Oregon Coast Today May 17, 2013

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FREE! May 17-23, 2013 • ISSUE 51, VOL. 8

Tides • Dining • Theater Events Calendar • Live Music

FINE AND DANDY

11

Manzanita welcomes The Dandy Warhols on 13th anniversary tour

Thirsting for fun? TOP BRASS

7

Presidio Brass brings “Sounds of the Cinema” to Lincoln City

You’d be barking mad to miss Brewer’s Memorial Ale Fest in Newport – p.5


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artsy

Spring into gift-buying mode “Iris Garden” by Luellla Hartwell

“Dream of Genie” by Solveig Leslie

“Water Garden” by Ann Nicholson

Triple threat in Newport

Art fans heading to the Yaquina Art Association Gallery in Newport’s Nye Beach will be treated to a triple-header this weekend as two spotlight shows overlap, featuring the work of three artists. A joint show featuring Luella Hartwell and Solveig Leslie begins on Saturday, May 18, overlapping with the ongoing show of Ann Nicholson’s work, which runs until Friday May 24. Hartwell, who will be showing watercolors, pastels and mixed media, is inspired by the challenge of depicting in her art, the beauty of nature that she sees all around. She enjoys working from her own photos or working on location. Meanwhile, Leslie, who is approaching her 94th birthday, is still challenging herself to keep making art in spite of losing her eyesight to macular degeneration. Born in Norway, Leslie came to US as a child, and was raised in New York City. She has traveled to Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Europe, China, Central America, and all over the US.

She says her love of nature and the many years she spent traveling the world inspires her art, working with oil pastels, watercolors and mixed media as well as hand building with clay. Their show runs through May 31. Visitors heading to the gallery before Friday, May 24, will be able to admire the work of artist Ann Nicholson, who will be displaying wire pendants, painted pots, matted 5x7 prints and baskets created from beach materials Nicholson says she loves color, texture and shape and tries to see how she can create different variations of them to make something that is beautiful to look at or useful. Having lived in Idaho until she joined the Navy, Nicholson has since traveled extensively, exploring Europe and Guam as well as living in Wales in the United Kingdom for almost two years and Hawaii for 12. For the past 20 years, she has called the Oregon Coast home. Both shows are open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day at the gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive in Newport.

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The Yachats Commons will be bursting with the fruits of artisans’ labor on the weekend of May 25 and 26, with the former elementary school playing host to the 16th Annual Spring Arts & Crafts Festival by Crafts on the Coast. More than 70 exhibitors from the Pacific Northwest will display products ranging from gourmet foods to fine art, jewelry, clothing, wood, metal, fabric, paper and glass art, to bath and body products, birdhouses and candles — offering some- Pendant by Vincent LaRochelle thing for everyone’s budget. Many artisans will be demonstrating their arts including wool spinning, weaving, pyrography, basket weaving, needle felting, bead weaving, jewelry making and Brazilian embroidery. Meanwhile, gourmet food producers will be offering tastes of products including hazelnut candies and butters; salt free seasonings, garlic seasonings and condiments; Honey products and nut brittles, toffee and caramel corn. Face painting and chair massage will add to the fun, while community booths will offer the chance to learn about organizations including Yachats Volunteer Fire Department and the Yachats Ladies Club. The festival will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 25, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, May 26, at the commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. Admission and parking are free. For more information, call 541-547-4664.


on the cover

Thirsting for fun? You’d be barking mad to miss Brewer’s Memorial Ale Fest in Newport

95,000 likes on his Facebook page. Nora Vanatta, Obie’s current owner, first found out about him by reading a letter the he timeless argument of whether it’s previous owner’s family sent to dachshund rescats that rule and dogs that drool or cue organizations around the country; Obie’s vice-versa will be laid to rest for at least elderly owners had overfed him to a point one weekend during Brewer’s Memorial Ale where he was dangerously overweight and Fest, where dogs truly rule. could no longer get around on his own. The annual event, taking place this year “It’s not that they didn’t love him,’ said May 17 and 18, is put on by Rogue Ales at the Vanatta, “They were just no longer able to care brewery in Newport and is billed as “The largfor him properly. When I saw the letter and est dog-beer festival in the world.” Although responded to it; I thought, ‘How hard could it the pool of contestants for that title might be a be?’” By the time Obie had made it from his small one, there is no question that the festival, Washington home to his new home in Portheld in honor of Brewer, the black lab that land, the dog whose healthy weight would be ruled the brewery from 1993-2006, promises about 25 pounds, weighed 77. good times for man and beast. “Brewer was as Obie couldn’t have found a better home; much a part of the brewery as the people who Vanatta is trained as certified veterinary techworked there,” said Brett Joyce, who is the son nician, and she has two other dogs, including of Rogue Ales founder Jack Joyce and now another dachshund that took quickly to Obie, runs the company. “It was really hard when he cuddling with him and helping lessen the passed, and we knew anxiety of both the it would be impossimove and the new diet ble to replace him, so and lifestyle. After less we haven’t tried; we than a year with his started this memorial new family, Obie has event instead. We were slimmed down to 35 trying to figure out a pounds. “When he first way to honor Brewer, came to me, he couldn’t and what could be move and was trapped more natural for a dog in his little body,” that hung out at the Vanatta said. “It’s been brewery than for a a lot of fun seeing him festival that puts man, turn into a real dog. He dog and beer together.” used to sleep till 10, While their owners Obie the dachshund has since made great strides in his now gets up with the are enjoying a sample weight-loss quest others at seven, ready from the more than and excited for the 50 microbrews, dogs can enjoy Doggy Musical day ahead.” Chairs and Dog Dancing, or compete in Obie has turned into a bit of a spokes-dog celebrity dog look-alike contests (Rin-Tin-Tin, for canine obesity, and Vanatta receives letters Lassie, Benji and of course, Brewer). And for daily from owners motivated by his story to get the first time in the festival’s history, there will their own dogs to a more healthy weight. “Not be a guest star, Obie, a “doxie” whose story just dogs but people write to me about being was profiled on CNN and who has more than inspired by Obie to lose weight,” she said. Gretchen Ammerman For the TODAY

T

Keeping guests on their toes

“Some people say they are trying to lose faster than him but they usually can’t.” Obie will be strutting his stuff during the festival with his new beach-ready body, and might just be fit enough to compete in some of the more athletic events like the dog Olympics, which will be staged four times during the two-day event For the humans, beyond enjoying the wide selection of beers, entertainment includes live music from The Ty Curtis Band, Alder Street All Stars and the Hank Shreve Band, as well as food from local vendors “What could be better than enjoying some great food, some great music, and some great beer,” Joyce said, “But most importantly, doing it all while hanging out with your dog.”

So to all those well meaning but deluded folks who prefer the feline to the canine, I have just one question, “Where is your cat-beer festival?” Entry to this 21-and-over event is $10 per day and includes four taster tickets, which can be used at the booths of more than 50 microbrews from Oregon, Washington, and California. Dogs get in free when accompanied by a human. Proceeds from the festival will go to various dog organizations throughout Lincoln County. Rogue Ales Brewery is located on Yaquina Bay at 2320 OSU Drive, in the South Beach area of Newport. Festival hours are 4-10 pm Friday and noon to 10 pm Saturday. For more details, go to www.brewersalefest.com or call 503-241-3800.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 5


Paul Chasman & the Pillars of Power

in concert

Guitarist finds words Paul Chasman will play original songs about life, love, dogs, cats, Muhammad Ali, and who knows what else for an exciting, eclectic evening in Yachats on Saturday, May 18. A former resident of Waldport, Chasman is known by many people from his time playing with the Acoustic Guitar Summit as well as from his solo concerts. In 2011, after the release of his CD “One Man Guitar Festival,” celebrating 50 years of guitar playing, Chasman needed to have surgery on his left hand. While recovering and barely able to hold a “G” chord, he wrote a song. Then he wrote another and soon found he couldn’t stop. Two years later, Chasman

emerged as a singer/songwriter. Singing and writing songs takes Chasman back to his roots when he first learned to play the classic old folk songs of the ’60s and spent time at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles, awed by the masters like Doc Watson, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Brownie and Sonny, Muddy Waters, Bill Monroe, and The New Lost City Ramblers. He celebrated his “return to the basics,” with his debut vocal album, BASICS. For more information, go to www.paulchasmanguitar.com. For the May 18 concert, Chasman will be joined by David Rivers and Hayden Pomeroy, both of whom hail from the Olympic Peninsula, where

Chasman and his wife, Anna, now make their home. Together, Rivers on guitar and Pomeroy on bass, constitute the Pillars of Power. All three musicians are performing as a benefit for View the Future, a community-based nonprofit that has been working for nine years to protect the beautiful natural landscape surrounding Yachats. Paul Chasman & the Pillars of Power will play at 7 pm at Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. Doors open at 6:30 pm. Tickets are $10 at the door. Refreshments will be available, with all proceeds going to View the Future. For more, contact Andrea Scharf at 541-547-3092.

Give amor one Soloists featured at youth orchestra concert more encore at Kids Sing Out

Spring is in the air, and love is on the minds of the performers set to grace the stage at the Lincoln City Cultural Center in the latest offering from Kids Sing Out. “Seasons of Love” performers will take on art songs, love songs, popular songs and Broadway songs as well as reggae songs, French songs and Disney tunes. But the real love story is the one that blossomed behind the scenes last December, when Kids Sing Out and Flying Fish Productions experimented with a small-scale collaboration with Ballet and Dance of Lincoln City. Organizers say the partnership was an immediate success, prompting the decision to make the spring show a full-scale collaboration, with Ballet and Dance of Lincoln City Director Nicole O’Brien bringing the dancers, Kids Sing Out Musical Director Valerie Kendall bringing the singers, and John Kendall of Flying Fish Productions providing lighting design and technical direction. The Kids Sing Out performers are Angelina Berlingeri, Haley Callin, Winter Callin, Dylan Myers, Rowan Myers, Avery Nightingale, Margery Price, Delpheen Kimbrough, Logan Oakes, Chloe Kay Stroud, Corey Van Damme and Juliette Vold. They will be joined on stage by almost 50 Ballet and Dance of Lincoln City dancers ranging from aged 3 to adult. Performances are set for 2 pm and 7 pm on Saturday May 18 at the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets are $5 in advance and $7 at the door. Call 541- 9949994. Attendees are also encouraged to bring two non-perishables for the Lincoln City Food Pantry.

The Newport Symphony Orchestra’s youth orchestra will perform their Spring Concert on Saturday, May 18 at 7 pm in the sanctuary of the Newport First Presbyterian Church at 227 NE 12th St. Admission is free, with donations to the youth orchestra accepted at the door. This Spring Concert features school-aged musicians

Goodwin-Rice and Solano

from the Oregon Coast, with the young performers joined by adults who are at a similar playing level. The concert will begin with a series of ensemble pieces performed by the beginners’ orchestra conducted by Barbara Wilcox. They will be followed by the full orchestra, conducted by Kathy Follett, which will perform an early

Mozart Symphony, “Pizzicato Polka” by Johann Strauss Jr., and the first movement of the beloved Bach Double Concerto, featuring two student violin soloists, Isabel Solano and Sophie Goodwin-Rice. To find out more about the orchestra, concerts or summer music day camp, go to newportsymphony.org or call 541-574-0164.

Taking flight with finale

Jam-packed fund-raiser

The North Oregon Coast Symphony will perform its last concert of the 2012-13 season on Sunday, May 19 in Tillamook, bringing an end to its eighth season. The concert, conducted by Collin G. Heade, is titled “Tales of Flight” and includes works by composers Richard Strauss, Gustav Holst, Richard Wagner, J. S. Bach, Nathan Wang, Michael Kamen and James Horner. The May 19 concert will be at 3 pm at the Tillamook High School Auditorium. Concert admission at the door is $12. Students and those 12 and under are admitted free when accompanied by an adult. The symphony also provides musical education and scholarships through the Sandra Stromquist Memorial Scholarship Fund to local students who play regularly with the group. This year four members will be awarded scholarships for their college education. For more information, or to sponsor the North Oregon Coast Symphony, call 503-436-0936, or go to www.northorgegoncoast symphony.org.

Local musicians plan on giving ‘till it hurts on Sunday, May 19, when they will play until they can’t play anymore to raise money for a cancer-stricken colleague. Jack Gale, bass player for the coastal band Argosy, was diagnosed with stage 3b lung cancer in April, despite never having been a smoker. Surgery to remove his right lung will leave him unable to work for about two months. Active in local theatre, a regular player at Newport’s Bay Haven Inn Sunday jam session and single father to his 3-yearold son, Mason, Gale has a lot of people pulling for him. On

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013

May 19, the inn will hold a fund-raiser during an extended Sunday Jam Session, running from 2 pm until the musicians can’t play anymore. Many Bay Front businesses have stepped up with donations for a silent auction, which will run 11 am-7 pm. Cash donations can be made at any Columbia State Bank branch by asking to donate to the account “FBO Jack Gale.” To donate items for the silent auction or for information, contact Steve Mason at Bay Haven Inn at 541-265-7271. The Bay Haven Inn is at 608 SW Bay Blvd., Newport.


in concert

Brass plus silver equals pure gold

Some of the most talented brass musicians on the West Coast will take to the stage alongside student musicians from Taft High 7-12 band for the ďŹ nale of the Devils Lake Community Concert Series at the Lincoln City Cultural Center on Friday, May 17. The Presidio Brass quintet will ďŹ ll the center’s auditorium with the music of the silver screen as their “Sounds of the Cinemaâ€? show brings some of Hollywood’s greatest hits to the Oregon Coast. Hailing from San Diego, the band’s ďŹ ve members have performed with major symphony orchestras, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Las Vegas Philharmonic, Pacific Symphony and San Diego Symphony.

The band’s Lincoln City performance will include a rendition of music from “The Pirates of the Caribbeanâ€? from advanced brass members of Andrew Hordichok’s Taft High 7-12 band, who will beneďŹ t from a performance clinic before the show. Doors for the May 17 show will open at 6:30 pm. The show will begin at 7 pm, and will feature one intermission. Wine, beer and snacks will be available to purchase. Tickets are $20 in advance or $25 at the door. Tickets for children 12 and under are free, with a paid adult. To purchase tickets, drop by the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101, or call 541-9949994.

Pick carefully at the market

Shoppers searching for fresh greens at the Lincoln City Farmers Market on Sunday, May 19, will also be able to pick up a healthy dose of the Blues, with ďŹ ngerstyle guitarist Dorian Michael set to bring his 40 years of playing experience to the Oregon Coast. Having started playing guitar at the age of 7 in Los Angeles, Michael promises a gig that blends original songs

with traditional American roots music, a little Celtic and Brazilian and maybe a tune on the ukulele for good measure. Michael calls his solo music “contemporary traditional,â€? original music that reects his interest in a number of styles of music. When he plays, he always manages to add a few surprises. “Some music makes you feel, some makes you think, and some music is just for the

Get the cliff notes on brass

Concert covers all the Angles

fun of it,� he said. “I try to get to all those places in the space of a performance.� Michael will perform in the cultural center auditorium at 2 pm during the farmers market, which runs 9 am-3 pm. Tickets are $10 in advance, $12 at the door and free for kids 12 and under. To purchase, drop by the center at 540 NE Hwy. 101, 10 am-4 pm Thursday through Monday, or call 541994-9994 to reserve.

The Lost in Time trio and keyboard artist Don Jenkins will present a program of English music from the late renaissance and early baroque periods in Newport on Sunday, May 19. All but one of the composers featured in the show were born between 1563 and 1695 and the pieces will be played on harpsichord, recorder and viola da gamba. The Lost in Time trio will perform music from ďŹ ve composers, four of whom are English born and bred. The ďŹ fth, Turlough O’Carolan, is Irish but organizers say his charming music begged to be included. On keyboard, Jenkins will perform pieces by Giles Farnaby and George Frideric Handel — the latter a transplant to England from Germany. Sunday’s concert also features a special performance of “Enchanted Groundâ€? by the late American composer Mark Lambert. The piece is from his operetta “What a Woman Wantsâ€? (later retitled “Camelot, God Wot!â€?), produced in 1985 and 1986 by Newport’s Red Octopus Theater. The free concert is at 3 pm Sunday, May 19, at the First Presbyterian Church, at 227 NE 12th St., Newport. The event will beneďŹ t the Lincoln City and Newport food pantries; monetary and nonperishable food donations accepted.

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learn a little

It’s OK to copy, right?

Your PowerPoint presentation is almost ready. Your board of directors will be mightily impressed. The pie charts are colorful; the quotes compelling. The only missing piece is a nice photo of the coast. Something to add a little “local color.” Before you fire up Google’s image search and grab that perfect lighthouse, bridge or beach shot from the Web, perhaps you should make time for this special presentation coming May 17 to Oregon Coast Community College’s Newport campus. Leonard DuBoff is an attorney and author who has lectured in Newport before on how copyright and intellectual property law affects local small business. He’s also spoken on the topic at the Hague Academy of International Law in Poland, as well as across Southeast Asia and in countless other locations. “Intellectual property impacts every business and every person,” DuBoff said. “Every person and every business is involved in copyright law, one way or the

other. It applies to software, photographs – everything creative and aesthetic.” DuBoff ’s many books include “The Law (In Plain English) for Writers,” “The Law (In Plain English) for Restaurants,” plus others in the series for photographers, artists, crafters and more. Everyone is welcome to this free presentation. “We’re fortunate to be able to bring a speaker of this caliber to Lincoln County,” said Small Business Management Program Coordinator Ron Spisso. “Our communities are full of small businesses who inhabit an environment in which copyright, trademark and other legal issues surround them, but few of them have the resources to consult world-class legal experts about these issues.” The presentation is set for 1:30 pm Friday, May 17 at the Newport Campus of Oregon Coast Community College, 400 SE College Way. For more information, call 541-994-4166.

Lesson1: do not steal this photo

Feather in your cap

The Oregon Coast Chorus

Get singing this summer

The Oregon Coast Chorus is inviting women who want to learn a new skill, make new friends and have fun to take part in its Summer Music program starting Thursday May 23. The program, which runs throughout May, June, and July, gives women the opportunity to experience singing barbershop harmony with the local chorus, culminating in several public performances. Rehearsals start at 6:15 pm on Thursday May 23 and last until 9 pm at the American Legion Hall Post 116, located at 424 West Olive Street in Newport.

Looking for something to give added meaning to your beach walks? The Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team (COASST) is looking for volunteers to help care for the environment by collecting data on the status of coastal beaches, and trends of seabirds. The program’s goal is to assist government agencies and other organizations in making informed management and conservation decisions, and promote proactive citizen involvement and action. COASST volunteers systematically count and identify bird carcasses that wash ashore along ocean beaches from northern California to Alaska. Volunteers do not need any experience with birds, just a commitment to survey a specific beach — about three quarters of a mile — each month. COASST staff will be running a 6-hour training session on Sunday, May 19 from 10 am to 4 pm at Hatfield Marine Science Center, 2030 SE Marine Science Drive. To reserve a spot at a training session, contact coasst@uw.edu or 206-221-6893.

Movie opens health care discussion, debate at NOW meeting

Health professional Gary Lahman will present the 30-minute film “The Health Care Movie” at the May meeting of Central Oregon Coast NOW (National Organization for Women).

“The Health Care Movie” depicts the history of the Canadian Health Care System. It also provides background to discussing what Health Care for All – Oregon is proposing: a “single payer” system of providing

health care for all Oregonians. After the film, Lahman will lead a discussion on what the proposal would mean for Oregonians, with emphasis on women and children. The meeting will take place at

6 pm on Monday, May 20, at the Central Lincoln PUD meeting room, 2129 North Coast Highway, Newport. For more information, email centraloregoncoastnow@ gmail.com or call 541-765-2371.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 9


School on its toes for 40 years

Four decades of dancing memories are set to grace the stage at the Newport Performing Arts Center on Saturday, May 18, and Sunday, May 19, as the Newport School of Dance celebrates its 40th birthday with a free recital and party. “There will be many faces from the past,” school founder Sian Zander said, “and cake for everyone.” Zander founded the school in the old Agate Beach Community Hall, with the search for good wood floors taking it to several different premises throughout the following years.

In 1983, with the help of the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts and Margaretta Ramsey’s Lincoln Consociates for the Arts, Zander brought Lincoln County dance schools and theater companies together for the first “Nutcracker Suite,” which spilled over the stage and filled the auditorium at the school’s then-home in the Naterlin Center. After two years, it became clear the annual performance needed a bigger space. Zander participated with Lincoln County theater and dance activists under the direction of Sharon

Morgan of the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts to build the Newport Performing Arts Center. The free recital will feature dancers from the Newport school of Dance and the Oregon Coast Ballet Company, led by this year’s graduates, Domenica Gavin and Tyler Teich. The first performance will take place at 7 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, followed by a 2 p.m. matinee on Sunday, May 19, both at the performing arts center, 777 NW Olive St. The lobby will have displays of past productions.

Lead dancers Domenica Gavin and Tyler Teich

urchins Hold on to your helmet With summer approaching, kids who want to be safe on their bikes are invited to attend a Bicycle Safety Class Rodeo in Lincoln City’s Taft district. The Saturday, May 18, event, presented by Lincoln City Police Department and the Bay Area Merchants Association, is taught by school outreach Officer Oscar Escalante. The free event is open to bike riders ages 6 to 12, all of whom will get their bikes and helmets checked and get the chance to ride their bikes through four different courses to test their control skills. A parent must be present to accompany any rider ages 8 or under. All participants will be entered into a raffle to win a new bike donated by the Bay Area Merchants Association.

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3203 SW Hwy. 101 • 541-996-2898 • 10a-5p Tues-Sat • 10a-4p Sun • Closed Mon

10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013


s o un dwave s Friday, May 17 TONY SMILEY — This musical savant loops his way through a unique genre of music that you won’t find anywhere else. All with a witty, engaging, and energetic stage presence. 9 pm. $5 cover. THE SAN DUNE PUB, 127 LANEDA AVE., MANZANITA, 503-368-5080.

Just across from the D River Wayside In Central Lincoln City

Souvenirs & Gifts T-Shirts Wind Chimes (large inventory) Glass Floats

THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience – singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, impersonations and comedy. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159. KEVIN SELFE AND THE TORNADOES — Selfe’s stylistic depth and electric performances resonate with audiences due to his unique gift for communicating, through guitar, the complex range of moods revealed only by blues. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — Join the party in the attic lounge, as the coastal favorites play requests from every genre and decade. 8 pm SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, 7760 HWY. 101, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-3600.

“Family Friendly Prices”

MICHAEL DANE — Modern classics on piano and guitar with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.

Take Home a True Oregon Coast Souvenir from Cap N Gulls!

ELIZABETH CABLE — Original folk and blues. 6-8 pm, SAVORY CAFE & PIZZERIA, 562 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT.

120 SE Hwy. 101 • 541-994-7743

JOE ARMENIO — Local musician. 6 -8 pm, CLUB 1216 INSIDE THE CANYON WAY RESTAURANT & BOOKSTORE, 1216 SW CANYON WAY, NEWPORT, 541-265-8319. PAUL BOGAARD — Hear the “Sons of the Beaches” frontman in a special solo showcase. 7 pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. FIDDLIN’ SUE BAND — A wonderful blend of country swing, new grass, blues, and jazz. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, May 18 THE DANDY WARHOLS — The hit indie rock band warms up for its summer tour promoting the reissue of Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia with this stop at the coast. 9 pm. $5 cover. THE SAN DUNE PUB, 127 LANEDA AVE., MANZANITA, 503-368-5080. THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159. THE ORIGINAL WATER BROTHERS BLUES BAND— 9 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-9964976. THE TOMMY HOGAN BAND — Blazing, tasteful guitar work that is both contemporary yet traditionally based, award-winning song-writing, booming, raw vocals, harmonica and a full rhythm section. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — Acoustic duo with just enough punch to make it interesting. Plus a lovely atmosphere and excellent drinks. 8 pm SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, 7760 HWY. 101, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-3600. MICHAEL DANE — Modern classics on piano and guitar with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.

The

on the

Sunday, May 19

RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371.

STEVE SLOAN AND FRIENDS — 8:30 pm, SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

LOZELLE JENNINGS — 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-0986.

MICHAEL DANE — Modern classics on piano and guitar with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734.

TONY KALTENBURG — From the wild and misty Oregon coast speaks a powerful voice for the mystical guitar tradition. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

LOZELLE JENNINGS — Presents The Pentacoastal Blues Jam, 4-7 pm. CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. BEVERLY RITZ — Unique renditions of jazz classics and original jazz and blues. 12:45 pm, CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. ALL JAMMED UP — As a fund-raiser for cancer stricken bass guitarist Jack Gale, the inn will extend its Sunday Jam Session to have live music running onstage from 2 pm until the musicians can’t play anymore. There will also be a silent auction from 11 am to 7 pm. THE BAY HAVEN INN, 608 SW BAY BLVD. 541 265-7271. FIDDLIN’ SUE BAND — A blend of country swing, new grass, blues, and jazz. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Monday, May 20 RICHARD SHARPLESS — Folk, guitar and vocals. Originals and covers. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, May 21 OPEN JAM, HOSTED BY ONE WAY OUT — 8:30 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Featuring an ensemble of musicians on guitar, bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals – the Drivers perform original, rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

SATORI BOB — This Eugene fourpiece plays songs ranging from strikingly gentle acoustic pieces to dynamic gypsy and bluegrass-inflected compositions. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Oregon Coast

Dandy Warhols • May 18

FRANSPAUL BOGAARD: AKA SONS OF THE BEACHES — Blues with a beach flavor. 8:30-11:30 pm. NANA’S IRISH PUB, 613 NW 3RD STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-8787.

CLEAN SLATE DUO — Ever heard of “Electracoustic Bluesic”? It translates as indie rock/Americana in a bluesy-ish yet up-tempo feel and a jazzy tilt. 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-0986.

Largest Builder

NEWPORT COMMUNITY DRUM CIRCLE — Free participatory music event. Drug and alcohol free, facilitated drum circle for all ages and skills; bring a drum or borrow one. GAZEBO AT DON DAVIS PARK, ACROSS FROM NEWPORT PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, 6-8 PM. CHANDLER@CHANDLERDAVIS. COM.

Listings are free. Venues and music makers in Lincoln or Tillamook counties are invited to submit concerts, photos and corrections in writing. Email them to news@oregoncoasttoday. com. Listings are organized from north to south, and the descriptions are generally provided by the venue. Entrance is free unless otherwise indicated.

DEREK JEFFERSON — 6 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFÉ AND RESTAURANT, 156 SW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-0986. MIKE ANDERSON— Jazz standards. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Wednesday, May 22 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience. 7-9 pm. ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & GOLF

Thursday, May 23 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience. 6-9 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159.

Custom Homes Remodeling • Commercial

MICHAEL DANE — Modern classics on piano and guitar with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734. STELLA BLUE — and open mic. 7-9 pm. CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. OPEN MIC NIGHT — 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. GOLDEN GATE TRIO — Original music with a familiar, energetic feel. Covers that hark to the heyday of the Haight. 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HIGHWAY 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Friday, May 24 EROTIC CITY — Musical royalty visits the coast in the form of this Prince tribute band. 9 pm. $5 cover. THE SAN DUNE PUB, 127 LANEDA AVE., MANZANITA, 503-368-5080.

lincoln city • 541-994-8600 oksenholtconstruction.com

After you beachcomb... Find More Treasures Here!

THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Come listen to the Bret Lucich Music Experience. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES RESORT MIST LOUNGE, 2945 NW JETTY AVENUE, LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-452-2159. RENEE HILL BAND — The band is a close-knit group with an array of styles including rock, R&B, country, blues and folk. A real American band to be sure. 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729. MICHAEL DANE — Modern classics on piano and guitar with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. GRACIE’S SEA HAG, 58 SE HWY. 101, DEPOE BAY, 541-765-2734. ELIZABETH CABLE — Original folk and blues. 6-8 pm, SAVORY CAFE & PIZZERIA, 562 NW COAST STREET, NEWPORT. UNDRTOW — Lincoln County’s homegrown reggae band returns, with blues, roots rock, and high energy dance music with the island beat. Veteran reggae drummer/ percussionist Rodney Turner is joined by Steve Sloan, Richard Silen, Pascal Fortier and Norman Austin. 7-9 pm, CECIL’S DIRTY APRON 912 N. COAST HWY., NEWPORT, 541-264-8360. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Featuring an ensemble of musicians on instruments including guitar, bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals – the Drivers get a groove on performing original, rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

OPEN 9:30am–4:30pm • Closed Tuesdays 33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale

Between Cloverdale & Hebo

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 11


Coast Calendar

friday • may 17 Presidio Brass Lincoln City Cultural Center The quintet will bring Hollywood’s greatest hits to the Oregon Coast with their “Sounds of the Cinema” show. 7 pm, doors open 6:30 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets $20 each, and $25 at the door. Tickets for children 12 and under are free, if accompanied by a paid adult. To purchase, drop by the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101, or call 541-994-9994.

Dogs can try their paw at a range of activities including Doggy Musical Chairs, Dog Dancing, Doggy Lookalike and even the Doggy Olympics. Humans will have to content themselves with a range of more than 50 microbrews and music from artists including The Ty Curtis Band. 4-10 pm, 2320 OSU Drive. FMI, go to brewersalefest.com or call 503-241-3800. Continues Saturday, May 18.

Free Beading Class Sin, Sex & the CIA Theatre West • Lincoln City The discovery of vast oil reserves in the Chagos Islands piques the interest of the US intelligence services in this farce, which shows what happens when you put an incompetent spook, an oversexed official and various shady characters in a Virginia safe house when billions of dollars are on the line. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets are $12 for adults; $10 for seniors (62 and up) and for students (over 12); and $8 for children 12 and under. Call 541-994-5663 to reserve seats.

Kiawanda Community Center • Pacific City Learn how to make jewelry from beads & found objects. If you have your own materials, bring those; if not, just bring your creativity. 1-4 pm, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive.

a community, Alkali Lake, Canada, and its recovery from 100-percent alcoholism to 95-percent sobriety as filmed by Phil Lucas. Free, 3 to 6 pm, 243 W. Buford Ave., Siletz.

Copy that Oregon Coast Community College • Newport Join attorney and author Leonard DuBoff for this presentation on how copyright and intellectual property law affects local small businesses. 1:30 pm at the college’s Newport Campus, 400 SE College Way. For more information, call 541-994-4166.

Kite Festival Rockaway Beach Join in on all the fun at the Rockaway Beach Kite Festival May 17 to 19. For more information call 503-355-8108.

“The Honor of All”

Brewer’s Memorial Ale Fest Brewer’s on the Bay • Newport Sink your canines into the fun at this party in memory of Rogue Ales’ beloved black lab, Brewer.

Siletz Library The public is invited to attend a showing of this Sundance award-winning film, a dynamic story of

Speak up! Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts presents a night of four one-act plays entitled “You Know I Can’t Hear You When the Water is Running.” Written by Robert Anderson and directed locally by Chris Chiola, each play uses humor to explore morality, relationships, and taboo subjects. $15 (adults), $10 (seniors or students), $40 (for a family of four). 7 pm at the corner of 12th and Ivy. Reserved seating is available through Diamond Art Jewelers at 503-842-7940. For more information, go to facebook.com/tillamooktheater or contact info@ tillamooktheater.com.

saturday • may 18 Devils Lake Dash

Seasons of Love

Point the way

Dash off for a cocktail

Spring migration field trip

Lincoln City Cultural Center Meet the skiers competing in the inaugural Devils Lake Dash, check out their watercraft and see the presentation of some awards from last season’s racing at this mid-event cocktail party. 4 to 5:30 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.

NASA

Beach clean

Newport Performing Arts Center Step on out for an evening of dance and cake for everyone as the Newport School of Dance celebrates its 40th birthday with free recital and party. The lobby will have displays of past productions. Seating for the free shows is first come first served. 7 pm, 777 NW Olive Street.

Spring concert

Newport First Presbyterian Church Musicians from the Newport Symphony Orchestra’s youth orchestra will be joined by adult musicians of similar skill levels for this concert, featuring works by Mozart, Strauss and Bach. 7 pm, 227 NE 12th Street. All are welcome and admission is free, with donations to the youth orchestra accepted at the door.

Beaver Creek • Newport See a variety of song and marsh birds in seasonal wetlands on this Yaquina Birders and Naturalists trip led by interpretive ranger Brian Fowler. The field trip will last three hours. Meet at 8 am at the Beaver Creek visitor center on North Beaver Creek Road and dress for variable weather. For more information call 541-961-1307.

Kite Festival Rockaway Beach Join in on all the fun at the Rockaway Beach Kite Festival May 17 to 19. For more information call 503-355-8108.

Nye Beach turnaround • Newport Join the Oregon chapter of the American Cetacean Society for a clean up in which volunteers will work their way to the North Jetty of the Yaquina River. Noon to 3 pm. For more information, contact Joy Primrose, at marine_ lover4ever@yahoo.com or 541-517-8754.

Speak up! Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts presents a night of four one-act plays entitled “You Know I Can’t Hear You When the Water is Running.” Written by Robert Anderson and directed locally by Chris Chiola. $15 (adults), $10 (seniors or students), $40 (for a family of four). 7 pm at the corner of 12th and Ivy. Reserved seating is available through Diamond Art Jewelers at 503-842-7940. For more information, go to facebook.com/tillamooktheater or contact info@tillamooktheater.com

Elementary-level positions Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Dust off the deerstalker and try out for “Sherlock’s Secret Life,” the September offering from the Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts. Directors are looking for two men aged 20 to 40, three men aged 50 to 70, one woman aged 50 to 70, and two women aged 20 to 40. No acting experience is required. 1 pm at the playhouse, 12th

12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013

Street and Ivy. For an audition packet, contact director Robert Buckingham at 503-842-6305 or via email at info@tillamooktheater.com. Continues Sunday, May 19.

Sin, Sex & the CIA Theatre West • Lincoln City 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets are $12 for adults; $10 for seniors (62 and up) and for students (over 12); and $8 for children 12 and under. Call 541-994-5663 to reserve seats.

Don’t be square Garibaldi City Hall Get your dancing boots on for this shindig organized by the WaveSteppers Square Dance Club. Requested donation of $5 adults and $3 for kids. Square dance attire is admired but not required 7-9:30 pm, 107 6th Street at Acacia. For more information, call Carolyn at 503-801-4044 or go to www.wavesteppers.org.

Sea Lion Kisses Oregon Coast Aquarium • Newport This 20-30 minute experience includes a behind-thescenes look at the pinniped facility and a whiskery kiss from a sea lion or harbor seal. $25 members, $30 nonmembers. 1:30–2 pm, 2820 SE Ferry Slip Road. Ages 8 and up. Register online at https://tickets.aquarium.org/ public, by calling 541-867-3474; or in person on the day.

Café C’est La Vie • Lincoln Beach Steve Sparks, local veteran and author, will share readings from his book, which recounts how his father’s World War II combat experience affected his entire family, and his journey of healing. Refreshments available for purchase. 5-7 pm, 8 Bella Beach Circle. FMI, go to livingwithptsd-sparkles.blogspot.com.

Free boat exams Lincoln County boat ramps Float your boat safely and have a trained U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary vessel examiner go over its safety equipment. Owners of personal watercraft, paddlecraft and sailboats also welcome. 9 am to 2 pm at South Beach Marina in Newport Depoe Bay ramp and East Devils Lake State Park near Lincoln City.

Paul Chasman and the Pillars of Power Yachats Commons Chasman, backed by David Rivers on guitar and Hayden Pomeroy on bass, will play original songs about life, love, dogs, cats, Muhammad Ali, and who knows what else for an exciting, eclectic evening. The gig is a benefit for View the Future, a nonprofit working to protect the natural landscape surrounding Yachats. Tickets are $10 at the door. 7 pm, doors open at 6:30 pm. 441 Hwy. 101 N. For more information, contact Andrea Scharf at 541 547 3092 or go to www.paulchasmanguitar.com.

Yachats Farmers Market Yachats Farmers Market Check out the art, food and other wares at the Yachats Farmers Market. Free, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., 441 Hwy. 101. For more information, go to yachatsfarmersmarket.webs.com.

sunday • may 19

saturday • may 18, cont. Lincoln City Cultural Center The singing girls and boys from Kids Sing Out and the students from Ballet and Dance of Lincoln City invite the community to see all that they have learned this spring. $5 for adults and older kids, free for all children 5 and under. 2 and 7 pm at 540 NE Hwy. 101. For more information, call 541-994-9994.

“Reconcilliation: a son’s story”

Regatta Grounds • Lincoln City The Devils Lake Dash will provide high-octane entertainment with personal watercraft races in categories ranging from beginner to professional. In addition to the speed trials, watercraft riders will demonstrate acrobatic skills. Regatta Grounds will be packed with vendors and offer spectators a close-up view of the vehicles preparing for action. Free. 9 am-3:30 pm, NE West Devils Lake Road. Continues Sunday, May 19.

Devils Lake Dash Regatta Grounds • Lincoln City Personal watercraft races in categories ranging from beginner to professional and acrobatic demonstrations. Regatta Grounds will be packed with vendors. Free. 9 am-3:30 pm, NE West Devils Lake Road.

Godzilla film festival Newport Public Library Cinema studies scholar Isabelle Freda will lead a conversation entitled “Tracking Godzilla: Images of Nuclear Radiation in Film and Media.” Free, 2 pm, 35 NW Nye St. For more information, call the library at 541-265-2153 or visit www.newportlibrary.org.

Time to get cooking South Beach Community Center • Newport Learn to make delicious dishes with or without meat: mushroom moussaka, artichoke and cheese frittata, roasted stuffed vegetables and bruschetta with cannellini beans and kale. 1-4 p.m. 3024 SE Ferry Slip Road. Contact Chef Pati at 971-506-6695 or pati@ apostochefs.com to reserve your spot. $39 per person.

Kite Festival Rockaway Beach Join in on all the fun at the Rockaway Beach Kite

Festival May 17 to 19. For more information call 503-355-8108.

“Tales of Flight” Tillamook High School The season finale from the North Oregon Coast Symphony includes works by composers Richard Strauss, Gustav Holst, Richard Wagner, J. S. Bach, Nathan Wang, Michael Kamen and James Horner. $12. Students and those 12 and under are admitted free when accompanied by an adult. 3 pm, 2605 12th Street. For more information, call 503-436-0936, or go to www.northorgegoncoastsymphony.org.

Point the way Newport Performing Arts Center Free recital to mark the 40th birthday of the Newport School of Dance. First come, first seated. 2 pm, 777 NW Olive Street.

COASST training Hatfield Marine Science Center • Newport A free introductory session for people interested in volunteering for the Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team (COASST) 10 am to 4 pm at 2030 SE Marine Science Drive. For more information, contact coasst@uw.edu or 206-221-6893.

All jammed up The Bay Haven Inn • Newport As a fund-raiser for cancer stricken bass guitarist Jack Gale, the inn will extend its Sunday Jam Session, in order to have live music running onstage from 2 pm until the musicians can’t play anymore. There will also be a silent auction from 11 am to 7 pm, 608 SW Bay Blvd., Newport. FMI, call 541 265-7271.

“Tico Marimba,” door prizes, silent auction and raffle. All proceeds support the scholarship fund for community women. Tickets are available at the Pioneer Museum, the Garibaldi Maritime Museum, or by calling 503 355-6349 or 503 368-4074. Tickets are $25 in advance or $30 at the door and include a glass of wine, hors d’oeuvres aand chocolate sweets. 1-3 pm, 2106 2nd Street.

Covering the Angles Lincoln City Farmers Market Lincoln City Cultural Center Browse the wares of local farmers, crafters and artisans on the front lawn of the cultural center. Free, 9 am to 3 pm, 540 NE U.S. Highway 101. For more information, call 541-994-9994.

Dorian Michael Lincoln City Cultural Center Round off your trip to the Lincoln City Farmers Market with a dose of the Blues from fingerstyle guitarist Dorian Michael. 2 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets $10 in advance and $12 at the door, free for kids 12 and under. Call 541-994-9994 to reserve.

Wine and Chocolate Affaire Tillamook County Pioneer Museum • Tillamook This Tillamook Branch American Association of University Women fund-raiser features entertainment from band

Newport First Presbyterian Church A concert of late renaissance and early baroque music, featuring works from English composers Orlando Gibbons, William Lawes, John Hilton, and Michael East played on harpsichord, recorder and viola da gamba. Performed by Don Jenkins and the Lost in Time Trio. 3 pm, 227 NE 12th Street, Newport. Donations of money and nonperishable food for the Lincoln City and Newport food pantries accepted.

Elementary-level positions Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Try out for “Sherlock’s Secret Life,” the September offering from the Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts. No acting experience is required. 6 pm at the playhouse, 12th Street and Ivy. For an audition packet, contact director Robert Buckingham at 503-842-6305 or via email at info@ tillamooktheater.com.

Brewer’s Memorial Ale Fest Brewer’s on the Bay • Newport Sample your choice of more than 50 microbrews and music from artists including The Ty Curtis Band. noon-10 pm, 2320 OSU Drive. FMI, go to brewersalefest.com or call 503-241-3800.

Bicycle Safety Class Rodeo

A shout out

Taft city parking lot • Lincoln City. Presented by Lincoln City Police Department and the Bay Area Merchants Association, and taught by school outreach Officer Oscar Escalante, this event gives bike riders aged 6 to 12, the chance to get their bikes and helmets checked, test their skills four different courses and win a new bike. 10 am to 2 pm at the parking lot, located next to the community garden on SE Inlet Avenue behind Ace Hardware. For more information, contact Escalante at 541-921-0503.

The Hoffman Center • Manzanita Author Natalie Serber will read from her latest work, “Shout Her Lovely Name.” After Serber’s reading and Q&A, there will be an Open Mic where up to nine local writers will read 5 minutes of their original work. $7. 7 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue. During the day, Serber will conduct a writing workshop on generative writing. For more information, go to hoffmanblog.org or contact Vera Wildauer at vwildauer@gmail.com.

Goat Soap Making Demo

Museum reception Tillamook County Pioneer Museum A reception for the “Captain Farley and the Life-Saving Station” exhibit and Danielle Pfeiffer’s “Of Perils Unknown” exhibit. Pfeiffer, a Tillamook High School graduate, will be on hand to answer questions and discuss her art installation the museum’s archives about Bayocean Park. Free, 1 to 3 pm, light refreshments will be served. 2106 2nd St, Tillamook. For more information, call 503-8424553 or visit www.tcpm.org.

Culinary Center • Lincoln City In this demonstration class you’ll learn the benefits of using fresh goat milk in soap, resources for soap making supplies, and how to make goat milk soap. $30, includes bar of soap, 10 am to noon, 801 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City. For more information, contact Chef Sharon Wiest at 541-557-1125, 800-452-2151.

Newport Farmers Market Newport City Hall Find locally grown produce, fresh baked goods and crafts at this market outside city hall. 9 am 1pm, at Hwy. 101 and Angle Street.

tuesday • may 21

mon. • may 20 A triple trip

CD launch party

Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport Get triple the pleasure as two spotlight shows overlap, featuring the work of three artists — Luella Hartwell, Solveig Leslie and Ann Nicholson. The Nicholson exhibit will run through may 24, while Hartwell and Leslie’s work will be on display through May 31. 11 am to 4 pm every day, 789 NW Beach Drive in Newport.

The Hoffman Center • Manzanita Cathleen “Cat” Freshwater-Du Bois hosts a release party for her new CD — “Ant Cat Sings I Am Me,” a collection of children’s songs that became a reality after a chance meeting with the cousin of a Nashville record producer. Free. 7 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.

“The Health Care Movie” Central Lincoln PUD • Newport Health Care for All – Oregon presents this 30-minute movie on history of the Canadian Health Care System and how it is viewed by Canadians. It also talks about how the U.S. system of providing health care evolved. After the film, health professional Gary Lahman will lead a discussion on the proposal for a “single payer” system of providing health care for all Oregonians. 6 pm, 2129 North Coast Highway, Newport. For more information, email centraloregoncoastnow@gmail.com or call 541-765-2371.

Get well-versed Newport Public Library If you’re going to write poetry, it stanza reason you’re going to need a little help. Join longtime scholar, teacher and activist Judith Arcana for this free poetry workshop, designed for writers of all levels of experience. 7 to 8:30 pm in the library’s McEntee meeting room, 35 NW Nye Street. Organized by Willamette Writers. For more information, call Theresa Wisner at 541-270-3870.

Octopus Encounters Oregon Coast Aquarium • Newport Go behind-the-scenes at the aquarium to shake an octopus by the tentacle and learn about the hidden life of this amazing animal through your eyes, ears and fingertips. 11:30 am to 12:30 pm, 2820 SE Ferry Slip Road. $35 for Aquarium members, $40 for non-members. Ages 8 and up. Reservations are recommended. For more information go to http://aquarium.org/visit/special-tours-and-encounters, or call 541-867-3474.

wed. • may 22 “We Come From Everywhere” Taft Elementary School • Lincoln City Students will present a play that shows how people can travel the world simply by learning about each other’s customs. Money raised from the show will go toward H2O for Life, which will use the funds to provide running water for a school in Jelu, India. 1-3 pm, in the gymnasium, 4040 SE High School Drive.

Toe the line Garibaldi City Hall Enjoy an evening of square dancing and line dancing with WaveSteppers Tillamook Bay. Mark Wheeler is the caller and Gwen Kiel is the cuer. $5. 7-9:30 pm,107 6th Street at Acacia Avenue. For more information, call Carolyn at 503-801-4044 or go to www. wavesteppers.org.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 13


„ Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide f touch o e l t t i l f A to! uch o arliisttle h PA a Beac l l e B n i each! B a l l e in B

Nationally Famous Clam Chowder • Fresh Oregon Seafood Visit all the great Mo’s locations! Newport • Original Mo’s 622 SW Bay Blvd. Newport • Mo’s Annex 657 SW Bay Blvd. Otter Rock • 122 1st St. Cannon Beach 195 Warren Way • Tolovana Park Florence 1436 Bay Street

Welcome to the Oregon Coast’s European-inspired cafe! Serving fresh, sweet and savory crepes, homemade soups and indulgent sandwiches! Featuring local produce, Italian coffee and Gelato, imported French wines, as well as a variety of local art from mosaic work to jewelry.

Open Thurs.-Mon. 9am to 6pm Mention this ad and receive a complimentary sweet crepe with any purchase! Located at 8 Bella Beach Dr. 2 Miles South of Gleneden Beach, off Hwy. 101 in the Bella Beach Neighborhood

moschowder.com • shoot the QR for more!

The Coast’s Best Live Music! Fri., May 17

Kevin Selfe & the Tornadoes

Sat., May 18

The Tommy Hogan Band FAMILY FRIENDLY DINING!

OPEN DAILY (Spring Hours) - HAPPY HOUR 3-5:30PM 4649 SW HWY. 101 • LINCOLN CITY • 541-994-7729

#,#2 v 2 VOT E D B E S T BA K E RY I N L I N CO L N CO U N T Y • 2 0 0 9 , ‘ 1 0 , ‘ 1 1 & ‘ 1 2 !

The Captain’s got you pegged!

Set sail to Captain Dan’s and try our new

neighbors to neighbors

3-Courses • Locally-Sourced Menu • Just $25 join us every night in the lounge

Shipwreck Turnovers

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

Captain Dan’s

forbes 3-star rated • AAA 3-diamond rated • wine spectator | best of award of excellence wednesday through sunday • lounge opens at 5 p.m. • dinner service begins at 5:30 p.m. reservations recommended

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

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013

Pirate Pastry Shop

At the light at SE 51st & Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City 541.996.4600 • www.piratepastry.com


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide

Isle have a Guinness Classic poem inspires Irish pub owner

Lake Isle of Innisfree I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree, And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made; Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honey bee, And live alone in the bee loud glade.

Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

For Nobel Prize-winning poet William Butler Yeats, the “Lake Isle of Innisfree” was an expression of the poet’s longing to return to the land of his youth — to leave behind the pressures of 19th-century London and get back to the simpler life of rural Ireland. Yeats’ 1888 work conjures a similar range of emotions in the heart of his compatriot Philomena O’Brien, owner of Nana’s Irish Pub in Newport. O’Brien, who grew up hearing her mother recite the poem, has chosen Innisfree as the name for the farm she is establishing to provide fresh ingredients for the restaurant’s family recipes. Those recipes, including Steak & Guinness Pie, Corned Beef & Cabbage, and Chocolate Brandy Bread Pudding, have been bringing a touch of Irish home-cooking to Newport’s locals and visitors for more than five years, and it is the restaurant’s continued success that has prompted O’Brien to embark on this next adventure. “We’ve gotten to this point so now we are looking at our path,” she said, “where we want to bring the restaurant for the future.” That future — one of locally grown, sustainable vegetables and meats — has its roots in O’Brien’s past, growing up in Limerick, Ireland, where her mother prided herself on being a welcoming host. “A lot of what we do here at Nana’s is from my mother,” she said, “because she fed everyone.” The family immigrated to the U.S. in 1958, when O’Brien was a child, but to this day those family recipes live on, along with the philosophy of treating every customer like an old friend. Having established her hospitality credentials in Virginia by setting up an Irish pub and restaurant that continues to thrive, O’Brien moved to Oregon, where she found herself wowed by a food culture that emphasizes the importance of fresh, local ingredients. And the Innisfree farm, located just 22 miles from Newport in Logsden, offers the prospect of unbeatable freshness, with O’Brien already bringing in leafy greens including baby spinach, kale and arugula grown on the property she bought last June. “I never really ate a lot of those salads before because they didn’t really taste like much,” she said. “But when I pick them out of my greenhouse, I could eat them just like that.” Throughout the next three years, O’Brien plans for the farm to produce a range of foods, including potatoes, onions and parsnips as well as herbs including parsley, rosemary and tarragon — all raised from organic seed. The 10-acre farm already boasts some laying hens, and O’Brien has plans to raise some heritage pigs. The farm will also allow O’Brien to do things she just doesn’t have room for in Nana’s compact kitchen, such as curing her own brisket for

And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow, Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings; There midnight’s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow, And evening full of the linnet’s wings. I will arise and go now, for always night and day I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore; While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey, I hear it in the deep heart’s core. — W.B. Yeats

Nana’s Irish Pub courtyard

corned beef, canning pickles and making soda bread and hot sauce for sale. O’Brien already tries to source as many of her ingredients as locally as possible, using Painted Hills beef for the Dublin Burger as well as chickens from southern Washington for the Chicken Pot Pie. But with the Innisfree farm, she aims to step up to a sustainable, integrated system, in which the farm animals and crops work in harmony with compostable restaurant waste. While the restaurant has defied the economy by registering higher sales every year since opening in 2008, O’Brien said the effect the farm will have on her bottom line remains unclear. “I’m not sure if it will be more or less expensive [for me],” she said, “but I do know that the end product will have way more value than some of the products I’m using.” One thing the farm will not be growing is grain for making whiskey, with O’Brien saying she is happy to leave distilling to the experts. Nana’s still caters for those who care for a tipple, however, with a range of single malt Scotch and Irish whiskeys on offer, alongside Rogue Brutal Bitter on tap. Other tap drinks include the obligatory Guinness, Harp lager and Strongbow cider as well as Smithwicks, Ireland’s very oldest ale. For those who want to order like a local, remember the ‘w’ is silent. The best time to sample a few? From 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. each day, when drafts are available in 20-ounce Imperial

pints for $3.50 each, along with all wines and well drinks. For those looking for a little something different, Nana’s offers a see-it-to-believe-it Guinness and 7up shandy, an Irish mimosa consisting of cider and orange juice, and bloody marys for $4 apiece on Sunday mornings to help ease the fog of the night before. It is possible, of course, that the night before was also at Nana’s, with the restaurant doing a fine line in live music most Friday and Saturday nights, featuring local musicians such as Henry Cooper, Rob Connell and Evans Longshore as well as visitors including Wild Hog in the Woods. Though its Nye Beach corner location makes it a popular stop for visitors, O’Brien said Nana’s is proud of its connection to the community, taking part in local events like Chefs Against Hunger and the Siletz Soup Kitchen. The latest community endeavor will see locals losing their locks in a head-shaving fundraiser for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, which supports childhood cancer research. The hair will hit the patio at 1 p.m. on Sunday, May 19, so drop by, grab a chair, order a pint and dig deep for a good cause. O’Brien said events like the head shave are part of what makes Nana’s what it is — a living room where locals can — quite literally — let their hair down. “The tourists come and we make more food,” she said, “but really it’s the people of Newport that are our goal to please.”

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 15


„ Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide You know dinner... it’s

sandwiched between lunch & breakfast! Spice Up Your Thursday Night Dinner Just

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Saturday, May 18: Franspaul Boggard aka Sons of the Beaches in nye beach • nw third & coast streets in newport nanasirishpub.com • 541-574-8787

Open 6am to 3pm Daily Newport • 810 SW Alder • 541-265-9065 Lincoln City • 3910 NE Hwy. 101 • 541-994-3268 More Pig’N Pancake locations to ser ve you: Astoria, Cannon Beach and Seaside

16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013


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


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „

Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! Just $30! ¥ŽŠ¤ÂŽ Š £¤§ÂšÂšÂ“š‘ ÂŁÂŽ¤ ÂœÂ? ŒœŠ£¤ÂŽÂĄÂŁá€”နန

tide tables

GLASS FUSING STUDIO

4933 SW Hwy. 101 • 541-994-2427 • Lincoln City • morart.net

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Saturday Morning Cinema Saturday, May 18th - 10AM

Peter Sellers in PG-13

The Smallest Show on Earth

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(1957)

BIJOU THEATRE • 1624 NE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City • 541-994-8255 • cinemalovers.com

Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date

Thurs., May 16 Fri., May 17 Sat., May 18 Sun., May 19 Mon., May 20 Tues., May 21 Wed., May 22 Thurs., May 23

11:39 a.m. 12:05 a.m. 1:16 a.m. 2:28 a.m. 3:32 a.m. 4:27 a.m. 5:17 a.m. 6:05 a.m.

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date

Thurs., May 16 Fri., May 17 Sat., May 18 Sun., May 19 Mon., May 20 Tues., May 21 Wed,, May 22 Thurs., May 23

11:59 a.m. 12:29 a.m. 1:40 a.m. 2:48 a.m. 3:46 a.m. 4:38 a.m. 5:26 a.m. 6:12 a.m.

Yaquina Bay, Newport Date

Thurs. May 16 Fri., May 17 Sat., May 18 Sun., May 19 Mon., May 20 Tues., May 21 Wed., May 22 Thurs., May 23

11:21 a.m. 12:09 p.m. 1:02 a.m. 2:10 a.m. 3:08 a.m. 4:00 a.m. 4:48 a.m. 5:34 a.m.

Alsea Bay, Waldport Date

Low Tides

0.9 3.8 3.6 3.0 2.2 1.1 0.1 -0.9

--12:29 p.m. 1:26 p.m. 2:26 p.m. 3:24 p.m. 4:19 p.m. 5:11 p.m. 6:00 p.m.

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-1.3 1.7 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.3

4:47 a.m.. 5:43 a.m. 6:52 a.m. 8:12 a.m. 9:32 a.m. 10:42 a.m. 11:44 a.m. 12:40 p.m.

7.0 6.5 6.1 5.9 6.0 6.3 6.8 7.2

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6.5 6.1 5.7 5.5 5.6 5.9 6.3 6.7

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0.2 2.2 2.0 1.6 1.1 0.5 -0.1 -0.7

--12:47 p.m. 1:38 p.m. 2:31 p.m. 3:23 p.m. 4:14 p.m. 5:03 p.m. 5:52 p.m.

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Low Tides

6.6 6.7 7.0 7.4 7.9 8.5 9.0 --

High Tides

Low Tides

0.3 0.7 3.0 2.4 1.6 0.7 -0.2 -1.1

6:32 p.m. 7:24 p.m. 8:18 p.m. 9:09 p.m. 9:58 p.m. 10:43 p.m. 11:27 p.m. ---

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4.8 5.0 5.2 5.6 6.0 6.4 6.9 7.2

High Tides

6:26 p.m. 7:14 p.m. 7:58 p.m. 8:40 p.m. 9:20 p.m. 10:01 p.m. 10:42 p.m. 11:25 p.m.

6.2 6.4 6.8 7.2 7.8 8.3 8.9 9.4

High Tides

Thurs., May 16 11:40 a.m. 0.4 ---4:39 a.m. 6.2 6:28 p.m. 5.9 Fri., May 17 12:11 a.m. 3.0 12:29 p.m. 0.8 5:36 a.m. 5.8 7:18 p.m. 6.1 Sat., May 18 1:20 a.m. 2.8 1:22 p.m. 1.1 6:45 a.m. 5.4 8:06 p.m. 6.3 Sun., May 19 2:28 a.m. 2.3 2:17 p.m. 1.3 8:00 a.m. 5.3 8:51 p.m. 6.7 Mon., May 20 3:29 a.m. 1.6 3:12 p.m. 1.6 9:14 a.m. 5.4 9:35 p.m. 7.2 Tues, May 21 4:22 a.m. 0.7 4:05 p.m. 1.7 10:21 a.m. 5.6 10:18 p.m. 7.7 Wed., May 22 5:11 a.m. -0.1 4:55 p.m. 1.8 11:22 a.m. 6.0 11:01 p.m. 8.2 Thurs., May 23 5:58 a.m. -1.0 5:45 p.m. 1.9 12:17 a.m. 6.4 11:44 p.m. 8.6 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 of Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.

Grab Life by the

Beans All Organic Coffee

Full Espresso Bar Artisan Baked Goods Big Mountain Coffee House-Roastery 3930 NE Hwy. 101 • Depoe Bay

Next to Thriftway • 541-764-2195 • bigmountaincoffees.com

18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013


beach reads

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Get versed in poetry

As part of its ongoing Writers on Writing series, the Coast Chapter of Willamette Writers, is oering a free poetry workshop for people who are new to poetry and those who are interested in learning more, as well as experienced poets and writers. Longtime scholar, teacher and activist Judith Arcana will teach the workshop in Newport on Tuesday, May 21. Born and raised in the Great Lakes region and living now in the PaciďŹ c Northwest,

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Arcana is a writer of poems, stories, essays and books who has been published widely for more than 30 years, in literary magazines including “13th Moonâ€? and “Calyx,â€? as well as political, cultural and medical journals, including “Conscienceâ€? and “AďŹƒlia.â€? More information at www.juditharcana.com. The free event takes place from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 21, in the Newport Public Library’s McEntee meeting room, 35 NW Nye Street.

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Writers can’t be shrinking violets when it comes to promoting their work and when your book is called “Shout Her Lovely Name,â€? people are going to expect you to make some noise. On May 18 at The Homan Center in Manzanita, author Natalie Serber will do just that, reading an extract from the book that tells stories of resilient and awed mothers and daughters riding the familial tide of joy, pride, regret, loathing, and love. Serber has her MFA in ďŹ ction, has been awarded the John Steinbeck Award, Tobias Wol Award, and H.E. Francis Award, and was short listed in Best American Short Stories. She’s been published in The Bellingham Review, Inkwell Magazine, Third Coast, Fourth Genre, and Hunger. During the day on Saturday, Serber will conduct a writing workshop on generative writing. Workshop participants will learn what creates sparks on the page, how tension and thwarted yearnings, having something at stake brings words to life. Through multiple prompts they’ll explore language, imagery, character,

Find

Harmony

Natalie Serber

conict and action. For registration details, go to homanblog.org. Serber’s reading will take place at 7 pm at The Homan Center, 594 Laneda Avenue. Admission is $7.

Ducks fans, Beavers fans ...and Blazers fans! All ďŹ nd peace, on the stations of Yaquina Bay Broadcasting, where you’ll ďŹ nd all the Oregon basketball action you need, every week.

Poets share international perspectives

Authors Ralph Salisbury and Carlos Reyes will present works crafted from international perspectives at the Nye Beach Writers Series presented by Writers on the Edge on Saturday, May 18. Salisbury, whose poems and short ďŹ ction evoke his Cherokee-Shawnee-Irish-English-American heritage, is the

winner of River Teeth’s 2012 Literary Non Fiction Book Prize for his autobiography, “So Far, So Good.� He has presented his work on stage, on radio and TV in the U.S., Canada, Europe and India. Meanwhile, poet and translator Carlos Reyes’ world travels inform his poetry. He was recently in Bangalore, India,

where he spent a month writing and connecting with poets. He received a Heinrich Boll Fellowship in 2007, allowing him time to write on Achill Island, Ireland. The May 18 readings will begin at 7 pm at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive. Admission is $6, and students are free.

Plus, Lincoln County’s high school sports action!

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 19


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get out! Get dolphins Get a line on tickets a squeaky clean beach

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The Red Cock Craftsmen’s Outlet

Aware that the last thing a bottle nosed dolphin wants is an actual bottle on its nose, the Oregon Chapter of the American Cetacean Society is running a beach clean-up in partnership with Surfrider Foundation on Saturday, May 18. Marine debris poses a major threat to whales, dolphins and porpoises, with entanglements leading to more than 300,000 cetacean deaths each year. Marine debris is ingested by cetaceans, causing disruption in digestion, reduced growth, stranding and death. The clean up will run from noon to 3 p.m., with volunteers meeting at the Nye Beach turnaround and working their way to the North Jetty of the Yaquina River. For more information, contact Joy Primrose, at marine_lover4ever@yahoo.com or 541-517-8754.

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Outdoor Market 9am - 3 pm at the Lincoln City Cultural Center

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Get buzzed on field trip Spring migration is underway and the Yaquina Birders and Naturalists are inviting people to see song and marsh birds along Beaver Creek near Newport on Saturday, May 18. Brian Fowler, Oregon State Parks interpretive ranger, will lead the field trip, which is free and open to everyone. Meet at 8 a.m. at the Beaver Creek visitor center on North Beaver Creek Road and dress for variable weather. The field trip will last three hours. For a trail guide and birding checklist, go to www. oregonstateparks.org/park_261.php. For more information call 541-961-1307.

coast weather almanac

1221-A NE HWY. 101 • LINCOLN CITY • 541-994-2518

LINCOLN CITY

There are just 13 seats left for guided fishing trips at the upcoming Bounty on the Bay fund-raiser organized by the Tillamook Estuaries Partnership. The event features two days of revelry, including: a BBQ dinner, fishing seminar, and a fishing tournament. Register to fish with a pro-guide or as your own captain. Guides who offer their pro-expertise to this event include David Harris, Russ Morrow, Andy Schneider, Dave Johnson, Greg Hublou, Bob Rees, Dane Crossley, Curt Hedges, Ted Teufel, Pat Abel and Jon Winter. After the contest, enjoy a fabulous seafood feast, silent auction and award ceremony on the evening of June 1. Registration is open and necessary for all facets of the event. Registration forms are available online by going to www.tbnep. org. For more information, contact Lisa Phipps by phone at 503-322-2222 or by email at lphipps@tbnep.org. Bounty on the Bay raises funds to support water research, habitat restoration and education projects throughout Tillamook County.

Record Rainfall MAXIMUM WIND Record Wind-Speed LOW TEMPERATURE Record Low Temp HIGH TEMPERATURE Record High YEAR TO DATE RAIN

APRIL 2013

APRIL AVG.

APRIL 1993

5.18 in. 12.8 in - recorded in 1991 46 mph 59 mph - recorded in 1996 39.2 31.3 - recorded in 1994 67.5 78.8 - recorded in 1999 2013: 23.06 in.

6.4 in.

8.1 in. 32 mph 37.8 64.9 1993: 22.9 in.

Weather Statistics recorded by Sheridan Jones in Roads End, near Lincoln City.

NOTEWORTHY: Near month’s end there was a 7-day dry spell. The last three days had showers. The highest 24-hour rain total was 1.6”. No other 24-hour rain total exceeded 0.7”. The summer wind pattern of Northwesteries in pm has started. IN 1993: The seagull we nicknamed “bad bird” has returned for summer. The surf temp was 57 degrees. It was 51 degrees offshore. The monthly rain total was 2” above average. The rain gauge was plugged by bird droppings. FORECAST: May should be dry and warmer than average.

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013

Sheridan Jones


Join the jet set at Devils Lake

In a world where the phrase “high-octane” is tossed around as a catchall term for something exciting, it is refreshing to see an event that actually requires jet fuel to make it go. The inaugural Devils Lake Dash will see competitors from beginner to professional put their Jet Skis and other personal watercraft through their paces on May 18 and 19 in Lincoln City, with some of the machines fueling up with kerosene in order to deliver high West Richland’s Matt Engels comspeeds and gravity defying acrobatics. pletes a flatwater barrel role. The newest event on the Northwest Jet Sports Association’s calendar, the Devils Lake Dash kicks off a 2013 season that will determine who goes on to the International Jet Sports Boating Association world finals at WHAT: Devils Lake Dash Lake Havasu, Ariz. WHEN: 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., The contest has different classes for waSaturday, May 18; and 9 a.m.-3 tercraft depending on the amount of modip.m., Sunday, May 19 fications they have undergone. Classes range WHERE: Best view from Refrom “stock” or unmodified models; to “limitgatta Park, NE West Devils Lake ed” for models with limited modification such Road, Lincoln City as improved piping or propellers; to “open,” COST: Free where the sky is — quite literally — the limit. Aside from the races, the event will feature

If you go

a freestyle competition, in which skiers will demonstrate their skill by performing barrel rolls, riding their skis backwards and even doing back flips from a flat-water start. The best views of all the action are likely to be from Regatta Park, where vendors will set up booths and viewers can watch the racers ready their skis for action. Open pits will allow the public to get a close look at the machines. The event is open to riders of all ages, with skiers as young as 10 taking part. As well as age categories, the races will be divided up according to experience level with a slot for everyone from professionals to beginners who have never raced before. For those who prefer to keep their feet on dry land, there will be a mid-event cocktail party from 4 to 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, at Lincoln City Cultural Center. The party, sponsored by Chinook Winds Casino Resort, will give attendees a chance to meet the skiers, check out their watercraft and see the presentation of some awards from last season’s racing.

lively Gather for nuclear night From Hiroshima to Fukushima, the deadly power of nuclear radiation has exerted a potent influence on the world’s collective psyche. One of the earliest visions of that threat to hit the silver screen was the 1956 movie ‘Godzilla, king of the Monsters!” in which the portrayal of a gargantuan mutant Isabelle Freda lizard leveling Tokyo played upon fears surrounding hydrogen bomb testing in the Pacific Ocean. The changing face of the nuclear threat is the subject of “Tracking Godzilla: Images of Nuclear Radiation in Film and Media,” a free conversation with cinema studies scholar

Isabelle Freda, sponsored by Oregon Humanities, with additional help from the Sylvia Beach Hotel. Freda is an independent scholar who has taught at numerous universities and colleges in the U.S. and abroad. She received her Ph.D. in cinema studies from New York University, and her research and publications include studies of the modern American presidency, German-American relations, 9/11, the imagination of disaster, the Cold War and nuclear national security state, the presidential campaign film, eco-politics, and film. The discussion will take place at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May 19, at the Newport Public Library, 35 NW Nye St. For more information, contact the library at 541-265-2153 or go to www. newportlibrary.org.

800-COAST-44 • discovernewport.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013 • 21


one man’s beach

Dan and Sally H

ow far would someone go to save a dog traumatized by enslavement in a dog-fighting operation? How much would someone give to save a dog on the brink of annihilation? Recently, I found out. Sonny the husky and I were cruising down our local beach when, in the distance, I saw a man and his small dog playing with one another at the ocean’s edge in the most curious way. Sonny saw them, too, and stopped. Something in the man and dog’s joyful abandon transfixed us. Something special was going on there, we both just knew. It was only the four of us and a few boats at sea. Sonny started trotting toward the man and his dog. I followed. We all met up, but not before the man’s dog showed an astonishing submissiveness to Sonny. She seemed wracked with fear, which normally you don’t find in a pit bull, even an undersized one like the dog that cowered before Sonny. I went up to the dog and petted her. She looked at me with resignation and sadness. Then I saw her look at her owner and it was nothing like I have ever seen. I have no words to describe it. He introduced himself as Dan. Sally is his dog. I started asking questions and couldn’t stop because as Sally danced around Dan as he answered, I knew I was about to experience one the most inspiring random encounters of my life. Here’s their story: A month ago Dan relocated to South Beach from Portland because he needed a big life change and Sally, well, Sally needed everything.

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C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y M A T T L O V E

Several years earlier, someone had found a badly mauled Sally covered in blood on a Hillsboro street after she was thrown from a moving vehicle. She was probably used as a bait dog in a fighting operation. Dan learned of Sally’s plight while searching the Internet for a dog that could accompany him on his runs. A Beaverton-based animal rescue organization called Indigo Rescue had patched up Sally’s physical wounds but informed Dan that Sally suffered from grievous psychic trauma that required a level of care from an owner that most working adults can’t provide. He adopted her anyway and basically remodeled his life to heal the dog. That meant spending as much time as possible with Sally, who quickly developed severe separation anxiety when Dan left her alone. She nearly strangled herself chewing through a metal crate and once destroyed his living room. Dan’s father urged him to euthanize Sally but he wouldn’t give up. Dan started taking her to his office at a mortgage company and pretty much everywhere else, but at some point, he knew Sally needed something else. And perhaps Dan did, too. He heard the old sound of the ocean calling him. I think a lot of people hear that call in the city, but fail to heed it. Dan did not. He found a cabin for rent in South Beach and arranged with his employer to work out of his home, a block from the beach. He started taking Sally to the beach multiple times a day and a new kind of healing for her has commenced. Sally still has a long way to go, but she has an extraordinary owner with infinite love and patience. As I listened to Dan talk about Sally, I heard him articulate an axiom I had learned long ago: save one dog and it saves you. After that, all things are possible. “I get so much out of her, that it’s hard to explain,” Dan told me as we parted that fine April afternoon on a publicly-owned Oregon beach. I thought: You don’t have to explain anything Dan. Look where you are. Look what you’ve become. I’m looking at everything Sally did give you. Matt Love is the author/editor of ten books about Oregon, available at independent bookstores or nestuccaspitpress.com He can be reached at lovematt100@ yahoo.com. If you want to learn more about Indigo Rescue or make a donation, go to indigorescue.org.

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22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013

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on stage

Classified: as funny

Some plays have geopolitical intrigue, some have CIA operatives exposing their red underwear after walking into one of their own booby traps. To get both of these on the same stage, accept no substitutes for “Sin, Sex and the CIA,” the latest offering from Lincoln City’s Theatre West. The play, one of many farces written by husband and wife team Michael and Susan Parker, begins with the discovery of huge oil reserves in the Chagos Islands, which quickly come under pressure to join the OPEC cartel. Anxious to stop such a move, the U.S. government sends a CIA agent and an undersecretary of state to a safe house to begin negotiations to place the islands under U.S. protection. But things get complicated as the agent turns out to be incompetent and the undersecretary proves that her are actions controlled more by her libido than U.S. foreign policy objectives. Director Bryan Kirsch, who also plays one of the OPEC representatives, is joined on stage by Debbie Hendrickson as Heather, Joanna Corlett as Ranger Don, Karen Davis as Millicent, Rich Emery as Reverend Samuel, Shelby Barton as Luke and Tami Keller as Margaret.

Bryan Kirsch and Shelby Barton failing to see eye to eye.

The play will run on Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings through Saturday, May 25 at the theatre, 3536 SE Hwy.101, Lincoln City On performance days, the box office is open at 2 p.m., the doors open at 7:30 p.m., and the curtain goes up promptly at 8 p.m. Advance reservations for all performances are recommended and can be made by calling 541-9945663. Leave a message and someone will call you back. Tickets are $12 for adults; $10 for seniors (62 and up) and for students (over 12); and $8 for children 12 and under.

Elementary roles open

The game is afoot for all actors who aspire to wear the famed deerstalker of Western literature’s most legendary detective, with Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts issuing an open casting call for “Sherlock’s Secret Life.” Directors are looking for two men aged 20 to 40 to play the young Sherlock Holmes and the young Dr. Watson. They are also seeking three men aged 50 to 70 to play the old Dr Watson, Inspector Lestrade and Professor Moriarty. The cast list also calls for one woman aged 50 to 70 to play the role of Mrs. Hudson

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and two women aged 20 to 40 to play Miss Smith and Nurse Mollie. No acting experience is required. The performance dates will be Aug. 30 and 31 as well as Sept. 6, 7,8, 13, 14 and 15. Auditions will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, and 6 p.m. on Sunday, May 19, at the Barn Community Playhouse, 12th Street and Ivy, Tillamook. For an audition packet, contact director Robert Buckingham at 503-842-6305 or via email at info@tillamooktheater.com.

Speaking out for running water

Students at Taft Elementary School in Lincoln City will be raising money to provide running water to a school in India by presenting a play that shows how people can travel the world simply by learning about one another’s customs. “We Come From Everywhere” tells the story of kids on a cross-town train who wish they were going on a worldwide adventure but who soon discover that they can take a different kind of trip just by learning about the roots of their fellow passengers. Money raised from the show will go toward H2O for Life, which will use the funds to provide running water for a school in Jelu, India. Performances will run from 1-3 p.m. on Wednesday, May 22, and Thursday, May 23, in the gymnasium at Taft Elementary School, 4040 SE High School Drive, Lincoln City.

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Ozone Fine Art presents....

Radically Different Currents May 18 - June 17 featuring the artistic exploration of Katy LaReau & Leighton Blackwell Opening May 18th 5:00 - 7:30pm Art • Wine • Music • Food Artist’s-Talk • Interactive Project/Demos Upstairs 669 SW Bay Blvd. Newport (541) 265-9500 www.oznefineart.com

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


24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • may 17, 2013


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