Oregon Coast Today August 23, 2013

Page 1

oregon coast

FREE! Aug. 23-29, 2013 • ISSUE 13, VOL. 9

Tides • Dining • Theater Events Calendar • Live Music

TIME TO FES UP

7

Of all music, Moroccan oud tunes are our favorite

THEY’VE GOT BOTTLE

11

Pacific City’s Pelican spreads its wings with Tillamook brewery

ToYz ’n the hood

Find a sweet ride at Surf City this weekend See story, page 13


oregon coast

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MHJLIVVR JVT VYLNVUJVHZ[[VKH` 2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


departments artsy coast calendar crossword & sudoku dining guide, featuring Pelican Brewing Co. get out! in concert learn a little live music listings one man’s beach, commentary by Matt Love potpourri tide tables for yaquina, siletz, tillamook and alsea bays urchins

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13

ON THE COVER

Nothing says summer quite like a bubblegum pink automobile with more curves than Highway 22. Regardless of what gets your engine running, the Surf City car show at Chinook Winds Casino Resort is guaranteed to give you plenty to chew on.

%5,1* 7+,6 $' 72 6+233(5 6(59,&(6 )25 $ 6+((7 2)

Seal Rock’s 1st Annual Garage Sale LABOR DAY WEEKEND

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Saturday & Sunday

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Aug. 31 & Sept. 1

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‡ $IULFDQ %HDG 7UDGHUV ‡ $UWLVDQV &UDIWV ‡ (VWDWH *DOOHU\ ,WHPV ‡ &U\VWDOV 0RUH and so much more! For more information or to reserve a space call 541-563-2272

Musicia ns Food Ca rts

$7 3$57,&,3$7,1* 6725(6 CODE 2592213

LINCOLN CITY PaciďŹ c Coast Hwy 101 at Milepost 115.6 (541) 996-5000 tangeroutlet.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 3


4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

USED BOOK SALE

50

%

OFF

EVERYTHING • All Hardbacks • All Paperbacks • All Ephemera • All Signed Books

SHOP SOON FOR BEST SELECTION Store Closing All Must Go!

BRADY BOOKS 1530 E Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City 1 Block South of Tanger Mall

541-994-4599 Open 6 Days 10-6, Sunday 10-4

Gated-Private, 200ft. Ocean Frontage, Neskowin Oregon’s finest ocean site. Masterpiece design, material and builder. Elegant furnished 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath, butler’s pantry, 3 fireplaces, decks, indoor and outdoor spas, hidden wine room with vault. Built on solid rock with 200ft of ocean frontage at Neskowin.

Own it all for $1,800,000 Shown by appointment www.TheShores.info

SUMMER 2013 SALE To see call 541-614-1314 5FSNT QSPWJEFE CZ 0SFHPO $PBTU #BOL t 1SJDFT 4VCKFDU UP DIBOHF


get out!

Yachats’

growth market

See the Yachats River Valley’s bounty on a tour of its working farms

Story & photos by Eileen Flory For the TODAY

W

hen the folks “up the river” invite us to their annual Yachats River Valley Farm Tour, it’s a good idea to pay attention. After all, where else can a person find peacocks, alpacas, organic bee pollen and a drum circle, all within a few miles of each other? These items and a whole lot more will be on view on Saturday, Aug. 24, from 10 am to 4 pm, when the owners of eight farms throw open their gates for visitors to come in and explore. The livestock and produce that are the valley’s staples will be much in evidence, and a mix of specialty products will engage almost any interest. Yachats Valley farmers offer fresh milk, organic honey, cut flowers, cacti and other succulents, and even pressed four-leaf clovers. The valley’s bounty will be on display Saturday for tour-goers to sample and purchase. “We try to keep it informal and a fun time for both the farmers and the visitors” said organizer Catherine Lucido of Forks Farm. “A couple of the farms will even have a place for people to linger and eat their picnics.” The eight farms are spread up and down the valley, from a couple of miles inland up to the South Fork Road’s “Dead End” sign. It will be worth it to stick it out to the end, promises Nancy Kromer of The Ranch. “I’ll do some baking beforehand and make pitchers of nonalcoholic mint juleps. My farm is at the end of the road, so people will be ready to have a cold drink and a snack,” she said “The Newport Drum Circle will be here, too.” “I just want people to come out to the country,” she added.

“Years ago, people would just gather together and have a good time. That’s what the farm tour is all about, really.” Simply experiencing the valley itself is worth the trip. The Yachats (that’s YAH-hots) River rises in the Coast Range about 12 miles east of the town of Yachats and, for most of its short length, flows slowly through a storybook scene. For all the pastures and gardens, the forest is never far away, and residents report seeing coyotes, deer, elk, bobcats, vultures, hawks and, rarely, a bear or cougar. Travelers up the river soon leave the spruce and pine of the shore for the lush, upland woods of red alder, bigleaf maple and western redcedar. As if eight open farms weren’t enough, the valley also sports a park to enjoy and a covered bridge to admire. Cape Perpetua Scenic Area is nearby, with a visitor center and 26 miles of forest and shore trails. And of course there’s the town of Yachats itself, the “Gem of the Oregon Coast,” offering restaurants, shops, parks, beaches and trails. For a post-tour driving adventure, consider continuing on as the river road turns into Cape Ridge Road, a Forest Service route through spectacular Coast Range scenery, joining Highway 101 at Cape Perpetua. This part of the loop is about 11 miles long, but plan to spend at least a half hour navigating the twisty, one-lane-with-turnouts road. For a downloadable map, visit www.yachats.org and click on “Events,” pick one up at the Yachats Visitor Center next to C&K Market, or just head up the valley and follow the signs. From the north, turn left where the Yachats River Road angles sharply off opposite the Landmark in Yachats; from the south, cross the Yachats River and turn right at Lori Lane, go to the top of the hill, and turn right onto the road.

The Farms SEEDS OF OREGON — vegetables and plants; greenhouse TRIPLE D RANCH — grass-fed beef, lamb, and goat; fresh cow and goat milk RISE AND SHINE FARM —organic honey, bee pollen FORKS FARM — blueberries, cut flowers, winter squash, pumpkins, produce STARSHINE FARM — llamas, alpacas, peacocks, pressed four-leaf clovers YACHATS SPECIALTIES — naturally raised fruit, produce, and beef; greenhouse YAQUINA NURSERY — a wide variety of succulents and cactus, horticultural supplies;

greenhouse

THE RANCH — free baked goods, coffee, and cold drinks; grass-fed beef; drumming

Growers with greenhouses suggest you plan to visit them early to avoid the heat.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 5


LINCOLN CITY FRESH NEW RS! VENDO

FARMERS & CRAFTERS

Outdoor Market

Keeley is ready for summer, are you?

Sunday 9am - 3 pm Year Round Market

at the Lincoln City Cultural Center

540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

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Newport School of Artistic Movement #BMMFU t .PEFSO +B[[ t )JQ )PQ Directed by Nancy Mittleman

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“Training dancers from preschool to professional for over 40 years.�

Register Now t pdedance@msn.com


in concert

Some oud for thought Music with its roots in one of the world’s oldest cities will ring out on the Oregon Coast this weekend as the Moroccan-inspired duo Seffarine bring their multicultural sound to Newport and Lincoln City. The group takes its name from the ancient metalworking square in the medieval Moroccan city of Fes, where vocalist Lamiae Naki was born and raised. The square dates back to the 9th Century and is famous for the complex rhythms that can be heard from the blacksmiths’ hammers. To this day, Naki’s family is well known in the Seffarine as master metalworkers. But for Naki herself, the rhythm of those hammers proved a greater inspiration as she went on to become an interpreter of Portuguese fado, jazz, Sephardic and Arabic songs as well as flamenco, Brazilian samba and bossa nova. After moving to Portland, Naki connected with guitarist and oud player Nat Hulskamp and the band Seffarine was born, with a repertoire including traditional Arabic and Andalusian music as well as new songs inspired by Spanish flamenco, classical Persian music and American jazz. Seffarine will take the stage on Friday, Aug. 23, in a 7 pm concert in the conference room at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive. Seating is limited to about 40 people and tickets are $14. The duo will appear in an equally intimate setting on Saturday, Aug. 24, performing a dinner-show at the Nepali Kitchen, 1816 NE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City This performance, including a full Asian dinner, starts at 7 pm, with tickets priced at $20. Tickets for the performances, presented by José Solano, are available at the Nepali Kitchen and may be reserved by calling 541-264-8445 or 503-812-6726.

A jam-packed weekend

Registration is now open for the Slab Creek Music Festival, a workshop weekend for musicians of all ages featuring informal jam sessions, performance time, great food and overnight camping — all on the grounds of Neskowin Valley School. The festival takes place over Labor Day weekend, starting on the morning of Saturday, Aug. 31, and running until noon on Monday, Sept. 3. Registration costs $65 per person, including workshops, a campsite and four meals. Children 5 or under are admitted free and the festival is limited to 125 attendees. Everyone pitches in to help with meal preparation, set-up for performances and clean-up. Workshops take place from 1 to 4 pm on Saturday and Sunday, with performances during the day at the Cafe Stage and at nights in the auditorium. Now in its 12th year, the family friendly festival aims to create a supportive and safe environment in which people of all ages and abilities can celebrate their creativity through music. Festival-goers pride themselves on their excellent recycling

skills, and a single bag of trash is auctioned off at the end of the weekend. All proceeds from the festival benefit Neskowin Valley School. Registration and more information are available at www.slabcreekmusicfestival.com.

Enter sandman

International guitar virtuoso Aaron Larget-Caplan will perform serenades and lullabies from Spain, the United States and Japan on Thursday, Aug. 29, as his “Music of the East and West” tour brings him to Lincoln City Fresh from solo performances in St. Petersburg, Sicily and Mantova, the Boston-based guitarist will take to the stage at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, playing works by composers including Isaac Albéniz, Esteban Sanlucar, Pascual Marquina, Kevin Siegfried, and Toru Takemitsu; as well as a rarely heard masterwork by Keigo Fujii. Larget-Caplan said the idea for the solo program came to him when he heard Fujii’s “Legend of Hagaromo” at a Spanish festival in 1998. “I wasn’t sure how to bridge the Japanese piece into my program until 2006 when I came upon the genius of Toru Takemitsu’s arrangements of popular songs,” he said. “I was so moved by his re-creation of the lullaby “Summertime” by George Gershwin that I was inspired to begin my New Lullaby Project, which has gone on to include 40 premieres by 36 composers and a CD in 2010.” The opening piece of the program “Tracing a wheel on water” was written specifically for Larget-Caplan by composer Kevin Siegfried in 2003. The minimalist piece was inspired by the rising and falling tides of the Maine coast. “The effect is so strong that I have performed it close to 100 times,” Larget-Caplan said. The Lincoln City program will also include two popular flamenco solos, “Panaderos” and “España Cañi (Paso Doble)” and the famed serenade, “Granada,” by Isaac Albéniz. Born in Oklahoma and raised in Colorado, Larget-Caplan discovered the classical guitar at the age of 16. He graduated from the New England Conservatory having studied with David Leisner and Eliot Fisk and went on to study with Russian master pedagogue Dmitry Goryachev and flamenco master Juanito Pascual. He was recently appointed to the faculty of The Boston Conservatory and the University of Massachusetts Boston. For more information on Larget-Caplan, go to www.AaronLC.com. The Aug. 29 concert starts at 7 pm at in the auditorium of the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door, on sale now at the center or by calling 541994-9994.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 7


in concert

Welcome to the school of rock!

The Rose City roster

and blues... and country... and pop...

Indie rock and alt rock, bluegrass and blues, garage band and country folk will all be on oer on Saturday, Aug. 24, as some of Portland’s most creative musicians come to Lincoln City to help raise funds for Taft Elementary School. Entitled “The Coast Music Collective,â€? the fund raiser will see 10 musicians accepting Principal Chris Sullivan’s invitation to take to the stage at the Lincoln City Cultural Center for two separate concerts — one for kids and one for adults. The 3 pm kids show will be headlined by Americana folk artist Mo Phillips, who uses guitar, harmonica and organ to create music that strikes a chord with people of all ages. Phillips will be accompanied by a host of fellow musicians from the Rose City.

The troupe will appear again at 7 pm, in a concert for over 21s. Sullivan said generous sponsorship from local businesses means that all proceeds from ticket sales can go toward art and music programs at the school “Old musical instruments will be repaired and new ones bought for the students,� he said, “and we will be able to purchase much-needed art supplies.� Tickets for the 3 pm show are $5, with children 4 and under admitted free when accompanied by a paying adult. Tickets for the 7 pm show are $20 in advance or $22 at the door and are on sale now at the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101 or via phone at 541-994-9994.

GIANT CLEARANCE

SALE!

JENNY CONLEE MICHAEL JODELL JEREMY WILSON WENDY PATE SUSANNAH WEAVER MATT BROWN DARKA DUSTY & MIRI STEBIVKA STEVE DRIZOS Mo Phillips

Thank You

from Bob’s Beach Books to all of you who came out to support our event last weekend!

Open 7 Days A Week

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AUGUST 23, 24 & 25............................50% OFF REGULAR PRICE

AUGUST 26, 27 & 28............................60% OFF REGULAR PRICE AUGUST 29, 30 & 31.............................70% OFF REGULAR PRICE SEPTEMBER 1 & 2.................................80% OFF REGULAR PRICE and then we’re done!

11 AM to 7 PM

SPECIAL LOCATION! 4& )XZ t -JODPMO $JUZ _ "$3044 '30. 1*&3 _

The Red Cock Craftsmen’s Outlet 541-994-2518

Follow us on Twitter #lincolncityredco

8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

Come play with Fused Glass Prices start at $25! Adults & Kids are welcome!

GLASS FUSING STUDIO

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Now thru Aug. 31


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „ :38 ) ( & ) 7 8 &% / ) 6= - 2 0 - 2 '3 0 2 '3 9 2 8 = ˆ ² ² ²

The Captain’s got you pegged!

Set sail to Captain Dan’s and try our new

Shipwreck Turnovers

Stuffed with apples, cream cheese, caramel, and BACON!!! PLUS... COOKIES, PIES, CAKES, GLUTEN-FREE ITEMS & MORE

Captain Dan’s

Pirate Pastry Shop

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the other option at The Bay House...

The Bayside Lounge

Hurry! Offer Expires 1/01/2014

Great atmosphere, Fabulous Small Plates Menu plus Neighbors to Neighbors – 3-Courses for $25, every day 1RW H[SHQVLYH MXVW WHUUL¿F IRRG GULQN DQG VHUYLFH $VN DQ\RQH forbes 3-star rated • AAA 3-diamond rated | best of award of excellence wednesday through sunday • lounge opens at 5 p.m. • dinner service begins at 5:30 p.m.

5911 SOUTHWEST HIGHWAY 101 • LINCOLN CITY 541-996-3222 • www.thebayhouse.org

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 9


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5 OFF

$ 00

*

Every day! Any purchase $30 or more. Please present this ad... 08/27/13 Discount valid in our Oceanfront restaurant

*Coupon not valid for Friday Night Seafood Buffet

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Y OUR S UMMER D ESTINATION FOR G REAT F OOD , G REAT D RINK & THE C OAST ’ S B EST L IVE M USIC ... HAPPY HOUR 3:00-5:30PM

Friday, August 23rd

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Traditional Irish Fare

Rhythm Culture Saturday, August 24th:

UNDRTOW

r Growle Grab a Go! Family-Friendly Dining To 4649 SW HWY. 101 • LINCOLN CITY • 541-994-7729

#,#2 v 2

Homemade Soups & Desserts

Now open at 11 a.m. Every Day!

LIVE MUSIC:

Friday, August 23rd Charlotte Thistle Saturday, August 24th Rob Connell & Evans Longshore Ln n\H EHaFK ‡ nZ WKLUG FRaVW VWUHHWV Ln nHZSRUW nanaVLULVKSXE FRP ‡

10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide

The center of hop-erations

New brewery and tasting room shows the Pelican Pub’s got bottle By Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

A

s the Pelican Brewing Co.’s Tillamook expansion nears completion, one could be forgiven for suspecting that the owners are motivated purely by the lure of more wall space to display their ever-increasing haul of best beer awards. The crew have been piling up accolades since they started brewing some 17 years ago, and recently brought home another four silver medals from the 2013 North American Beer Awards, together with a gold medal for their MacPelican’s Scottish Style Ale. But the fact of the matter is that Darron Welch and the rest of the brew crew had simply squeezed as much beer as they could out of the Pelican’s beachfront brewpub in Pacific City and needed more space to take things to the next level. “There was an unmet demand,” said co-owner Ken Henson. “Darron and the brew team have done an amazing job creating a worldclass product and we quite simply could not keep up with the demand for it.” The new brewery, located on Stillwell Street in downtown Tillamook, can brew twice as much beer as the Pacific City facility and, if demand continues to grow at current rates, the company could double that output again by adding one more piece of equipment. While the new facility will be much more efficient at producing large quantities of bestselling beers, it will still give brewers the option of creating smaller, 30 barrel batches of one-off creations or niche brews like Doryman’s Dark. Welch said another advantage of the new brewery is its compact, linear formation — in

stark contract to the Pacific City operation, which had evolved piecemeal throughout the years from a small brewpub into a something of a sprawl. In fact, Welch and his crew are so proud of the gleaming tanks and spotless spigots that they are inviting the public into the heart of the brewery to sample its wares. The new tasting room, slightly elevated from the brewhouse floor, is separated from the action only by a low balustrade made from local, reclaimed barn wood. “The reason it’s going to feel like they are right in the middle of a brewery is because they are right in the middle of a brewery,” Welch said. And, with the Pelican’s liquor license covering the whole building, patrons will even get the chance to get on to the brewery floor itself for a game of shuffleboard or darts when brewing operations allow. Welch said this level of visibility will put the brewing team front and center. “It is incumbent on us to remain physically fit,” he said, “because everyone’s going to be looking at our butts.” Henson said the 44-seat tasting room, with another 30 seats on a patio, will serve Pelican favorites like fish and chips, spent grain burgers and chowder, as well as new, locally sourced items like elk and salmon burgers. From their seats on the patio, guests will be able to watch as trucks carrying bottles of Pelican beer head out to restaurants, bars and taverns throughout the Northwest, with the new premises capable of producing 12-ounce bottles as well as the Pelican’s signature 22-ouncers. Welch said being able to offer smaller beers

is a big step toward reaching new customers. “A lot of people are looking for six packs and never even look at the 22 set,” he said. Once the new facility is fully up and running, the brewery in Pacific City will return to its roots, a brewpub-scaled operation focusing purely on draft beer. Welch said plans for how to use the freed up space in Pacific City are still up in the air, with ideas ranging from a brewhouse testing room to events space. Meanwhile, he said, some of the brew crew can’t help but feel that the space would be just perfect for barrel-aged beer projects. Right now, the crew’s attention is elsewhere — namely on the first batch of beer that started working its way through the new system on Aug. 12. Named Stillwell #1 in honor of the Tillamook location, the brew is a strong pale ale that Welch said was chosen specifically because its simple ingredients will allow his team to learn as much as possible as quickly as possible about how the new system performs. “With two malts, two hops, water and yeast, you are limiting your variables,” he said. Welch said the beer, which should be ready by the end of the month, will differ from typical pine- and citrus-tinged Northwest pale ales, bringing a floral, spicy, almost perfume flavor while still packing a hoppy punch. The next thing to run through the system, he said, will probably be the Pelican’s bestselling Kiwanda Cream Ale — a beer famous for

being nominated three times in a row as one of the top 25 beers by Draft Magazine. Pints of Stillwell #1, Kiwanda Cream Ale and more will be on offer at the brewery’s grand opening, planned for mid September. Check the Coast Calendar for details nearer the date. Meanwhile, the Pelican Pub & Brewery in Pacific City is still open seven days a week, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner, 8 am to 10 pm Sunday through Thursday, and 8 am to 11 pm Friday and Saturday. For more information, call 503-965-7007 or go to www.PelicanBrewery.com.

The brewpub’s iconic Pacific City view

TODAY photo

Hops, they did it again We do love a good pun here at TODAY Towers and it is with great happiness that we can pass on news of the newest addition to a downright royal lineage of masterful brews from the House of Pelican. Having already settled on a rye beer for the latest in their Lone Pelican draft-only series, brewers could not help but notice that the beer shared a birthday with Prince George, the Duke of Cambridge. With round-the-clock TV coverage on both sides of the Atlantic, the name for the new beer just fell into place — Rye all the Fuss? The beer is available in draft only at the Pelican Pub & Brewery. Check the Coast Calendar for future additions to the series. TODAY photo

Ken Henson and Darron Welch at the new brewery site

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 11


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „ Welcome to the Oregon coast’s European-inspired cafe! Serving fresh, sweet and savory crepes, homemade soups and indulgent sandwiches! We feature local produce, Italian coffee and gelato, imported French wines, as well as a variety of local art including mosaic art and hand crafted jewelry. 0QFO BN UP QN t $MPTFE 5VFT Located 2 miles North of Depoe Bay just off Hwy. 101 at Ocean View St. t UIFDBGFDFTUMBWJF DPN Featuring local and organic produce all summer! Look for the blue flag!

1 Weekend

#

Daytrip Spot... “Great ďŹ sh tacos & dogs... or a mean Mudslide with bourbon & Stumptown coffee.â€?

And on Thursday.... how about $ Jambalaya and Corn Bread Just

899

15% discount off food & drink items (excluding beer & wine) to Active Military and Veterans every day.

Please show your military ID.

Famous Mojitos, Fish Tacos & Dogs

Tiki’s at 51st “A Real Beach Shack�

3HW )ULHQGO\

0RQ )UL $0 30 6DW 6XQ $0 30

6: VW ‡ /LQFROQ &LW\

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Harbor Lights Inn Presents

Italian Nights at Harbor Lights

Breakfast 8AM-11AM

All served with fruit salad

– Sunset Magazine

$V VHHQ RQ 79¡V stâ€? we “Go North

NOW Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner at Deli 101! Breakfast Specials... Sammies, Burritos & Quiche

Cool Beach Vibe!

Gluten Free Options

Featuring: Hand Made Pastas, Home Made Sauces, & Crab Stuffed Ravioli

Every Friday and Saturday from 5 PM

Sandwiches, Hot Soups, Salads, Paninis, Beverages & Beer

Parties of 5 or more require reservations Our Full Bar is also open on these nights.

Open at 8 AM Closed Sunday 1509 NW Highway 101 Lincoln City 541 614 1300 facebook.com/deli101LC

235 SE Bayview Ave., Depoe Bay

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Pizza Every Sunday 5-8 PM

3026 N.E. Hwy. 101, Lincoln City 12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

541-996-1006


on the cover

To Yz ’n the hood

Find a sweet ride at Surf City this weekend

No hood can hold it

Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

T

he word ‘classic’ conjures different images for different people. For some, it brings to mind the works of F. Scott Fitzgerald; for others the cinematic majesty of “Lawrence of Arabia.” But for the folks gathering at Chinook Winds Casino Resort this weekend, a true classic weighs in at about a ton and comes complete with chrome hubcaps and a lot of horsepower. The 14th Annual Surf City Classic Car Show will offer everything from hot rods and custom cars to trucks and Corvettes against a backdrop of vendors, live music and a beer garden — all on the field directly behind the casino. Classic cars and trucks will be judged Saturday, Aug. 24, with judging of the PT Cruiser, Corvette and Tuners divisions taking place Sunday, Aug. 25. A total of $5,000 in cash and prizes is up for grabs, and the job of deciding which car owners take home the loot and the glory falls to Jim Tough and his fellow enthusiasts from the Newport-based Bay City Cruisers car club. “You see every type,” he said, “from cars that are trailered in by guys that don’t want to drive them for fear that a pebble might hit it or

that a grasshopper will stick to the windshield … all the way down to rat rods.” Rat rods, Tough explains, are where the world of classic cars collides with that of jigsaw puzzles. “It’s where someone takes pieces from all kinds of different cars and puts them together,” he said. “So you can end up with parts from a dozen different cars all on the same vehicle.” But the most common sight at the show is the muscle car — the high-powered Chevelles, Mustangs and Camaros that dominated the market in the ’60s and early ’70s, when gas was cheap and the V8 was king. Tough said a lot of the muscle

car owners he meets at shows are people who were young when those cars first came on the market but could never afford one because they were starting a family. “Now the family is away at college,” he said, “and they think ‘by golly, I’m going to get that car I always wanted.’” Himself the owner of a Model A roadster and a pair of 1930s Ford sedans, Tough specializes in judging stock cars while other members of the club apply their expertise to other categories. Like most car shows, Surf City draws its fair share of popular makes such as Fords and Chevys. Asked what he would most like to see roll into view this week-

If you go

Music schedule

WHAT: Surf City Classic Car Show 2013 WHERE: Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street, Lincoln City

Saturday, Aug. 24 THE BLUE VALENTINES — 10 am-noon FABULOUS FARELANES — 12:30-2:30 pm

WHEN: 10 am-8 pm, Saturday, Aug. 24; 10 am-6 pm, Sunday, Aug. 25

ONE WAY OUT — 5-7 pm

Sunday, Aug. 25 SHWING DADDIE — 10 am-noon

COST: Free CALL: 1-888-6665

end, Tough said he would love to see something from one of the lesser-known, now defunct U.S. automakers — like Hudson, which operated out of Detroit from 1909 to 1954, or the Indiana-based Auburn, which produced cars from 1900 to 1936. Whether Tough will get his wish remains to be seen but visitors to this year’s event do have a chance at winning a brand new muscle car from the three U.S. automakers that are very much alive and kicking. Chinook Winds Casino Resort is giving away a 2013 Chevy Camaro SS, a 2013 Dodge Challenger RS, and a 2013 Ford Mustang GT throughout the weekend. The prize drawings will be held at 10 pm on

THE OCEAN — 12:30-2:30 pm Summer. Time to hit the grill.

Friday and Saturday, and at 6 pm on Sunday. Complete rules are available at www.chinookwindscasino.com. And, as if the noise of three people winning their dream cars is not enough, the casino will also be giving car owners the chance to turn the volume up to 11 at the Surf City SoundOff 2013. Now in its fourth year, the contest will not only be trying to find who has the loudest car stereo, but also the best sound quality. The contest will run from 10 am to 4:30 pm on Sunday, with judging at 5 pm. Producers of the most plentiful, crispest decibels will earn points toward qualification to October’s dB Drag Racing World Finals in Huntsville, Alabama. Registration for the Surf City car show is $10 and includes a t-shirt and $5 in free slot play. All registration proceeds go to support Angels Anonymous, a nonprofit that helps Lincoln City residents with basic, immediate needs. To register your vehicle, contact Kelli Duhamel at 541-996-5312 or kellid@cwcresort.com. For more information, call 1-888-6665 or 541-996-5825; or go to www.chinookwindscasino.com. The show runs from 10 am to 8 pm on Saturday and from 10 am to 6 pm on Sunday and is free to view.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 13


saturday • aug. 24

friday • aug. 23

Coast Calendar

Seffarine Newport Performing Arts Center Inspired by the sounds of Moroccan marketplaces, this duo plays traditional Arabic and Andalusian music as well as new songs inspired by Spanish flamenco, classical Persian music and American jazz. $14. 7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. FMI, call 541-264-8445 or 503-812-6726.

“The Fox on the Fairway” Theatre West • Lincoln City A tribute to the great English farces of the 1930s and 1940s, this comedy from Ken Ludwig pulls the rug out from underneath the stuffy denizens of a private country club in a furiously paced tale filled with mistaken identities, slamming doors, and over-the-top romantic shenanigans. Doors at 7:30 pm, curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $12/ adults; $10/seniors and students; $8/under 12s. To reserve tickets, call 541-994-5663, leave a message.

mandolin, Greek bouzouki and didgeridoo. 7-9 pm, 4821 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-996-2569.

Bike/ped safety training Newport Recreation Center Learn about teaching bike and pedestrian safety to youths in this session from Lynne Mutrie of the Oregon Safe Routes to School program. Free. 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, 225 SE Avery Street. FMI or to RSVP, contact Tarah Campi at tcampi@ocwcog. org or 541-924-8480.

Return to the Islands Oceanview Senior Living • Newport The Annual Community Luau at Oceanview is their way of saying “thank you.” Chandler Davis leads off again this year with a drum circle and Polynesian log drumming, followed once again by authentic Hawaiian dancing with Shannon Rackowski. Golden oldies hit parade, free luau feast, free refreshments and a Master Gardener adaptive gardening demonstration. 2-4 pm, 525 Northeast 71st Street. 541-574-0550.

Get wired Heartsong Beads • Seal Rock Learn how to make a pendant with wire for earrings, beaded connectors and more in this free demo. 1-2 pm, 10343 North Pacific Hwy. FMI, call 541 563 8789.

Seffarine

The Friday Blowout Jennifer Sears Glass Art Studio • Lincoln City See the glass artists turn their skills to more complex creations than the famous glass floats while enjoying live music from Traveler — playing original songs on

Manzanita Farmers Market 5th and Laneda • Manzanita Fresh vegetables crafts and more. 5-8 pm in the Kamali/Sotheby’s Realty parking lot, 5th and Laneda. FMI, call 503-939-5416 or go to manzanitafarmersmarket.com.

Surf City Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City See classic cars from hot rods to Corvettes at this annual celebration of all things shiny, all against a backdrop of vendors, live music and a beer garden. Classic cars and truck categories judged today. Free. 10 am-8 pm, 1777 NW 44th Street.

In plein sight Alder Creek Farm • Nehalem Plein air instructor Bjorn Lundeen will lead this workshop, set in 54-acres of gardens, creeks and wetlands, offering views of the estuary, bay and ocean. 10 am-2 pm. $50 for Lower Nehalem Community Trust members and $65 for general public, including lunch and materials. Bring an easel and a favorite chair or stool. FMI, call 503-801-0969.

inspired music from this vocalist and oud player duo. $20. 7 pm, 1816 NE Hwy. 101. To reserve tickets, call 541-2648445 or 503-812-6726.

Neskowin Farmers Market

“The Fox on the Fairway”

Neskowin Beach Wayside Shop with the locals at the coast’s most intimate farmers market. 9 am-1 pm, right off Highway 101.

Theatre West • Lincoln City A tribute to the great English farces of the 1930s and 1940s, this comedy from Ken Ludwig pulls the rug out from underneath the stuffy denizens of a private country club in a furiously paced tale filled with mistaken identities, slamming doors, and over-the-top romantic shenanigans. Doors at 7:30 pm, curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $12/ adults; $10/seniors and students; $8/under 12s. To reserve tickets, call 541-994-5663, leave a message.

The Coast Music Collective Lincoln City Cultural Center Ten Portland musicians will play two concerts — one for kids and one for over 21s — to raise funds for arts and music programs at Taft Elementary school. Americana folk artist Mo Phillips headlines the show. 3 pm and 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. 3 pm show: $5 for people aged 5 and over. 7 pm show: $20 in advance or $22 at the door. To book, call 541-994-9994.

Grand opening The Signal Music & Technology • Lincoln City Refreshments, demos and prizes, including items from the Oregon Surf Shop in Lincoln City and Gerlitz Guitar Care in Salem, will be on offer as this new business opens its doors. 10 am-6 pm, 1800 SE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541669-0038.

Newport Farmers Market 2013 Summer Art Walk Pacific City The beach town shows its art chops in this stroll, including local galleries, an artisans fair at the Kiawanda Community Center and a pop-up gallery at The Village Merchants. 10 am-5 pm. Continues Aug. 25. FMI, go to www. pacificcityarts.org.

Seffarine Nepali Kitchen • Lincoln City Enjoy a full Asian meal against a backdrop of Moroccan-

Mo Phillip Newport City Hall s Fresh bread, fresh veg, crafts and treats. 9 am-1 pm, Hwy. 101 and Angle Street. FMI, go to www. newportfarmersmarket.org.

Tillamook Farmers Market 2nd Street • Tillamook In the land of fresh milk, find fresh veg, fresh fruit and fresh bread. 9 am to 2 pm, 2nd Street and Laurel Avenue. FMI, contact Lauren at 503-812-9326.

Corvallis or bust Newport 60+ Activity Center Grab a seat for this trip to Corvallis, including a visit to the Rose Garden, lunch at an Indian restaurant and a trolley car tour of historical homes. $44. Bus leaves at 9 am from the center, 20 SE 2nd Street. To reserve a seat, drop by or call 541-265-9617.

Old MacDonald had a drum

Garden of the future Yachats Community Garden Join the master gardeners as they demonstrate rainwater catchment, composting, solar-fan cooling, garden projects, sensory garden and lots more. Noon-3 pm, 7th Street.

The Ranch • Yachats Top off the Yachats River Valley Farm Tour with a countrystyle drum circle lead by the Newport Drum Circle Ensemble on a cattle ranch specializing in grass-fed beef. Enjoy baked goods, coffee, soft drinks for an optional donation. 10 am-4 pm,10740 South Fork River Road. The drumming starts about noon with a boom-boom here and a boom-boom there…

TODAY photo

sunday • aug. 25

saturday • aug. 24, cont. course. The Buccaneer Rampage will see adult competitors bring their Aye! game to try and scoop prizes for the best costumes and top finishers in each age group. The event will also feature an after party, with music, food and a beer garden. $45 to register on the day. FMI, go to www.buccaneerrampage.com.

Surf City Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City Overdose on chrome as judging takes place for the PT Cruiser, Corvette and Tuner divisions at this celebration of classic cars. Find out whose box has the most boom at the car stereo contest. Vendors, live music and a beer garden will complete the fun. Free. 10 am-8 pm, 1777 NW 44th Street.

Manzanita Home Tour Aaaar you ready to rampage?

Dig deep up river Yachats River Valley Road Meet “up the river folks” who are using their land to raise anything from llamas to edible flowers at the fourth annual Yachats River Valley Farm Tour. The free, self-guided tour includes seven farms, offering products including honey, vegetables and herbs. Download a tour map from the events section of www.yachats.org.

Avast… pile of mud Newport Airport What’s more fun than tackling flaming hurdles and rope walls on a course made of slimy mud? Doing the whole thing dressed as a pirate, of

Manzanita area The 16th annual home tour organized by Kiwanis and the Women’s Club of North County will take in six homes, with hostesses providing tours and refreshments at each. 10 am-4 pm. Tickets, $10, available on the day of the tour from a booth in Howell’s Square, downtown Manzanita. FMI, call Mary at 503368-7002.

“Coming Out as a Person of Faith” Atonement Lutheran Church • Newport Everyone is invited to this discussion, centered on a multi-media project that reveals the experiences,

Bird walk Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area • Newport Join Brian Fowler for a field trip entitled ‘Lighthouse keepers and their interaction with birds.’ Part of National Lighthouse Month. 8 am, Lighthouse Drive. FMI, go to www.yaquinalights. org/events.html.

stories, and perspectives of clergy, parents of gays and lesbians, and LGBT couples of faith who support marriage equality. 2-4 pm, 2315 N. Coast Highway. FMI, call 541-265-7194.

Artist Reception Congregational Church of Lincoln City View rice paper collage and other works from Portlandarea artist Barbara Rodway. All pieces are for sale. 12:15-1:15 pm, 1760 NW 25th Street.

Now, that’s crafty Lincoln City Community Center Stop in at the Lincoln County Crafters and Artisans Bazaar to find hand-crafted goods including furniture, clothing, accessories, gemstone and sterling silver jewelry, baked goods, art and more — all from local vendors. Free admission. Noon-5 pm, 2150 NE Oar Place. FMI, call 541-994-2131.

2013 Summer Art Walk Pacific City The beach town shows its art chops in this stroll, including local galleries, an artisans fair at the Kiawanda Community Center and a pop-up gallery at The Village Merchants. 10 am-5 pm. FMI, go to www. pacificcityarts.org. Hit the grill at Surf City

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

Lincoln City Farmers Market Lincoln City Cultural Center Drop by the front lawn of the cultural center to sample coffee, cookies, crafts, treats and pick up fresh produce. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994. FMI, go to www.lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

Yachats Farmers Market

Janice Kobow Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport Kobow’s impressionistic realist works will be on show through Sept. 6 in this Artist Spotlight show. 10 am-4 pm, daily, 789 NW Beach Drive.

Yachats Commons Fresh produce, crafts and more. 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, go to http://yachatsfarmersmarket.webs. com.

Step up!

Enter sandman

Tillamook Elks Lodge Learn western style dancing with Jim Hattrick. Couples, singles, families and beginners all welcome. 6:30 to 8:30 pm, 1907 3rd Street. FMI, call Carolyn at 503-801-4044 or go to www.wavesteppers.org.

Lincoln City Cultural Center Hear lullabies and serenades from around the world as classical guitar virtuoso Aaron Larget-Caplan performs works from Spain, the U.S. and Japan. 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $10 in advance, $12 at the door, on sale now at the center or by calling 541-994-9994.

Paddle the refuge

Hands-on Summer Salads

“Starfis

obow anice K h” by J

thursday • aug. 29

Salishan Lodge • Gleneden Beach. Insurance agent Charlotte Lehto will address the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce Lunch Forum about Oregon’s new online marketplace where businesses and individuals can shop for health and dental coverage. $12.50. 11:45am, 7760 N. Hwy. 101. RSVP by Friday, Aug. 23, by calling 541-994-3070.

Gaither & Logsden • Siletz Find locally produced goods at the coast’s newest farmers market. 2-6 pm, 162 S. Gaither Street at the corner of Logsden Road. FMI, contact Tina Retasket at 541-444-2144 or at siletzvalleyfarmersmarket@hotmail.com.

Pacific City Library Come see this market packed with fresh produce and local crafts. 10 am-2 pm at the library on the corner of Brooten Road and Camp Street.

wed. • aug. 28

Cover Oregon

Paddle the refuge TODAY photo

Siletz Valley Farmers Market

Pacific City Farmers Market

South Beach Community Center • Newport Go beyond potato or macaroni in a class that includes Vietnamese noodle salad, Mediterranean bread salad, Italian bean and tuna salad and grilled Caesar salad. 1-4 pm 3024 SE Ferry Slip Road. $39, includes ingredients, instruction and recipes. To reserve a spot, call 971-5066695 or email pati@apostochefs.com.

tuesday • aug. 27

monday • aug. 26

Siletz Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Lincoln City Learn about the wildlife and natural history of the refuge on this two-hour guided canoe and kayak trip from the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Binoculars, field guides, and personal flotation devices are available. 5-7 pm. To make a reservation, contact Julia Ledbetter at 541270-0610 or julia_ledbetter@fws.gov.

Summer Surf School Ossie’s Surf Shop • Newport Learn how to surf or learn how to surf better at this three-day class. Two hours each day. Rental gear included. Just bring a positive attitude. $110. Open to anyone 9 years or older. One-day drop in also available for $60. Call 541-5744634 or sign up online at ossiessurfshop.com.

Siletz Valley Farmers Market Gaither & Logsden • Siletz Find locally produced goods at the coast’s newest farmers market. 2-6 pm, 162 S. Gaither Street at the corner of Logsden Road. FMI, contact Tina Retasket at 541-444-2144 or at siletzvalleyfarmersmarket@hotmail.com.

Waldport Farmers Market Waldport Community Center Bread, coffee, art and treats all in the heart of downtown. 10 am-4:30 pm.

“The Fox on the Fairway” Theatre West • Lincoln City A tribute to the great English farces of the 1930s and 1940s, this comedy from Ken Ludwig pulls the rug out from underneath the stuffy denizens of a private country club in a furiously paced tale filled with mistaken identities, slamming doors, and over-the-top romantic shenanigans. Doors at 7:30 pm, curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $12/ adults; $10/seniors and students; $8/under 12s. To reserve tickets, call 541-994-5663, leave a message.

Plein Air Painting

Thursday in August, 620 NE Hwy 101. FMI, call 503-5801773 or email: kyteart@yahoo.com.

Hands-on Pizza Experience South Beach Community Center • Newport Join Chef Bruce for an afternoon of authentic Napolitanastyle pizza, using cold fermentation pizza dough. Learn how to properly top a pizza with various ingredients, and about two kinds of tomato sauces that will make your pizza sing. $39. 1-4 pm, 3024 SE Ferry Slip Road. Call 971-5066695 or email pati@apostochefs.com to reserve your spot.

“Jonah and the Great Fish”

Aaron Larget-Caplan

Artists’ Studio Association • Lincoln City Instructor Katia Kyte will demonstrate techniques before students try for themselves in a class that will see morning outdoor painting followed by fun and honest critique in the classroom. $80 for ASA members/$95 for non-members; 8:30 am–1:30 pm each

All Nations Lutheran Church • Newport This one-day vacation Bible school will include Bible studies, crafts and songs. Open to all children ages 4-10 years old. 10 am to 2 pm, 358 NE 12th Street. To register, call Dorothy at 541-265-3174, or drop by after 9:30 am on Aug. 29.

Toledo Farmers Market Main Street • Toledo Produce and crafts from more than 40 vendors, right in downtown.10 am-2 pm.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 15


16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 17


learn a little

Nurture your natural side

Get a peace of the action

Registration is now open for the next sessions of Oregon Master Naturalist Online, a course from Oregon State University that explores the natural history of plants, animals, habitats and geology as well as theories of sustainable natural resource management. The fall course launches Sept. 9, and the winter course begins Jan. 20, next year. There are two ways to complete the course. Option 1 requires students to complete 40 hours of instructor-led online coursework, at a cost of $225, and one Ecoregion Specialization course, for which there is an additional fee, before completing 40 hours of volunteer work.

The peaceful town of Yachats will play host to a seminar on resolving conflict on Friday, Aug. 30, as the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences welcomes international troubleshooters Drs Amy and Arnold Mindell. The Mindells’ presentation, “Conflict Resolution and Open Forum Experience around the World,” will take place at 6:30 pm at the Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. Arnold Mindell developed process work or what is called today, “process oriented psychology” in the mid 1970s. Beginning with Taoism, physics and Jungian psychology, by the 1990s, he expanded

Option 2 does not involve volunteering and only requires students to complete the same 40 hours of instructor-led online coursework — this time at a cost of $325. Students will not become certified Oregon Master Naturalists after taking the course, but can apply the coursework towards certification if they eventually want to become certified. To register, go to https://pne.oregonstate. edu/catalog/oregon-master-naturalist-online. For more information, contact Program Coordinator Jason O’Brien at Jason. OBrien@oregonstate.edu.

Visit Oregon’s shortest lighthouse, the famous “Octopus Tree” and Oregon’s largest Sitka spruce, the “Big Spruce!” Enjoy easily accessible viewing decks – perfect for bird watching and spectacular ocean views.

Lighthouse Open 11am - 4pm Daily Mention this ad in the interpretive shop for a special thank you

process work to include quantum theory and “deep democracy.” Now process work applies individual therapy, body problems, coma and near death experiences, large group, and organizational change movement. Amy Mindell is best known for her development of the metaskill concept in process psychology; her process work on comatose states; and her artwork, which includes drawings, music, animation and puppets in the process work paradigm. There is no admission charge, but a $5 donation is requested to help cover publicity expenses. For more information, go to GoYachats.com or call 541-961-6695.

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800-COAST-44 • discovernewport.com 18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


one man’s beach C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y M A T T L O V E

His name is Butch N ot long ago, the husky and I made a sojourn to my old stomping grounds of Pacific City to visit my favorite sacred place in the world, Nestucca Spit, in Bob Straub State Park. It was here, for 10 years, that I rambled with my three big dogs, Ray, Jo Jo, and Sonny. Now I’m down to one who can barely walk. During my visit, I was hoping to run into one of my favorite local characters, a man who has a love for dogs and beaches that perhaps surpasses mine. His name is Butch. He lives in Pacific City and fishes from his dory. He drives a beater truck and doesn’t truck much with environmentalists and writers who write in the Sportsman Tavern where he drinks beer. I bet we disagree on every crucial political and cultural issue threatening to crumble the Empire, although it is possible he favors the legalization of marijuana, doesn’t care if a man wants to marry a man, and thinks Bill Walton was truly a God among men. Butch and I can agree, however, on two things that bind us like blood brothers: 1) Repealing the 18th Amendment was necessary to preserve the union and promote the general welfare; 2) Nobody messes with our dogs on Oregon Coast beaches! When I lived in the area, I never beat Butch to the Spit in the early mornings. Once, my record arrival time was 5:39 am and I thought this might be my only shot at victory. But no, Butch was already there, the tail gate of his truck down, the canopy propped open. I backed up next to him, gave a curse, and fumbled

around the cab for a flashlight. The canine crew barked impatiently and scratched at the windows. They couldn’t see anything outside but they knew where they were. The Spit drove them absolutely mad. We rambled south down the Spit and Sonny chased the flashlight’s beam while Ray and Jo Jo broke off to scout the dunes. A quarter mile later, I saw it — Butch’s flashlight wobbling from the other direction. He was always accompanied by two gargantuan, furry and friendly monsters, Ten Beers and Bosephus. I kept walking toward the light and knew that in a few minutes all five dogs would collide in the surf. I never actually saw this collision, but their snarling yet friendly sounds when they did had to be one of the holier sounds in Oregon and only two dudes of opposite political persuasions on the beach ever heard it. I call that common sand. In these flashlight mornings, Butch and I would always make quick chats, never really stopping, but not hurrying past one another either. He once told me he hit the beach every morning, rain or not, hangover be damned, walking his dogs before he went to work. He never once asked me what I was doing there. I guess it was obvious. I’ll never forget the time I brought along Elizabeth, a woman I was dating then. Butch gave her an expert non-didactic education in constellations and a smooth discourse on the luminescent biological entities then lighting up the wrack line like something out of a B science fiction movie. He also knew why the sea foam frothed

the way it did. He reminded me of Doc from Steinbeck’s Cannery Row, easily that author’s greatest book: the Great American Tidal Novel. Over the years, Butch and I had many good chats, always right to the point. Nothing banal about the weather or the machinations in the White House, then ruled by a Republican. Never about how Oregon’s legacy of publicly-owned beaches stood undeniably as the state’s pinnacle of socialism. It was usually about dogs or the cool things he encountered at the beach, things you never encounter unless you go to the beach at five in the morning. Sonny and I didn’t see Butch on the Spit the other day. In fact, we didn’t see anyone, which is fine, vastly preferred. I had heard that one of Butch’s gentle giants had passed away a while back and that news saddened me. I wondered how he dealt with that loss. One dog just simply isn’t the same on the beach as two or three. Just as I was pulling out of Pacific City, near the intersection with the only light in town, I saw a black dog with its massive furry head sticking out the canopy window of a red truck. His tongue flailed in the wind and he had the wild look of a beast on his way to the Spit. I never saw the driver but knew it could only be one man. Matt Love lives in South Beach with his husky, Sonny. His latest book, “Of Walking in Rain,” is available at nestuccaspitpress.com and coastal bookstores. He can be reached at lovematt100@yahoo. com.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 19


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Rhythm Culture • Aug. 23

Friday Aug. 23 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich

Saturday, Aug. 24

EROTIC CITY — No need to decipher symbols here. Dig out your Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, raspberry beret for this Prince tribute band. $5. 9 pm. THE SAN impersonations and comedy. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST DUNE PUB, 127 LANEDA AVENUE, MANZANITA, LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, 503-368-5080. 1-800-452-2159. THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich RHYTHM CULTURE — Combining their individual influences of the Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonations and comedy. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST Caribbean and the Americas, and using a roots reggae foundation, LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, this band infuses blues and jazz into their music, guaranteed to 1-800-452-2159. get even the most reluctant of dancers out of their chairs. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, THORN — 9 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW 541-994-7729.    HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, UNDRTOW — Lincoln County’s homegrown reggae band brings playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S its beats to Lincoln City. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734. HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.   UNDRTOW — Lincoln County’s homegrown reggae band are back MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, for another evening of island groove. 7:30 pm, CECIL’S DIRTY modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. playing SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.     ELIZABETH CABLE — Original folk and blues. 6-8 pm, SAVORY BRINGETTO-CAMERON JAZZ ORCHESTRA — 7-9 pm, CECIL’S CAFE & PIZZERIA, 562 NW DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST COAST STREET, NEWPORT.    HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264CHARLOTTE THISTLE — Come hear 8360. this girl with a guitar. 8:30-11:30 DIVA NITE —Stella Blue, Elizabeth pm, NANA’S IRISH PUB, 613 Cable & Richard Silen join Lozelle NW 3RD STREET, NEWPORT, Jennings for The Purple Cats’ 541-574-8787. Saturday Nite Sit-In. 8:30-11;30 THE GOLDEN GATE TRIO —Get pm, EMBARCADERO RESORT transported back to the heady HOTEL AND MARINA, 1000 days of the Haight in its prime. 7 SE BAY BLVD., NEWPORT, pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW 541-265-8521. COAST STREET, NEWPORT, RON CONNELL & EVAND LONG541-574-8134. SHORE — Classic rock. 8:30-11:30 SPINDRIFT — with Debbie Dypold pm, NANA’S IRISH PUB, 613 on viola, Margot Fetrow on hamNW 3RD STREET, NEWPORT, mered dulcimer, Evans Longshore 541-574-8787. on cello, and David Konowalchuk RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT on guitar. 6-8 pm. CLUB 1216, Listings are free. Venues and music makers in DRIVERS — This ensemble of musiCANYON WAY BOOKLincoln or Tillamook counties are invited to cians on instruments including guitar, STORE AND RESTAURANT, submit concerts, photos and corrections in bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals 1216 SW CANYON WAY, writing. Email them to news@oregoncoasttoday. get a groove on performing original, NEWPORT, 541-265-8319. rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm, CAFÉ com. Listings are organized from north to south, PARISH GAP — The Valley’s MUNDO, 209 NW COAST and the descriptions are generally provided best-known classy classic and ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. by the venue. Entrance is free unless otherwise original art rock band returns to the indicated. CLEAN SLATE DUO — Ever heard of coast. 8:30 pm to past midnight, “Electracoustic Bluesic?â€? It translates THE BAY HAVEN at 608 as indie rock/americana in a bluesySW BAY BLVD, ON THE BAY ish yet up tempo feel and a jazzy tilt. FRONT, NEWPORT, 541- 265-7271. The Clean Slate duo coined the term. Now come and hear them JUNE RUSHING TRIO — Who says three’s a crowd? 6:30-9 play some. 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT, 541-547-4477. 541-574-0986. Â

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


s o u n d wa v e s PARISH GAP — A second night of partying from the Valley’s best-

known classy classic and original art rock band. 8:30 pm to past midnight, THE BAY HAVEN at 608 SW BAY BLVD, ON THE BAY FRONT, NEWPORT, 541- 265-7271. RITCHIE G & TU TU KANE — Hawaiian style. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-5474477.

Sunday, Aug. 25 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — More jams than you could hope to find in Manhattan at rush hour. 4 pm OLD OREGON TAVERN, 1604 HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-8515. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 8:30 pm, SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-9964976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.  LOZELLE JENNINGS — presents The Pentacoastal Blues Jam, 4-7 pm. CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. ANNIE AVERRE — 10 am-1 pm, LA MAISON CAFÉ & BAKERY, 315 SW 9th NEWPORT, 541-265-8812. TU TU KANE — 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Monday, Aug. 26 ELIZABETH CABLE — That amber glow can mean just one thing, the

ruby-topped songstress has returned with yet more of her original work. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, Aug. 27 OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, SNUG

HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976. DEREK JEFFERSON — This 18-year-old performer will blow you away with his classical guitar. 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-0986.  BRINGETTO-CAMERON JAZZ ORCHESTRA — 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-5474477.

THE LARRY BLAKE JAZZ BAND — Cocktail Jazz... lively and sophisticated, but played by some cool cats with a sense of humor. You will enjoy tunes like “Wave,â€? “Satin Dollâ€?, “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars,â€? “Take Fiveâ€? and even the theme from The Flintstones. You never know what to expect with this band except fun. 7 pm, THE WING WA TIKI LOUNGE, 330 HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2288. SWEET BUTTER JAM OPEN MIC— 7-9 pm. CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360.   TONY KALTENBURG — From the wild and misty Oregon coast speaks a powerful voice for the mystical guitar tradition, with roots extending back through the innovative works of Fahey, Kottke and Hedges. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Thursday, Aug. 29 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich

Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonations and comedy. 6-9 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159.     MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734. STELLA BLUE AND FRIENDS — 7-9 pm. CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360.   OPEN MIC NIGHT — 7 pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. GOLDEN GATE TRIO — A pleasing rhythmic meld of acoustic Americana-folk-rock with a slight bluesy streak and dead-ish psychedelic roots. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734. ELIZABETH CABLE — Original folk and blues. 6-8 pm, SAVORY CAFE & PIZZERIA, 562 NW COAST STREET, NEWPORT.    PAUL VANDEBOGAARD AND SONS OF THE BEACHES — With Bill Stiffler on bass and harp, Doug Thurber on mandolin, and Evan Peterson on percussion, VanDenBogaard describes the Sons of the Beaches style as “beach bum music.â€? Expect a mix of original material with lots of finger-picking as well as a few classic covers from the world of folk, rock, and blues. — 7 pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. RICK BARTOW AND BARBARA LEE TURRILL — Original and classic blues, folk and gospel played on slide steel and acoustic guitars. 6-8 pm. CLUB 1216, CANYON WAY BOOKSTORE AND RESTAURANT, 1216 SW CANYON WAY, NEWPORT, 541-265-8319. RICHARD SHARPLESS — Folk, guitar and vocals. Originals and covers. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, Aug. 31 KARAOKE FROM HELL — A karaoke band? Isn’t that a contradic-

Friday Aug. 30 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich

Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonations and comedy. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159. NORMAN SYLVESTER — aka “The Boogie Cat,â€? Sylvester will lay down a blues performance that will leave you feeling the cat that got the cream. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.    BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — She’s got the brains. He’s got the looks. Together, they make beautiful music. Come out and hear your favorWednesday, Aug. 28 ites, by request. 8 pm, ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music GOLF RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371.  Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonMICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, ations and comedy. 7-9 pm. ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371.   playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S

DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? PAINT THE DATE, TIME AND VENUE IN FLAME PATTERNS ON THE SIDE OF A SWEET ’64 CHEVELLE AND CRUISE PAST MID CITY PLAZA. PREFER THE CLASSIC LOOK? JUST EMAIL US AT NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.

Erotic City • Aug. 24

The

After you beachcomb... Find More Treasures Here!

tion in terms? Maybe so, but come and find out what one sound like anyway. $5. 9 pm. THE SAN DUNE PUB, 127 LANEDA AVENUE, MANZANITA, 503-368-5080. THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonations and comedy. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 9 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-9964976. FACE 4 RADIO — Come find out what caused all the fuss at the Gleneden Beach Fourth of July Parade. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.   BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — The beautiful atmosphere is only the start; the duo plays requests all night. Come party! 8 pm, ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.     BRIAN CHEVALIER & HEAVY CHEVY — This group will rock the house with blues/soul/R&B so get your groove on and come on down. 7:30 pm, CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. SATURDAY NITE SIT-IN —Deane Bristow (vocals and harp) and Rob Connell (guitar) join The Purple Cats for this all-ages gig. 8:30-11:30 pm, EMBARCADERO RESORT HOTEL AND MARINA, 1000 SE BAY BLVD., NEWPORT, 541-265-8521. HIGH FIDELITY — Blues. 8:30-11:30 pm, NANA’S IRISH PUB, 613 NW 3RD STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — This ensemble of musicians on instruments including guitar, bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals get a groove on performing original, rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. CLEAN SLATE DUO — Ever heard of “Electracoustic Bluesic?â€? It translates as indie rock/americana in a bluesy-ish yet up tempo feel and a jazzy tilt. The Clean Slate duo coined the term. Now come and hear them play some. 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-0986.   RICHWOOD — Acoustic duo. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 21


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22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013

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By Dave Green

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minus tide

• BY JACK KENT


tide tables

SEAFOOD SPECIALS Friday, Saturday & Sunday

%YKYWX XL ‰ ;LMPI WYTTPMIW PEWX Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date

Thurs., Aug. 22 Fri., Aug. 23 Sat., Aug. 24 Sun., Aug. 25 Mon., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug. 27 Wed., Aug. 28 Thurs., Aug. 29

8:06 am 8:46 am 9:25 am 10:05 am 10:48 am 11:35 am 12:47 am 1:52 am

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date

Thurs., Aug. 22 Fri., Aug. 23 Sat., Aug. 24 Sun., Aug. 25 Mon., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug. 27 Wed., Aug. 28 Thurs., Aug. 29

8:16 am 8:56 am 9:36 am 10:16 am 10:58 am 12:07 am 1:12 am 2:21 am

Yaquina Bay, Newport Date

Thurs., Aug. 22 Fri., Aug. 23 Sat., Aug. 24 Sun., Aug. 25 Mon., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug. 27 Wed., Aug. 28 Thurs., Aug. 29

7:38 am 8:18 am 8:58 am 9:38 am 10:20 am 11:08 am 12:34 am 1:43 am

Alsea Bay, Waldport Date

Thurs., Aug. 22 Fri., Aug. 23 Sat., Aug. 24 Sun., Aug. 25 Mon., Aug. 26 Tues., Aug. 27 Wed., Aug. 28 Thurs., Aug. 29

8:04 am 8:44 am 9:24 am 10:04 am 10:46 am 11:33 am 12:49 am 1:56 am

Low Tides

-0.7 -0.2 0.5 1.3 2.1 2.8 1.3 1.3

High Tides

8:29 pm 9:15 pm 10:03 pm 10:53 pm 11:47 pm --12:32 pm 1:38 pm

0.6 0.5 0.6 0.8 1.0 -3.4 3.7

1:57 am 2:45 am 3:33 am 4:21 am 5:12 am 6:07 am 7:11 am 8:25 am

9.0 8.6 8.0 7.4 6.7 6.1 5.7 5.5

2:43 pm 3:21 pm 3:58 pm 4:36 pm 5:17 pm 6:03 pm 6:55 pm 7:56 pm

8.6 8.7 8.6 8.3 8.0 7.7 7.4 7.3

ALBACORE TUNA LOIN FRESH ............................. $8.49/LB VENUS STEAMERS CLAMS FRESH ............................... $3.29/LB 'D.LQH 6ZRUGĂ€VK

Low Tides

-0.4 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 0.7 0.8 0.9

High Tides

8:37 pm 9:26 pm 10:17 pm 11:10 pm --11:46 pm 12:43 pm 1:54 pm

0.5 0.4 0.4 0.6 -2.0 2.3 2.5

1:25 am 2:15 am 3:06 am 3:58 am 4:55 am 6:01 am 7:18 am 8:41 am

7.1 6.7 6.2 5.7 5.1 4.7 4.4 4.4

7:59 pm 8:48 pm 9:39 pm 10:32 pm 11:29 pm --12:05 pm 1:16 pm

0.7 0.6 0.7 0.8 1.0 -3.4 3.7

1:16 am 2:06 am 2:57 am 3:49 am 4:46 am 5:52 am 7:09 am 8:32 am

9.2 8.7 8.1 7.4 6.7 6.1 5.7 5.7

8:26 pm 9:14 pm 10:03 pm 10:53 pm 11:48 pm --12:29 pm 1:39 pm

0.3 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.7 -2.9 3.2

1:35 am 2:24 am 3:13 am 4:03 am 4:57 am 5:58 am 7:08 am 8:26 am

8.2 7.8 7.2 6.6 6.0 5.5 5.1 5.0

Low Tides

-0.6 0.0 0.7 1.5 2.2 2.9 1.2 1.3

6.7 6.8 6.7 6.5 6.3 6.0 5.8 5.6

High Tides

Low Tides

-0.9 -0.4 0.3 1.0 1.7 2.4 0.9 1.0

2:11 pm 2:49 pm 3:28 pm 4:09 pm 4:52 pm 5:40 pm 6:36 pm 7:40 pm

2:02 pm 2:40 pm 3:19 pm 4:00 pm 4:43 pm 5:31 pm 6:27 pm 7:31 pm

8.7 8.8 8.7 8.5 8.2 7.8 7.5 7.3

High Tides

2:19 pm 2:57 pm 3:36 pm 4:16 pm 4:59 pm 5:46 pm 6:41 pm 7:43 pm

7.9 7.9 7.9 7.6 7.3 7.0 6.7 6.5

Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia II� in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest of Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 23


potpourri

All aboard

The Newport 60+ Activity Center is running a trip to Corvallis on Saturday, Aug. 24, including a visit to the Rose Garden, lunch at an Indian restaurant and a trolley car ride. The bus will leave the center at 9 am, with the Rose Garden the ďŹ rst stop, followed by lunch at the Evergreen Indian Restaurant. After lunch, the group will board the trolley for a tour of historical homes in the area. If time allows, the bus will stop at Trader Joe’s on the way back to the coast, arriving back in Newport at about 5 pm. The cost of the trip is $44, including lunch and the trolley ride. To reserve a seat, drop by the center at 20 SE 2nd Street or call 541-265-9617.

A game that’s Hope floats tough to beat Bingo — let’s face it, not the most dynamic game on the planet. Sit down, grab your dabber and wait for the numbers to be called. Maybe you’ll get lucky. But add bongo drums to the equation and it’s a whole dierent story. Bongo Bingo will make its debut at the Sunday, Sept. 29, fund raiser for the North Lincoln County Historical Museum. Organizers are keeping details of exactly how the bongos will interact with the bingo a closely guarded secret, meaning the only way to ďŹ nd out is to buy a ticket and see for yourself. The event will take place from 3 to 5 pm at the Eventuary, a former mortuary

lovingly restored into an events center and located at 560 SW Fleet Avenue, Lincoln City. Tickets are $20 and include 12 traditional bingo games as well as door prizes. Winners will get to choose from a variety of prizes, including dinners at local restaurants and motel stays. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. For advance ticket sales or more information, call 541996-6614 or drop by the museum at 4907 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City. Seating is limited to 40 and unsold tickets will be available at the door. For a glimpse at the venue, go to www.theeventuary. com.

Registration is now open for the Paddle for Prevention, a kayak trip that marks the beginning of the inaugural Tillamook County Suicide Prevention Week. The Sunday, Sept. 8, trip will take high school students and parents through Hoquarton Forest near Tillamook, where the natural surroundings provide perspective, comfort and inspiration. The outing will run from 12:30 to 3 pm and is open to people aged 15 and older. The cost is $30 per person and a limited number of scholarships are available on a case-bycase basis. Register at kayaktillamook.com by Aug. 31. For more information on Tillamook County Suicide Prevention Week, which includes a kickboxing day, candelight vigil, and a fun run, go to talk_tillamook@yahoo.com.

TODAY photo

Find your reason to rhyme Organizers of the new Seascape poetry festival in Lincoln City are looking for entries on the themes of peace and justice for the festival’s poetry contest. The contest will be divided into two divisions: adults and youths under 17, with $25 prizes on oer for the winners.

Winners will be announced during the daylong Oct. 12 festival at the Congregational Church, which will also feature readings, workshops and discussion by four well-known Oregon writers and publishers, as well as an open mic for public participants.

Submissions must be received by Oct. 4 and should be mailed to: Seascape, P.O. Box 838, Neskowin OR, 97149. Fore more information, contact Opening Door at 541921-1395 or 503-391-3717 or via email at openingdoor.lc@ gmail.com.

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24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


urchins

Stretch yourself a little

The Newport School of Artistic Movement has opened registration for its fall classes, oering instruction in a wide range of styles for students aged 3 and up, from beginner to advanced. Director Nancy Mittleman, has been training dancers from preschool to professional for more than 40 years. In addition to Mittleman’s classes in contemporary ballet, the school oers hip hop and African dance taught by Abdoulaye Thioub; Adult Beginning Ballet with Jessie Pelletier; and a ballet class especially designed for young men, taught by Audrey Young. Young joined Mittleman last year, bringing 14 years of classical ballet training, including time at Ballet Russe De Monte Carlo, Cirque du Soleil, American Ballet Theatre, and The Royal Ballet in London. Thioub, who has been at the school for ďŹ ve years, is the son of Meissa Thioub, director of Ballets Africains Sangomar in Senegal, and was raised in the Griot tradition of West African storytelling. Thioub has been teaching dance since he was a teenager in Dakar and regularly performs and teaches

in Boston and New York City. Pelletier, herself a graduate of the Newport school, has been dancing for more than 30 years, continuing her studies in Portland with Oregon Ballet Theater, The Renoux Studio and Betsy Abts’ American Dance Theatre in Seattle. Meanwhile, Erika Sugrue, who has danced for more than 20 years, continues in her 10th year as assistant director for Mittleman, working with the school’s 3-8 year olds. Mittleman will also be oering a moms and tots class, aimed at helping new moms get back in shape, while physically enriching their infants. Students registering before Sept. 1 receive a 10-percent discount on the ďŹ rst month’s tuition. For more details, call 541-961-2316 or email paciďŹ cdanceensemble@msn. com.

The department is again sponsoring a middle school cross country team for kids of all running abilities. The program features a variety of running routes, both on- and o-road, to keep participants motivated. “It’s also a great way to get into shape for winter sports,â€? said coach Gail Kimberling, herself a 12-time marathon ďŹ nisher. The season will run from Aug. 26 through Oct. 27, with practices held Monday to Thursday. Prior to Labor Day, practices will be from 4 to 5 pm at the Lincoln

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If you’re looking for a way to keep your kids on the move this fall, the Lincoln City Recreation Department has the answer — cross-country running for students in grades 6 through 8.

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City Community Center. Once school begins, practices will be from 4 to 5 pm at the Taft High track. A list of meets will be provided upon registration. Parents are responsible for transportation to all away meets. The cost is $35 per student, and includes a sweatshirt. Registration deadline is Friday, Aug. 23, at the community center. For more information, call the center at 541-994-2131 or Kimberling at 541-557-1137.

To hear all the highlights of your favorite team keep your radio tuned to AM 1310 AM KNPT or 1400 AM KBCH.

Plus, Lincoln County’s high school sports action!

Keep our stations on your presets, and tune in during power outages for news updates!

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 25


artsy

Rocking the art world PaciďŹ c City will transform itself from a sleepy beach town into a thriving artistic hub this weekend as the PaciďŹ c City Art Association’s Summer 2013 Art Walk gets underway. Among the stops on the route is the Kiawanda Community Center, where the Nestucca Valley Artisans will be holding their 21st annual festival, with 14 local artists and craftspeople displaying and selling their works. The artists will be on hand to discuss everything from paintings to rugs and jewelry to calligraphy. Selected works of art, donated by each of the artisans, will be given away in a drawing during the event, with proceeds helping the association continue its support of arts and art education TODAY photo in the communities and schools of the Nestucca Valley. Previous support has included the purchase of art supplies in local public schools; salaries for invited lecturers at art workshops; subscriptions to art-oriented periodicals for

local libraries and schools; an annual art prize at the Tillamook County Fair; cash donations to the Community Art Project; and last year’s donation of a mural to the public library in PaciďŹ c City. The free festival, sponsored in part by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts and the Oregon Arts Commission, runs from 10 am to 5 pm on Saturday, Aug. 24, and Sunday, Aug. 25, at the Kiawanda Community Center, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive. Refreshments will be available. For more information, call Marilyn Burkhardt at 503-392-3333; Julius Jortner at 503-965-7016; or the Kiawanda Center at 503-965-7900. Other stops on the Art Walk route include The Corner; The Dapper Frog; The Rowboat Gallery; The Stimulus CafĂŠ; and The Gallery at Ron Trost Real Estate as well as a special pop-up gallery that will be set up at The Village Merchants in the center of town. The pop up gallery which has the theme “Smooth Beaches and Flat Bottomed Boats,â€? will feature work from artists including Rose Perez, Merrie Jo Snow, Tyrone Marshall and Norm Eder. Half of the proceeds from the gallery’s sales will go toward the PaciďŹ c City Arts Association. For more information, go to www. paciďŹ ccityarts.org.

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Painter Dana Hulburt with her work

Bill of fair ARTS AT THE NESTUCCA VALLEY ARTISANS FESTIVAL WILL INCLUDE: MARILYN BURKHARDT — oils, encaustics, block prints

MIKE LONEY — paintings, giclÊes

MARY JO BARTELS — glassworks

TY AND TAMARA MAUTNER — Gyotaku fish prints

VICTOR GUSCHOV — mixed media, paintings, jewelry

DONNA LUDWIG PETERSON — oil paintings

SHIRLEY HAINES — textiles and rugs

ALITA PEARL — handmade leather bags, sterling

CAL HAMREUS — metalwork DANA HULBURT — paintings, mixed media JULIUS JORTNER — photographs

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artsy

A marriage of styles Watercolors from husband and wife team Victoria and Anthony Stoppiello will be on show throughout August at the Bay City Arts Center. The show, entitled “Near and Far...in Some Cases, Far Out,” features individual and collaborative pieces from the pair, both of whom took up watercolors as a way to relax after their day jobs. Anthony, an architect who has been designing solar buildings for more than 35 years, saw the

“Sailing” (left) and “Starfishes” by Janice Kobow

medium as the antidote to the precise construction drawings he produces each day. Meanwhile, Victoria says watercolor helps her get away from all the ‘left-brain thinking’ required by her administrative work. The show is open by appointment through Aug. 28 at the center, 5680 A Street, Bay City. To make an appointment or for more information, email baycityartscenter@gmail.com.

A place for peerless photos

Making an impression

The impressionistic realism of Janice Kobow will be on display at the Yaquina Art Association Gallery in Newport, from Friday, Aug. 24, to Sept. 6, in a two-week Artist Spotlight show. Kobow studied fine art at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion. She moved to the Newport area in 2001 and joined the association, where she has enjoyed studying with local artists. The gallery, located at 789 NW Beach Drive, is open daily from 10 am to 4 pm.

The Yaquina Art Association is looking for entries for its 2013 Juried Show of Photography, an exhibition aimed at highlighting the talent of photographers throughout the Pacific Northwest. The exhibition will be on show throughout November at the Yaquina Art Gallery in Newport. It is open to all U.S. resident photographers 18 years old and over working

with all photographic techniques and processes except video. Entrants can submit up to four images completed in the past three years. A non-refundable $10 entry fee will be charged for each entry up to four total entries. All entries will be juried online and can be submitted at www. yaquinaart.org/show2013. The deadline for entry is Sept. 15.

Final judging for the prizes will be done on the printed image submitted for hanging. Five cash prizes are up for grabs, including a $700 Best of Show Award; $500 First Place; and $200 Second Place prize. In addition, $100 prizes will be on offer for the Mayor’s Award and People’s Choice. For more information about YAA and the show, email Ted Crego at show@yaquinaart.org.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013 • 27


28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 23, 2013


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