Oregon Coast Today March 6, 2015

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oregon coast

TODAY

FREE! March 6, 2015 • ISSUE 39, VOL. 10

Tides • Dining • Theater Events Calendar • Live Music

GET

A CLUE The Nye Beach Mystery Weekend rolls into Newport See page 11

2

Dollar

Tuesday

Six $2 sliders & Draft Beer specials from 28 taps! Every Tuesday 4pm-10pm

“It’s Better at the Beach” • Aces Bar & Grill • 3245 NE 50th Street • Lincoln City • (541) 994-8232 • chinookwindscasino.com


ANNUAL EARRING SALE! Feb rua ry 1stthru M a rc h 31st

BUY ONE PAIR, 2ND PAIR

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Every earring pair in the store included in this sale:

Family Gifts at Family Prices

Renee’s Herb Store

Firefly, Boma, Sita, Saraswati, Wide-Mouth Frog, Equinox, Anne Koplick and many more!

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o pen W ed s th ru S u n d a y 10-5 PM Com e in a n d ch eck out ourselection of

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The Red Cock Craftsmen’s Outlet 1221 A NE HWY. 101 • LINCOLN CITY

Lega lB a ked G o o d s G o lden X trx O PEN:M ON -SAT 10AM -5 PM |SU N D AY 10AM -2PM 3219 SW H w y 101 • Lin co ln City

(south of Birkenstock) • 541-994-2518 Closed Wednesdays until March 1st

541.994.9733 |w w w .ren eesherbsto re.co m

November thru april Saturday 10am - 2pm Inside the Exhibition Hall at the Fairgrounds

Thank you for supporting us! Buy good food, local farm products and handcrafted art at the Lincoln County Farmers Market!

Patrick Alexander, Editor & Publisher 541-921-0413

patrick@oregoncoasttoday.com

Greg Robertson, Advertising 541-992-1920

greg@oregoncoasttoday.com

Submit news, calendar or event info to news@oregoncoasttoday.com

Manzanita

Founded by Niki & Dave Price • May 2005 Copyright 201 EO Media Group dba Oregon Coast TODAY

Mailing: PO Box 962, Lincoln City, OR 97367 Billing or business questions? 877-737-3690 Find us on facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • @octoday Optimized for your mobile device at oregoncoasttoday.com

facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday 2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

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Tillamook 101

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from the editor

If I had a hammer…

One of the earliest arguments I can recall having with my older brother — and there were many — concerned the late, great Leonard Nimoy and his 1968 recording of the Pete Seeger and Lee Hays classic “If I Had a Hammer.” My tender young brain simply could not conceive of the notion that Mr. Spock was somehow moonlighting as a folk singer. My bother, I concluded, must be lying. That early and somewhat harsh judgment rather set the tone for our relationship throughout the years Patrick Alexander that followed. Editor & Publisher Now, some 30 years later, Nimoy has crossed the Final Frontier and I find it is I that will be holding the hammer and moonlighting, too, when I accept the role of auctioneer at this Friday’s Super Auction II, the Sequel. The marathon, 13-hour auction, a fund-raiser for the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce, was supposed to be completed on February 21. Unfortunately, it had to be called off with three hours left on the clock due to a flood of prank calls from the sort of people who don’t realize that asking to speak to “Seymore Butts” is only funny if you happen to be Bart Simpson — and even then it wasn’t his best work. Thanks to these speed-dialing sad-acts, there is a whole bunch of great stuff that still needs to find loving homes — like an $880 silver and gold necklace and earrings set from Diamonds by the Sea; two nights in the Beachcombers Haven vacation rental, valued at $500; and four hours rental of the Eventuary events center, valued at $800. There’s also still plenty of stuff to fit more modest budgets, like a coffee-lover’s package from Starbucks, valued at $30; gift baskets from Kenny’s IGA, valued at $75; and a $60 night at the Captain Cook Inn. All the items are donated by local businesses to help keep the chamber working hard for our community, so I’ll be pulling out every trick in the book to get top dollar for every lot. As an added incentive, everyone who buys an item at its listed price or higher stands a chance of being entered into a prize draw for the main haul of the evening — a sevennight stay at the Eagle Crest Resort in Bend, donated by Chinook Winds Casino Resort. So join me for what promises to be a fun evening with light appetizers and a no host bar, starting at 6 pm at Aces Bar & Grill, 3250 NE 50th Street. For a list of all the remaining auction items, go to the chamber website at www. lcchamber.com. For any other questions, call the chamber at 541-994-3070.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 3


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The clown is back in town Registration is now open for the Magic Camps that will take place during this month’s Festival of Illusions at Lincoln City Cultural Center. The camps will run from 9 to 11 am daily from Monday, March 23, through Friday, March 27. Guest artist Regina Wollrabe, aka Cha Cha the Clown, will help young performers improve their skills in juggling, circusstyle tricks, makeup, costumes, props and more. The camps are open to kids aged 8 to 18 and their parents, grandparents and guardians. The price is $18 per person, per day and includes all props and instructions. Kids can also sign up for the entire week for the discounted price of $80. Pre-registration is recommended, although drop-ins will be accepted if space is available. To register or learn more, call 541-994-9994. Cha Cha and her assistant, Laura Green the Juggling Queen, are planning a DIY Magic Show after the last camp, at 11 am on Friday, March 27. Participation is free to any magic camp student and admission is free as well. Also on offer during this year’s festival is the Abra Cadabra Open Art Space,

Wand to know more?

Regina Wollrabe, aka Cha Cha the Clown

led by arts educator Krista Eddy and a slew of cultural center volunteers. The workshop will take over the center’s conference room for drop-in fun from 1 to 4 pm daily. Some projects will be guided — like making magic wands, magician’s hats and floating butterflies — while other tables will be “free art” zones, with paper, markers, paints, fabric, notions and the like. The entrance fee is $5. Children 8 and under must be accompanied by an adult. For details, contact Sam Randall or Krista Eddy at 541-994-9994.

Tickets are on sale now for the festival’s evening performances, which begin at 7 pm each night, with doors open at 6:30 pm. Each show has two sets with an intermission; and sweet treats, sodas, nuts, beer and wine are sold inside. Advance tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for kids aged 5 to 18, and free for kids 4 and younger. Tickets are available at www. lincolncity-culturalcenter.org or by calling 541-994-9994. MONDAY, MARCH 23 Joe Black — Magician, mentalist and a real crowd pleaser. Appropriate for older children and adults. TUESDAY, MARCH 24 Henrik Bothe — One of the best plate spinners in the world, as well as one of the funniest physical comedians on the circuit today. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25 Steve Hamilton — Comedy magician, known for his spontaneous humor and original routines. THURSDAY, MARCH 26 Jeff Evans the Entertainer — “Ridiculously dangerous” escape stunts from ropes, chains and padlocks. FRIDAY, MARCH 27 Louie Foxx — Close-up magician known for his artistry with the bullwhip and the lasso, as well as his ability to shrink his own head.

Feeling art-sea? Spring Break can feel like a shipwreck for some parents, who suddenly have to think up ways of keeping their unruly crew occupied until school starts again. But help is at hand in the form of “Lost at Sea,” a Spring Break art camp that will run from Tuesday, March 24, to Thursday, March 26, at the Bay City Arts Center.

4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

Designed for kids aged 7 to 9, the camp will teach a variety of art skills and send students home with amazing, one-of-a-kind projects each day. Camp runs from 9 to 11:30 am daily and pre-registration is required. The fee is $12 per day or $30 for all three days. For more information or to register, call Leeauna at 503377-9620.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 5


potpourri

A very ratio-nal choice When organizers of the inaugural Pie Auction and Pie Feast in Pacific City scoured their calendars to find a suitable date for the event, there was only ever going to be one option — March 14, Pi Day. But their devotion to the mathematical ratio that begins with 3.14 and never truly ends is dwarfed by their love for the pies produced by the Central Oregon Coast’s all-star cast of

bakers and makers. March 14 will see Pacific City’s Kiawanda Community Center packed with an overwhelming display of pie mastery, with each of the sweet and savory miracles auctioned off to the highest bidder. And guests who develop an appetite from constantly raising and lowering their auction paddles will find satisfaction at the evening’s concluding All

You Can Eat Pie Feast, offering a bevy of homemade, locally made, lovingly made pie. Gluten-free and vegan pies will be available. No pie is complete without ice cream, which will be provided by the Tillamook County Creamery Association. Equator Coffee Co. is providing the coffee; Pelican Pub and Brewery is bringing the beer while Twist is handling the wine. The event will run from

7 to 9 pm at the Kiawanda Community Center, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive. Tickets, $10, will be available on the door. Proceeds from the event will benefit Food Roots, the Neskowin and Pacific City farmers markets, and the Pacific City Food Pantry. For more information about Food Roots, call 503-815-2800 or go to foodrootsnw.org.

The first thing every gardener learns upon moving to the Oregon Coast is to abandon all hope of seeing a crop of fresh, juicy, sunripened tomatoes. They just won’t grow, people tell us — try kale instead. Not so, say the good folks at the Sustainable Living Center in Lincoln City, which is hosting a series of workshops on how to grow a perfect crop using a TomatoBarrel. The ingenious invention makes use of the heat-storing capacity of its water reservoir to protect the tomatoes from the chilling effect of Oregon’s cold rain. Gardeners can start their crop as soon as the barrel is ready and can place it on a deck, a patio or in the sunniest

Learn at lunchtime The director of Newport’s OSU Hatfield Marine Science Center will give an update on plans to expand the facility in a Friday, March 13, talk at Taft High 7-12 in Lincoln City. Speaking at the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce lunch forum, Dr. Bob Cowen will provide an overview of Oregon State University’s Marine Studies Initiative, which is designed to address emerging issues and challenges facing not only

the coast, but the state and the world as a whole. The Initiative will further bridge OSU’s Corvallis campus and the coast by bringing a $50-million, state-of-the-art facility with 500 students to Newport. The March 13 lunch, catered by the Taft High Culinary Department, will begin at 11:45 am and costs $10 a head. Taft High 7-12 is located at 3780 Spyglass Ridge Drive. The public is always invited

The time is ripe for a new tomato trick part of the yard throughout the season. With a 30-gallon reservoir, the TomatoBarrel only needs to be watered about once a week. The free TomatoBarrel workshops will take place from 1-3 pm on Wednesday, March 11, 18 and 25, giving participants the chance to try their hand at making a barrel of their own. The Sustainable Living Center is located at 6349 S Hwy. 101, just south of ProBuild and right across the highway from Street Car Village. Registration is required. For details, email workshop@ sustainablelivingproducts.org or call 541-921-7007.

Book some space in your schedule

to attend chamber lunch forums and people should RSVP by calling 541-994-

3070 or e-mailing info@ lcchamber.com by 5 pm Wednesday, March 11.

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

The Hoffman Center in Manzanita will host a workshop that gives artists the opportunity to create their own journal or sketchbook from scratch on Saturday, March 14. From 9 am to 4 pm, workshop leader Eliza Holliday will guide students through the process of making a book from Arches Text Wove, a translucent paper that is strong enough to take wet

media but is also excellent for drawing. Students will start the day coloring watercolor paper for the cover and go on to complete the project with exposed longstitch and added beads. The workshop is open to people aged 12 and up, with previous book arts experience recommended. Tuition is $60. Register at http://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

A real housing bubble A

fter searching the countryside for a year, Theresa and Richard Wisner had finally found their little piece of paradise, property so rural no one could tell them for certain which town it was in. Now, it was time to decide on a dwelling. They considered cob construction, but it was too much work. They looked at hay bale but feared it wouldn’t withstand the wet Oregon Coast Range climate. And manufactured homes simply held no appeal. When Richard suggested they consider a monolithic dome, Theresa recalls, “I was like, ‘I don’t think so.’” But Richard was sold on the idea and eventually Theresa came around, too — but soon found herself regretting it. What had they done? Whatever it was, it was much too late to back out. Which was not a pleasant thought on that day when, midway through construction, Theresa and Richard stepped inside. “They had put the concrete in the dome and hadn’t yet taken away the window and door space,” Theresa said. “Walking in, it’s a gray concrete orb and it was pretty distressing. It was a cave and I was so like, ‘Oh my god, what have we done?’ We’d basically put everything in. We had eight acres we bought for it. We were fully invested.” It was not as if the pair had not done their homework. Richard’s sister built a monolithic dome in Belize, and the Wisners had made up a road trip to Yelm, Washington to look at another. They studied the pros and cons, the maintenance requirements and the construction technique. “It’s kind of an interesting process,” Theresa said.

Dome sweet dome: the Wisners relax in their cozy abode

“They blow up basically a balloon and put pressurized air in it. Then they blow in a polyurethane form and then they put rebar inside of that and then they blow concrete inside the rebar.” They learned about the difference between a monolithic dome, which is essentially one piece; and a geodesic dome, which is built from a series of panels. The former is considered more stable in rough conditions, like the big wind experienced in the Coast Range. That stability along with the low maintenance, energy efficiency and the unique nature of the dwelling convinced the pair a dome was the home for them. It would be a cozy, comfortable kind of place. Or so Theresa thought. The 1,100-square-foot dome arrived via UPS in a box. It took contractors little more than two weeks to raise the dome, install more than one mile of rebar, and six inches each of insulation and concrete. And that was the cave the Wisners found themselves inside of midway through the project. “When they were blew up the outer polyurethane shell, it looked really big, but by the time they put the concrete in, the color changed. There was no light coming in anywhere. I thought, ‘This is tiny. It’s a cave. I hate it.’” But in days, builders opened the windows and doors, filling the dome with light, and suddenly it wasn’t so tiny. But the trials were far from over. Once the floors were poured, the couple sprayed the inside in a paint color with a name — Exciting Orange — that Theresa hated, but one she hoped would

complement the brick red floors. “When we were done, I came back in, looked around and started crying,” she says. “I said, ‘I have to live inside the Great Pumpkin.’ That moment was pretty horrifying.” But once Richard installed the interior walls, crafted from 8,000 board feet of lumber from their own land, suddenly that expanse of Exciting Orange was just a little less electrifying. “It broke it up, it worked perfectly,” Theresa said. “I love it now.” Today, the little dome is a warm, inviting space filled with light, antiques and old mementos from their families’ deep Oregon roots. The solar system feeds into the electrical grid, eliminating electric bills five months of the year. There’s a temperate rainforest just outside the dome’s front door where a pair of goats provide entertainment and deer nibble on dandelion heads. And it’s so quiet, cars pull into the driveway, but they never know they have company until they hear the knock at the door. Nonetheless, the house still feels like a cave, says Theresa. That is, in the best possible way. “It’s comforting,” she said. “Walking into that house more than any other house I’ve ever lived in is comforting. You are almost caressed by the atmosphere.” 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, as well as the occasional post for her blog loritobias.com.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 7


beach reads

Find Love in Yachats The Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences will welcome Oregon Coast author Matt Love as the speaker at its Saturday, March 7, meeting. In the past 10 years, Love has written seven books directly inspired by the Oregon Coast, ranging from the unique legacy of the state’s publicly owned beaches to the movie “Sometimes a Great Notion.� In a presentation entitled “One Writer’s Muse: the Oregon Coast,� Love will share the story of how he approached these topics and started his own publishing company to distribute them. Love, who lives in Astoria, is publisher of Nestucca Spit Press and a recipient of the Stewart H. Holbrook Literary Legacy Award for his contributions to Oregon’s history and literature. His latest book is “A Nice Piece of Astoria: A Narrative Guide� and he is currently working on a book about teaching. For more information on Love, go to www. nestuccaspitpress.com. Saturday’s presentation will start at 6:30 pm at the Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. There is no admission charge but a $5 donation will help cover publicity expenses.

Lincoln City’s best restaurant has another option...

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The Manzanita Writers’ Series has kicked off its crowdfunding campaign to raise money for the fourth edition of the North Coast Squid, a journal for local writing. The magazine, which showcases work by writers and artists who live on the North Oregon Coast or have a strong connection to the area, will publish its fourth edition in

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8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

April. The crowdfunding campaign is just one part of the overall budget, with the rest of the expenses being covered through in-kind donations of design time and editing along with sales of the Squid Supporters can pledge anywhere between $25 and $500, earning exclusive perks in return. Perks available to donors range from a copy of the Squid with their name on the donor page or a signed print of the cover image all the way up to a literary agent review of their book proposal. They can even have a character named for them in Phillip Margolin’s next novel. The campaign funding goal is $3,000, with a stretch goal of $5,000, which would allow a few pages of color on the inside as well as the cover of the Squid. Any amount raised past the goal will go to the next Squid. The fund-raising campaign runs through March 18. To pledge support, go to www.indiegogo. com and search for North Coast Squid.


FILLING

Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide The deli’s gluten-free option is refreshingly fluffy

gap

the

Deli 101 reopens to a hero’s welcome Story & photos by Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

Everybody likes to feel wanted. But for Deli 101 Manager Greg Hill, the attention he started receiving on recent trips into Lincoln City made him feel ‘wanted’ in the Wild West sense of the word. “We kept getting yelled at,” he said. “Any time we came into town to do groceries or go to the bank, people were asking: ‘When are you going to open back up?’” This past winter was the second in which Hill and his wife, Kristina, took four months off from the hectic business of satisfying the sandwich cravings of Lincoln City locals and thousands of visitors alike. Hill said the clear demand for sammich services even in the off season has persuaded him to shorten next winter’s break to just two months — December and January. “I don’t want to get lynched,” he said. For the past two years, Hill has witnessed firsthand the effects of impending sandwich deprivation on his regulars as the winter closure draws near. “We have a lot of people come in to get their last fix,” he said. “They will get three or four Sissies.” That would be the Sissy sandwich, one of Hill’s signature creations, combining Genoa salami, ham, bacon and provolone cheese with lettuce, onion and tomato — all drizzled with balsamic dressing and served on a baguette. Hill said taking the winters off allows him and his family to recharge their batteries before gearing up for another busy season. Even so, toward the end of the break, Hill finds himself drawn to the kitchen, where he tries out new recipes and tinkers with new ingredients.

“It usually starts at home, making a few sandwiches here and there,” he said. “And I always check out other restaurants; just to see if I can find an idea I like and that I can put my own spin on.” One of the ideas floating around this year involves Cougar Gold, a cheddar cheese produced at Washington State University’s creamery in Pullman and sold in distinctive, 30-ounce cans. Hill said he has been thinking of ways to get the cheese on to his menu ever since his parents, both proud WSU graduates, came to visit with a can in tow. “It’s sharp cheddar, almost like a Parmesan,” he said “It’s super dry.” Possible pairings for the Cougar Gold include salami, ham and turkey, with Hill No sammich lineup is complete without the mighty Rueben

waiting to hear what customers think of each. “I’m going to mess with it as a special until I get it to where I want it before putting it on the regular menu,” he said. The deli’s sandwiches come on a range of breads including baguette, ciabatta, muffulata and various sliced loaves, as well as a glutenfree, fluffy, brioche-style bun. Hill is happy to whip up special orders on request, going so far as to make a peanut butter and pickle sandwich for one customer. “I’m thinking his wife was pregnant because he got it to go,” Hill said. “Happy spouse, happy house.” Aside from sandwiches, the deli always has a salad bar with seven or eight options, such as red potato salad, roasted veggies and tarragon chicken. There is always a soup of the

day and, always — always — chowder. “You have to have chowder here or they set your restaurant on fire,” Hill said. “People don’t come to the beach to have chili.” While the deli always has something on offer for vegetarians, Wednesdays are truly V-day, with three or four salads and the soup of the day all meat-free. For those wanting to add a touch of decadence to lunch, the deli offers a range of Hop Valley beers as well as wine by the glass and, for dessert, a selection of treats from Spokane-based chocolatier, Spokandy. The deli opens at 8 am six days a week for breakfast, with options including the mammoth breakfast burrito; three eggs, two strips of bacon, Tillamook cheddar cheese and house-made salsa, all rolled up in a spinach wrap. Other ways to start the day include a choice of two quiches — one meat, one vegetarian — as well as a full range of breakfast sandwiches, toasted in the sandwich press. Hill said breakfast has been a big hit with locals as well guests staying at nearby hotels. This year, the deli is expanding its breakfast menu to include a range of freshbaked goodies from the Neskowin Trading Company. So drop by for breakfast or lunch and, before you know it, you’ll have a new date to circle in your diary alongside Labor Day and the Fourth of July — the first day of Sandwich Season. Deli 101 is located at 1509 NW Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City and is open from 8 am to 5 pm Tuesday through Saturday; and 8 am to 3 pm on Mondays. They offer a 15-percent discount every day to seniors, active military and veterans. Call them at 541-614-1300.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 9


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide

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Gluten Free Options Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8am - 5pm Sun. 8am - 3pm 1509 NW Highway 101 Lincoln City 541 614 1300 facebook.com/deli101LC

Located 2 miles North of Depoe Bay just off Hwy. 101 at Ocean View St.

Look for the blue flag! 541-764-2828 • thecafecestlavie.com

Serving fresh, sweet and savory crepes, homemade soups and indulgent sandwiches! We feature local produce, Italian coffee and gelato, imported French wines, as well as a monthly feature of local art from oil paintings to mosaic works.

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OPEN 9AM TO 4PM • CLOSED TUES. & WED.

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New Winter Hours: Open 11:30 Wednesday-Sunday

5150 Oyster Drive Bay City, OR 97107 503.377.2323

GRAB A GROWLER TO GO!

10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

3026 N.E. Hwy. 101, Lincoln City

541-996-1006

46-14


on the cover

Gumshoes in gumboots

Sleuths and suspects descend on Newport for “The Haunted Trailer,” this year’s Nye Beach Mystery Weekend caper By Nancy Steinberg Some decidedly unusual suspects will be lining up in Nye Beach on Saturday, March 14, for the annual Nye Beach Mystery Weekend, sweating bullets as they await interrogation by amateur sleuths from far and near. This is the 13th year of the event, an auspicious anniversary for a murder mystery, during which the streets, cafes, shops and hotels of Nye Beach become the backdrop for an elaborate whodunit. Participants collect clues, interview suspects, consult with Inspector Fillmore Cells and attempt to solve the crime by nightfall. This year’s crime, entitled “The Haunted Trailer,” takes place in 1978 at the fictitious Ten Commandments Mobile Village in Newport, where resident Indi Cent is found dead in the arms of her boyfriend, Robin Steele. Detective Cells is not ready to state unequivocally that Steele is the culprit, although he has been arrested. Sleuths must determine which of the six suspects, all played by local actors, is the actual killer. Is it Miss Tick, a gypsy who inhabits a shadow land between this world and the other? Is it Al Coholic, a man with an explosive reputation? Or perhaps it is Robin Steele after all, a hick whose sticky fingers have left him with a guilty conscience. These characters, three other suspects, and Inspector Cells will be available for questioning in the streets of Nye Beach as the day gets underway. First, participants pick up packets of information beginning at 9 am at Nye Cottage bead shop, in which they will find an introductory “news article” about the crime

Ram Papish as Inspector Fillmore Cells

A helpful suspect fields questions during last year’s event

and a schedule of appearances of the suspects in Nye Beach. Before they conduct interviews, sleuths first collect a set of clues, about 30 in all, placed at Nye Beach businesses, which will help direct their interrogations later in the day. Costumed suspects await questioning throughout the neighborhood from noon onward. Participating sleuths must come up with a theory of the crime, including who, when, how and why; and submit it by 5 pm. The big reveal comes at 7 pm at the American Legion Hall, where Inspector Fillmore Cells tells all. Those that get it right win prizes donated by Nye Beach businesses. The 100 or so sleuths that generally participate are competitive, verging on cutthroat, says local actor Ram Papish, who wrote this year’s mystery and also plays the role

of Inspector Cells. “It definitely has a cloak and dagger feel to it,” he said, “particularly toward the end of the day, when the questioning gets a little more aggressive. The suspects tend to get swamped at the end.” Inspector Cells, is the only recurring character from year to year, with Papish dusting off his Brooklyn accent and guiding participants through the investigation, even steering them away from more outlandish (and incorrect) theories. “I’ll sometimes say, ‘That’s not relevant to your investigation,’” he said — his coded way of telling them they’re barking up the wrong tree. Papish started participating in the event as a sleuth, and has become the go-to writer of the yearly adventure for the past eight years. It’s a challenging job for many reasons, not the least of which is that it’s impossible to

predict all of the questions the suspects will be asked. Papish prepares character sketches for each suspect, as well as a list of questions they’ll likely be asked and sample answers. “Suspects can lie when the character would lie, to avoid incrimination or embarrassment,” Papish said, complicating the investigators’ jobs. It’s also a challenge to create a stable of equally suspicious characters, but ensuring that only one of them could be the actual culprit. Papish doesn’t want to make the mystery too easy or too hard to solve. So far, so good: between one and five sleuths, out of roughly 100 participating individually or in teams, have solved the crime each year. “The winner last year was a 10-year-old girl who had been participating every year since

she was three,” Papish said. “She goes by the sleuth name ‘Nancy Drew.’” Papish, an artist and illustrator, comes by the craft of mystery writing honestly: his great uncle, with whom he was very close, wrote and produced serial mysteries for radio in the 1940s until he was blacklisted as a communist during the McCarthy era. This year’s mystery is a tribute to him, as “The Haunted Trailer” was one of his titles, albeit for a tale with a different plot. To help hunt for the killer yourself, bring your best sleuthing skills (comically oversized magnifying glass optional) to Newport’s Nye Beach on Saturday, March 14. Packets, $10 apiece, can be purchased at Nye Beach Cottage, 208 NW Coast Street, starting at 9 am. Proceeds benefit the Nye Beach Merchants Association. More information is available from Linda Neigebauer at 541270-2234 and on the event’s Facebook page.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 11


Friday, March 6

Coast Calendar

Super Auction II Aces Bar & Grill • Lincoln City Cast your bid for items ranging from jewelry to a fishing trip to a year’s supply of cupcakes at this auction benefiting Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce. Buy your item at listed value or above and get a chance to win the grand prize — a seven-night vacation in Bend. 6 pm, 3250 NE 50th Street. FMI, call the chamber at 541-994-3070.

Photography show Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this show, featuring work from the Yaquina Art Association photography group. Buy pieces right off the wall and cast your vote in the People’s Choice Award. 5-7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. Show runs through March 29, available to view 11 am to 5 pm daily except Mondays,

Riverbend auditions North Coast Recreation District • Nehalem Try out for a role in “The Foreigner,” a Larry Shue comedy that the Riverbend Players will bring to the stage in May. The director is looking for four men and three women for major roles, plus four to eight more people for non-speaking parts. 3 pm, 36155 Ninth Street. FMI, contact Sedona at sedonasmiles7@gmail.com. Repeated Saturday.

“Social Security”

Recommended for mature audiences. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students and $9 for children aged 12 and under, available by calling 541-994-5663, leave a message and someone will call you back.

Computer classes Newport Public Library The library’s free classes continue with, at 9 am, “Introduction to Computers” followed at 10 am by “Beginning Internet.” Registration required. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.

Saturday, March 7 cont. City Hall at $9 for adults or $6 for kids ($10 and $6 on the door). Under 3s get in free. 5-7:30 pm, 276 S Hwy. 101. FMI, call 503-355-2291 and ask for Laurie.

Nehalem Bay and Estuary Clean Up Wheeler and Nehalem Help keep the waterway healthy at this biennial workday. Orientation begins at 7:30 am at Wheeler Waterfront Park on Highway 101 in downtown Wheeler. A family friendly orientation starts at 8:30 am at the boat ramp in Nehalem. A post-cleanup party, with live music, a chili and cornbread feast, root beer floats and socializing starts at 3:30 pm at the Tsunami Grill, 380 Marine Drive, Wheeler. FMI, contact Alix Lee at lnwc@ nehalemtel.net.

Tree Seedling Sale Lincoln County Fairgrounds • Newport An assortment of native seedlings will be offered at this annual sale, hosted by the Lincoln County Small Woodlands Association. A mixture of conifers and possibly some hardwoods will be available. Most specimens $2 apiece. First come, first served. 10 am-2 pm, 633 NE 3rd Street. FMI, call 541-574-6534.

Find Love in Yachats

Indoor Farmers Market

Yachats Commons Oregon Coast author Matt Love is the guest at this Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences event. His presentation, “One Writer’s Muse: the Oregon Coast,” will show how he approaches his coastal topics. 6:30 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. $5 donation suggested. FMI, call 541-961-6695.

“The Kite Runner” Lincoln City Cultural Center A stage version of Khaled Hosseini’s bestselling tale of class divides, violence, honor and regret, set against a backdrop of 1970s Afghanistan in turmoil. Actor Sorab Wadia takes on the roles of eight characters in a show that uses original Afghani music as a backdrop. Free. 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994.

Lincoln County Fairgrounds • Newport Snug in the fairgrounds exhibition hall, this market features locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 10 am to 2 pm, 633 NE 3rd Street.

Photo hike Regatta Grounds • Lincoln City Grab your digital camera and join professional photographers Bob Gibson and Jeri Knudson for this educational hike, designed to fit every skill level. Ages 14 and up. 9-11 am. $20 per person. Pre-registration is required. To register, call Gibson at 541-994-3405.

The Stomptowners Lincoln City Cultural Center The center’s Weekender Concert Series continues with this blend of foot stomping jigs, reels and feisty sea shanties, with a little percussive dance thrown in for good measure. 6:30pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $18 in advance or $20 at the door, available at the box office, by calling 541-994-9994 or online at lincolncityculturalcenter.org.

Riverbend auditions North Coast Recreation District • Nehalem Try out for a role in “The Foreigner,” a Larry Shue comedy that the Riverbend Players will bring to the stage in May. The director is looking for four men and three women for major roles,. 10:30 am, 36155 Ninth Street. FMI, contact Sedona at sedonasmiles7@ gmail.com.

March Artist of the Month Bay City Arts Center A community reception for this month’s featured artists — the students of Nestucca High School. Light refreshments will be served. Free. 5-7 pm, 5680 A Street.

“Social Security” Theatre West • Lincoln City This Andrew Bergman comedy shows that — from teenagers to senior citizens — there is one three-letter word that unites us all. Recommended for mature audiences. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students and $9 for children aged 12 and under, available by calling 541-994-5663, leave a message and someone will call you back.

Theatre West • Lincoln City This Andrew Bergman comedy shows that — from teenagers to senior citizens — there is one three-letter word that unites us all.

TODAY photo

Saturday, March 7

Sunday, March 8

Italian Dinner & Silent Auction HAM radio course Newport Performing Arts Center Be a hero when the zombie apocalypse arrives by having this course under your belt — an intensive, one-day introduction to

Monday, March 9

amateur radio, designed to prepare students to get a Technician Class license. Free, Open to all. 9 am to 6 pm, 777 W Olive Street, FMI, contact Mike Eastman at choirboy1953@gmail.com or 541-270-4114.

Wednesday, March 11

Thursday, March 12

The Voetberg Family Band

Spotlight show

Creativity Camp

Business After Hours

“Social Security”

Eden Hall • Gleneden Beach Celebrate Depoe Bay’s best and brightest at this awards banquet naming the Man, Woman and Business of the Year for 2014. 6 pm, 6675 Gleneden Beach Loop. Tickets, $25 per person or $45 per couple, available by calling 541-765-2889.

Tillamook High School The Monday Musical Club of Tillamook concert series continues with a show from this eight-strong, award-winning brood of violin, guitar and cello players — playing a blend of Irish, Scottish, American, swing, jazz and classical music. 2 pm, 2605 Twelfth Street, Tillamook. Advance tickets, $25 for adults or $20 for students, rising to $30 and $25 on the door, available by calling 503-842-2078.

Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport This two-week show pairs 40-year Newport art scene mainstay Patti Johnson with Timothy Benjamin, a humorist, portrait maker and illustrator who arrived at the coast in 2011 after a young life on the move. Show runs through March 20, available to view from 11 am to 4 pm daily, 789 NW Beach Drive.

Toledo Public Library The first session in a program aimed at helping kids aged 10 to 17 explore their personal creativity. Runs through May 27. $8 per session, with some scholarships are available. Application and informal interview required. Forms available from the library page at www.cityoftoledo.org. FMI, call Deborah Trusty at 541-336-3132.

Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach Enjoy appetizers and beverages while networking and learning about Salishan and the American Cancer Society. Raffle prizes will be awarded, too. 5:30 pm, 7760 N. Hwy 101. FMI, call Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce at 541-994-3070.

Auditions

First Weekend

Theatre West • Lincoln City This Andrew Bergman comedy shows that — from teenagers to senior citizens — there is one three-letter word that unites us all. Recommended for mature audiences. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students and $9 for children aged 12 and under, available by calling 541994-5663, leave a message and someone will call you back.

Chamber banquet

Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Try out for a role in “The Orphans,” the upcoming production from the Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts — a touching and playful study of two eccentric, rich sisters struggling to comprehend the outside world. Three women and three men needed. Audition packets are available at the Tillamook County Library or by emailing info@ tillamooktheater.com. 5:30 pm, at the corner of 12th and Ivy in Tillamook. Continues Sunday.

Galleries throughout Toledo Toledo’s artists throw open their doors for the latest in their monthly art celebrations. This month’s theme, “The Key to Everything,” prompts a very different response from each. Most galleries open from 11 am to 5 pm, with refreshments on offer at many. FMI, go to www.toledoarts.info.

First Weekend

Auditions

Galleries throughout Toledo Toledo’s artists throw open their doors for the latest in their monthly art celebrations. This month’s theme, “The Key to Everything,” prompts a very different response from each. Most galleries open from 11 am to 5 pm today and Sunday, with refreshments on offer at many. FMI, go to www.toledoarts.info.

Lincoln City Farmers Market

Lincoln City Cultural Center Cloistered within the center’s auditorium, this market offers homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 10 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www. lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

“Messages from Kilchis Point” Tillamook County Pioneer Museum An opening reception for this exhibit of oil paintings from local artist Helen Hill, created on site at the Kilchis Point Reserve. 1 pm, 2106 2nd Street. Show runs through May 8.

Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Try out for a role in “The Orphans,” the upcoming production from the Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts — a touching and playful study of two eccentric, rich sisters struggling to comprehend the outside world. Three women and three men needed. Audition packets are available at the Tillamook County Library or by emailing info@ tillamooktheater.com. 1 pm, at the corner of 12th and Ivy in Tillamook.

Tuesday, March 10 Rock your pots

Reading Circle

Tillamook County Library Clair Thomas will teach this free class on how to make garden pots from hypertufa, a porous, artificial stone made from aggregate and Portland cement. 3-4:30 pm, 1716 3rd Street. FMI, call 503-842-4792.

Newport Public Library Join a discussion of Susan Vreeland’s “The Forest Lover,” set in the early 1900s and based on the life of artist Emily Carr, who captured untamed British Columbia and its indigenous peoples just before industrialization changed them forever. Free. Noon, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.

Yearbook 50/50 McMenamin’s Lighthouse Brewpub • Lincoln City Help ensure every graduating Taft High senior gets a yearbook while enjoying a feast at one of Lincoln City’s favorite hangouts. Anything and everything edible on the menu, starting with happy hour pizza slices under $2, counts towards the fundraising goal. 5 pm to close, 4157 NW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-996-2115.

“Elmer Gantry” Newport Public Library The library continues its Literary Flicks series with this 1960 film based on the 1927 novel by Sinclair Lewis. Burt Lancaster stars as Gantry, a drunken, dishonest street preacher who wrangles a job giving enthusiastic hellfire-and-brimstone sermons at the traveling tent ministry conducted by Sister Sharon Falconer, played by Jean Simmons. Free. 6:30 pm, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.

• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com

12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

“Turning Dirt into Soil” Newport Public Library The latest round table from Lincoln County Master Gardeners is a discussion on how to develop, amend and maintain healthy soil; prepare soils for seed planting, improve fertility and much more. 10 am-noon, 35 NW Nye Street. Free, but RSVP by calling the OSU Extension Office at 541-574-6534, ext. 57410.

“Storytime For Grown-ups” The Hoffman Center • Manzanita Liz Cole presents stories and poems about those surprising events that change our lives forever, whether or not we recognize it at the time. As always, the material will be rich in both humor and poignancy. Suggested donation $10, with proceeds supporting the center’s programs. 6:30 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue. FMI, call 503-368-3846.

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Wednesdays in March for lunch in the Rogue River Steakhouse, take your choice of one of 10 burgers and sandwiches plus a non-alcoholic beverage for $10!

"It's Better at the Beach!"

TomatoBarrel workshop Sustainable Living Center • Lincoln City Learn how to get perfect tomatoes every year by creating your own portable TomatoBarrel to insulate your crop from Oregon’s cold rain. Free. 1-3 pm, 6349 S Hwy. 101. Registration required. email workshop@sustainablelivingproducts. org or call 541-921-7007.

Rockaway Beach Civic Facility Enjoy an Italian dinner and the chance to go home with some great auction items at this fund-raiser, benefiting Rockaway Beach Parks & Recreation. Advance tickets available at Rockaway

"It's "I ' Better B at the Beach!"

• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 13


potpourri

Prepare to get Wilde Newport’s Shamrock Supper is a truly Joyce occasion By Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

Irish author Oscar Wilde famously said he could resist anything — except temptation. And organizers of Newport’s third annual St Patrick’s Shamrock Supper have done the scandalous scribe’s memory proud, presenting a lineup sure to tempt plenty of guests to the Shilo Inn on Saturday, March 14. The event, a fund-raiser for the Celtic Heritage Alliance, comes hot on the heels of the group’s Burns Night Supper, which celebrated Scottish culture at a rousing bash in late January. Organizer Belinda Goody said her team has now recovered and looks forward to giving Shamrock Supper guests a St. Patrick’s Day celebration to remember. At the center of the

evening is a traditional meal of corned beef and cabbage accompanied by Irish soda bread, boiled potatoes and parsley sauce, mashed carrots and parsnips — followed by a choice of bread pudding or apple crisp for dessert. Tea, coffee and water are included and beer and wine are available to purchase. But for those who fancy something a little stronger, a whiskey tasting option gives them the chance to pair their feast with five of the finest snifters the Emerald Isle has to offer. Goody said the whiskey lineup is still being finalized but that Redbreast, a nutty and spicy little number from County Cork, is emerging as a clear favorite among the tasting committee. And the poetry will be flowing as past as the whiskey, with speakers offering glimpses of a literary heritage that

a trip to Ireland to meet up with long-lost cousins, will also be handing out tips on how to carry out genealogical research using records from the old country. Live music will be provided by Portland Celtic quartet Dram & Go, whose dynamic performance at the Burns supper earned them a return invite to the coast. Goody said the supper offers a fun night out while helping to raise funds for the Newport Celtic Festival & Highland Games, slated for June 12 to 14 at the Lincoln County Fairgrounds. “We want it to be entertaining and educational and to share the heritage in a different way,” she said. “It’s not all shamrocks and rainbows.” Dram & Go

includes giants such as Jonathon Swift, James Joyce and William Butler Years as well as the notorious Wilde. But don’t expect wall-to-

wall highbrow literature. Ireland is, after all, home to the proud city of Limerick, meaning no poetry reading would be complete without at least a few of the absurd,

five-line ditties. “They don’t have to be dirty limericks,” Goody said, “but you never know what’s going to come up.” Goody, who recently took

The Shamrock Supper will run from 6 to 10 pm in the ballroom of the Shilo Inn, 536 SW Elizabeth Street. Tickets, $40 (or $65 including whiskey tasting), are available by calling 541961-7696 or going to www. ncfhg.com.

Pitch some ideas — at Creativity Camp This spring, kids looking for the chance to discover, develop and explore their personal creativity can find it at Creativity Camp, which starts on Wednesday, March 11, at Toledo Public Library. The camp, organized in collaboration with SolaLuna Studios, is designed for kids aged 10 to 17 and will meet from 4 to 6 pm every Wednesday through May 27. The two-hour workshops

are designed to engage kids in a wide variety of creative learning experiences, as well as building opportunities for adults in the community to share their creative passions with children. The program will stimulate young imaginations using three themes: “Down the Rabbit Hole,” “Ocean Commotion” and “Pie in the Sky.” Activities include creative writing, pet

craft projects, nature art, home design, watercolors, seaweed cards, sailors’ valentines, movement, drama, drawing, cooking and dream catcher design. Instruction will come from some of the community’s most creative individuals, including Heather Fortner, Guy DiTorrice, Mary Eastman, Steve Travis, Jeff Ingram, Robert Trusty and Wayne Plourde. The

artistic director for the camp is Sarah Gayle Plourde Enrollment is limited to 10 students per session. Cost is $8 per session and some scholarships are available. Participants are asked to complete an application form and an informal interview. Applications are available on the library page of the City of Toledo website,

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

www.cityoftoledo.org; at Toledo Public Library, 173 NW 7th Street; and at SolaLuna Studios, 179 N Main Street. Funding for Creativity Camp comes from the Lincoln County Cultural Coalition. For more information, contact Deborah Trusty, director of Toledo Public Library, at 541-336-3132 or librarydirector@cityoftoledo. org.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 15


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Few things on Earth are as important as soil — essential for crops; crucial for forests; and the subject of the Thursday, March 12, round table discussion hosted by the Lincoln County Master Gardeners. “Turning Dirt into Soil” will see master gardeners Sonja Lovas, Claudette Schroeder and Sally Reill guide a discussion about how to develop, amend and maintain healthy soil; prepare soils for seed planting, improve fertility and much more. Agriculturalists have known for years that nourishing and protecting the soil is critical for growing vegetables, fruit and landscape plants. “Soil is not dirt,” Reill said, “but a complex, living, breathing aggregate of minerals, bacteria, fungi and

arthropods, working together to make nutrients available to support healthy plants,” In recent years, soil scientists have improved our understanding of minimum ground disturbance, encouraging microorganisms and caring for soil over time. “Healthy soil is the foundation of successful

coastal gardening,” Schroeder said. A bonus during this program will be free soil pH testing. Participants are welcome to bring a small amount of soil from their garden beds or problem areas. Master gardeners will be on hand to conduct a quick litmus test to determine the acidity level of their sample. The round table will run from 10 am to noon at Newport Public Library, 35 NW Nye Street. It is free to all; but participants should RSVP by calling the OSU Extension Office at 541574-6534, ext. 57410, to ensure adequate seating and materials. A list of round table topics, dates and times is available online at oregonstate.edu/ lincoln/master_gardeners or by calling the extension office.

Rush into a trash decision Some things in life, like the Dubai Air Show or the Oregon state budgeting process, are simply so much fun that organizers limit them to taking place just once every two years. The Nehalem Bay and Estuary Clean Up is one such event. Last seen in 2013, it returns on Saturday, March 7, giving people the opportunity to spend a day making a lasting difference in the beauty, safety and habitat quality of the waterway. “The river needs us,” said organizer Alix Lee. “A clean bay and estuary are not only good for salmon and wildlife, but also a healthy estuarine habitat does our region proud. Help us pick up assorted debris in every imaginable shape, size, and color, and you’ll also learn about our region’s ecology and the potential threats posed by marine debris.” Orientation begins at 7:30 am at Wheeler Waterfront Park on Highway 101 in downtown Wheeler. Participants should bring drinking water and a snack or sack lunch as well as waterproof boots, work gloves and layers for the rain-or-shine event. A change of clothes is also recommended for any volunteers planning on attending the post-cleanup party, offering live music, a chili and cornbread feast, root beer floats and socializing, starting at

16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

3:30 pm at the Tsunami Grill, 380 Marine Drive, Wheeler. A new addition this year is the family-friendly cleanup site in Nehalem Bay State Park led by park ranger Shelley Parker. This will include funfilled family activities and hands-on education. Also, science educator Peter Walczak will lead a youth crew cleaning up marine debris at the state park jetty. Youth and family volunteers can join the 7:30 am orientation in Wheeler, or go directly to the boat ramp in Nehalem Bay State Park for a family orientation at 8:30 am. For more information or to become a volunteer leader, contact Lee at lnwc@nehalemtel.net.


in concert

Center gets the stamp of approval Winter concert The stage at the Lincoln City Cultural Center has seen a lot of action — from school plays to political speeches to music of all kinds. But never have the old timbers been subjected to anything like the pounding they will receive this Saturday, when the Stomptowners come to town. This dynamic group combines Irish instrumentation and singing with a range of foot percussion, including choreographed sean-nós dance. Saturday’s show, part of the center’s Weekender Concert Series, promises an exciting blend of foot stomping jigs, reels and hornpipes interlaced with melodic, soulful Celtic songs, feisty sea shanties and a few good pub songs, with the percussive dance adding to the show. Audience members should come prepared to move their own feet, too, with lead vocalist Andrea Wild only too pleased to lead a rabble-rousing chorus, while Irish dance choreographer Maldon Meehan promises to have people up on the floor in no time. Born in Liverpool, England, into Welsh speaking home, Wild grew up with the sibling singing tradition, emphasizing harmony and a capella performance. She began singing in folk clubs throughout the North of England during young adulthood and, after moving to the United States, teamed up with Meehan in order to merge traditional forms of dance and song for stage performance. Meehan, who grew up in California and Oregon, began Irish dancing with her father at local céilí dances and classes in Portland.

honors Great War composers

Photo by Andrea J Wright/The Wright Pictures

She was hooked at a young age and has been dancing ever since. She is a founding member of Sean-nós Northwest and, in the spring of 2010, opened the Stomptown Collective where she holds regular classes and workshops. The pair will be joined by Portland’s Preston Howard on uilleann pipes. Howard grew up in Northern California where he first became interested in the pipes thanks to a Finbar Furey record his father owned. He started on the whistle at age 11 and at 13 began learning the Scottish highland pipes. At 17 he finally acquired his first set of uilleann pipes and has been at it ever since. Rounding out the quartet is Richie

Rosencrans on bouzouki and vocals. A selftaught guitarist and songwriter, Rosencrans found his way to Traditional Irish music while studying civil engineering at the University of New Hampshire. Doors for Saturday’s concert will open at 6:30 pm at 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $18 in advance or $20 at the door, are available at the box office, by calling 541-994-9994 or online at lincolncityculturalcenter.org. A selection of Northwest beers and wines, My Petite Sweet cookies and bars and Mountain Man savory snacks will be sold before the show and during intermission.

Siblings on strings Every day, throughout the world, exasperated parents can be heard telling their troublesome kids “Hey, quit fiddling with that!” It is safe to say that such a reprimand was never heard inside the home of the Voetberg family of Centralia, Washington, which has produced an awardwinning brood of violin, guitar and cello players who perform together as The Voetberg Family Band. The eight brothers and sisters

include in their number two national fiddle champions plus a West Coast flat-picking champion and, between them, have captured at least 10 West Coast fiddle championships. For more than eight years, the band has been performing its blend of Irish, Scottish, American, swing, jazz and classical music — and, on Sunday, March 8, will bring their show to the Oregon Coast as part of the Monday Musical Club of Tillamook

concert series. The group will take to the stage at 2 pm in the Don Whitney Auditorium at Tillamook High School, 2605 Twelfth Street, Tillamook. Advance tickets are $25 for adults or $20 for students, rising to $30 and $25 on the door. Tickets are available at the offices of TLC Federal Credit Union and the Tillamook Chamber of Commerce or by sending a check payable to the Monday Musical Club of

Works that have gone unheard for a hundred years will take their place on the program for the Oregon Coast Chamber Orchestra’s Winter 2015 concert on Friday, March 13. Entitled “For the Fallen: The Lost Composers of World War I,” the concert will feature works by 12 composers and lyricists who were all casualties of what was then called The Great War. “The summer of 2014 marked the 100th anniversary of the beginning of World War I — a 19th century war fought with 20th century weapons,” said the orchestra’s Yvonne Coopmans. “The war caused the loss of an entire generation. One can only

speculate on what they might have accomplished.” The concert will feature many works not heard since the death of these composers, thanks to an extensive research effort. “We extend our thanks to librarians, arrangers and webmasters from around the world,” Coopmans said. “Their assistance has made this concert possible.” The concert will begin at 7 pm at the Yachats Community Presbyterian Church, 360 W 7th Street. All tickets are $10, available at the door. Students and children get in free. For more information, go to www. occorchestra.org or call 541997-3727.

For the Fallen “They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them.” Robert Laurence Binyon (1914)

Tillamook at 6415 Westwood Court, Tillamook, OR 97141. To order advance tickets with reserved seating, call 503-8422078. Funds raised by the Monday Musical Club of Tillamook are used to sponsor master classes for Tillamook music students and fund a scholarship for the winner of the club’s annual talent competition. The concert series will conclude on Monday, April 20, with a 7 pm performance from Quartetto Gelato, an ensemble of classically trained musicians, including a brilliant operatic tenor.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 17


s o u n dwave s

Us Lights • Saturday, March 7, in Manzanita

Friday, March 6 BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — Requests taken, drinks served,

good times had. Let’s party. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. BARBARA LEE TURRILL — The singer-songwriter-guitarist plays new, traditional and original folk, accompanied by Gib Bernhardt on bass. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. JUNE RUSHING BAND — Newport’s favorite songbird gives us the best in ballads and classic rock. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 6-9 pm, Embarcadero Resort, 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521.

THE SWING JAZZ PROJECT — Featuring Don Berg on guitar, Terry Carr on piano and Steven James on bass. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, March 7 US LIGHTS — This Portland band uses synth-driven soundscapes,

soaring tonal vocals, crisp guitar lines and a steadfast rhythm section to create a sonically moving and unique brand of dark, adventurous pop. $5. 9 pm, San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. SONNY HESS AND VICKI STEVENS — The Seattle and Portland vocalists have joined forces. Once you have heard these two powerful women perform together you will feel the magnetism. Chocolate and vanilla never tasted so good. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. JIMMY BIVENS — Country. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — The Attic is the place to be if you want to hear Frank Sinatra, Metallica, Taylor Swift and pretty much

nana’s irish pub • newport Corned Beef & SPECIAL Cabbage Dinner Just $10! 4-8 p.m. Tuesdays

everything in between. Come meet the duo. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. PAUL BOGAARD AND THE SONS OF THE BEACHES — Blues and rock with a beach flavor. 9-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub,

613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787.

RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Rick and the Drivers always deliver. Originals and roots music. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 6-9 pm, Embarcadero Resort, 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521.

Sunday, March 8 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. ZUHG ACOUSTIC — Acoustic rock. 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 — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. RICHWOOD — Acoustic duo. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

continued on pg. 19

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18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

Pronto Pup – Next to the Salmon River Market in Otis Open 11am-6pm • Seven Days Just East of Highway 101 on Highway 18 46-14


s o u n dwave s Saturday, March 14

continued from pg. 18

Monday, March 9

BILLY D. AND THE HOODOOS — Mix one part rock’n

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. RUSS & RON — With Ron on guitar and Russ on fiddle, this pair play a little of everything: classic country, pop, swing, folk, bluegrass, standards, fifties and hoedowns. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

blues, add some Chicago South Side swagger and sprinkle some tasty Cray-esque licks, and you’ve got some mighty fine tunes. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BUCKET LIST — Classic rock done right. 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. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. ANDRA TAYLOR & NATE DODGE — Indie Americana and folk duo from Pennsylvania. 9-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Rick and the Drivers always deliver. Originals and roots music. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541764-2371. RICHARD SILEN — The well-known local singer and guitarist plays an eclectic and engaging mix of everything from American songbook standards to blues to originals; accompanied by sidekick Deane Bristow on harmonica. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. JESSE MEADE — Finger-style acoustic guitarist playing original material and an array of cover songs, with influences ranging from Ray Charles to Hank Williams and Elizabeth Cotton to Aretha Franklin. 6:30 pm, Alder Bistro & The Dispensary Lounge, 160 W 2nd St, Yachats, 541-547-3420.

Friday, March 13

Sunday, March 15

MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar,

OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. AL DENTY — No doubt destined to become a firm favorite with the coastal crowd. 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 — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-2657271. TIM TRAUTMAN — Piano-playing singer-songwriter. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

RICHARD SHARPLESS — ‘Retired’ from his days playing in

Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, March 10 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 — Jam hosts Argosy Instone mostly play rock and blues but will “try almost anything with anyone.” Pair that with 50-cent tacos and you have yourself one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. BRINGETTO JAZZ DUO — 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 GREG ERNST — Jazz guitar. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy.

101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Thursday, March 12 BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this

playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. MALARKEY STILES — Acoustic Duo playing Americana and original folk. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541764-2371. PAUL FRANZ VAN DEN BOGAARD — Originals and powerhouse ballads. One of the area’s favorite groups. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. RONNIE JAY’S SWINGIN’ DUO — Two swarthy Mediterraneans slingin’ swingin’ American tunes your way. Ronnie Jay on vocals, guitar and harmonica, accompanied by Richard Robitaille on bongos and vocals. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? WORK THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE INTO THE PLOT OF A WELL-CRAFTED MURDER MYSTERY AND SEND A CLUE TO MID CITY PLAZA. CLUELESS? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY. COM.

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NOW PLAYING

Andra Taylor & Nate Dodge • Saturday, March 14, in Newport

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 19


By Dave Green

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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: HISTORY (e.g., Which British liner was sunk in 1915? Answer: Lusitania.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. John Kerry got slammed for using this “A” word with Israel. 2. In 1836, Texas became independent from ____. 3. What is Hillary Clinton’s maiden name?

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20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

Last Week’s Answers:


artsy

tide tables

The odd couple of the art world The latest Spotlight Show from the Yaquina Art Association pairs a 40-year mainstay of the Newport art scene with a newcomer who has arrived at the coast after a young life on the move. Timothy Benjamin, who was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spent his early life in England, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Italy before his family returned to the U.S. Even then he was constantly on the move, with the family living out of a 1972 Volkswagen bus as they traveled across the country. After high school, he attended the Palomar College in San Diego and moved to the Oregon Coast in 2011. “I am a 21st-Century humorist, portrait maker and illustrator,” he said. “I have been an artist since before I could write and I have been an illustrator for hire since the early ’90s in the media of color pencil, charcoal, pastel and acrylic.” Hanging alongside Benjamin’s works, will be portraits and flower paintings from Patti Johnson, who has been painting at the Newport

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Lincoln City Indoor Market Jewelry & Accessories Tye Dye Ornaments Felted Hats Native American Art Crochet Rugs Steel Art Didjeridoos Wooden Toys TIC TAC TACO

Walker Farms Farm Fresh Eggs Ceramics Local Succulents Baked Goods Free Trade Coffee Kettle Corn Sweet Confections Spreads & Dips Fused Glass

Sundays • 10am-3pm • “CHECK US OUT” At the Lincoln City Cultural Center 540 NE Hwy. 101 • lincolncityfarmersmarket.org By Patti Johnson

Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Visual Arts Center for more than 40 years. Johnson enjoys working with oils and acrylics and facilitates the Yaquina Art Association’s oil and acrylic classes, which take place at the center every Tuesday and are open to the public. The show opens on Friday, March 7, and will be on display through March 20, available to view from 11 am to 4 pm daily at the Yaquina Art Association Gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive.

Date

Thurs., Mar. 5 Fri., Mar. 6 Sat., Mar. 7 Sun., Mar. 8 Mon., Mar. 9 Tues., Mar. 10 Wed., Mar. 11 Thurs., Mar. 12

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date

Thurs., Mar. 5 Fri., Mar. 6 Sat., Mar. 7 Sun., Mar. 8 Mon., Mar. 9 Tues., Mar. 10 Wed., Mar. 11 Thurs., Mar. 12

By Timothy Benjamin

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Yaquina Bay, Newport

Make a few snap judgments Members of the Yaquina Art Association photography group will be displaying their work at the Newport Visual Arts Center throughout March, in a show where guests can buy work right off the wall. Almost 20 photographers will be featured in the show, which opens with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, March 6. The show will remain on display through March 29, with visitors invited to vote for their favorite in the People’s Choice Award. The work will be on display in the center’s Runyan Gallery from 11 am to 5 pm daily except Mondays, at 777 NW Beach Drive. The photography group meets at 7 pm on the first and third Mondays in the upstairs classroom of the Visual Arts Center. It focuses on improving members’ photography skills through programs, critique and competition.

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Thurs., Mar. 5 Fri., Mar. 6 Sat., Mar. 7 Sun., Mar. 8 Mon., Mar. 9 Tues., Mar. 10 Wed., Mar. 11 Thurs., Mar. 12

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Alsea Bay, Waldport Date

Thurs., Mar. 5 Fri., Mar. 6 Sat., Mar. 7 Sun., Mar. 8 Mon., Mar. 9 Tues., Mar. 10 Wed., Mar. 11 Thurs., Mar. 12

By Walt Duvall

Recent programs have included presentations on water photography, night photography, cell phone photography, light painting, tips on post processing, framing and matting as well as field trips. New members are welcome.

6:38 am 7:17 am 7:56 am 9:34 am 10:13 am 10:54 am 11:39 am 12:32 pm

Low Tides

1.9 1.6 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.2 1.2 1.3

High Tides

6:39 pm 7:11 pm 7:42 pm 9:12 pm 9:42 pm 10:15 pm 10:52 pm 11:43 pm

0.5 0.7 1.0 1.4 1.8 2.4 2.9 3.4

12:43 am 1:13 am 1:42 am 3:12 am 3:41 am 4:11 am 4:44 am 5:23 am

7.7 7.9 8.0 8.1 8.1 8.1 8.0 7.9

6:53 pm 7:22 pm 7:51 pm 9:20 pm 9:51 pm 10:25 pm 11:04 pm 11:56 pm

0.3 0.5 0.7 1.0 1.3 1.6 2.0 2.2

12:20 am 12:47 am 1:14 am 1:41 am 3:10 am 3:41 am 4:16 am 5:58 am

5.9 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.2 6.2 6.1 6.0

6:15 pm 6:44 pm 7:13 pm 8:42 pm 9:13 pm 9:47 pm 10:26 pm 11:18 pm

0.5 0.7 1.1 1.5 1.9 2.4 2.9 3.3

12:11 am 12:38 am 1:05 am 1:32 am 3:01 am 3:32 am 4:07 am 4:49 am

7.6 7.8 7.9 8.0 8.0 8.0 7.9 7.8

7:00 pm 7:33 pm 8:06 pm 9:38 pm 10:10 pm 10:42 pm 11:18 pm ---

0.7 0.8 1.1 1.4 1.7 2.1 2.5 --

12:44 am 1:15 am 1:44 am 3:13 am 3:43 am 4:13 am 4:47 am 5:26 am

6.8 7.0 7.1 7.3 7.4 7.4 7.5 7.4

Low Tides

1.3 1.2 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8

12:04 pm 12:40 pm 1:17 pm 2:55 pm 3:36 pm 4:23 pm 5:19 pm 6:28 pm

6.2 6.1 5.9 5.7 5.4 5.0 4.7 4.4

High Tides

Low Tides

2.1 1.7 1.4 1.3 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3

8.1 8.0 7.8 7.5 7.1 6.3 6.3 6.0

High Tides

Low Tides

2.0 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.3

12:32 pm 1:09 pm 1:46 pm 3:24 pm 4:03 pm 4:46 pm 5:36 pm 6:38 pm

11:55 am 12:31 pm 1:08 pm 2:46 pm 3:27 pm 4:14 pm 5:10 pm 6:19 pm

8.1 7.9 7.7 7.4 7.0 6.5 6.1 5.8

High Tides

12:29 pm 1:10 pm 1:50 pm 3:29 pm 4:10 pm 4:54 pm 5:43 pm 6:40 pm

7.2 7.1 7.0 6.8 6.5 6.2 5.9 5.6

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.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 21


y o u k c r o creativi l n U ty…

artsy

As Toledo’s First Weekend celebrates “The Key to Everything”

Sarah Gayle’s oil interpretation of Vincent van Gogh’s famous “Cafe Terrace at Night” painting, using the Fletcher theory as a color guide.

Ask five artists what lies at the center of their work and you will likely get five very different answers. This is certainly the case in Toledo, where artists will throw open the doors to their studios and galleries this weekend to display their take on “The Key to Everything.” And this month’s featured artist, Sarah Gayle of SolaLuna Studios, is inviting the public to get inspired by taking part in two special activities. The first is a key exchange, where guests should bring a key they no longer use and label it with their answer to the phrase, “The key to it all is…” Gayle will use the keys to create an art display in the gallery as well as a future post about creativity on the SolaLuna website. In exchange for all the keys and ideas, she will share some fascinating facts about an ancient Roman tradition involving keys. Some spare keys will be available at the gallery for those who can’t find a spare to bring. And, at 2 pm on both days, Gayle will give an introductory talk on what she feels is the key to her work as an artist and designer — Fletcher color theory. Gayle will look at the historical trail the color management theory has left, particularly in impressionist art and will share how she has used it to study Van Gogh. Gayle said the theory has had a huge impact on her own work and understanding of color.

“In all its forms it fascinates me,” she said. “From the transparent interactions with watercolors and inks, the opaque blending of oils and gouache, to the pairing of colors next to each other in textile design, and the blues of a sun shadow on a white wall, it is the interplay and reactions that are beautiful and captivating to me.” SolaLuna Gallery will be open from 11 am to 5 pm both days at 179 N Main Street. Light refreshments will be provided. Meanwhile, for fellow Toledo artist Becky Miller, the “Key to it All” is the vigor of living things. And Miller will be using First Weekend to unveil several new paintings, as well as a large, colorful painting of kelp that is in progress. Also showing will be a wide variety of works by Alice Haga, Caroll Loomis and Karen Fitzgibbon — fellow members of Miller’s four-woman art group, B*A*C*K. Becky Miller Studio is located half a block above Main Street at 167 NE 1st Street, and will be open from 11 am to 5 pm both days, with guests invited to enjoy a glass of wine while they talk art. Capturing the relationship of sloping land to upright bushes was the key to success for Toledo oil painter Michael Gibbons as he worked on “Willamette Valley View,” an image that will soon grace the labels of a limited edition wine from the Flying Dutchman Winery. The original painting will be on view at the artist’s

“The Challenger” by Ivan Kelly

22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

“Tall Ship Rigging on Yellow” by Angela Lehrbass

signature gallery during First Weekend, along with working sketches of the label. Gallery Michael Gibbons, located at 140 NE Alder Street, will be open from 11 am to 5 pm both days, with guests invited to join the artist for wine, cheese and conversation while enjoying the art. For fellow oil painter Ivan Kelly, the key to nature is that it is free and protected. During First Weekend, Kelly will be displaying “The Challenger,” a depiction of a moose in its natural habitat, captured on canvas. His gallery, located at 207 East Graham Street, will be open from 11 am to 5 pm on Saturday and noon to 5 pm on Sunday for guests to talk art and enjoy light refreshments. Also open for First Weekend is The Yaquina River Museum of Art, which will be

showcasing “On a Summer Morning” from the “Yaquina” traveling exhibit. This original painting and eight others from the Yaquina watershed group of 42 are on display along with information from the Land Conservancy, which owns land near Arnold Creek where much of the art was painted. The museum is located at 151 NE Alder Street. And at 333 N. Main Street, Impressions Pacific will be showcasing “Tall Ship Rigging on Yellow,” one of several photographs on display from Angela Lehrbass. Master woodturner Rodney Lehrbass will be offering demonstrations all weekend and light refreshments will be provided. The gallery will be open from 10 am to 6 pm on Saturday and 11 am to 5 pm on Sunday.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015 • 23


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"It's Better at the Beach!" • On 24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • march 6, 2015

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