oregon coast
FREE! July 8, 2016 • ISSUE 3, VOL. 12
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 1
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Remembering Laurel Dannen All at TODAY Towers were saddened to hear last week’s news of the passing of Laurel Dannen, owner of The Red Cock craftsmen’s outlet in Lincoln City — an establishment that has graced these pages for many years. As well as an overwhelming selection of items from all corners of the globe, Laurel oered a warm welcome to all who came through her door, as described in this vignette written last year by Libby Durbin. ••• A bell on the door handle announces your entrance to a long
room where you’re confronted by exotic goods of every sort clamoring for your attention. You try to take in the mÊlange of colors, textures, shapes and subtle scents. You notice piles of purses, bins overowing with scarves, bars of soap, Tibetan prayer ags, carved Buddhas of wood and stone, dreamcatcher jars and Christmas ornaments, hemp yarn and geodes, sailor’s knots bracelets and decorated notebooks, marimbas and mood rings, string bags and candles, Indian temple incense and fossil shark’s teeth, utes, gourds, and chopsticks, beads, boxes, and bowls. And receding into the distance, dozens of tightly packed racks of women’s clothing.
Then you detect a slight movement to your right, behind a curtain of necklaces, bracelets, pins and earrings and see the short blonde hair and round smiling face of the owner, Laurel Dannen. She looks comfortable behind all the bling. After all, she’s been managing the Red Cock for 42 years. In 1972, Laurel and her husband, Mike Soeby, a potter, opened the store in order to show Mike’s work, along with the pottery of their friends, macrame, paintings, carvings, a few antiques and modular boxes. When Mike and Laurel divorced in 1975, Laurel took over the shop and began adding clothing in the 1980s.
2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
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from the editor Over the years the shop has been in four locations, all within ďŹ ve blocks, on the same side of the highway. “I probably have something from every country in the world,â€? Laurel said, “except for a few African nations too small to have products yet for an international market. I’ve practiced Fair Trade since the beginning, long before it became fashionable.â€? The bell jingles. More customers. Laurel tells you, “I haven’t traveled much, but maybe this shop is my way of traveling vicariously, because I have a deep and abiding interest in other cultures.â€? “I’m going to retire in two years, come hell or high water, and my wish
is for someone to take it over who has the same passion I have, for this kind of store.� You buy four magnets depicting a buttery, two shells, and a cloth kimono. Laurel puts them in a richly embossed red and gold envelope of Chinese design for you. The bell bids you adieu. ••• The Red Cock remains open for business, so please drop by to pay your respects and pick up that special something. Word of Laurel’s memorial service will follow in our coast calendar.
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ARTISTIC DUST-UP RETURNS TO LINCOLN CITY The Lincoln City Chalk Art Competition will return for its third year on Saturday, July 9, inviting everyone from professional artists to complete beginners to transform the sidewalks into colorful works of art. The contest will run from 11 am to 3 pm on the west side of the Lincoln City Cultural Center, housed inside the historic Delake School building, at 540 NE Hwy. 101. Center sta and volunteers will provide the vivid pastel chalk, along with spray bottles with water and sponges. There will also be hot dogs, beverages and snacks for sale throughout the day. Artists can arrive as early as 10:45 am, or as late as 2:30 pm, with squares of sidewalk assigned on a ďŹ rst-comeďŹ rst-served basis. Priority placement will be given to early registrants. Judging will be held at 3 pm and prizes awarded immediately after. Prizes will be up for grabs in the categories of six and under, 7-11, 12-17, 18 and older, and Family/Group. There will also be a grand prize of $50 cash for the People’s Choice Award. The registration fee for the sidewalk chalk art competition is $5 for kids aged six and under and $10 for ages 7 and up. Entrants can purchase squares next
4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
to each other to produce a group work. Registration forms can be picked up at the cultural center or downloaded from www.lincolncityculturalcenter.org. This year, the cultural center is partnering with the Lincoln City Parks & Recreation Department’s Trekking summer day camp program. Participants in the program, in grades K-6, will travel from their home base at Oceanlake Elementary School to take part in their very own chalk art fest at the cultural center on Friday, July 8. Their work will be in place on the sidewalks around the center to inspire the competitors in the public event scheduled for the next day. To learn more about Trekking, which is open
every weekday throughout the summer and features a variety of fun activities, call 541-9942131. “We are very excited to be working with Coach Boone and the Rec Kids day camp, to provide an outdoor art experience for the campers,� said center Executive Director Niki Price. “Gallery director Krista Eddy will be on hand to help them learn art techniques while having fun with chalk.� The cultural center is currently seeking volunteers to assist with set-up, registration, monitoring, and cleanup. Vendor spots are still available, as well. For vendor registration or volunteering, contact Price at lcccdirector@ gmail.com or 541-994-9994.
in concert
AN EVENT OF
NOTE
YACHATS MUSIC FESTIVAL RETURNS FOR ITS 36TH YEAR THIS WEEKEND By Barbara B. Covell For the TODAY
This is a story about one man’s dream to create an international music festival featuring worldclass instrumental and vocal talent, performing multicultural music in an intimate, pastoral setting. In the summer of 1981, the village of Yachats hosted the first of Dr. W. Hazaiah Williams’s epic festivals — where audience and performance artists merge in a musical symbiosis. Now in its 36th year, the Yachats Music Festival draws recordbreaking audiences from the Pacific Northwest, eager to participate in a weekend-long series of concerts and seminars. Twenty-one musicians and vocalists with international concert hall credentials on opera and Broadway stages perform in the intimate setting of the Yachats Community Presbyterian Church. For the artists, it is an opportunity to restore and recharge with their peers in an idyllic coastal setting. For the audience members, it offers the chance to be one with the music. The repertoire consists of classical, jazz, spiritual, Latin, world rhythms, opera and Broadway melodies, played on everything from piano and violin to the Chinese guzheng and guqin. The festival is sponsored by Four Seasons Arts, a nonprofit classical music organization based in Berkeley, California, with a legacy of programming that gives expression to the world’s cultural, racial and ethnic diversity. Vocalist Anthony Turner, whose rich baritone has been an audience favorite since his Yachats Music Festival debut in 2001, says the Four Seasons Arts philosophy made a
powerful impact on his life. “They took me in, embraced me, and recognized what I had to offer,” he said. “I knew I was accepted in being a singer in the universe. I’ve worked hard and I say, ‘yes!’ to this.” Turner said the festival fosters a human contact among the audience and performers. “We are a family there and reconnecting every year,” he said. “My colleagues backstage support me when I am onstage. I have grown to have less fear now; it is the epiphany of trusting yourself and going with it.” “I feel like a part of the town when I am in Yachats,” he added. “I go to lunch and dinner with the many people I know. Edwena Matychuck always bakes a strawberry rhubarb pie, just for me.” When not traveling and performing, Turner teaches at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, one of the nation’s leading centers for professional training, scholarship and research in the performing and media arts. He also teaches at Wagner College on Staten Island. “I have learned as much, if not more from my students and I am a better singer because of them. After all, teaching is a reflection of myself,” he said, adding: “The world has changed. But what we do as performing artists is about the human contact.” Every year, the festival introduces new artists to the audience. This year’s roster includes two pianists, Aileen Chanco and Rochelle Sennet. Both play in multiple ensemble selections and Chanco will be featured solo in Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition (Parts I and II)” and “Ondine” from Ravel’s
“Gaspard de la Nuit.” Sennet will present Bach’s “English Suite No. 5 in E minor, #1,” Chopin’s “Etude Op. 10, No. 10” and Liszt’s transcription of “Isoldens Liebestod” by Wagner. Audience favorite pianists Leon Bates, Gerry Hecht, Dennis Helmrich and Joseph Kubera return this year, in addition to Ayn Balija, David Burnett, Elaine Kreston and Anyango Yarbo-Davenport on string instruments. David Wong returns to play the guzheng and guqin, a pair of Chinese instuments from the zither family. Vocalists Alison Buchanan, Thomas Buckner, Justin Hopkins, Rafael LeBron, Ilya Martinez, Autris Paige and Anthony Turner will give individual and ensemble presentations. Flutist Marco Granados and clarinetist Tom Rose are also featured. Yachats’ own pianist and favorite son Milo Graamans will give solo performances of Joplin’s “Pine Apple Rag” and “Nocturne, Op. 9, No. 2” by Chopin. The Yachats Music Festival concerts are Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evening at 8 pm, in addition to a Sunday 2 pm recital. Tickets are $20 apiece for each performance or $85 for a Member ticket that covers all four shows. Meanwhile, a $140 Patron pass grants access to all four concerts plus a series of senimars that begin at 10 am and 1 pm on Friday and Saturday. The seminar schedule includes “An Interactive Look Inside Great Works of Flute Literature” with flutist Marco Granados; “Composer
Jennifer Higdon: The Sounds of the Koto on the Violin/Piano” with violinist Anyango Yarbo-Davenport and pianist Rochelle Sennet; “The Licorice Stick: A Survey of Clarinet Music from the Early 19th Century to the Present” with clarinetist Tom Rose and pianist Gerry Hecht; and “British Composers: A Personal Journey” with soprano Alison Buchanan and pianist Dennis Helmrich.
Baritone Anthony Turner
General admission individual tickets are available at the Adobe Resort or the Yachats Visitors Center as well as online at www.brownpapertickets.com/ event/2519544. For more information, go to www.fsarts.org or call Joanne Kittel at 541-961-8374. Barbara B. Covell is a contributing journalist with 10 years’ experience in Oregon newspapers and regional magazines. Feel free to contact her at bbcovell@me.com.
Pianist Aileen Chanco
Pianist Rochelle Sennet
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 5
get out!
The natural choice NEIGHBORS FORE KIDS The Annual Kids Zone Classic will return for its seventh year on Saturday, July 23, giving people the chance to take to the greens in support of a good cause — and possibly in the company of an NFL Hall of Famer. University of Oregon alum Dave Wilcox, who played as a linebacker for the 49ers from 1964 to ’74, will be offering his golfing prowess to the highest bidder for the event, with bids to join his foursome accepted until July 21. Fellow U of O Duck and retired coach Nick Aliotti will also take part in this year’s tournament, held at Chinook Winds Golf Resort in Lincoln City. Registration for the 18-hole scramble will begin at 8 am with a shotgun start at 9 am. Entry fees are $100 a player or $400 for a foursome. Everyone playing will have the chance to win a brand new convertible 2016 Mazda Miata by making a hole-in-one in a contest sponsored by Waddell & Reed - Duane J. Silbernagel Financial Advisor and Sunwest Motors. There will be a special Grand Prize Raffle drawing for a chance to win a week at a beautiful Worldmark Resort in Indio, California. Ticket sales are limited to 200. There will also be other team prizes, raffle and silent auction items, including a pair of original seats from Autzen Stadium. Proceeds from the event will support the Kids Zone education enrichment program, based in Depoe Bay. For more information, to make a bid or to register as a golfer, go to www. neighborsforkids.org or call Executive Director Toby Winn at 541-765-8990.
At 1,333 square miles and boasting four major bays and more rivers than you can shake a stick at, Tillamook County is a naturalist’s dream come true. And this summer and fall, a new program of hikes, walks, paddles and outdoor adventures offers locals and visitors alike the chance to get out and see nature up close. The Explore Nature program is hosted by a consortium of volunteer community and non-profit organizations, and partially funded by the Economic Development Council of Tillamook County and Visit Tillamook Coast. The slate of nature-based experiences aims to highlight the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve and conserve the area’s natural resources and natural resource-based economy. Most events are free, family-friendly and all are open to the public, though some do require registration. For registration and more information go to www.tbnep.org or call 503-322-2222.
6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
The schedule Sunday, July 17
Saturday, Sept. 17
Art of Growing Oysters, 9:30 a.m.
Community Garden Open House, 10 a.m.
Saturday, July 23
Paddle Nehalem River, noon
Geology of Netarts Bay, 8:30 am
Saturday, Sept. 24
Community Garden Open House, 10 a.m.
SOLVE Beach Cleanup, 10 a.m.
Moth Night Viewing, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 1
Saturday, Aug. 20
14th Annual Harvest Festival, 10 a.m.
Community Garden Open House, 10 a.m.
Saturday, Oct. 15
Saturday, Aug. 27
Wild Mushroom Hike, 10 a.m.
Tour Alder Creek Farm, 1 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5
Monday, Sept. 5
Birds of Netarts Bay, 9 a.m.
Kayak Netarts Bay, 8:30 a.m.
Saturday, Nov. 12
Saturday, Sept. 10
Wild Mushroom Walk, 9 a.m.
Emerald Necklace Tour, 10 a.m.
Birds on Tillamook Bay
potpourri
A treat in story
A date with
DISASTER
While “Independence Day: Resurgence” is tearing up big screens the world over, audiences in Lincoln City can get their fill of disaster and destruction without spending a penny, thanks to Captain Jim Kusz of the North Lincoln Fire and Rescue District. On Tuesday and Thursday, July 12 and 14, Kusz will present his celebrated disaster preparedness workshop at the Lincoln City campus of Oregon Coast Community College. The free class will look at how people can prepare to survive a natural disaster and live comfortably without power, transportation and access to grocery stores and gas stations in the days and weeks that follow. In March, Kusz was awarded the “Golden Sparky” by the Oregon State Fire Marshall for his efforts to promote safety, including
specifically this course. The award is the state’s highest honor for fire prevention efforts. “We are hoping locals will be joined by part-year area residents here for the summer, as well as visitors passing through,” said Dave Price, the college’s community education director. “This class not only talks about how to be prepared, but it talks about why we need to be. Jim explains in easy-tounderstand terms the risks faced by the Oregon Coast, including the Cascadia Subduction Zone, the risk of destructive storms and tsunamis caused by distant earthquakes, and much more.” The workshop will be held from 6 to 8 pm both nights at 3788 SE High School Drive. Admission is free, but pre-registration is required. To reserve a space, call 541-9944166 or email shirley.hill@ occc.cc.or.us.
Give yourself some credit The college is now planning its fall lineup of community education classes. If you have a passion for art, history, language, chemistry or anything you’d like to share with members of the community at one of the college’s three locations in Lincoln County, email Dave Price at dave. price@occc.cc.or.us.
Portland Story Theater and Robert Falcon Scott. founders Lawrence Howard Lynne Duddy is a and Lynne Duddy will lead narrative artist who draws a free storytelling upon her own workshop in personal experience Newport on to create captivating Saturday, July 16, stories that draw showing how to listeners in. speak off the cuff Together, the and from the heart. pair will explore The lively, the necessity of interactive two-hour Lawrence vulnerability in Howard session will teach storytelling, as well participants how to as techniques for identify their stories bringing stories and find what it alive. Students will takes to share them learn about story with an audience. structure, the power Lawrence Howard of presence, the is a master at differences between crafting engaging writing and telling, Lynne stories that often and how to find the have listeners on the Duddy story that they need edge of their seats. to tell. He draws from his rich Howard and Duddy will repertoire of adventure, perform excerpts from their personal and mythic stories, while engaging tales to create narrative participants to begin programs for people from exploring stories of their all walks of life. Howard own. is best known as the The workshop will run creator of the Armchair from 2 to 4 pm at the Adventurer series, which library, 35 NW Nye Street. include riveting stories Participation is limited to about Antarctic explorers the first 25 who sign up. To Ernest Shackleton, Douglas register, drop by the library, Mawson, Roald Amundsen or call 541-265-2153.
Newport braces for large scale cookoffs Tickets are now on sale for a pair of culinary events that will put two of Newport’s most beloved catches in the spotlight this August. First, on Saturday, Aug. 13, the Great Albacore Tuna Challenge will return to the Port of Newport for its fifth year, bringing in 15 culinary teams from all over the Northwest to compete for $3,000 in prize money. The popular cookoff will run from 11 am to 3 pm at
2000 SE Marine Science Drive, across from the Hatfield Marine Science Center. As well as unlimited samples from the talented tuna chefs, guests will be able to enjoy a classic car show from the Bay City Cruisers and a Rogue Ale Garden. Tickets, $15 apiece, can be purchased online at www. tunabbq.com. Then, on Saturday, Aug. 27, the port will host “Salmon
Enchanted Evening,” a salute to Oregon wild-caught salmon that will see six talented chefs from around the state, including the famed Timberline Lodge, cook up eight gourmet salmon dishes. As well as salmon, guests will be treated to wine, salads courtesy of Sysco foods and an anniversary cake from My Petite Sweet of Lincoln City in honor of the NOAA Pacific Fleet’s fifth year in Newport.
The Unlikely Saints band will provide live music while the Jaguars Owners Club of Oregon show off their motors in a “Jaguars & British Cars” car show. The 21-and-over event will run from 5 to 8 pm at the Port of Newport, across from the Hatfield Marine Science Center. Only 400 tickets will be sold, available for $25 apiece at www. salmonenchantedevening.com.
Both events benefit the Newport Food Pantry and Operation Snackpacks,
emergency food programs that benefit the community and local schools.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 7
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OPENS JULY 14
Novelist Megan Kruse and publisher Rhonda Hughes
14
27 SUNDAY MATINEE JULY 17, 2PM
A slice of advice The Manzanita Writers’ Series will offer an inside view of the publisher-author relationship on Saturday, July 16, in a conversation between novelist Megan Kruse and publisher Rhonda Hughes of Portland’s Hawthorne Books. Kruse will begin by reading from her debut novel, “Call Me Home,” which was published by Hawthorne in 2015, winning that year’s Rainbow Award for Gay Contemporary Fiction. After the reading, Kruse and Hughes will talk about how to get published and the editing process that follows. Kruse grew up in the Pacific Northwest and currently lives in Olympia. She studied creative writing at Oberlin College and earned her MFA at the University of Montana. Her work has appeared widely in journals and anthologies. She teaches fiction at Eastern
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
Oregon University’s LowResidency MFA program, Hugo House and Gotham Writers Workshop. She was one of the National Book Foundation’s “5 Under 35” for 2015. Now in its 14th year, Hawthorne Books has published literary fiction and nonfiction to consistent critical acclaim, while also selling film options and publishing rights to its works worldwide. “If we specialize in anything,” Hughes said, “it’s in finding superb writing which might be overlooked by larger houses, and giving it the attention it deserves.” Prior to founding Hawthorne, Hughes had an extensive career in book production and printing. She holds a Master of Arts in English Literature and completed the Yale Publishing
Course. The July 16 conversation will begin at 7 pm at the Hoffman Center for the Arts, 594 Laneda Avenue. Admission is $7. For more information, go to http://hoffmanblog.org or email Kathie Hightower at kathiejhightower@gmail.com • Earlier in the day on Saturday, July 16, Kruse will present a writing workshop on “Crafting Emotion.” Aimed at writers in all genres, the workshop will show students how to use object potential and transcendent details to create work that resonates deeply with the reader. The workshop will run from 1 to 3:30 pm at the Hoffman Center for the Arts, 594 Laneda Avenue. Tuition is $30 and students can register at hoffmanblog.org.
cliff notes:
the coast, condensed
C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y L O R I T O B I A S
HELP WANTED NEEDED
“If the trend continues, you’re going to have long-standing shops that can’t maintain the hours they would like. That’s the big one. Not being able to have the choices of shops or restaurants that people are accustomed to — or the hours.” Dan Haag, coordinator for the Manzanita Visitor Center
The sign on the restaurant window caught my attention. I stopped to read it. Then read it again. The little restaurant where we’d ordered dinner ever since discovering Manzanita in 2004 had closed its dining room. For now, at least, the menu at Marzano’s Pizza Pie will be strictly take-out. As a friend who once worked at the restaurant so aptly put it, “It was a gut punch.” When I discovered the Oregon Coast, I fell in love with it for two reasons. One was the beauty, of course. Rain. Shine. Fog. Wind. The towering grand pines, the thunder of the ocean, the slow pace. From day one, I was absolutely smitten with the place. But there was something else, too. Here, I thought, was one of the last places in this country where a working class family could afford a home with a view of the ocean. And if not a view, certainly a home only a few blocks from the beach. I lived in southern Oregon at the time and spent every weekend camping on the coast, dreaming of the day when we’d figure out how to make it our home. As it turned out, our journey took us to Denver instead. But as many of you who have read my work know, we always said, ‘If we ever settle down, it will be on the Oregon Coast.’ Meanwhile, as the years floated by, I worried that the chance would pass us by. That we would wait too long and the world would discover the coast and we would no longer be able to afford it. In 2000, our chance to relocate finally came and we grabbed it. Sixteen years later, I still count myself lucky to be here. Many others, however, cannot say the same. It turns out Marzano’s will be take-out only because for the first time in 15 years they can no longer find the staff they need to operate their very successful business. And they can’t find the staff because people can’t find affordable housing. It’s the same story in many coastal towns. “I say that this is an overnight crisis 40 years in the making,” said Lincoln County Commissioner Bill Hall. “I have been testifying on housing issues in the legislature for several sessions. Up until last year, I saw only one other elected official show up. This year, a whole parade of councilors, city managers, mayors, the state treasurer were there. All of the sudden it has risen to the top of
everybody’s agenda. They are hearing stories like Marzano’s.” It’s not only that housing is not affordable, but in many places, there simply is not enough. And there isn’t much space available on which to build more. Or where land does exist, the terrain is challenging or city services are not readily available. “I think the problem in Manzanita is the housing inventory overall,” said Dan Haag, coordinator for the Manzanita Visitor Center. “It is getting gobbled up by people from out of state. There are some people moving in to retire. People moving in to get away from other things. People are using them as vacation rentals.” For those of us already here, or those who are happy to enjoy the Oregon Coast as visitors, it may not seem like much of a problem. But eventually, in one way or another, we’ll all feel the pain. “Certainly, it’s not just tourism-based businesses that are running into this problem,” Hall said. “The hospitals are saying doctors and nurses aren’t coming because they can’t find affordable housing. Teachers are saying the same thing. Builders are not building for the lowincome market. They are going for the least risk and highest reward. Someone building million dollar homes isn’t going to suddenly say, ‘Oh, out of the goodness of my heart, I’ll build a $200,000 home.’” You would think there must be a solution, but until that comes, you can’t help but wonder what the future holds. “If the trend continues, you’re going to have long-standing shops that can’t maintain the hours they would like,” Haag said. “That’s the big one. Not being able to have the choices of shops or restaurants that people are accustomed to — or the hours. You see something like Marzano’s and you wonder who else is close to doing something like that. Marzano’s being such a long-established business and then not being able to have the employees they need — like I said, that was a gut punch.” Lori Tobias covered the coast for The Oregonian for nine years. She lives in Newport, where she freelances for a number of regional and national publications. Follow her at loritobias.com.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 9
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „
From Our Pizza Oven, We bake our pizzas to order. Our fresh, local toppings may change on availability.
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10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
COME AND SEA
artsy
Cultural center members’ show celebrates the life aquatic
“Ecofriendly Bicycles” by Catherine Hingson
Splash out and double dip WHAT: Meanwhile, across the street, the Artist’s Co-op Gallery will be holding an opening reception for its new show, “A Splash of Color.” WHEN: From 5 to 7 pm on Friday, July 8, guests can enjoy wine, refreshments and a chance to visit with many of the gallery’s talented artists. WHO: Catherine Hingson, a local artist known for her vibrant Northwest landscapes, will demonstrate her process of creating a painting. Working from a photo, she will show how to create an area of interest, move your eye through a painting, and watercolor techniques to create a free and easy colorful painting. WHERE: The gallery is located at 620 NE Hwy. 101. Joe Boyette with one of his Native American paddles
Fishbox #62 by Ben Soeby
The Lincoln City Cultural Center is offering art lovers the chance to immerse themselves in “AQUATIC,” its annual members’ show, featuring works inspired by rivers and the ocean. The show will open with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, July 8, in the center’s Chessman Gallery, where guests can enjoy wine and refreshments while mingling with the artists. Executive Director Niki Price said that, in addition to being creative, colorful and inspirational, the annual members’ art show is essential to the cultural center’s community mission. “We are here to serve our local artists
and the arts community,” she said, “and to provide ways for our friends and neighbors to express themselves creatively.” Gallery Director Krista Eddy said she is intrigued to see what members will create for the marine-themed show. “Our lives here on the Oregon Coast are so closely connected to bodies of water,” she said. “The ocean, tides and rivers are always present in our daily lives, so this year I wanted to challenge the artists with this idea and see how it would percolate into their art.” The members’ shows always offer a wide variety of artistic mediums, from painting and jewelry to sculpture and textiles, and
from up-cycled metal lamps and fused glass to pottery to wooden paddles. “There is always something new to see and learn,” Price said, “and Krista finds a way to bring all these diverse media and artists together in a beautiful way.” The Chessman Gallery was the first classroom in the old Delake School building to be renovated. Dedicated in 2007, it has gone on to host more than 80 art shows. The gallery offers 570 square feet of white, clean display space, accented with high ceilings, picture windows, a bamboo floor and modern track lighting. “The Chessman is a beautiful blank slate,” Eddy said, “ready to enable artistic
expression and this year’s members’ show will transform it into an AQUATIC art adventure. Don’t miss it.” The show will run through Monday Aug. 8, available to view from 10 am to 4 pm every day except Tuesdays at the center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. • Membership of the cultural center costs $35 a year and comes with benefits including access to the members’ art show, discounts on concerts, monthly newsletters and, of course, the great feeling that comes from supporting a worthy community organization. For more information, go to www. lincolncity-culturalcenter.org or call 541994-9994.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 11
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „
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Lincoln City • (Located in Lighthouse Square) Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 (541) 996-5500 Purchase Excludes Gift Cards. Limit one per customer per visit. Valid only at participating US locations. Price excludes tax. Valid in store only. Not valid for online purchases. No cash value. Not valid with other offersor fundraisers or if copied, sold, auctioned, exchanged for payment or where prohibited by law. 16.5536_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY is a registered trademark of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.
Happy Hour Specials from 3pm-6pm  Live Music The Ronnie Jay Duo, July 8 and 9 M IST RESTAURAN T AN D LOUN GE 2945 NW Jetty Ave, Lincoln City, OR 541.994.3877
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Lincoln City • (Located in Lighthouse Square) Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 (541) 996-5500 Purchase Excludes Gift Cards. Limit one per customer per visit. Valid only at participating US locations. Price excludes tax. Valid in store only. Not valid for online purchases. No cash value. Not valid with other offers or fundraisers or if copied, sold, auctioned, exchanged for payment or where prohibited by law.16.5536_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY is a registered trademark of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.
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Enjoy Sunny days on our Patio! Traditional Irish Fare Homemade Soups & Desserts
O p en 7 d a ys a w eek a t 11a m 12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
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tide tables
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
LINCOLN CITY FARMERS & CRAFTERS MARKET
Outdoor Market Open Sundays All Summer 9 am - 3 pm
Bernard Farms Walker Farms Guerrero Farms Misty Hills Farm Farm Fresh Eggs
Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date
Thurs., July 7 Fri., July 8 Sat., July 9 Sun., July 10 Mon., July 11 Tues., July 12 Wed., July 13 Thurs., July 14
9:29 am 10:11 am 10:52 am 11:35 am 12:26 am 1:29 am 2:31 am 3:30 am
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date
Thurs., July 7 Fri., July 8 Sat., July 9 Sun., July 10 Mon., July 11 Tues., July 12 Wed., July 13 Thurs., July 14
9:45 am 10:26 am 11:08 am 11:49 am 12:52 am 1:59 am 3:03 am 4:01 am
Yaquina Bay, Newport Date
Thurs., July 7 Fri., July 8 Sat., July 9 Sun., July 10 Mon., July 11 Tues., July 12 Wed., July 13 Thurs., July 14
9:07 am 9:48 am 10:30 am 11:11 am 12:14 am 1:21 am 2:25 am 3:23 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
Thurs., July 7 Fri., July 8 Sat., July 9 Sun., July 10 Mon., July 11 Tues., July 12 Wed., July 13 Thurs., July 14
9:48 am 10:28 am 11:08 am 11:49 am 12:39 am 1:39 am 2:41 am 3:41 am
Located at the Lincoln City Cultural Center
540 NE Hwy. 101
O pen 7 D a ys • Cred itCa rd s O K • Lim iton e cou pon perord er. Cou pon expires 7/ 31/ 16
lincolncityfarmersmarket.org
Low Tides
-1.3 -0.7 -0.1 0.6 2.2 2.1 1.7 1.3
2.2 2.3 2.3 -1.4 2.0 2.5 2.9
3:04 am 3:49 am 4:35 am 5:23 am 6:17 am 7:18 am 8:28 am 9:40 am
8.4 7.8 7.1 6.4 5.8 5.3 5.1 5.1
9:57 pm 10:51 pm 11:49 pm --12:33 pm 1:20 pm 2:13 pm 3:09 pm
1.7 1.7 1.7 -1.1 1.5 1.8 2.1
2:29 am 3:16 am 4:05 am 4:59 am 6:01 am 7:14 am 8:35 am 9:51 am
6.7 6.2 5.6 5.0 4.5 4.1 4.0 4.1
9:19 pm 10:13 pm 11:11 pm --11:55 am 12:42 pm 1:35 pm 2:31 pm
2.5 2.6 2.5 -1.6 2.2 2.7 3.1
2:20 am 3:07 am 3:56 am 4:50 am 5:52 am 7:05 am 8:26 am 9:42 am
8.7 8.0 7.3 6.5 5.8 5.4 5.2 5.3
Low Tides
-0.8 -0.4 0.1 0.6 1.6 1.5 1.2 0.9
7.5 7.4 7.3 7.2 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.5
ocean-front DINING
4:00 pm 4:43 pm 5:27 pm 6:11 pm 6:55 pm 7:41 pm 8:27 pm 9:12 pm
5.9 5.8 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.8 5.9 6.0
High Tides
Low Tides
-0.9 -0.5 0.1 0.7 2.1 1.9 1.6 1.2
4:21 pm 5:01 pm 5:42 pm 6:23 pm 7:07 pm 7:53 pm 8:41 pm 9:30 pm
High Tides
Low Tides
-1.1 -0.6 0.1 0.8 2.4 2.2 1.8 1.3
Romantic
High Tides
9:44 pm 10:34 pm 11:28 pm --12:20 pm 1:10 pm 2:05 pm 3:02 pm
3:51 pm 4:34 pm 5:18 pm 6:02 pm 6:46 pm 7:32 pm 8:18 pm 9:03 pm
7.6 7.6 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 7.6 7.8
High Tides
10:01 pm 10:50 pm 11:42 pm --12:33 pm 1:21 pm 2:14 pm 3:11 pm
2.1 2.2 2.2 -1.3 1.8 2.3 2.6
2:54 am 3:41 am 4:29 am 5:21 am 6:19 am 7:23 am 8:32 am 9:41 am
7.3 6.8 6.2 5.7 5.2 4.8 4.6 4.6
4:19 pm 5:00 pm 5:41 pm 6:23 pm 7:07 pm 7:53 pm 8:40 pm 9:28 pm
6.5 6.5 6.5 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.9
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 or 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.
OFF $ 1 Any Order! Hurry! OfferExpires 6/01/17
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4157 N. Hwy. 101 • 541-996-6898
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 13
Friday, July 8
Coast Calendar
“AQUATIC”
Lincoln City Cultural Center An opening reception for this show, featuring works created by cultural center members and inspired by their relationship to the area’s rivers and the ocean. Refreshments will be served. 5-7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.
“A Splash of Color”
Artist’s Co-op Gallery • Lincoln City See the gallery’s vibrant new collection at this opening reception, featuring wine, refreshments and a painting demonstration from local artist Catherine Hingson. 5-7 pm, 620 NE Hwy. 101.
Judy Collins
Newport Performing Arts Center The widely talented troubadour takes to the stage with the Newport Symphony Orchestra for an intimate evening of classics in the Alice Silverman Theater.7:30 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $55 to $95, available at the box office and online at NewportSymphony.org. Repeated Saturday.
“Nye Beach Vernacular”
Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this exhibit of works by Marcus “Mar” Lehrman, depicting scenes around Newport’s Nye Beach neighborhood. 5-7 pm, with a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. Show runs through Sept. 3
Yachats Music Festival
Yachats Community Presbyterian Church Hear solo and ensemble performances from classical music singers, pianists and instrumentalists, featuring works by Mendelssohn, Schubert, Tchaikovsky and more. $20. 8 pm, 360 West 7th Street.
Cafe C’est La Vie • Gleneden Beach Bring a guest and a dish to share at this opening reception for the café’s new exhibit of vibrant photography. Free drinks and hors d’oeuvres on offer. 7-9 pm, 8 Bella Beach Drive.
Group Exhibition
Birding walk
Thomas Goodwin Gallery • Cloverdale An exhibit of work by the Nestucca Valley Artisans, featuring everything from paintings and drawings to ceramics, glass and jewelry — an appetizer to the group’s 24th annual festival in August. Show runs through Aug. 14, downtown at 34390 S. Hwy. 101.
Devils Lake State Park • Lincoln City Join the Audubon Society of Lincoln City for this easy walk in search of summer song birds, osprey, wrens, sparrows and woodpeckers. 9 am, on NE 1st Street, at Comfort Inn gravel road. FMI, call 541-992-9720.
“Love Letters”
“Rick Bartow: A Community Collection”
Theatre West • Lincoln City Dennis Gibson and Patti Siberz star in this classic drama by A.R. Gurney. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students, and $9 for children 12 and under. For reservations, call 541-994-5663.
Manzanita Farmers Market Laneda Avenue • Manzanita
Sunday, July 10 Pacific City Library Matt W. cooks up some kickin’ country sounds to complement the fresh local food and artisan crafts. 10 am to 2 pm at Brooten Road and Camp Street.
Yachats Music Festival
Yachats Community Presbyterian Church The festival concludes with a pair of performances, featuring works by Bach, Joplin, Verdi and more, played by world-class classical music singers, pianists and instrumentalists. $20. 2 pm and again at 8 pm, 360 West 7th Street.
“Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike” Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook 2 pm. See Friday listing for details.
“A Walk Back in Time”
11 am. See Saturday listing for details.
Yachats Commons 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N.
Book Sale
Private home • Oregon Coast Jazz guitarist John Stowell performs in this intimate home concert, alongside vocalist Annie Averre and Dmitri Matheny on flugelhorn, showcasing a mix of original works, familiar jazz and bossa nova classics. 2:30 pm. Suggested donation $15-$30. For reservations and directions, contact Averre at 360-606-7136 or email aaverre@hotmail.com.
North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City 1 pm. See Saturday listing for details.
Lincoln City Farmers Market
Lincoln City Cultural Center Set up on the center’s front lawn, the market’s vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-921-0062 or go to www. lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
“Hello, My Name is Doris”
INHOUSE Jazz
Dmitri Matheny
Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this exhibition, featuring a collection of works by renowned and beloved Newport artist Rick Bartow, who died in April. 5-7 pm, with community members discussing their loaned Bartow work at 5:45 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. Show runs through Sept. 4.
Monday, July 11
Yachats Farmers Market
Newport Performing Arts Center Bijou’s Summer Film Series kicks off with Sally Field as a 60-something woman inspired by a self-help seminar to romantically pursue her younger co-worker. Rated R for language. 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. $7.50 for adults and $7 for seniors and students. Repeated Monday.
“Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike”
Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Christopher Durang’s Tony Award-winning play tells the story of middleaged siblings whose humdrum life is turned upside down by the arrival of their movie-star sister and her new boy toy. 7 pm, on the corner of 12th and Ivy. Tickets, $15 or $10 for children 12 and under, available by calling 503-842-7940.
Dennis White show
Ocean’s Edge 5K • Saturday, July 9, in Lincoln City
Pacific City Farmers Market
Start the weekend off right with farm-fresh produce, prepared foods, crafts and a rotating winery booth. 5-8 pm, 5th and Laneda. FMI, call 503-939-5416.
Beach Town Comedy
The Eventuary • Lincoln City Arj Barker, famous for his role as Dave on HBO’s “Flight of the Conchords,” makes a triumphant return to the coast, along with lifelong sidekick Tony Camin. $20 in advance, $25 on the door. 21 and over. 6 pm. 560 SW Fleet Avenue.
Clamming clinic
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Join shellfish expert Bill Lackner for this free, hands-on class, staring with a 45-minute talk at the library before moving on to dig in the sand of Siletz Bay. Hosted by the Lincoln City Visitor & Convention Bureau. 11:30 am, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 800-452-2151 or go to www.oregoncoast.org/crabbing-and-clamming-clinics.
“Hook”
Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City
“Hello, My Name is Doris” Newport Performing Arts Center 7 pm. See Sunday listing for details.
“Walk with a Ranger”
Cape Perpetua Scenic Area • Yachats Join retired chief park ranger Michael Noack for a guided, 60- to 75-minute hike along easy-to-moderate trails. Free, but a day-use fee or recreation pass is required. Noon, three miles south of Yachats on Highway 101. FMI, call 541-547-3289.
Don’t miss your chance to audition for
Wheel of Fortune!
Judy Collins
Newport Performing Arts Center The widely talented troubadour takes to the stage with the Newport Symphony Orchestra for an intimate evening of classics in the Alice Silverman Theater.7:30 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $55 to $95, available at the box office and online at NewportSymphony.org.
Disaster class
Oregon Coast Community College • Lincoln City Get prepared for the worst, from earthquakes to tsunamis, in this award-winning, twonight course from fire department Captain Jim Kusz. Free but registration required. 6-8 pm Tuesday and Thursday, 3788 SE High School Drive. To reserve a space, call 541-9944166 or email shirley.hill@occc.cc.or.us.
Kyllo’s Restaurant • Lincoln City This all-beach running event sets off from the sands behind Kyllo’s and is open to runners and walkers of all ages, including four-legged friends. $15, or $25 including race t-shirt. Sign up at www.getmeregistered.com. 9 am, at the D River Wayside.
Found in the Forest
Tillamook Forest Center A special exhibit by Ann Girard of Rain Garden Studio, featuring intricate wreaths made of Douglas-fir cones, horse-chestnut husks, lichens and other natural materials. 10 am-5 pm, 22 miles east of Tillamook on Hwy. 6. Free admission. Show runs through July 30. FMI, call 866-930-4646.
Photo hike
Cascade Head Capture stunning photos of Lincoln City’s treasured hiking
“Doctor Faustus”
Newport Public Library The library’s Literary Flicks Series continues with this 1967 adaptation of Christopher Marlowe’s 1588 “The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus.” Richard Burton co-directs and also stars as Faust, a medieval scholar who sells his soul to Mephistopheles in exchange for mastering all human knowledge 6:30 pm, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-2652153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Siletz Farmers Market
Siletz Valley Grange 2 to 6 pm, at the corner of Gaither Street and Logsden Road.
Reading Circle
spots while learning skills from a professional in this clinic, led by photographers Bob Gibson and Jeri Knudson. $20. 9-11 am. Hikes are limited to 12 photographers aged 14 and up. Registration required. Call 541-994-3405.
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
Newport 60+ Activity Center Beginners are welcome at this free class, which alternates low-impact aerobics with upper body strength work for active seniors aged 60 and above. No registration required. 10-11 am, 20 SE 2nd Street. Enter by steps on the south side of the building.
“Love Letters”
Theatre West • Lincoln City 7:30 pm. See Friday listing for details.
Tillamook Farmers Market
Newport Public Library The group will discuss “The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry” by Rachel Joyce, the story of a cancer-defying, 627-mile journey filled with fascinating characters. Noon, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Downtown Tillamook It’s kids’ day at the market, featuring live music from Fred Bassett and Sonya Kazen, along with one-stop shopping in the heart of Tillamook. 9 am-2 pm, 2nd and Laurel. FMI, call 503-812-9326.
“Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike” Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook 7 pm. See Friday listing for details.
“A Walk Back in Time”
North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City Join museum president John Blaine for this 90-minute walking tour of Taft and Siletz Bay, showing how the area developed from a 1904 hamlet to a thriving tourist destination. 1 pm, 4907 SW Hwy. 101. Free, but registration required. To reserve a spot, call 541-996-6614.
Newport Farmers Market
Yachats Music Festival
Neskowin Farmers Market
Yachats Community Presbyterian Church Hear solo and ensemble performances from classical music singers, pianists and instrumentalists, featuring works by Puccini, Wagner and Mozart as well as a solo on the Chinese guqin. $20. 8 pm, 360 West 7th Street.
Wednesday, July 13 Auditions
Waldport Farmers Market
Oregon Coast Community College • Lincoln City 6-8 pm. See Tuesday listing for details.
Silver Sneakers Circuit Class
Newport 60+ Activity Center Beginners are welcome at this free class, which alternates low-impact aerobics with upper body strength work for active seniors aged 60 and above. No registration required. 10:45-11:45 am, 20 SE 2nd Street.
Yaquina Head Lighthouse • Newport On Saturday July 9, birders invite you to join trip Mark Elliott leads this Audubon Society of Lincoln City trip to view nesting colonies of common murre, bald eagle, black oystercatcher, cormorants, brown pelican, peregrine falcon and pigeon guillemot. 9 am at the interpretive center on Lighthouse Drive.
Chalk Art Competition
Lincoln City Cultural Center Let the sidewalk be your canvas at this come-one-come-all event, with prizes up for grabs in various age categories as well as a $50 People’s Choice Award. 11 am to 3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. $5 for kids aged six and under and $10 for ages 7 and up. FMI, call 541-994-9994.
Neskowin Beach Wayside 9 am to 1 pm, right off Highway 101.
“Hook”
Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City
Disaster class
Gleneden Harvest Market
Side Door Café • Gleneden Beach Find granola, berries, fresh meats, produce and more at this new farmers market. 1-6 pm, 6675 Gleneden Beach Loop.
Toledo Street Market
Main Street • Toledo Choose from a variety of fresh produce, products, food, drink, artisan and hand crafted items. 10 am-3 pm.
Beach Bacon ""It's Better at the Beach!"
Birding Trip
“Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative”
Theatre West • Lincoln City Prepare to die laughing at this Roger Karshner comedy, showing how a wealthy entrepreneur’s family descends into acrimony over the division of his property. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students, and $9 for children 12 and under. For reservations, call 541-994-5663.
Waldport Community Center 10 am-6:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.
Highway 101 & Lee Buy local at this outdoor market, featuring locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 9 am to 1 pm, southwest of city hall.
11 am. See Thursday listing for details.
Thursday, July 14
Oregon Coast Community College • Newport The Central Coast Chorale is looking for new singers. 4-5 pm, 400 SE College Way. FMI or to schedule an audition time, contact Mary Lee Scoville at admin@ centralcoastchorale.com or 541563-6830.
Saturday & Sunday, July 16 & 17 • Shows at Noon, 1:30pm & 3pm
"It's Better at the Beach!" • On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK
Silver Sneakers Circuit Class
Ocean’s Edge 5K
Tuesday, July 12
Fitbit class
Newport 60+ Activity Center Rack up some serious mileage with this six-week class using Fitbit wristbands to record your steps, heart rate and more. 11 am to noon, 20 SE 2nd Street. FMI, call 541-265-9617.
Saturday, July 9
“Hook”
Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City The summer matinée series continues with this 1991 classic, starring Robin Williams as a grownup Peter Pan, forced to return to Neverland to save his children from the dastardly Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman). $2. 11 am, 1624 NE Hwy. 101.
July 16, 2016 • Admission $20 Noon to 6pm • Craft Beers & Ciders Food Samples • Live Music!
• Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 15
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Want Results? Call MARK SCHULTS! TWO HOMES on one lot with outrageous views of the bay, bridge and ocean! One home is currently a vacation rental, the other is rented full time. Excellent property at a great price! Waldport 14-1545 $550,000
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3691 NW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR A BLOCK TO THE BEACH! Home includes 2 beds and one bath. Great location that is close to the beach, shopping and restaurants. MLS 15-2262 $165,000
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OCEANFRONT QUALITY PANORAMIC VIEW from high on a bluff. Quality built 4 bdrm with essential rooms on entry level. Oceanside MLS 16216569 $729,000
SUMPTUOUS INTERIORS, FABULOUS OCEAN VIEW Beautiful gated community, HOA only $300/yr, vacation rental allowed. Ask about secret trail to beach. Oceanside MLS 16-581 $595,000
RIVERFRONT SPECTACULAR - gorgeous 4 bdrm home on over 1 acre, plus ďŹ sherman’s dream shop with den, full bath, woodstove, motor home size bay, Fabulous view. Beautifully maintained. Beaver MLS 16-17 $497,500
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At the Beach Real Estate
16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
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Enjoy the lake now, divide later! MLS 15-2255
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GET CAUGHT UP
on the cover in the excitement, with a fishing excursion from Depoe Bay
Story & photos by Gretchen Ammerman For the TODAY
When Tyler Turner was a young boy, he knew he wanted to be a part of the fishing industry in which he grew up. And today he is a boat captain, just like his dad. But following in his father’s footsteps was complicated for Tyler by an incident that challenged, yet didn’t discourage him. “Today is the eight-year anniversary of my son’s accident,” Jeurgen Turner told me shortly after I boarded Tacklebuster, the boat he and Tyler own and co-captain. Tyler was hit by a car when he was riding his motorcycle in Depoe Bay, and it left him paraplegic. “It took me a year to get used to the new body and the new mindset,” he said. “I figured out pretty quickly that I needed to find something to do.” That “something” was a feat few thought he could accomplish. To become a boat captain, Tyler had to pass a series of Coast Guard tests that are extremely difficult even for people who haven’t suffered a traumatic injury, but Tyler persisted and passed the tests. “As far as I know, he’s the only licensed boat captain that is paraplegic,” said Dockside Charters owner Dorinda Goddard. “He’s an amazing kid, and we love putting people on their boat.” When we were first motoring out from dock, I met Tom Fox, a frequent fisherman on the Tacklebuster. “I’ve been fishing with Jeurgen for 35 years,” he said. “These guys are great; they work so hard to serve their customers and to find fish. It’s a joy to come out with them.” On one trip, Fox caught a 60-pound halibut, which was unusual as they were in the near shore reefs. “I caught it using [deck hand] Jake’s [Mikoleit’s] rod, and at the end of the day he said he wanted me to keep it. That’s the kind of person all these guys are. I’ve used that rod ever since.” The Tacklebuster is one of the eight boats booked by Dockside, which offer bottom fishing and crabbing trips, like the trip I went on; tuna and salmon fishing trips; and whale watching excursions. When you go out on one of the fishing trips, you get much more than a boat ride. “We start fresh as if it’s everybody’s first time,” Tyler said. “We teach them the way we like to fish and give them a baseline, but of course we have people who come that already know how and like to do things their own way.” My fishing experience had been, up to this point, a single day at summer camp where we were taken to a lake and given some little rods. I was the only person to catch a fish, but when it was served to my table at dinner that night, my cabin mates enjoyed it while I cried. So I thought it was fair to
More info Dockside Charters is located in the Depoe Bay Harbor and at their new ticket office on Highway 101, just north of the Depoe Bay Bridge. For more information, go to docksidedepoebay.com or call 541-765-2545 or 800-733-8915.
Tyler Turner on the bridge
call myself a first timer. I grabbed the pole next to “Fish-on John” (“Fish-on” is what you yell when you’ve caught a fish so the deck hands can help get it into the boat). With John on one side of me, and one of his equally pro-fish-ient friends on the other, I began to despair of ever catching anything, but Jeurgen gave me encouragement and pointers. “It’s definitely a challenge,” he said. “There’s as
much going on in the ocean as there is in the sky. I tell people to picture that we are above a 10-story building, and what they are trying to catch is on the first three floors. Timing is so important. The lures we use are of different weights, and they’ve done lots of research on how fast each different weight falls in the water, so we tell people exactly how many seconds to let the line run out based on the water depth and the lure weight.”
The bottom fishing trip has the option, for a mere $15 extra, to catch crab as well as fish. The hands simply toss crab pots off the boat on the way out, and you help them haul them back in on the way back. “If you even catch one good crab, it’s still a great deal,” Jake said. On our trip, every single one of the eight pots that went out came back with at least one good crab in it, and many came back with more. The Dockside Charters experience also includes fish cleaning and packing once you get back to shore, for those who don’t want that pleasure. I got to to line up with everyone at the fish cleaning station, as with Jeurgen’s help, I did finally catch a fish. History repeated itself, though, and I cried and went back to taking only photos. Tom, who saw it happen, admitted that he’d seen plenty of people get seasick on his boat, but I was the first he’d seen cry.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 17
Retirem en t IsM ore Fu n A t The Bea ch!
Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! Create beautiful plates, platters, bowls, coasters, sconces, window pieces, etc. Gift Certificates Available
GLASS FUSING STUDIO
4933 SW Hwy. 101 • 541-994-2427 • Lincoln City • morart.net
• Active Retirement Cottages • All inclusive rent • Month to month / No buy-in’s • Find us at www.lincolncityseniorliving.com Call Today for your Free Tour and Lunch! 541-994-7400
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Start & finish on the beach behind Kyllo’s Restaurant Register at www.getmeregistered.com or the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 NE Oar Place 541.-994-.2131
ges All A e! om Welc • S! I PR ZE
Deadline for pre-registration is July 8 Cost before July 9: $15 (race only) or $25 (with shirt) Cost day of race: $20 (race only) or $30 (with shirt) ANNEX C0RNER OF 101 & BAY ST. MAIN OFFICE AND ALL BOARDING EAST SIDE OF HARBOR
You take care of yourself because you want to be there for all of the big moments. Samaritan Heart & Vascular Institute offers top-quality doctors, technology and care to help keep your heart healthy, so you can celebrate life for years to come.
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samhealth.org/SHVI 18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
We continue to have very good whale watching excursions. Many good sightings of Grey Whales and some Humpbacks recently. We have excursions leaving daily, call 541-765-2545 to make your reservation. Easy Access - No Stairs
270 Coast Guard DR, Depoe Bay, Oregon 97341 (541) 765-2545 or (800) 733-8915 docksidedepoebay.com
naturalist’s calendar
Dig into nature, in Depoe Bay CoastWatch volunteers, but they are also open to members of the general public. Teachers and other professionals can obtain professional development units by attending the workshop. The workshop will take place at Depoe Bay Community Hall, 220 SE Bay Street. Tuition is $145, reduced to $95 for members of CoastWatch or Oregon Shores and to $75 for people who belong to both organizations. To register, go to https:// oregonshores.givezooks.
Stewart Schultz’ wide-ranging career has taken him everywhere from working for The Nature Conservancy on the Oregon Coast to studying reefs in Florida. He now teaches at the University of Zadar in Croatia and conducts his research in the Adriatic during the academic year, and returns to Oregon every summer.
com or contact Fawn Custer at 541-270-0027 or fawn@ oregonshores.org.
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mammals, tides, oceanography and many other topics. Each session will include indoor presentations, laboratory experiences and field trips — weather permitting. CoastWatch is the volunteer program of the Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition, through which participants adopt one-mile segments of shoreline and monitor them for natural changes and human impacts. These annual workshops were originally developed as intensive training sessions for
COUPON
Some spaces are still available in year’s CoastWatch Shoreline Science Workshop, which will run from July 8 to 10 in Depoe Bay. Open to anyone curious about the natural history of the Oregon Coast, the workshop will be led by ecologist Stewart Schultz, author of “The Northwest Coast: A Natural History.” Over three full days, students will cover rocky shore, beach and estuarine habitats in depth, and touch on forests, the nearshore ocean, marine
About the teacher
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WELCOME TO MIAMI The Nature Conservancy is looking for volunteers willing to lend a hand removing invasive species from the Miami River Preserve near Tillamook Bay on Saturday, July 16. These restored wetlands benefit northern red-legged
frog, chum salmon, peregrine falcon and other at-risk wildlife. Participants should be prepared to walk on uneven ground through tall, dense grass. Volunteers should bring hiking shoes, a day pack, lunch and snacks, one or two
Across from Christmas Cottage
full water bottles, layers of clothing including rain gear and a hat, and sunscreen as well as leather gloves and eye protection if available. Registration is required. For more information or to register, call 503-802-8100 or email orvolunteers@tnc.org.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 19
See Judy bloom The Newport Symphony Orchestra will bring its summer festival of music to a close in epic style this weekend with a pair of performances featuring living legend Judy Collins. Collins, who burst on to the international music stage in 1967 with her album “Wildflowers,” has since sustained a successful, worldwide career with vocal talents and interests that cross genres of folk, rock and even Broadway standards. Performing alongside the symphony orchestra will be something of a return to her roots for Collins, who began her music career by dazzling audiences with Mozart’s “Concerto for Two Pianos” as a 13-year-old piano prodigy. But, seduced away from the concert pianist life by the hard-luck tales and rugged sensitivity of artists such as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, Collins instead began a lifelong love affair with the guitar and pursuit of emotional truth in lyrics. Her early focus and regimented practice of classical music, however, would be a source of strength to her inner core as she navigated the highs and lows of the music business. Collins will take to the stage for two evening shows at 7:30 pm on Friday, July 8, and Saturday, July 9, at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, ranging from $55 to $95, are available at the box office and online at NewportSymphony.org. • Season tickets are also on sale now for the orchestra’s regular season of classical performances from September 2016 through March 2017.
in concert
JAZZ good as it gets
Workshop Prior to Sunday’s concert, John Stowell will lead a jazz guitar workshop aimed at players who want to expand their vocabulary in jazz phrasing, improvisation or other applicable skills. The workshop cost is $25 and private lessons are also available for $75. INHOUSE Jazz will sponsor participation fees any interested high school students. To book a spot, contact Annie Averre at email aaverre@hotmail.com or 360-606-7136.
20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
Jazz guitarist John Stowell will visit the Oregon Coast this Sunday, July 10, to perform the latest INHOUSE Jazz concert alongside vocalist Annie Averre and Dmitri Matheny on flugelhorn. Held in a private home, the intimate concert will showcase a mix of fresh, original works, familiar jazz and bossa nova classics, and favorite selections from the artists’ recordings. Stowell is a unique jazz artist, influenced as much by pianists and horn players as he is by other guitarists. His original take on harmony, chords and improvisation sets him apart and led the Los Angeles Times to describe him as an artist who “transcends the label of jazz guitarist.” Meanwhile flugelhornist and composer Dmitri Matheny has been lauded by the International Review of Music as “one of the most emotionally expressive improvisers of his generation.” An honors graduate of Berklee College of Music, Matheny vaulted onto the jazz scene in the 1990s as the protégé of jazz legend Art Farmer. Since then. he has garnered critical acclaim and a loyal following, releasing 11 albums and touring extensively throughout the United States, Europe and Asia. Vocalist Annie Averre is known for her bright, vibrant and accessible performances, bringing nuance, lyricism and a compelling stage presence to jazz audiences. Described by noted pianist Randy Porter as “a quality musician and inspired composer,” she delivers a song with a heartfelt warmth and spirit uniquely her own. Sunday’s concert will begin at 2:30 pm. For reservations and directions, contact Averre at 360-606-7136 or email aaverre@hotmail.com. Admission is by suggested donation of $15 to $30, with all profits going toward local music education. For more information, go to inhousejazz.org.
coast culture
DISCOVER YOUR NEXT GREAT EXCUSE TO SNEAK AWAY TO THE COAST
Keep movie-ing this summer For some people on the Oregon Coast, July is a time to spend every waking minute on the beach, in the forests or otherwise engaged in soaking up the great outdoors. But for those who find themselves overwhelmed by the joys of summer and need to relax for a while in a darkened room, the Bijou Theatre’s Summer Film Series awaits. The series presents four critically acclaimed movies on Sunday and Monday evenings throughout the month, with screenings at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. All screenings start at 7 pm, with tickets $7.50 for adults and $7 for seniors and students. For more information, go to www.cinemalovers.com.
July 10 & 11
“Hello, My Name is Doris” (2016) A self-help seminar inspires a 60-something woman to romantically pursue her younger co-worker in this hilarious movie, starring Sally Field and directed by Michael Showalter. Rater R for language.
July 17 & 18
“The Man Who Knew Infinity” (2016) Dev Patel and Jeremy Irons star in this movie, inspired by the true story of Ramanujan, a poor East Indian man who earns admittance to Cambridge University during World War I. There, with the guidance of his professor, he overcomes discrimination to become a pioneer in mathematical theories. Directed by Matt Brown. PG-13.
Jeremy Irons and Dev Patel in “The Man Who Knew Infinity”
July 24 & 25
“The Brand New Testament” (2015) Produced in Belgium, France and Luxembourg, this black comedy imagines God living as a cynic with his young, opinionated daughter in present-day Brussels. She concludes that her dad is doing a terrible job and does something which leaves
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God angry, powerless and adamant to get his power back. Directed by Jaco Van Dormael. Subtitles. PG-13.
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“Love and Friendship” (2016) Lady Susan Vernon takes up temporary residence at her in-laws’ estate and, while there, is determined to be a matchmaker for her daughter Frederica — and herself too, naturally. Kate Beckinsale and Chloe Sevigny star in this US-Eurpean production, based on the Jane Austin novella. Directed by Whit Stillman. PG.
Duck Fan? Beaver Fan? Lincoln County High School Fan? 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! Sally Field in “Hello, my name is Doris”
knpt • 1310am • newport
|
kbch • 1400am • lincoln city
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 21
By Dave Green
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE T A L C I M P O A I S L O C A R R L I E I A K I N W I N G A D E T O R T B M A J O E C O N L A K E D I E D
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distant clouds 2 Issue 3 Like spectroscopes and microscopes 4 Dictatorial boss 5 Director ___ C. Kenton 6 Prominent feature of a sloth 7 Sign adored by angels 8 Brief refreshers 9 “The Green Hornet” trumpeter 10 Stand on its head 11 Holder of spirits 12 Literally, “land of the sun” 13 Second club used on a par 4 hole, maybe 14 Adams and Jefferson, e.g. 15 Final order of things? 17 Big name in drugs 23 Feudal lord 24 Memo starter
SUPER QUIZ
Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: MISSED ROLES Identify the actor who could have played the given role. Initials are provided. (e.g., W.C.F. turned down the title role in “The Wizard of Oz” because MGM wouldn’t meet his price. Answer: W.C. Fields.)
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. M.P. was the director’s choice to play Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) in “The Silence of the Lambs.”
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Beer-andwhiskey cocktail “… let slip the dogs of ___”: Shak. Stuck Grabbed something Black-tie event Speech in a Spike Lee film By hook or by crook
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Ancient Greek craft Island north of Antigua Tablet contents, perhaps Not yet admitted Heart They hold water Power in old films
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21st word of the Pledge of Allegiance
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SUDOKU is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. King Features
Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 per minute; or, with puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). credit card, 1-800-814-5554. (Or, just wait for next week’s TODAY.) Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young. solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
5. M.R. turned down the role of Archie Bunker on TV’s “All in the Family.” 6. J.T. turned down the title role played by Tom Hanks in “Forrest Gump.” PH.D. LEVEL 7. S.C. turned down the role of Gandalf in “The Lord of the Rings.” 8. B.R. turned down the role of Han Solo (Harrison Ford) in “Star Wars.” 9. K.C. turned down the role of Andy (played by Tim Robbins) in “Shawshank Redemption.” ANSWERS: 1. Tom Selleck. 2. Al Pacino. 3. Jack Nicholson. 4. Michelle Pfeiffer. 5. Mickey Rooney. 6. John Travolta. 7. Sean Connery. 8. Burt Reynolds. 9. Kevin Costner. SCORING: 18 points -- congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points -- honors graduate; 10 to 14 points -- you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points -- you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points -- enroll in remedial courses immediately
22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
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2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. T.S. turned down the role of Indiana Jones in “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” 2. A.P. turned down the role of Edward Lewis (played by Richard Gere) in “Pretty Woman.” 3. J.N. turned down the role of Michael Corleone in “The Godfather.”
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Like some cakes Classic R&B hit about a returning lover It has multiple clauses Honey PostImpressionist Seurat
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website with virtual animals 8 Met for a party? 16 Film villain who says “Your feeble skills are no match for the power of the dark side” 18 Classic conflict 19 Confederate 20 Bold way to solve a crossword 21 Some AOL exchanges 22 Like teddies, often 23 Source of some leather 25 Wheel that runs? 26 Rat-___ 27 Feckless 28 Beau
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Tough to get ahold of Boots one Anytown, U.S.A., sign Something hot “___ on Fire” (2012 Alicia Keys hit) Executor’s charge Camp invader Bellwether’s “belles” Carried Put on hold Get-out-of-jail aid, maybe Go without saying? Route through the boondocks Protein-rich paste ___ Tamid (synagogue lamp) Raiser of horses?
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No. 0610
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ACROSS
Edited by Will Shortz
Difficulty Level
Crossword
Last Week’s Answers:
s o u n d wa v e s
Friday, July 8
Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. WINTERLINGS — Seattle duo Wolff Bowden and Amanda Birdsall are both songwriters and multi-instrumentalists, taking turns singing lead and harmony vocals. Featuring guitar, ukulele, violin, banjitar, percussion and more. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. THEY WENT THATAWAY — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6:309 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from
this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — These guys will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. “Jump ‘n’ Swing with a Zing!” Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. ZUHG — An evening of fully plugged in ZuhG tunes, celebrating life through everything from country to rock to reggae. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. SORE THUMB — Pop, rock, R&B, funk, Motown, blues, jazz, country and more, all performed with style and skill. 9 pm, Rusty Truck Brewery, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. 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. ORIGINAL FACE — Joe Armenio on keyboards and Gary Baker on guitar. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. DAVE & CRATE — Take a magical mystery musical tour with easy listening rock and pop from the ’50s to the ’90s. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, July 16 THE JUNEBUGS — A high-energy pop-folk trio who are
thang,” with Jedi-Jim Hobbs on guitar, lots of original blues, Cajun, swampytonk and American roots tunes, plus tall tales, outright lies, and talented local sit-ins. Family friendly. 5-8 pm, O’Downey’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, 10 Bay Street, Depoe Bay. FLAT 5 FLIM FLAM — Modern Acoustic Swing. 9 pm, Bier one, 424 SW Coast Hwy, Newport. RICK JOHNSON — Americana. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
ready to rock and/or roll until the cows come home. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-3685080. ZUHG — Original funk and reggae. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. RETROACTIVE GAMMA RAYS — A night of high-energy surf music from these local favorites makes for a must-see beach music show. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. HANK SHREVE BAND — Hank began playing harmonica at the age of 8 and has established himself as a major talent on the blues scene in the Pacific Northwest. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. JIMMY BIVENS — Rockin’ the house with Western swing. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — These guys will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. “Jump ‘n’ Swing with a Zing!” Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 5-7 pm, at Bayfront Tasting Room, 146 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-2725222. SHY SHY & GARY — Oregon Coast locals playing folk, blues and originals. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DAVE & CRATE — A magical mystery musical tour of ‘50s to ‘80s classic rock, played on the outdoor stage if the weather co-operates. 1-3:30 pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.
Thursday, July 14
Sunday, July 17
Saturday, July 9 COUNTRYSIDE RIDE — Let your hair down for an evening
of good ole honkytonk, hard-core country & western, hillbilly and Western swing. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — These guys will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. “Jump ‘n’ Swing with a Zing!” Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. ZUHG — An evening of fully plugged in ZuhG tunes, celebrating life through everything from country to rock to reggae. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. ANDY STOKES — Get your embers well and truly stoked as this soul master brings his deep sound to the coast. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-9947729. TED VAUGHN BLUES BAND — 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. JUNE RUSHING BAND — Accompanied by sidekick and husband Joren, June plays a host of songs you know and love. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-5474477. DAVE & CRATE — A magical mystery musical tour of ‘50s to ‘80s classic rock, played on the outdoor stage if the weather co-operates. 1-3:30 pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.
Sunday, July 10 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. ZUHG — An evening of fully plugged-in ZuhG tunes, celebrating life through everything from country to rock to reggae. 9
Sore Thumb • Friday, July 8, in Lincoln City pm, Nauti Mermaid Beach House, 220 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. JAM SESSION — Pair those German ales with some lively tunes: No glockenspiel required. 7 pm, Autobahn 101, 1512 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1811. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam. All musicians welcome. Free pool all day and happy hour while the music plays. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. GEN OBATA — Flatpicking guitar. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Monday, July 11 THE LIQUE — This hip-hop/jazz combo promises a high-energy performance involving crowd participation and comedy, making fans think as they groove. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. RICHARD SHARPLESS — Retired from his days of playing in Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Tuesday, July 12
Wednesday, July 13 LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this “front porch
BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from
this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-10 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, 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. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. WITHERWOOD — 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Friday, July 15 ZUHG — Original funk and reggae. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Sea-
OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor
Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. ROCK’N TACOS OPEN JAM — JRC and Friends host this weekly jam, paired with 50-cent tacos for one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. JOHN BRINGETTO — Classic jazz favorites. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
food Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. SCHWING — The best of ’90s rock and pop. 9 pm, Rusty Truck Brewery, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s
OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. JAM SESSION — Pair those German ales with some lively tunes: No glockenspiel required. 7 pm, Autobahn 101, 1512 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1811. THE LARRY BLAKE MEDICINE SHOW— From old-timey songs to hippie anthems to jazz favorites, the Medicine Show band keeps them rolling. Guitar, congas, vocals, washboard and a sense of humor are all they need for a real variety show. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam. All musicians welcome. Free pool all day and happy hour while the music plays. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. PAST FORWARD — Music worth repeating; classics from the Great American Songbook. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? EMAIL THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE TO US AT NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 23
artsy
NOW PLAYING LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS
t Newport Performing Arts Center: JUDY COLLINS WITH THE NEWPORT SYMPHONY, SUMMER FILM SERIES – “HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS,” “FROM THE OUTSIDE LOOKING IN” SKATE FILM, MILO GRAAMANS & FRIENDS IN CONCERT t Yachats Community Presbyterian: YACHATS MUSIC FESTIVAL t Private Home, 360-606-7136: INHOUSE JAZZ – DMITRI MATHENY, JOHN STOWELL t Newport Public Library: LITERARY FLICKS – DR. FAUSTUS, STORYTELLING WORKSHOP t Lincoln City Cultural Center: RANDY MCALLISTER
OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS
91.7 FM Lincoln County’s only Public Radio Station Streaming live at KYAQ.org Featuring locally produced music programs: Oregon Music Connection w/ M Frazier: Fri 9pm, Sat 2pm Sunday Brunch w/ Dave Huntington: Sun 9am, Thu 10pm Sonic Cafe w/ Scott Clark: Mon 10pm, Sun 8pm KYAQ Music Hour w/ Bill Dalbey Sat 8pm, Wed 11pm Train to Skaville w/Brian Tomsic Sat 10pm, Tue 10pm
More online at coastarts.org
541-635-0034
Looking for
Summer Fun? Create art & win prizes!
We are looking for kids of all ages to create 100 masks as part of the Oregon Coast Invitational Youth Art Festival to be held this August. Youth from 5th to 12th grade are invited to create their own works of art, while kids from pre-school to 4th grade can compete as an individual student, or on family teams, consisting of one adult and one to two youth. Workshops will be in August and participants will have three days to decorate their masks and get in the running for prizes and gift cards. All supplies will be provided. To apply for the festival, youth artists from 5th to 12th grade can send a photo of a work of art they have created in the past year along with their name and contact information to occt.youthartprograms@gmail.com. They will then receive an info packet on how to enter the festival. Family teams just need to contact us to reserve a mask.
Hosted by the Oregon Coast Children’s Theatre & Center for the Arts, the festival will be held from August 27 to September 5, during Toledo’s “Art Walk” Labor Day Weekend.
“To Go On After The Loss” by Rick Bartow
BARTOW IN CLOSE-UP Works by renowned Newport artist Rick Bartow will be on display throughout summer in a retrospective exhibition hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, opening this Friday. “Rick Bartow: A Community Collection,” was developed through an open call to Bartow’s friends, supporters and fellow artists, encouraging them to loan pieces to the exhibit as a testament to the creative talent of the Newport icon, who died in April. The show will open with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, July 8, with a talk from community members discussing their loaned works at 5:45 pm. Born in Newport in 1946, Bartow was a member of the Wiyot tribe from Northern California. His family
24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
developed close ties with the Siletz Indian community of the Central Oregon Coast and Native American transformation myths remained at the heart of his work throughout his lifetime. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in art education from Western Oregon State University in 1969 and then served in the Vietnam War for 13 months as a teletype officer and musician in a military hospital. He returned to his art making several years after his service in the military, still suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Bartow was offered a solo exhibit in 1985 by Portland gallerist William Jamison of Jamison/Thomas Gallery, after which his arts career and prolific creative works grabbed the attention of the broader art world.
“I drew myself straight,” Bartow told Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “Art Beat” in 2004, referring to how his creative work allowed him to overcome personal challenges such as PTSD and the loss of his wife to cancer. Bartow’s life as a visual artist reached various pinnacles of recognition, not the least of which is his monumental cedar sculpture, “We Were Always Here,” commissioned by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian to sit on the museum’s grounds overlooking the National Mall in Washington D.C. The Newport exhibit will run until September 4, available to view from 11 am to 6 pm, Tuesday to Sunday at 777 NE Beach Drive.
n a t u r a l i s t ’s c a l e n d a r
Bird group offers double bill Lincoln City’s Audubon group will be lacing up their hiking boots two days running this weekend, with birding trips on offer on Friday, July 8, and Saturday, July 9. On Friday, the group will tackle the latest in a series of birding tours of Lincoln City Open Spaces, starting from D River at Devils Lake State Park. The easy walk will take participants over the boardwalk and through the campground to the dock on Devils Lake. The trip offers the chance to see summer songbirds as
well as osprey and year-round wetlands residents such as wrens, sparrows and woodpeckers. The group will meet at 9 am at the open space; turn east on NE 1st Street just north of the D River and follow the gravel road past the Comfort Inn. For more information, call 541-992-9720. On Saturday, July 9, the group is inviting people to take part in an excursion at Yaquina Head Lighthouse, just north of Newport. Mark Elliott will lead the trip, in search
of nesting colonies of common murre, bald eagle, black oystercatcher, cormorants, brown pelican, peregrine falcon and pigeon guillemot. The group will meet at 9 am in the interpretive center parking lot, turn west from Highway 101 on to Lighthouse Drive. No prior birding experience is required for either trip and binoculars and guidebooks will be provided. For more information, go to http:// lincolncityaudubon.org/calendar.html.
O n e-n igh t sta ys W elco m e! www.oceanterrace.com 4229 S.W. Beach Ave., Lincoln City, OR
800-648-2119
10% o ff w ith a d
Peregrine falcon • Photo by Ernie Rose
AT THE BEACH
RV site D eluxe co ttages C am ping C o ttages C abins
T enting L easing G ro up acco m m o datio ns Pizza!
Indo o r Po o l and Spa G ifts and G ro cery L ive Beach C am Free W iFi
info@ckrvr.com www.capekiwandarvresort.com
Plenty of activities to enjoy: • Golfing • Fishing
• Horseback riding • Shopping
• Excellent restaurants • And much more!
Find the rental home that works for you! 866-994-7026
Call us today at 503-392-4355 or toll-free at 1-888-720-2154 www.neskowinbeachvacations.com oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016 • 25
lively
A fair offer Organizers of the New Lincoln County Fair are looking for vendors and entertainers interested in being part of an event that attracted some 13,000 visitors last year. Michele Osterhoudt of the Lincoln County OSU Extension said indoor booth space was sold out at last year’s event, which saw the grounds teeming with activity. “Vendors reported terrific sales and organizations were thrilled with the visibility they gained in the community,” she said. “Attendees also sang the praises
of (and along with!) the many talented musicians who performed.” This year’s fair will run from Aug. 19 through 21 at the Lincoln County Fairgrounds, offering free admission to attractions including professional bull riding, junior rodeo, musicians, bouncy houses, a climbing wall, kids’ activities and lots of great food. For more information, go to www. TheLincolnCountyFair.com or contact Michele Osterhoudt at 541-648-6818 or michele.osterhoudt@oregonstate.edu.
CLOVERDALE
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TILLAMOOK
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Dory Restaurant
& Lounge Thomas Goodwin Gallery The Bowsery curios for dog lovers
Family Gifts at Family Prices
Open 7 days a week from 9 - 5 Nestucca Valley
Auto Parts Rusty Cow Antiques <ĂƚŝĞ͛Ɛ <ŽƌŶĞƌ
PACIFIC CITY Café & Ice Cream ϲ ŵŝůĞƐ Center Market Full Grocery Burkhardt Gallery ĂŶĚĞůĂƌŝĂ͛Ɛ Taqueria South County Motors LINCOLN CITY ϮϮ ŵŝůĞƐ 23 7pm - MUSIC BENEFIT Sat July )UHG 6RQ\D DQG 'RQQD -RVH
Nestucca Valley Artisans WR Aug 14 DW *RRGZLQ %XUNKDUGW *DOOHULHV
CRUISE-IN Cloverdale Aug 24 FORYHUGDOHQHZV RUJ
4741 SW Hwy 101 Ste. A, Lincoln City, OR 97367
1134 Main Ave, Tillamook, OR 97141
541-614-1442
503-842-9327
Highest Quality Lowest Prices Best Selection
Between Cloverdale & Hebo
:[YZ
Pipe Dreams Dispensary Recreational Dispensary
33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale
TIDES
Medical Dispensary
Your guide to cannabis on the coast
Meds and Accessories
Co nc entra tes , to pic a ls a nd ed ib les a re a va ila b le fo reveryo ne Ju ne 2 nd !
MON-THURS 10AM-7PM • FRI-SAT 10AM-8PM • CLOSED SUNDAY 1745 SW Highway 101 • Lincoln City, OR 97367 • 541-614-0682
26 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016
Pipe dreams
whale-size deals
every day
LCCC Presents:
Randy McAllister
Saturday, July 16 7 pm
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Heartbreak, humor, high hair and tall Texas tales all play a part in the songwriting of Randy McAllister, a singer-drummer-harmonica player from Novice, Texas. His music has been hailed as some of the most original and innovative being made today. While comparisons are not easy, it has been said that his music is a cross between Doug Sahm, Saturday, July 9, 11 am - 3 pm John Hiatt and Delbert McClinton, with a blues manâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s background and sensibilities thrown into the mix. On this tour, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bringing a four-piece band: bass, drums, guitar and fiddle. Tickets $28 adv/$30 door.
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The 3rd annual Lincoln City
on coast hwy
& devils lake road
Chalk Art Competition 540 NE Hwy. 101,
LincolnCityOutlets.com ďš&#x2122; ďš&#x161; "" - like!
inside the historic Delake School
On the Coast
TICKETS & INFO: www.lincolncityculturalcenter.org 541-994-9994
Help us transform the sidewalks of the historic Delake School building into colorful works of art! Registration is $5 for ages 6 and under and $10 for ages 7 and up and includes a sidewalk square and box of chalk. Individuals can purchase squares next to each other to produce a group work. For details, call the center at 541-994-9994.
6119 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR 97367
info@freedgallery.com 541-994-5600 www.freedgallery.com
oregon coast TODAY â&#x20AC;˘ facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday â&#x20AC;˘ july 8, 2016 â&#x20AC;˘ 27
VIA HDTV SAT, JULY 9, 7PM
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CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT
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Collect entries weekly starting July 1 DRAWINGS JULY 31 at 4pm Five semi-finalists will win their choice of $1000 CASH or 1000 $and Dollars. One finalist will win their choice of a new Nissan 370Z coupe or a Mazda MX-3 crossover! Complete rules at Winners Circle Actual vehicles may vary from illustration.
3245 NE 50 th St. Lincoln City, OR
541-994-8232 5 41 994 8232
chinookwindscasino.com • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK 28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 8, 2016