Purple Cow Toys will once again provide hula hoops, bubbles IRU EORZLQJ FKDON IRU GUDZLQJ DQG PRUH .081 radio will be on site broadcasting live on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. This Cup has something for everyone. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also an opportunity to wander â&#x20AC;&#x153;off camSXV´ DQG HQMR\ D OLWWOH PRUH RI $VWRULD WRR 1RWKLQJ is very far. Again thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s something for everyone. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the 5.1-mile RiverWalk that boarders the Brew Cup. Thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the Astoria Riverfront Trolley, spanning from Basin Street on the west end of town
Photo by Alex Pajunas
R.J. Kiepke, the owner and brewmaster at Hondoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Brew & Cork, stirs the mash in his Braumeister brewing system while brewing a 15-and-a-halfgallon batch of Cit Wit. Hondoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s will bring its home-brewing knowledge to this yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pacific Northwest Brew Cup, as well as its Pacifica Pale Ale, a dryhopped pale ale with coriander and orange peel.
to 39th Street on the east side. A dollar buys a roundtrip ride and two dollars purchases an all-day pass. Riding the rails provides a great historic overview of old Astoria both scenically and verbally from a knowledgeable conductor. The trolley will also stay open until 10 p.m on Friday and Saturday. The Barbey Maritime Depot, located at the entrance to the brew fest, will have a Basic Woodworking course going on all day Saturday and Sunday. The doors will be open and there will be someone there to answer questions. Astoriaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s central downtown core is located just a couple of blocks from all the festival action. Pick up a â&#x20AC;&#x153;Passportâ&#x20AC;? at Brew Cupâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s main entrance. Get it stamped at participating Astoria shops, bring it back to the Cup and you could win a prize. Tap in to whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s happening at the three day event, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s much to enjoy. Children, pets (on leashes, please) oldsters, babies, dancers and drinkers, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a party going on!
Photo by Alex Pajunas
A taster tray from Billâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tavern and Brewhouse, in Cannon Beach, offers a range of flavors from its lightest beer, the Blackberry Beauty, lower right, to its darkest, Odinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Oatmeal Stout. The stout will be available to taste at the 2013 Pacific Northwest Brew Cup. The tavern also brews its own root beer, lower left.
Live music schedule Friday, Sept. 27
1 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2 p.m. Brownsmead Flats Folk from Brownsmead 2:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3 p.m. Bonnie Bently + The Phantom Teardrops Astoria punk songstress 4 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5 p.m. Scott Pemberton Trio Guitar rock â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; groove 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Otis Heat Funk â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; roll 7 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8 p.m. Brainstorm Surf and dance pop trio 8:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9:30 p.m. The Dirty Moogs Analog-electro dance pop
Saturday, Sept. 28
KMUN 91.9 FM will broadcast live over Astoriaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Coast Community Radio. Brew Cup will be the live audience.
11 a.m. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 12 p.m. 12:15 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1 p.m. 1:15 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 2 p.m. 2:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3 p.m. 4 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5 p.m. 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. 7 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8 p.m. 8:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 9:30 p.m.
LIVE KMUN 91.9 FM Troll Radio Review LIVE KMUN 91.9 FM â&#x20AC;&#x153;Mystery Artistâ&#x20AC;? LIVE KMUN 91.9 FM Pat Kearns Bart Budwig and the Country Crooners Americana from Idaho J.D. Kindle and the Eastern Oregon Playboys Rock â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; croon from Pendleton Lesser Bangs Rock â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; roll Tezeta Band Ethiopian Funk Sassparilla A foot-stompinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; good time
Sunday, Sept. 29
11 a.m. â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 12 p.m. The Barney Perrine Band A Brew Cup tradition 12:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1:30 p.m. Weather Machine Americana 2 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3 p.m. Floating Glass Balls Beachgrass 3:15 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 4 p.m. Yogoman Burning Band Good time groovinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;
Pictured above from left: The Scott Pemberton Trio plays Friday evening.
Submitted photo by Jeremy Running Photography
Portland-based band Sassparilla will perform Saturday night. The Weather Machine will perform Americana music Sunday afternoon.
Submitted photos
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 13
The Cove
The Peninsula Golf Courseâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s restaurant carefully plans and prepares each excellent dish
I
In my grade school gym class I was always the last one picked when choosing up sides for sports. The only thing worse than my handeye coordination is my relative lack of aim, and when forced once to play indoor soccer, I stood, rigid and wincing, praying the ball might just hit my foot and bounce off in the appropriate direction. I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t play basketball or baseball, I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t swim worth a darn, and I certainly canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t golf. But something Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m really, really, exceedingly good at? Eating delicious food while watching other people golf. The Peninsula Golf Course on the Long Beach Peninsula has been delighting duffers since 1974, and now its recently remodeled clubhouse delights diners as well. Jim Eaton and Sondra Nash-Eaton have put a tremendous amount of work into this casually upscale space, and their in-house restaurant, The Cove, is a true treasure, whether you golf or not. I recently visited The Cove for lunch, was greeted warmly and quickly by our server, and seated at one of the many large windows overlooking the green. Drinks were dispatched immediately, including beer from a popular local favorite, Fort George Brewery. $V DQ DSSHWL]HU , Âż UVW VDPSOHG WKH KXPPXV
The pork was succulent and tender, and the homemade barbecue sauce was so tangy and tasty that I dumped the lot of it over the top of the sandwich and devoured it as if Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d never seen food.
The Cove Rating: Â?Â?Â?Â? 9604 Pacific Highway Long Beach, WA 98631 360-642-2828 www.peninsulagolfcourse.com/the-cove 14 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
plate, with house-made hummus, warm pita squares, fruits, vegetables, cheeses and candied walnuts. The beautiful plate looked almost too good to eat, but eat it, we did, and I was very pleased with both the quality and quantity of ingredients. The array of fruits included succulent strawberries, apple slices and orange wedges, plus broccoli, tomatoes, red peppers and an assortment of cheeses. The hummus had the pleasing tang of tzatziki, and the pita squares were crisp but soft on the inside. As a second appetizer I selected the Greek FKLFNHQ Ă&#x20AC; DWEUHDG Âą , MXVW FRXOGQÂśW JHW HQRXJK of that tzatziki taste, I suppose. Grilled chicken breast, kalamata olives, lettuce, tomato and feta cheese were served up hot atop housePDGH Ă&#x20AC; DWEUHDG DQG VHUYHG ZLWK D IUHVK JUHHQ VLGH VDODG (DFK ELWH ZDV EXUVWLQJ ZLWK Ă&#x20AC; DYRU My only complaint is that I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t particularO\ WKLQN WKH Ă&#x20AC; DWEUHDG QHHGHG DQ\ OHWWXFH DV LW GLGQÂśW HQKDQFH WKH Ă&#x20AC; DYRU EXW LW FHUWDLQO\
This hummus plate appetizer includes house-made hummus, warm pita squares, fruit, vegetables, cheese and candied walnuts. The Mouth found both the quality and quantity of ingredients pleasing.
didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t detract from it, either. Again, I was impressed with the quality and overall presentation of the dish, with the appearance that each item had been hand selected and perfectly placed on the plate with care. I couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t pass up a pulled pork sandwich, with slow-cooked pork piled on a buttery brioche bun, plus sweet potato fries, coleslaw and a side of barbecue sauce. The pork was succulent and tender, and the homemade barbecue sauce was so tangy and tasty that I dumped the lot of it over the top of the sandwich and devoured it as if Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d never seen food. The sweet potato fries were that perfect combination of crisp and tender, and the cole slaw, which is also house-made, was crisp, fresh
and the perfect accompaniment to an excellent sandwich. A fellow diner raved about the â&#x20AC;&#x153;bogeyâ&#x20AC;? burger, a 1/3-pound beef patty with cheddar, lettuce, tomato, red onion and mayo on a brioche bun, with house-made potato chips and a dill pickle spear. As The Mouth, I am often asked where to get a great burger, and I am happy to add the bogey burger from The Cove WR WKDW OLVW 7KH Ă&#x20AC; DYRUIXO KDQGPDGH SDWW\ ZDV juicy, and the toppings adequate and perfectly balanced. I simply cannot gush enough about the high quality of food and service I enjoyed at The Cove, and it further underlines my theory that food neednâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be â&#x20AC;&#x153;fancyâ&#x20AC;? in order to earn rave reviews. Though the menu at The Cove is rather short at one page, each dish has clearly been carefully planned and prepared, and each one is as excellent as the next. I so much prefer to see a restaurant adopt this practice, of having a small but well-rounded, well-executed menu, than several pages of mediocre offerings. The Cove knows its strengths and works to them very well, and for this I commend them. I could say the food is a hole-in-one, that everything was up to par, or that itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a great place â&#x20AC;&#x153;foreâ&#x20AC;? lunch, but that would be corny, even for me. So instead, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll simply say that I highly recommend The Cove for lunch anyWLPH \RX Âż QG \RXUVHOI RQ WKH /RQJ %HDFK Peninsula, and I look forward to visiting on a Friday or Saturday evening, when a separate dinner menu is featured.
mouth OF THE COLUMBIA COAST WEEKENDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S local restaurant review
Story and photo by THE MOUTH OF THE COLUMBIA â&#x20AC;˘ mouth@coastweekend.com
HOURS: Lunch is 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday, and dinner is 6 to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. PRICE: With lunch prices between $8 and $12, The Cove is a steal. SERVICE: Our service was extraordinarily fast, and our server was polite, charming and accommodating. ATMOSPHERE: Casually elegant, with a funky,
galvanized steel bar, plus lots of windows to view the rolling greens of the golf course. ALTERNATIVE OPTIONS: There are a few salads on the menu, daily rotating soups that are sometimes vegetable-only, and a hummus plate. DRINKS: Coffee, tea and soft drinks, plus an ample beer selection, including local favorites from Fort George Brewery, plus a small but pleasantly adequate wine list.
KEY TO RATINGS
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below average average good excellent outstanding, the best in the Â?Â?Â?Â?Â? Columbia-Pacific region
L et’ s E a t!
N O R TH CO AS T AN D P E N IN S U L A D IN IN G O P TIO N S LON G BEACH PEN IN SU LA
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10th Annual Wild Mushroom Dinner With Blakeslee Vineyards Oct 11
live and
THANK GOD THE
local jazz
TIKI BAR
thurs, fri, sat nights, sunday brunch dog-friendly dining on the deck open every day lunch.dinner.sunday brunch 20 basin street, astoria, or 503.325.6777 bridgewaterbistro.com
IS
OPEN!
We Deliver!
BURGER NITES RETURN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16TH! 38th & L, on the Seaview Beach approach
360-642-7880
depotrestaurantdining.com
Contemporary Fine Dining P elicano Restaurant on the Port of Ilwaco Waterfront
360-642-4034
177 Howerton Way SE • Port of Ilwaco
THURSDAY TO SATURDAY UNTIL 10PM OR LATER!
Open Wednesday to Sunday at 5 pm
Happy Hour Daily 5 to 6 Fine Wines & Cocktails View Current Menu Online
1335 Marine Dr., Downtown Astoria
(503) 741-3055
Hand-Made Milk Shakes in 21 flavors & Soft-Serve Ice Cream
LO C AL FAVO RITES !
•BREAK FAS T BUFFET- Sundays,9-11:30 am •S W EET BABY BAC K RIBS , O R PRIM E RIB - Fri& Sat,5-9 pm •10 S PEC IALTY BURG ERS !
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Open 7am
onlin
T. Paul’s Urban Cafe 5 03 -3 3 8-5 13 3 Lu n ch D elivery M o n -Fri11a m -2p m ••••••••••••••••••••••••
T. Paul’s Supper Club 5 03 -3 25 -25 4 5 Lu n ch D elivery M o n -Fri11a m -2p m
313 Pacific Hwy, Downtown Long Beach, WA Open Daily 11 a.m. - 8 p.m.
360-642-5555
www.hungryharbor.com
Daily! Musical Entertainment Tuesday through Saturday Happy Hour in the Pub from 4 to 6 pm VISIT: THESHELBURNEINN.COM/CALENDAR FOR EVENTS AND TIMES
S E R V I N G B R E A K FA S T, LUNCH & SUPPER European Style Coffeehouse by day, intimate bistro offering neo-regional cuisine by night. Regional selection of beers, wines and vintage cocktails available. Weekly Specials: 5-8 PM Sushi & Martinis Mondays Taco & Margarita Thursdays (3 Buck Tacos)
360-642-4150 Restaurant & Pub • www.theshelburnerestaurant.com
243 11th Street, Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-1787
www.AstoriaCoffeeHouse.com Follow & “Like” us on Facebook
For a dditiona lresta ura nts,storiesa nd to view our Coa sta lM enu Guide,go to coa stw eekend.com a nd click on D ining
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 15
Timberland Reads Together Book celebrated with month of events
PACIFIC and GRAYS HARBOR COUNTIES â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Timberland Regional Library (TRL) offers to the public Timberland Reads Together 2013, its ninth annual one-book/ one-community program presenting opportunities throughout October to engage with one great book and with other people, to explore common ground through discussion, images, ÂżOP OLYH PXVLF DQG WKHDWHU This year, that one great book is â&#x20AC;&#x153;Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward &XUWLV´ E\ 7LPRWK\ (JDQ 7KH ERRN LV DYDLODEOH WR borrow in print and audiobook CD formats from the 27 TRL branches in Grays Harbor, Lew-
LV 0DVRQ 3DFL¿F DQG 7KXUVWRQ FRXQWLHV 0RUH WKDQ HYHQWV will include discussions of the book, stage adaptations, and RULJLQDO VRQJV 7KHUH ZLOO EH SUHVHQWDWLRQV E\ 1DWLYH $PHULFDQV ¿OP VFUHHQLQJV SKRWRJUDSK\ ZRUNVKRSV DQG H[KLELWV $OO DUH IUHH RI FKDUJH DQG RSHQ WR WKH SXEOLF The 2013 Timberland Reads Together reading and program JXLGH ZLOO EH DYDLODEOH DW DOO 75/ EUDQFKHV ,WœV RQOLQH QRZ DW ZZZ 75/ RUJ XQGHU WKH SURJUDPV WDE The Boston Globe called WKH ERRN ³D ULYHWLQJ ELRJUDSK\ RI DQ $PHULFDQ RULJLQDO ´ (Gward Curtis (1868-1952) was a photographer from Seattle who
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the Pulitzer Prize-winning team that wrote the series â&#x20AC;&#x153;How Race ,V /LYHG LQ $PHULFD ´ (JDQ OLYHV LQ 6HDWWOH â&#x20AC;&#x153;Short Nights of the Shadow Catcherâ&#x20AC;? has won the naWLRQDO $QGUHZ &DUQHJLH DZDUG IRU QRQÂżFWLRQ WKH &KDXWDXTXD 3UL]H DQG (JDQÂśV WKLUG :DVKLQJWRQ 6WDWH %RRN $ZDUG Timberland Reads Together is an annual program of the Timberland Regional Library system that promotes and celebrates reading and community by focusing on one book that has widespread appeal across YDULRXV LQWHUHVWV (YHU\RQH LV HQFRXUDJHG WR read the book and to attend free book discussions, presentations, OLYH SHUIRUPDQFHV DQG RWKHU programs throughout the month of October at Timberland library branches and other local YHQXHV
CLATSOP DISTRIBUTING COMPANY is a local distributing company that employs local people and supports local community activities Clatsop Distributing Company distributes many Pacific Northwest brews
Our World. Our Responsibility. Anheuser-Busch
16 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
Clatsop Distributing Company wants to remind you to drink responsibly. Plan ahead and get a designated driver.
The New York Times Magazine Crossword LETTERBOXES By MIKE SELINKER / Edited by WILL SHORTZ Answers on Page 20
In this special crossword, the completed solution conceals a familiar three-word phrase related to the puzzle’s theme. 70-Across provides a hint on how to find it. ACROSS 1 Crew’s colleagues 5 Dojo needs 9 Classic sci-fi film billed as “a horror horde of crawl-and-crush giants” 13 “La-La” lead-in in a 1974 Al Green hit 16 Iberian wine city 18 “Vincent & ___” (film about the van Gogh brothers) 19 Rings of angels 21 What X-O-X lacks? 22 “Macbeth” king 23 Words on a fragile package 26 Irascible 27 “Mona Lisa,” e.g. 28 Thumbs-up 29 Harridan 30 Orchestra section 31 Mouthpiece for the head? 34 Jiffy 35 Not post37 Old piece 38 Little dog, for short 39 ___ Aviv 40 Strawberry blond sister of Barbie 43 Hindu “Mr.” 44 “Swans Reflecting Elephants” and others 46 1960s-’70s series starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr. 49 Oscar winner Hathaway 51 Material beyond the terrestrial plane, in medieval science 55 Hello or goodbye, maybe 57 PC key 59 First word in 104-Across 61 Cum ___ 62 ___ engr. 63 Like hit shows, often 67 Pitchfork-wielding groups
69 Boo-boo 70 How to get a message out of the boxes 74 Van Morrison song “___ the Mystic” 75 Numerical prefix 76 “Only the Lonely” singer 77 Part of a wriggly field? 78 Foreordained 80 Understands 82 Maker of the Sorento 83 Gallivants, with “about” 85 Boo-boos 87 Pale 89 Like citrus fruits 92 Like video games, nowadays 94 ___ Lingus 96 Round Table assignments 99 Old PC monitor feature 102 Ernie’s instrument on “Sesame Street,” informally 103 Italy’s main broadcasting co. 104 TV channel with lots of bells and whistles 105 Take up, as a skirt 107 Rotary alternative 112 Covent Garden performance 114 Newspaper columnist, humorously 115 Grampa Simpson 116 Snockered 117 Anders Celsius and Greta Garbo, for two 118 DDT and others 121 “Is Anybody Goin’ to San ___” (#1 Charley Pride song) 122 Bullet, in poker 123 Cartoonist Wilson 124 Help illicitly 125 Alley flanker 126 Hide/hair link 127 Looking up 128 Chant at a bullfight 129 Satirical 1974 espionage film DOWN 1 With 97-Down, classic puzzle type 2 Like eyebrows
3 Ones getting the red-carpet treatment, say 4 “The Spiderwick Chronicles” co-author DiTerlizzi 5 Antarctic summit between peaks named for faith and charity 6 Words after “win by” or “hang by” 7 What lobsters and crabs have 8 Nursery purchase 9 Baltimore club, for short 10 Ethan of “Before Sunrise” 11 Giant Manning 12 Company that pioneered walkie-talkies 13 “___ Mater” (hymn) 14 African capital 15 Organic chemistry group 16 Lilac and lavender 17 Turns into mush 20 Oaf 24 Not ephemeral 25 All ChiSox home games are played on it 32 ___ Lee 33 Pro with books, for short 35 Slapstick prop 36 Play watcher 41 Motocross entry, for short 42 Pirate’s cargo 44 Frenzied as if possessed 45 East German secret police 47 Where a mattress goes 48 Shapes like squares 50 Country that has two oryxes on its coat of arms 52 Like much processed wheat 53 Roman magistrates 54 Push off 55 Food item named after an Austrian city 56 Film set on Pandora 58 Snarly dog 60 Recedes 62 Blackmail, e.g. 64 “Well, now!” 65 Beat 66 Uncle Pedro, e.g.
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Do you want to be part of the Astoria Visual Arts?
Learn about brewery remodel
AVA board of directors seeks representation for various art disciplines
Hear from Fort George contractor
ASTORIA — Astoria Visual Arts (AVA) is accepting nominations for positions to its board of directors, to be elected at the annual membership meeting in October. AVA is seeking representation for the various arts disciplines, including but not limited to photography, videography, theater, dance, sculpture and architecture.
ASTORIA — The Lower Co- ative reuse of salvaged materials lumbia Preservation Society and present a slide show. will host a workshop on the reThen, a tour of both buildmodel of the Fort George Brew- ings will be conducted, with ery at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Sept. emphasis on the Fort George’s 28 at the Fort George Lovell VHFRQG ÀRRU Showroom, located at 14th and This workshop is open to the Duane streets. public with a fee of $5 for LCPS General contractor Tim Ken- members and $7 for the general nedy will share the methods of public. For more information, the remodel and his experiences. call Pam Chestnut at 503-325Kennedy will talk about the cre- 3245. September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 17
AVA is pursuing an aggressive agenda to implement its revised mission statement, which is “placing arts and culture at the center of a changing rural economy.’ AVA recently completed the 2103 Open Studio Tour, which featured a cultural information center and central exhibition space. The information center received more
than 800 visitors during the two-day event. More recently, AVA received a grant from the Miller Foundation to attend the National Arts Marketing Project Conference in Portland, in order to increase both sales and audience attendance at Astoria events. Anyone interested in pursuing a position on the board should email AVA president
Larry Taylor at Lawrence_d_ taylor@yahoo.com no later than Oct. 10. Elections to the AVA Board of Directors will be held during the 2013 Annual Meeting on Saturday Oct. 12. The meeting will begin at 10:30 a.m. and will be held at 300 Industry St., Suite 201 (West End Mooring Basin, upstairs on the northwest corner above Tiki Charters).
CW Marketplace 46 Announcements
70 Help Wanted
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•The Daily Astorian reaches 8,500 Clatsop County households
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•Seaside Signal or •Cannon Beach Gazette ONE WEEK IN THIS PACKAGE Starts at $62.27! Contact Kimberly in Classifieds at (503)325-3211 extension 231 or by email at classifieds@dailyastorian.com*
70 Help Wanted Avon Wants You! Start now for Holiday sales (503)738-3839 or (503)440-0675 EVERYTHING is coming up results when you use a Classified Ad!
The Mission of Columbia Memorial Hospital is to provide excellence, leadership and compassion in the enhancement of health for those we serve. Be a member of our Planetree Designated team. Full or Part Time Opportunities •Human Resource Manager •Business Development Analyst •Certified Surgical Tech •Medical Assistant Relief/Intermittent Opportunities •Echosonographer Visit www.columbiamemorial.org for more details and up-to-date opportunities. Apply online or stop by CMH to use our inhouse internet application process. CMH is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to the development of an inclusive, multicultural community. We are currently seeking exceptional individuals to volunteer with Columbia Memorial Hospital, and our Home Health and Hospice program. Visit CMH administration for more information or call 503.325.4321 x4402.
AAA Oregon/Idaho seeks a parttime Member Services Representative for our North Coast Service Center. This position is responsible for performing a variety of sales and service related tasks including generating sales opportunities and answering member inquiries by phone & in person relating to AAA services. Insurance experience a plus. Qualified applicants should possess: •A desire to be part of a dynamic and growing insurance business with opportunities to cross-sell a variety of products and services •Strong communication, keyboarding, conflict resolution and customer service skills •Experience with a Windows-based computer operating system and/or previous experience working in a Sales or Service environment. •Must possess ability to make independent decisions using sound judgment We also offer a Spanish/English bilingual salary supplement. Please feel free to email your resume to: recruiter@aaaoregon.com Candidates may also fax resumes to: (503)222-6379. AAA Oregon/Idaho is proud to promote and maintain a drugfree workplace and pre-employment drug screening is required. Criminal background check. EOE. Please, no calls
MCMENAMINS SAND TRAP is now hiring BREAKFAST COOKS! Qualified apps must have an open & flex sched including, days, eves, wknds and holidays. We are looking for applicants who have prev exp related exp and enjoy working in a busy customer service-oriented enviro. We are also willing to train! We offer opps for advancement and excellent benefits for eligible employees, including vision, med, chiro, dental and so much more! Please apply online 24/7 at www.mcmenamins.com or pick up a paper app at any McMenamins location. Mail to 430 N. Killingsworth, Portland OR, 97217 or fax: 503-221-8749. Call 503-952-0598 for info on other ways to apply. Please no phone calls or emails to individ locs! E.O.E.
18 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
70 Help Wanted
70 Help Wanted
70 Help Wanted
Assistant Teacher needed for Head start center in Seaside - Must have a CDA (Child Development Associate); one year ECE education or a one year ECE certificate from an accredited college. Also need to have one year experience working in an early childhood classroom; pass a pre0emplioyment drug screen and criminal background check. The position is 30 hours per week, $10.44 per hour. Visit or website. www.nworheadstart.org for a full job description and application.
Barber contract
Driftwood Restaurant is looking for individuals to join our fun team.
Teachers need for Head Start centers in Clatskanie, Seaside, Astoria, and Warrenton , Oregon Must have a Bachelorʼs degree in Early Childhood Education and two yearʼs experience teaching preschool children. Applicant must also have one year supervisory experience; pass a pre-employment drug screen and criminal background check. The position is 35 hours per week. 12.80 an hour plus benefits. Visit our website www.nworheadstart.orgfor a full job description and the application process. Family worker needed for Warrenton Head Start - must have minimum one year education in Human Services, Early Childhood Education or related field. PREFER AA degree and a minimum of one year experience in the Social Service or related field. Applicant must also pass a pre-employment drug screen and criminal background check. The position is 30 hours per week. $9.86 an hour. Visit our website www.nworheadstart.org for a full job description and the application process.
Astoria Aquatic Center is now hiring for lifeguards. We offer flexible schedules, competitive wages, a positive team environment, job experience, a chance to help others, and career development. Interested applicants will be required to take the Ellis and Associates certification course on Sept 28 & 29, Oct 5 & 6. There is a fee for this course. Upon successful completion of this course, applicants will be interviewed for lifeguard positions. Please call 503-325-7027 and speak with Pam Pearce or come to the Aquatic Center for more information. Experienced equipment operators, pipe layers & Class A CDL drivers. Pre-employment drug testing required. Big River Excavating 503-338-3878
open at Naselle Youth Camp, a Washington State Juvenile Justice & Rehabilitation Facility. This contractor will provide the Dept. of Social and Health Services and the Juvenile Justice and Rehabilitation Administration haircutting services for male residents. Salary: $10/cut - average 40 cuts per month. Background inquiry will be conducted for convictions and pending criminal charges. Authorization to work in the U.S. required.
For more details, contact 360-484-3223 ext. 222. The Dept. of Social & Health Services strives to create a working environment that encourages creative leadership & teamwork, & respects cultural diversity.
Our culture honors hard work, honesty, a sense of humor and individuality. At its core is a commitment to hiring for The Hospitality Attitude. Driftwood Restaurant offers many benefits to our employees. These benefits include paid vacation, medical, profit sharing/401K and more. Positions currently available include: •Server •Host •Busser Please apply in person at Escape Lodging (3287 S Hemlock, Cannon Beach) If you have any questions, please contact Debbie at debbie@escapelodging.com
•Brake/Alignment Technician •Tire Technician Part and Full-time positions in Warrenton. Competitive wages/generous benefits package includes medical/dental/vision/vacation, holiday pay/retirement/profit sharing. Requirements include: Brake/alignment skills/customer service/communication skills. We are proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. Pick up application 1167 SE Marlin Avenue, Warrenton.
Concrete Workers Needed 2 years Experience. Valid ODL, and pre-drug screening. Call (503)861-2285 or email to rpromconcrete@aol.com Crab Shakers needed for Bell Buoy Crab Company In Chinook Washington. experience preferred, will consider training. For applications go to foot of Valley Street, in Chinook WA.
Delivery Driver Needed. Must be 21 years old with clean driving record. Day and night shifts required. Please apply in person at: Fultanoʼs Pizza in Astoria. No Phone Calls. Hiring full time Medical Assistant in busy family practice. Experience with vaccines & EMR, preferred. Resume and references to Dr. Ashely 2120 Exchange St., Suite #209 Astoria.
Driver needed to deliver Daily Astorian publications. Must be able to lift up to 25 pounds, have a valid driver's license and a good driving record. Part time, 15-20 hours per week. Shifts will vary. Drug test and criminal background check will be completed before hire. Benefits include Paid Time Off (PTO) and a 401(k)/Roth 401(k) retirement plan. Request an application at 949 Exchange St, Astoria, Ore. or send resume and letter of interest to EO Media Group., PO Box 2048, Salem, OR 973082048, by fax to 503-371-2935 or e-mail, hr@eomediagroup.org MTC seeks candidates for the following position serving youth, ages 16-24, at our Tongue Point campus in Astoria. •On-Call Vehicle Operator Apply at www.mtctrains.com and enter 97103 in the search field. Minorities, women, persons with disabilities, and veterans are encouraged to apply. Tobacco & Drug-Free Campus EOE MTC Values Diversity! ADVERTISERS who want quick results use classified ads regularly. Pacific Way Bakery & Cafe in Gearhart is now hiring full-time evening Dishwasher, line cook, bussers, and servers Apply in person Thursday through Monday, 11 am-5 pm. 601 Pacific Way, Gearhart.
70 Help Wanted
Freelancer wanted Are you "plugged in" to life on the coast? Can you tell a good story? Coast Weekend is seeking local residents to write freelance feature columns on a variety of topics, from north Tillamook County to the Long Beach (Wash.) Peninsula. Frequency and extent of assignments will vary. Applicants should be familiar with this area's lifestyle and culture and should demonstrate a clear and vivid writing style. Familiarity with AP Style or photography is a plus. Send a resume and brief (one page) writing sample to Rebecca Sedlak, The Daily Astorian, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 or email rsedlak@dailyastorian.com. Email is preferred. Full or part-time Driver needed. Wages DOE, CDL required, North West Ready Mix. 950 Olney Avenue (503)325-3562 LEARN TO SELL CARS NO EXPERIENCE, MAKE $$$$$ If you are looking for a career where you can make above average income with a flexible schedule, we are starting a class on all of the necessary education to be a success! After you complete the class you WILL be offered a position at a guaranteed wage of $3000 per month with minimum of 12 sales. Class will start soon. Call for details. Dick (503)319-2277.
MCMENAMINS SAND TRAP is now hiring LINE COOKS! Qualified apps must have an open & flex sched including, days, eves, wknds and holidays. We are looking for applicants who have prev exp related exp and enjoy working in a busy customer service-oriented enviro. We are also willing to train! We offer opps for advancement and excellent benefits for eligible employees, including vision, med, chiro, dental and so much more! Please apply online 24/7 at www.mcmenamins.com or pick up a paper app at any McMenamins location. Mail to 430 N. Killingsworth, Portland OR, 97217 or fax: 503-221-8749. Call 503-952-0598 for info on other ways to apply. Please no phone calls or emails to individ locs! E.O.E.
CW Marketplace 70 Help Wanted
MCMENAMINS SAND TRAP is now hiring DISHWASHERS! Qualified apps must have an open & flex sched including, days, eves, wknds and holidays. We are looking for applicants who have prev exp related exp and enjoy working in a busy customer service-oriented enviro. We are also willing to train! We offer opps for advancement and excellent benefits for eligible employees, including vision, med, chiro, dental and so much more! Please apply online 24/7 at www.mcmenamins.com or pick up a paper app at any McMenamins location. Mail to 430 N. Killingsworth, Portland OR, 97217 or fax: 503-221-8749. Call 503-952-0598 for info on other ways to apply. Please no phone calls or emails to individ locs! E.O.E. OCEAN CREST MOTORS Seeking two top notch sales people. We have three GM lines to sell from, plus a huge used inventory. Brand New Store Huge inventory. Fantastic pay plan with bonus plan. We will train the right people. Must be neat and clean in appearance, goal oriented and will to earn a high income. Paid vacation and medical. Call to set up appt. for interview as for Jim Thompson. (503)8613366 LIVE OUTSIDE ASTORIA? To place your ad in the Daily Astorian Classifieds, simply dial:
1-800-781-3211 Itʼs fast and itʼs toll free!
80 Work Wanted Haul Away If it needs to go, call me! Moving/Attics/Basements/Odd Jobs. Senior Citizen & Veteran Discount. John (503)470-9180
105 Business-Sales Op The Daily Astorian is currently seeking independent contractors to deliver our paper in the Astoria area. For more information on these routes please contact Brett in circulation 503-325-3211
150 Homes for Sale Price reduced. Near Clatskanie, 2000 sf house with 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, bonus rooms, 1.96 acres, 2c garage, big shop, inground indoor heated pool. $273,500. 503-728-3192 or e-mail elarciel@wildblue.net
160 Lots & Acreage Seaside Oregon, Ocean Cove Estates. Partial ocean view great location, effluent neighborhood Lot 38 on Evergreen Dr. 80X100. Sewer/electric on site. 50 yards from the ocean. 1 mile from prom. $149,950 (425)232-8336.
210 Apartments, Unfurnished
295 Building Materials
440 Good Things to Eat
SEASIDE:Sparkling 2 bedroom. Dishwasher, washer/dryer, full bath, near town/beach, off-street parking. Second floor. $755 per month. No pets. (503)717-9229.
Sand $2 a yard in pit. Located in Warrenton. (503)338-0485
FRESH Frozen Albacore Tuna. $2.25 per lb. Loining, $6 per fish. Call FishHawk Fisheries. #1 4th Street, Astoria. (503)325-5252.
200 Mobile Homes
220 Plexes
Warrenton weatherized, 1 bedroom single wide mobile home for sale by owner. Deck, carport, in Alder Manor. Storage shed with cement foundation. $13,000 as is. (503)298-7633.
Seaside large 2 bedroom. River view with Balcony. Washer, dryer hook up, dishwasher, no dogs. $750 to $795, (503)440-2223
CASH buyers are reading your Classified Ad.
210 Apartments, Unfurnished
Warrenton 2bedroom 1bath fourplex. $675/month. Income & occupancy restrictions apply. No smoking or pets. Please call for more details. 503-325-2880. ADVERTISERS who want quick results use classified ads regularly.
230 Houses, Unfurnished Newly remodeled 1&2 bedroom homes by the bay. Call Today to reserve your new home at Bayshore! (503)325-1749 Seaside 1 Bedrooms/Studios Furnished Studio, with seasonal pool access, 1/2 block to beach, $500, all utilities paid 4 Plex, 1bed/bath, furnished, ocean view, steps to beach, gas partially paid, all other utilities paid, $650 Partially furnished 1 bed/1 bath, Cottage, covered patio, $595, pets ok 2 Beds 2 Bed/1 bath Cottage, Clean, bright w/glass sun porch & yard. Wood floors, Water/sewer & garbage paid. $900, pets ok 3-4 Beds 3 bed/3 bath, 2100sq. in Sunset Hills, 2 car garage, ocean view from upstairs, huge bonus room downstairs. $1600 Large 4 bed/3 bath 2 level ocean front home in the Sunset cliffs, 180 degree view, jetted tubs, $2400 1800 sq.3 bed/2 bath, new remodeled Gearhart home, hardwoods, tile, w/d, freezer, wood stove, large yard, pets ok, $1450 Cannon Beach newly remodeled 3 bed/2 bath, washer/dryer, studio/storage. $1250, pets negotiable 3 bed/2 bath on the river with view and fully fenced yard, garage, range, dishwasher, refrigerator $1400 3 bed/1 bath, small fenced yard and shed, gas fireplace, w/d & storage. $875, pets negotiable Beach Property Management Inc. (503)738-9068 Seaside: Clatsop Shores Apartments. 2 bedroom 1 bath w/laundry hookups. Rents starting at $700/month. 503-325-2880.
Astoria: 1+bedroom/1 bath. View, basement, garage, w/d hook-up. $750 per month, first/last/ $1000deposit, and lease. (503)717-3278
WE DELIVER! Please leave a light on or install motion detector lights to make your carrierʼs job easier. Thanks! THE DAILY ASTORIAN Big Farm House. 5 bedrooms, 2.5 bath, NO PETS. Credit check. $1600 per month and $1600 deposit. Free garbage, yard maintenance and pest control. 92320 Stoner Rd. Call Jim (503)739-0734 or Bill (707)422-0119 Seaside: 2 bed, 1 bath., garage. Close to school and hospital. No pets/smoking. $850 +security. (503)440-3564.
235 Houses, Furnished Warrenton: Partially furnished, 2 bedroom + one smaller bedroom, 1 bath. Electric heat, washer/dryer hook-up. $865 per month first, last and deposit. (503)791-7621
250 Home Share, Rooms &Roommates Home share:1 bedroom and comunity space available , $550 per month. First, last, $100 cleaning deposit. No pets/smoking. (503)338-0703
260 Commercial Rental Astoria: 3925 Abbey Lane, 800 square feet and up. Starting at $.50 square foot. (503)440-6945
300 Jewelry Buying Gold, Silver, Estate Jewelry, Coins, Diamonds and Old Watches. Downtown Astoria-332 12th St. Jonathonʼs, LTD Wednesday-Sunday (503)325-7600
340 Fuel & Wood $185 Semi seasoned fire wood, Includes Alder and Hemlock. Buy 2 or more cords get free Delivery. (503)791-7038.
380 Garage Sales OR Gearhart Second Annual NW Tea Party Yard Sale 9am to 4pm Saturday 9/28/13 Pacific Grange Hwy. 101 Just north of Cullaby lake Rd. Warrenton. Please deliver your donated items to the grange on Friday 9/27/13 Between 2pm and 4pm. Receipt for items upon request. Help to set up tables appreciated! For more information or if you need help with items call Charles (503)468-9625
500 Boats for Sale
19' Star Fire, runs great! Fishes better!! $3500 OBO
400 Misc Wanted
1998 Toyota Tacoma - 5 speed manual transmission. 4X4 standard cab. Good condition. $5,500 OBO (503)325-1636 or (503)7917135. Specialty
Services We urge you to patronize the local professionals advertising in The Daily Astorian Specialty Services. To place your Specialty Services ad, call 325-3211. 1999 Dodge Ram V10. Immaculate body and interior. All the goodies. Automatic, Dually, $9,999. (503)861-1887
(503)791-2445 ERROR AND CANCELLATIONS 1978 Bayliner, 24” 350 Chevy motor, Volvo Penta outdrive. Runs great, (503)338-9731. $2000 “Fishing for a good deal?” We have the catch of the day. 1976 Searay 22foot hard top with 1990 Shorelander trailer. Full canvas and fully equipped. All electronics. 275 horse power. I/0 Volvo Pinta counter rotating props. Trailer restored. Ready for fishing! $4450. (360)892-0385.
Please read your ad on the first day. If you see an error, The Daily Astorian will gladly re-run your ad correctly. We accept responsibility for the first incorrect insertion, and then only to the extent of a corrected insertion or refund of the price paid. To cancel or correct an ad, call 503-325-3211 or 1-800-781-3211.
590 Automobiles
BUYERS AND SELLERS get together with the help of classified ads. Read and use the classified section every day!
555 SUVs
Warrenton 4 person sale North Coast Mini Storage 605 Alt. Hwy. 101, Warrenton Saturday September 28th. 9am-5pm
560 Trucks
1996 JEEP CHEROKEE Good condition inside and out. Newer Tires & Battery. 126640 miles. Low miles on transfer case. 360-244-1851
2001 BMW 530i $4995 -159K miles -Clear Title -Sport Package/Winter Package -Moonroof -Power Everything -AM/FM/Multi-CD Changer Call or text (503)440-1792
Wanted rocks fossils and minerals, from 1 piece to entire estates. Also any lapidary equipment. Nothing to big or small! (503)440-3199
440 Good Things to Eat COASTAL CORNER MARKET Produce + Groceries Last of Season Yakima produce. Organic, Gluten- Free Open 10am–6pm Closed Sundays. Specialties & Gift Items. Now accepting EBT
(360)642-1318 1304 Pacific Ave S., Long Beach.WA
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 19
Learn 1001 things to love about life in the military
Art creates surreal reality
Seaside Public Library hosts author Kathie Hightower for book reading
Bay Avenue Gallery opens new exhibit
SEASIDE — The Friends of the Seaside Library welcome Kathie Hightower, local author of “1001 Things to Love About Military Life.” Hightower will speak at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 3. The event will take place in the Community Room, and there will be book sales and signings. A celebration of military life, “1001 Things to Love About Military Life” chronicles some obvious and not-so-obvious traditions, advantages and experiences military members, veterans and their families share.
Hightower’s book is full of heartwarming vignettes, laughout-loud lists, and stories and quotes from military members and their families. There are practical truths most service members wouldn’t want to live without, as well as insight into advantages military life provides. Hightower and her co-authors give readers an inspirational look at those who dedicate their lives to serving. Hightower is a retired lieutenant colonel from the U.S. Army Reserves, and her hus-
band of 33 years is retired from the Army. She is a co-author of “Help! I’m a Military Spouse – I Get A Life Too” and “Military Spouse Journey: Discover the Possibilities and Live Your Dreams.” Hightower is an international speaker and columnist whose articles have been featured in major military publications and civilian outlets. Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway. For more information call 503-7386742 or visit www.seasidelibrary.org
Fund your art, music or humanities project Clatsop Cultural Coalition’s 2013 grants cycle is underway ASTORIA — The 2013 grants cycle for the Clatsop Cultural Coalition is getting underway. Each year, approximately $8,000 is made available by the Oregon Cultural Trust to the local coalition to fund projects in art, music, humanities and heritage. Groups and individuals can go online to the Clatsop Cultural Coalition’s website – clatsopculturalcoalition.org – to see this
year’s application form and learn about the goals and work of the coalition. Grants of up to $2,000 can be given to both organized groups and individuals. Successful applications often exhibit a broader community purpose and involvement. Cultural trust funding has gone to school music programs, theater performances, dance instruction, ballet costumes,
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20 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
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musical instruments, speakers and even paint for a historic community building, among others. )ormal nonpro¿t status is not required. There will be an opportunity to get coaching on preparation of the application and to ask questions from 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 in the Liberty Theater’s McTavish Room, located at 1203 Commercial St., Astoria. All interested parties are welcome. Completed applications must be received by 5 p.m. Nov. 1 at P.O. Box 864, Asto-
Submitted photo
“1001 Things to Love About Military Life” by Kathie Hightower.
ria, Oregon, 97103. Successful applicants will be noti¿ed directly and will receive their checks at an awards ceremony to be held Dec. 4. If you have questions regarding the process or the project that you have in mind, contact Janet Bowler, jlbowler@charter.net or Jan Mitchell, 2janmitchell@gmail.com
Application prep 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1 Liberty Theater, McTavish Room 1203 Commercial St., Astoria jlbowler@charter.net 2janmitchell@gmail.com clatsopculturalcoalition.org
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OCEAN PARK, Wash. — Artist William VanDorin creates surreal realities in his drawings and wood sculptures. Fine lines combine to create new realism filled with future possibilities. Airships, dream faces and fish that fly capture an air of potential and timelessness. In his drawings, VanDorin can be wildly irreverent and satirical, but he can not be ignored. Deeper looks reveal additional layers of meaning. As a sculptor, VanDorin makes his view of reality into the 3-D space. The fantasy of flying airships brings past glories to life in new futuristic ways. The beauty of wood is revealed in Victorian airships and fantasy steam locomotives. Bay Avenue Gallery in Ocean Park, Wash., presents an exhibition featuring drawings and wooden sculptures by VanDorin. Everyone is invited to meet the artist during the reception from 5 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28. The exhibition can be seen through Oct. 18. Bay
Submitted photo
“Gone” by artist William VanDorin.
Avenue Gallery is open Thursday through Monday at 1406 Bay Ave. in Ocean Park, Wash. Call 360-6655200 or visit bayavenuegallery.com for more information.
Artist reception 5 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 28 Bay Avenue Gallery 1406 Bay Ave., Ocean Park, Wash. 360-665-5200
Hear Baroque and early classical music
Get fit with aquanastics in Warrenton
Consort of All Sorts to perform at Grace Episcopal Church
Water exercise is stimulating, beneficial – and a fun time
ASTORIA — Astoria’s own Consort of All Sorts returns to Grace Episcopal Church for a 3 p.m. Sunday afternoon concert on Sept. 29. This is the group’s second performance at the church following its debut concert in April. The group is made up entirely of local musicians who perform music of the Baroque and early classical periods on copies of original instruments. The concert is free to the public, and donations will be accepted, although not required, and split equally between the Grace Episcopal Church Food Pantry and the Clatsop Community Outreach Emergency Shelter in Seaside, a shelter opened earlier this year in response to a recent 30 percent increase in the homeless population in the county. Consort of All Sorts includes Judy Woodward on cello, Hannelore Morgan on recorder, Charles Schweigert on Baroque Àute, 'onna Carson on bassoon, Alexandra Myers and Barbara Bate on piano, Ray Lund on harpsichord, and 'rew Her]ig as percussionist and vocalist. The concert will feature several 18th-century compositions and will venture into the early
WARRENTON — Aquanastic classes are being offered to adults from 9 to 9:50 a.m. and 10 to 10:50 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, Oct. 3 through Oct. 29 at the heated, indoor KOA pool, at 1100 Ridge Road, across from the Fort Stevens State Park entrance in Warrenton. For directions call 503861-2606 or 800-562-8506. Each session of lessons is $25. Classes are offered through Clatsop Community College’s Education For Life. Each class is limited to 12 students. The class will be lead by Kathleen Hudson, a water exercise professional with certi¿cation from the American Red Cross water safety program and the Arthritis Aquatic Training program. Water is stimulating, therapeutic and exhilarating. With do]ens of exercises that use the natural resistance of the water, you will improve your body’s composition and tone, increase aerobic and muscular endurance, and improve Àexibility, coordination and agility – all with minimum stress on your body. Jump into aquanastic water workouts and discover your renewed physical self. Your body develops with
Submitted photo
From left: Judy Woodward, Hannelore Morgan, Donna Carson and Charles Schweigert of Consort of All Sorts.
classical. In keeping with the eclectic approach of the group, performers will include contemporary arrangements of English and Celtic tunes that have their roots in the Baroque era. In the Baroque era, it was not uncommon for music composed for speci¿c instruments to be played on whatever was at hand. In this case, a tenor recorder and the Baroque Àute substitute well for violins in some of the original arrangements, and the bassoon, played by the Consort’s newest member, 'onna Carson, doubles the part played by the cello. The name for the group comes from the title of a book
by Canadian author and painter Emily Carr. “The House of All Sorts” chronicles the daily life at a rooming house she ran for “all sorts” of ]any characters. In the realm of music, “consort” is a somewhat antiquated term for a group of instruments or voices: It’s a good match for this group of musicians and a name that allows for the addition of other instruments as they are needed. It also leaves open the possibility of exploring music from other periods. For further information, contact Charles Schweigert at 503-325-1895 or schweigertstudio@yahoo.com
Sunday market holds Rubber Boot Stomp Repurpose your old rainboots with Cover Girl theme
ASTORIA — Cover Girl is the theme for this year’s Rubber Boot Stomp at the Astoria Sunday Market. Fashionistas, artists, merchants and anyone ready to express their creative side are invited to donate rubber boots they have “glammed up” or repurposed for sale and auction. Funds raised will bene¿t Clatsop County Women’s Resource Center. The public is invited to join in on the fun and participate in the Rubber Boot Stomp through the market to the tune of RuPaul’s “Cover Girl” song. Rehearsal will be at 10 a.m.
Sunday, Sept. 29 at the market. Participants are asked to meet at the stage next to the Astoria American Legion building, 1132 Exchange St. The Rubber Boot Stomp through the market takes place Sunday, Oct. 6 to kick off the Rubber Boot Sale and Auction. Rubber boots can be dropped off at the market portable of¿ce R9 located at 12th and 'uane streets from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Sunday. For more information call 503-325-1010 or email AstoriaSundayMarket@ charter.net Boot donors are encouraged
to let their imaginations Ày. Participants can use the rubber boot as an art canvas for painting, create rubber boot sculptures, or repurpose the boots into something new. Last year a number of creative decorated and repurposed boots were donated, including a bride-and-groom boot pair from Fred Meyer’s Jewelry store, and artist Lynne Averill donated a pair of “ruby boots” attached to a wicked chair representing the house that fell on the witch in “The Wi]ard of O]. “ “We are looking forward to seeing what people donate this
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Aquanastics are a form of fun exercise. Classes are starting soon at the KOA pool.
use and deteriorates with disuse. This basic principle of physiology has lead many people to observe that as the level of physical ¿tness decreases, the number of degenerative diseases increases. We no longer live lives of vigorous physical activity. The best alternative is a regular exercise program. Exercising in the water is especially valuable for persons in physically poor condition and allows them to exercise without the consequences of stiff and sore muscles. This form of exercise has become popular for older adult and
those with overweight, arthritic, circulatory and orthopedic problems. Although the classes are held in the water, swimming ability is not necessary to participate in the basic level of the program. Exercise movements have creative, descriptive names such as Knee Kiss, Rocking Horse, Windshield Wiper, Spider Walk, Scarecrow Legs, and Frog Jump. To register for one of these classes call Mary Fryling at 503-338 2408, or call 855-2528767, press 8 and ask for Education for Life.
H A RV EST FESTIVA L
CANNON BEACH LIBRARY
Saturday,Septem ber 28th
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
• SH O P FO R •
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A pair of witchy boots, a 2012 Rubber Boot Stomp submission.
year,” enthused Cyndi Mudge, director of Astoria Sunday Market. “The submissions were so much fun last season, and we raised over $200 for the Clatsop County Resource Center.”
H andm ade Crafts SpecialTreasures Lovely G ifts Children’s Item s & Yum m y Baked G oods!
B EA U T IFU L Q U ILT T O B E R A FFLED at 4:00 pm
131 N. Hemlock St. • Cannon Beach
503-436-1391
September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 21
Special exhibit of local art by Charles Fitzpatrick opens 6x6 Art Show pieces also on display at Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum
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Astoria artist Gin Laughery works primarily in the medium of printmaking, specifically making monotypes. Some of Charles Fitzpatrickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s artwork. Clockwise from left: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Beach Patrolâ&#x20AC;? shows a beach patrol by the U.S. Coast Guard during World War ll, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sunset Arch, Ocean Park, WA,â&#x20AC;? and â&#x20AC;&#x153;North Head Lighthouse,â&#x20AC;? a pen and ink drawing. Submitted photos courtesy of the Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum
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22 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
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â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Charles Fitzpatrick: Pen & Photoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 5 to 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 27 Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum 115 S.E. Lake St., Ilwaco, Wash. 360-642-3446.
Five Minutes With ... GIN LAUGHERY
Where were you born and raised? I was born and raised in Eastern Washington. Where do you live now? I am now a long-time resident of Astoria. What art mediums do you work in and where do you show your art? I work primarily in the medium of printmaking, specifically monotypes. My art has been shown at RiverSea Gallery and has been juried into shows in the Pacific Northwest. I currently have an exhibit â&#x20AC;&#x153;Personal Landscapesâ&#x20AC;? at Columbia Memorial Hospital in the Pavilion Building. What sparked your interest in art and how did you become an artist? I grew up in a creative home. It has only been in recent years that I have had the time to explore the luxury of producing art. Once introduced to printmaking, I have never looked back! It incorporates my love of texture and color sometimes in very unexpected ways. Why are you drawn to creating monotypes? What does it take to work in this medium and what do you strive to portray?
My monotypes express reflections and memories of personal landscapes, internal and external. They are influenced by the sparse, elegant landscapes found in Eastern Washington and Oregon. I am drawn to the creation of monotypes for many reasons, one being the element of surprise caused by sending a piece through an etching press. What is something you like about living on the North Coast? Living on the North Coast is a very rich experience with access to an amazing variety of individuals. I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t imagine living elsewhere. What does it feel like to sell an art piece? I enjoy the connection to the individual that purchases a piece of my art. I feel very fortunate that something I created is relevant to another person. Your motto is: Keep printing! What do you do when youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not creating art? When I am not creating art, you might find me gardening, walking our dog Izzie, enjoying music or theater, and traveling with my husband.
Urgent Care
8IFO LJTTFT BSFO U FOPVHI Peace of Mind 7 days/week in Warrenton Now accepting Medicare & Medicaid Columbia Memorial Hospital now has two convenient Urgent Care locations in Astoria and Warrenton. Get care when and where you need it. CMH Urgent Care: t Works with most insurances. t Accepts Medicare and Medicaid. t Provides on-site lab and x-ray services. t Cares for people of all ages.
In Astoria (503) 338-4050 Open: Mon-Fri, 9am-7pm; Sat 9am-5:30pm Location: CMH Health & Wellness Pavilion (2265 Exchange Street, Astoria) In Warrenton (503) 338-4500 Open: Daily, 9am-7pm Location: Along U.S. Hwy 101 (1639 SE Ensign Lane, Warrenton)
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September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com | 23
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24 | September 26, 2013 | coastweekend.com
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