INSIDE: coupons, p. 5 • real estate, p. 22 • plus dining guide, p. 7-9
oregon coast
FREE!
November 6, 2015 • ISSUE 21, VOL. 11
HAVE YOU HERD? IT’S ELK SEASON ON THE OREGON COAST. GRAB A CAMERA AND PREPARE TO TAKE AIM. See story, p. 14
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LINCOLN CITY: 1025 Hwy 101, Lincoln City OR 97367 • 541-994-3676 NEWPORT: 1155 SW Coast Hwy, Newport OR 97365 • 541-265-6604 TOLEDO: 415 NW A St, Toledo, OR 97391 • 541-336-1611
Foam, sweet foam The first good storm of the season is something I have looked forward to every year since moving to the Oregon Coast. Nothing quite compares to the feeling of battening down the hatches, settling into a comfy chair and being thankful for a warm house as the wind whips through the trees and the rain pounds against the windows. As with most sources of joy, this one changed dramatically with the advent of fatherhood. During last weekend’s storm, the addition of a rambunctious two-yearold quickly transformed the warm, safe house that had been our sanctuary from
the tempest into a pressure cooker, with all the occupants suffering a serious case of cabin fever. Fortunately, parenthood has made me aware of another pleasure, possibly even greater than armchair stormwatching — I speak, of course, about beachfront foam-chasing. The ocean is, not to put too fine a point on it, full of tiny, dead critters called phytoplankton — the sort of thing you need a microscope to see and which whales eat by the million. Holding these phytoplankton together is a fatty substance called cytoplasm. Take this oily goo and add some
crashing waves and whipping winds and you have a pretty good approximation of a washing machine going at full tilt. The resulting mounds of brownish sea foam that line the beach after a good storm are a familiar sight to regular beachgoers. But they were not a familiar sight to assistant editor Quinn. He was intrigued and, in no time at all, transformed into a froth-covered dervish, racing back and forth among the suds, kicking globs of fluffy foam into the wind while shouting at the top of his lungs: “More foamies!” One door closes. Another opens.
2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
from the editor
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4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
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University and currently teaches at the New England Conservatory. The concerts, conducted by Music Director Adam Flatt, will also feature works by two quintessentially American composers. The performances will open with a work by a living American composer Michael Daugherty, whose
“Route 66” is a panoramic postcard of the country’s diverse and syncopated musical experience. “It is a fabulous road trip in a big car,” Flatt said, “and what could be more American than that?” The orchestra will also perform the “New England Triptych” by William Schumann, an elegiac piece of rugged religiosity that looks back at old New England hymns. The Saturday evening concert will begin at 7:30 pm, with a pre-concert talk at 6:45 pm. Sunday’s 2 pm matinée features informal discussion by Maestro Flatt throughout the concert. Both concerts will take place at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $20 for general seating, $34 for preferred seating and $10 for students, are available at the box office, online at NewportSymphony.org, by phone at 541-265-ARTS.
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Another banner year The Newport Banner Project will wrap up its seventh year of bringing original artwork to the streets of Nye Beach with its annual auction on Sunday, Nov. 8. This year’s project saw more than 35 artists hang their art banners from lampposts throughout the neighborhood during the summer and fall months. Artists were encouraged to paint one side of the canvas banners with a scene reflecting a section of Nye Beach and to paint the other side with a quote or words of their choosing. The banner auction is always a lively weekend
gathering. This year’s event will feature live music from Rick Bartow and Friends as well as food and beverages from Nye Beach restaurants. Bidding for the banners is typically fast and furious, with the auction ending promptly at 7 pm. Proceeds from the project and auction, organized by the Nye Beach Merchants Association, support youth arts education through the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, and permanent public art. The auction party will run from 5-8 pm, at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive.
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The Newport Symphony Orchestra promises to take audience members on an American journey this weekend as it continues its 2015-16 concert series with a selection of pieces inspired by the Land of the Free. Joining the orchestra for its Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 7 and 8, concerts is virtuoso Allison Eldredge, who will perform perhaps the greatest cello concerto in the repertory — “Cello Concerto in B minor,” composed by Czech-born Antonin Dvořák during a three-year stay in New York. Eldredge first appeared with the Newport Symphony Orchestra in September 2013. Her credits also include performances as a soloist with the New York Philharmonic, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the St Paul Chamber Orchestra, among others. She has served on the faculty of Harvard
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 5
one man’s beach C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y M A T T L O V E
KESEY COASTAL
RAIN In his classic 1964 novel “Sometimes a Great Notion,” set in the Oregon Coast, Ken Kesey wrote, “Give me a dark smeary shiny night full of rain. That’s when the fear starts. That’s when you sell the juice.” Having resided at the Oregon Coast for 18 years, I can’t think of a truer sentence written about rain or living here. Over some 500 pages, “Sometimes a Great Notion” unfolds the saga of the stubborn Stampers, a family gyppo logging outfit in conflict with nature, their community, and each other. Their family motto is: “Never give a inch.” (And yes, it’s ungrammatical.) The novel takes place as October fades into November. Meaning, right now. The season of gray and rain, my favorite time to walk on the beach because of the colorless skies and almost utter lack of any other humans around. November is the perfect time to read this book for the first time, or revisit it again, like so many of us do. I’ve read it four times and underlined hundreds of passages. I like to think if thousands of people read “Sometimes a Great Notion” this month, it might actually start raining like it’s supposed to around here. We desperately need a 90-inch rain year, like 2012. It rained 31 straight days in November in Newport where I lived that year. We reveled in the juice. I’m dying for another 90-inch year. The whole region is. I consider “Sometimes a Great Notion” the greatest book on rain in the history of world literature. Why does it hold the title? Because the novel rains words in all the eclectic and unique ways rain falls on the coast — from staccato to torrent to barely a pulse. The prose ingeniously and
miraculously mimics rainfall. Why? Because the word “rain” appears six times in the novel’s first page and is used as a noun, verb and adjective. Why? Because the word “rain” appears 500, possibly 1,000 times in the novel and animates everything from Teddy the Bartender to rivers to the reader. Why? Because Kesey integrates the Sermon on the Mount with rain’s culpability. Why? Because Kesey hews a landscape from the hues of rain, which is, of course, a physical and literary impossibility. Or it was until “Sometimes a Great Notion” was published and despised by the New York critics who used umbrellas and thought Gene Kelly dancing in spurious rain was the apotheosis of synthesizing rain with art. Why? Well, read this passage from “Sometimes a Great Notion:” The Halloween clouds had continued to roll off the sea all the rumbling night — a surly multitude, angry at being kept waiting so long, and full of moody determination to make up for time lost. Pouring out rain as they went, they had rolled over the beaches and town and into the farmlands and low hills, finally piling headlong up against the wall of the Coastal Range mountains with a soft, massive inertia. All night long. A few piled to the mountaintops and over into the Willamette Valley with their overloads of rain, but the majority, the great bulk of that multitude gathered and blown from the distant stretches of the sea, came rebounding heavily back into the other clouds. They exploded above the town like colliding lakes. Where are you, surly multitude? Fall and make me grin. If you do, I’ll give you (and Kesey) a subtle bow before my first rain beach walk of the season, and then I’ll sit down and open “Sometimes a Great Notion” again. There is always something new there, just like rain. Matt Love is the author/editor of 14 books about Oregon, including “Of Walking in Rain,” his account of one of the rainiest years in Oregon history. His books are available through nestuccaspitpress.com and coastal bookstores.
6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 7
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Author unravels African tale They might be safe, sipping coffee in the confines of a Pacific Northwest lodge, but guests at the Tuesday, Nov. 10, session of the Oregon Coast Learning Institute could be forgiven for feeling their pulses quicken as they are transported to a faraway land at one of the most turbulent times in recent history. Oregon Coast author Diana Polisensky will begin the day’s offerings with a presentation on “Whitewashed Jacarandas,” her first historical novel, set in post-World War II Africa before decolonization. “Whitewashed Jacarandas” is the first in a quartet of books chronicling the mostly ignored burst of development that took place between the end of World War II and the rise of African Nationalism in Southern Rhodesia which led to rebellion, civil war and finally the election in 1980 of the present despotic ruler, Robert Mugabe.
The Lincoln City Community Center is offering free admission in return for donations of three or more non-perishable food items until Saturday, Nov. 14. The food drive is being held in cooperation with North Lincoln Eagles to help fill holiday baskets, meaning items for holiday meals, such as canned fruit, vegetables and gravy, stuffing mixes and dessert mixes, are especially sought after. Free admission is limited to one per person per day and includes access to the swimming pool, basketball gym, cardio or weight rooms and the indoor walking/ running track. The center, located at 2150 NE Oar Place, will be closed Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Nov. 26, and open regular hours Friday, Nov. 27. For more information, call 541-994-2131 or go to www.lincolncity.org.
Spring into action for “Fall into Winter” Time is running out to buy tickets for the second annual Fall into Winter dinner and silent auction from St. Luke’s By-the-Sea Episcopal Church in Waldport. Guests have until Friday, Nov. 6, to make reservations for the event, which will see Chef Anthony Velarde and Chef Michele Korgan from ONA Restaurant serve up a gourmet dinner on Saturday, Nov. 14. The evening will begin at 5 pm at St. Luke’s, located at 1353 Hwy. 101 S, with guests enjoying appetizers and time to bid on auction items. Dinner will be followed by dessert provided by Pacific Sourdough. Tickets are $35 apiece and wine can be purchased separately, served by The Wine Place. A portion of the proceeds will help support Court Appointed Special Advocates of Lincoln County. The remaining earnings will be contributed to ongoing efforts provided by St. Luke’s By-the Sea Episcopal Church. To book tickets, call Dutch at 541-270-3747.
Diana Polisensky
Polisensky was born into a medical family in a small town in Southern Rhodesia. She moved to the US as a young woman and worked in genetic engineering. Now retired, she lives in Gleneden Beach. Her presentation, “Reading Between the Lines of ‘Whitewashed Jacarandas’” will begin at 10 am. She will also talk briefly about the publishing process and will be available afterwards to sign books. In the afternoon sessions, Lou Boudreau will present “3-D Printing: That is the Question” at 1 pm, giving an overview of this revolutionary new manufacturing technology and looking at current and potential future applications. At 2 pm, Judy Heltzel will present brief book reviews from four learning institute members. The learning institute meets at Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach. Membership is $75 for the year and guests are always welcome to try one session free. For more information, go to www. ocli.us.
BE SHORE NOT TO MISS IT Scientists will present updates on the state of Oregon’s ocean and beaches when the Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition meets in Lincoln City on Saturday, Nov. 7. Oceanographer Bill Peterson will look at the dramatic changes that have been observed recently in the marine environment, from the current El Niño, to the mysterious “Blob” occupying much of the northern Pacific, to ocean acidification, along with many other changes in the ocean. Then, Cynthia Trowbridge will present a tour of typical findings in the driftline along Oregon’s shores, with special
emphasis on many of the unusual phenomena observed
Bill Peterson (left)
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
this year on Oregon beaches: salps, tunicates, by-the-wind
sailors, the Cassin’s auklet dieoff, and much more. Between the main presentations, there will be short talks on Oregon Shores’ wide-ranging program activities, touching on everything from land use and water quality issues to marine debris and sea stars. The event, which is free and open to all, runs from 1:30 to 5 pm at The Eventuary, 560 SW Fleet Street and includes a reception catered by culinary students from Taft High School. For more information, contact Phillip Johnson at 503-7549303 or phillip@oregonshores. org.
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „
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artsy
THE CREAM OF THE (UN)CROP
Quite INK-redible Broadway is coming to the Oregon Coast this month, as the Newport Visual Arts Center presents an exhibit of work by award-winning theatre illustrator Justin Robertson. The “Ink on Broadway” exhibit opens with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, Nov. 6, in the center’s Upstairs Gallery. Robertson, professionally known as “Squigs,” will exhibit prints of his signature caricatures seen regularly as the “Broadway Ink” feature on Broadway.com. Robertson’s illustrations have also appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, Variety and the Playbill Broadway Yearbook. Raised in the Oregon town of Lebanon, Robertson vacationed with his family around Newport and along the 20 miracle miles while growing up. While he now calls New York City home, his extended family has a house near Waldport and continues to make great memories along the coast. Robertson didn’t have much say in picking his professional name. Like many nicknames, “Squigs” was handed down by those who know him best. “I was playing Nicely-Nicely in a production of Guys & Dolls and a friend called me ‘SquigglyWiggly,’” he said. “ Since I was known for drawing squiggles, my group of friends started calling me ‘Squiggly’, and this eventually
became ‘Squigs.’” Now heralded as the heir apparent to famed New York Times caricaturist Al Hirschfeld, Robertson began his artistic career more as an actor than illustrator. “I started drawing caricatures of my fellow actors as closing night gifts,” he says. “From there, other producers began asking that I draw illustrations for their shows as well.” Robertson’s work appears regularly on Broadway.com but also finds its way onto playbills, banners, posters and other marketing materials throughout the Broadway District in New York City. He has also contributed to promotional campaigns for Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, the Theatre World Awards and theatrical productions in London and around the world. Beyond drawing for Broadway shows, Robertson has started a new business venture, “The Lights of Broadway Showcards,” caricature cards of well-known Broadway actors and actresses. Samples of the showcards will be available during the “Ink on Broadway” exhibit. The exhibit, hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, will be on display through Nov. 28, available to view from noon to 4 pm Tuesday to Saturday at 777 NW Beach Drive.
Oregon Coast art lovers will have another chance to see works from local photographer Kirk Jonasson this month, as his “Inner Landscapes” exhibit opens in Newport. Fresh from a run in Lincoln City, the collection of abstract photography will be on display throughout November in the Runyan Gallery of the Newport Visual Arts Center. An opening reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, Nov. 6, will feature a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm. “Inner Landscapes” features abstracted images from locations throughout the state, captured using a medium-format film camera and presented un-cropped and un-manipulated. “This process imposes the discipline of seeing in real time and has as its final reward the bringing home of the photographic experience of discovery,” Jonasson said. “This is image ‘making,’ as opposed to ‘picture taking.’ It is the only way I know, outside of image manipulation, to create something original and unique while using an instrument that merely records what is in front of me.” A self-taught artist, Jonasson has been photographing Oregon for the past 38 years, beginning in Central Oregon. Born in Portland, he graduated from Beaverton High School and earned his BS in biology from Oregon State University. He moved to Bend, where he bought his first SLR camera and soon went from shooting pretty scenics in color to making
“Belmont” by Kirk Jonasson
personal color abstractions of the built environment, which eventually led him into the gallery business. As the printing resources for color film dwindle, Jonasson has increasingly turned to capturing his images in black and white. “Whether working in color or black and white, I have always felt that compelling composition can lead the way to content in a photograph,” he said. “Particularly if one uses an intuitive, as opposed to a purely cognitive method of visualizing.” Hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, the exhibit will be on display through Nov. 29, available to view from 11 am to 5 pm, Tuesday to Sunday.
10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
“Cannery Pier, Astoria” by Kirk Jonasson
artsy
Get a read on some art
“Spring Morning in Scholls” by Michael Gibbons
Autumn Author lineup 11:30 am: Kathy Cleaver, “Super Heroes Are Super Kind” Noon: Gus Willemin, “Sideman” and “Catch & Release” 12:30 pm: Ed Cameron, “Gilmore By The Sea” 1 pm: Dan Pistoresi, “Taking The Bitter With The Sweet: the story of my life” 1:30 pm: Deborah Trusty, “The Kid From Valsetz” 2 pm: Johnny Bargain, “A Collection of Bummer Summers” 3 pm: John Crawford, “Eye Dream” 3:30 pm: Catherine Rickbone, “Labyrinth Dance” and “What She Knows” 3:45 pm: Sarah Gayle, “Come One Come All to the Fairy Ball!” 4 pm: Carla Perry, “Riva Beside Me,” “Wanderlust,” “No Questions Asked, No Answers Given” and “Laughing Like Dogs” Sarah Gayle and Carla Perry
Artists at Toledo’s November First Weekend event will be celebrating words as well as pictures this Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 7 and 8, with an Autumn Author Spotlight accompanying the regular gallery tour. On Saturday, Nov. 7, Sarah Gayle Art Gallery will host 10 authors from Dancing Moon Press for presentations, question-and-answer sessions, idle chitchat and book sales. Lights snacks will be available. Sarah Gayle has been creating and producing the recent covers and interior illustrations for Dancing Moon Press, a full-service Newport publishing house founded in 1997 by Carla Perry. The event will run from 11 am to 4:30 pm at the gallery, 147 N Main Street. For an author schedule, see sidebar. For more information, contact Gayle at 1-541-632-3236 or sarahgayleart@gmail.com or Perry at 541-574-7708, info@ dancingmoonpress.com. Throughout the weekend, oil painter Michael Gibbons will be welcoming guests to his Signature Gallery to view his work, accompanied by a complimentary glass of Oregon wine. Among the works on display is “Spring Morning in Scholls”, a 25-by35-inch oil, painted on location at Smith Berry Farm between Newberg and Tigard on the Scholls Ferry Road. “I grew up in the Willamette Valley in Portland” Gibbons said, “and this view reminds me of my youth and family reunions.” Gallery Michael Gibbons will be open from 11 am to 5 pm both days at 140 NE Alder Street.
First weekend guests can also see Gibbons’ work across the street at the the Yaquina River Museum of Art, which is continuing its show of “Winter Surf II,” one of Gibbons’ series of four central coast Pacific Ocean views. “Winter Surf II” engages the viewer in the mystery of a soft, fog-shrouded ocean and shore in the winter during a quiet time at the beach. The second painting in the exhibit, “Winter Surf III”, is the complete opposite, showing a crashing sea that challenged the artist’s skills in a much different way. The museum will be open from 11 am to 5 pm both days at 151 NE Alder Street. Nearby, fellow oil painter Ivan Kelly will be showcasing a selection of recent works, including paintings of the GP paper mill and Criteser Moorage. “I’m very excited about the light, particularly that of early morning or late evening” Kelly said. “The low warm sun transforms everything and coupled with dissipating mist, you get moods that are sublime.” Ivan Kelly Studio-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. And, at the foot of Main Street, Pig Feathers BBQ is showing artwork by Eileen “Zelie” Hearne, with more than 20 original paintings and a variety of fine art cards on display, with subject matter including fish, flowers and birds. The show is available to view from 11 am to 9 pm on Saturday and 11 am to 7 pm on Sunday at 300 S. Main Street.
“Shining Mill on the Yaquina” by Ivan Kelly
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 11
Friday, Nov. 6
Coast Calendar
“Festival the Show”
“I Hate Hamlet”
After-Fair Party
Newport Performing Arts Center Be sure to catch this one-night-only satirical show, taking a penetrating look at festival culture through the lens of sketch comedy, physical theatre, music, dance and circus arts. 7 pm, 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $15 in advance, $16 at the door and $13 for students, available at coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS.
Theatre West • Lincoln City Theatre West’s latest production pits a hot young TV star against the ghost of the greatest Hamlet ever in a duel that covers women, art, success, duty, television and even his apartment. Curtain at 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $14 for adults, $12 for seniors or students and $9 for children 12 and under, available by calling 541-994-5663.
Rogue Brewery • Newport Come along and share your thoughts on this year’s Lincoln County Fair as well as suggestions for what you would like to see in 2016. Free beer and appetizers while supplies last. 5:30 pm, 2320 SE Marine Science Drive. FMI, call 541-574-6534 ext. 57426.
Winter bazaar
Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this exhibit from award-winning theatre illustrator Justin “Squigs” Robertson, heralded as the heir apparent to famed New York Times caricaturist Al Hirschfeld. 5-7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive.
Panther Creek Community Center 9am-4pmthroughSunday.Lunchavailableeachday.
Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this collection of abstract photographs from Kirk Jonasson, captured using a medium-format film camera and presented un-cropped and unmanipulated. Featuring a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm. 5-7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive.
“I Hate Hamlet,” Thursday, Friday & Saturday at 7:30 pm • Photo by Gretchen Ammerman
Lear to Excel Newport Public Library The library’s free computer classes continue with, at 9 am, “Beginning Excel,” followed at 10 am “Intermediate Excel.” 35 NW Nye Street. Registration required. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Artist of the Month Bay City Arts Center Enjoy light refreshments while admiring the photography of Mike Sava at this public reception. Free. 5-7 pm, 5680 A Street.
Saturday, Nov. 7 cont. Newport Symphony Orchestra Newport Performing Arts Center The orchestra presents an American journey featuring cello virtuoso Allison Eldredge and works by Antonin Dvořák, William Schumann and American composer Michael Daugherty. 6:45 pm, 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $20 for general seating, $34 for preferred seating and $10 for students, available at the box office, online at NewportSymphony.org, by phone at 541-265-ARTS. Repeated Sunday.
Allison Eldridge
Power Over Diabetes Chinook Winds Casino Resort A full day of free diabetes information, featuring speakers, interviews, films, cooking classes, health screenings, vendors and more. Bring your health insurance card and get your flu shot while you’re there.
10 am-4 pm, below the Seafood Grill, 1777 NW 44th Street. FMI, call 503-585-1335.
Boat Oregon class Depoe Bay Community Hall Presented by US Coast Guard Auxiliary. $15. FMI,
contact Cheryl Lundine at 503-551-5336 or countryma@ hotmail.com.
Head off to a party Bay City Arts Center You can bet there will be cake at this annual celebration commemorating the birth of one of history’s most misunderstood Madames, Marie Antoinette. Free. All-ages. 7 pm, 5680 A Street.
By sea and by land The Eventuary • Lincoln City All are welcome to this Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition meeting, where oceanographer Bill Peterson and marine ecologist Cynthia Trowbridge will present updates on the state of Oregon’s ocean and beaches. Followed by a catered reception. Free and open to all. 1:30 to 5 pm, 560 SW Fleet Street. FMI, contact Phillip Johnson at 503-754-9303 or phillip@oregonshores. org.
East meets West Tillamook Adventist School • Tillamook Enjoy “A Cruise Around the World” at this benefit dinner and auction. Proceeds fund scholarships and academic enhancements. All welcome. $25. 6:30-8:30pm, 4300 12th Street. FMI, call 503-842-6533.
Lincoln City Cultural Center Try your hand at making an art print with an ink-coated octopus in this class from Gyotaku expert Heather Fortner. $25. 1-4 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. To book a spot, contact Krista Eddy at 541-992-4292 or artgallery@lincolncityculturalcenter.org.
First Weekend Galleries throughout Toledo Galleries and studios throw open their doors to the public, with art displays, light refreshments and discussion. Most galleries open 11 am to 5 pm.
Newport Symphony Orchestra Newport Performing Arts Center 2 pm. See Saturday listing for details.
Pair with a special selection of wines for an additional charge. Valid through December 26, 2015
• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
St Peter the Fisherman Lutheran Church • Lincoln City Enjoy a bake sale, treasure room, beautiful quilts, crafts and a raffle. Lunch served 11 am to 2 pm, with soup, sandwiches, a hot dish and pies. All proceeds go toward mission projects. 10 am to 4 pm, at Highway 101 & SW 14th Street, across from Lincoln City Outlets. FMI, call 541-994-8793. Continues Saturday.
Aquarium Village • Newport Celebrate this ancient Aztec tradition with live pre-Hispanic music, Aztec dancing, face painting and a DJ. $10 at the door; kids get in free. 6 pm, 3101 SE Ferry Slip Road.
Octopus printing workshop
Tender rack of venison with simmered fall root vegetables and sides. Served Fridays & Saturdays in the Rogue River Steakhouse, 5pm-10pm - $30
"It's Better at the Beach!"
Beatlesfest Christmas Bazaar
Dia De Los Muertos
Lincoln City Cultural Center Toledo artist Heather Fortner leads this free class for kids, showing how to create prints from natural objects. 10 am-noon, 540 NE Hwy. 101. To book a spot, contact Krista Eddy at 541-992-4292 or artgallery@lincolncityculturalcenter.org.
Newport Banner Auction
Harvest & Holidays
Newport Visual Arts Center East, drink and enjoy live music at this annual fund-raiser, which offers the chance to take home one of the art banners that graced the Nye Beach neighborhood throughout summer. 5-8 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive.
Yachats Commons 10 am-4 pm. See Saturday listing for details.
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.
Galleries throughout Toledo Galleries and studios throw open their doors to the public, with art displays, light refreshments and discussion. Most galleries open 11 am to 5 pm. Continues Sunday.
Newport Public Library Learn about solar energy systems, basic site analysis, tax credits and incentives, and how to choose a contractor at this free workshop. 10:30 am- noon, 35 NW Nye Street.
Sunday, Nov. 8 Nature printing workshop
First Weekend
Basics of Going Solar
“Ink on Broadway”
“Inner Landscapes”
Saturday, Nov. 7
Lincoln City Cultural Center Get a ticket to ride for an evening of classic hits, great food and gourmet whisky tasting, with all proceeds going toward the Kids Zone education enrichment program in Depoe Bay. Tickets, $15 in advance, $18 on the door, available at www.neighborsforkids.org. 7-9 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.
Oyster Cloyster Oregon Coast Aquarium • Newport Sample oyster-based dishes whipped up by chefs from across the state at this fund-raiser benefiting the aquarium and the Oregon
Coast Community College Foundation. Cast your vote for the People’s Choice Award, enjoy aquarium exhibits and no-stakes casino games. 6:30 pm, 2820 SE Ferry Slip Road. Tickets, $75, available at OysterCloyster.org.
Christmas Bazaar
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.
St Peter the Fisherman Lutheran Church • Lincoln City Enjoy a bake sale, treasure room, beautiful quilts, crafts and a raffle. Lunch served 11 am to 2 pm, with soup, sandwiches, a hot dish and pies. All proceeds go toward mission projects. 10 am to 3 pm, at Highway 101 & SW 14th Street, across from Lincoln City Outlets. FMI, call 541-994-8793.
Author reading
St Augustine Catholic Church • Lincoln City More than 20 vendors will offer hand-crafted items including jewelry, wood toys, birdhouses, hand-woven rugs, knitted items and crochet work. Lunch served from 11 am to 2 pm, including home-made beef or chicken pot pie. Warm sticky buns, cookies, pies and pumpkin roll also available along with hot cider, hot chocolate and pumpkin spice coffee. 10 am-3 pm, 1139 NW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-2216.
“I Hate Hamlet” Theatre West • Lincoln City Curtain at 7:30 pm. See Friday listing for details.
Sarah Gayle Art Gallery • Toledo Hear from 10 Dancing Moon Press authors including Deborah Trusty, Ed Cameron and Dan Pistoresi, with plenty of time for question-andanswer sessions, idle chitchat and book sales. Lights snacks will be available. 11 am to 4:30 pm, 147 N Main Street. FMI, contact Sarah Gayle at 1-541-632-3236 or Carla Perry at 541-574-7708.
Holiday Bazaar and Auction Sacred Heart Catholic Church • Newport This year’s event features a raffle, silent auction, jewelry booth, handcrafted items, country store, book nook, cookie walk and lunch served from 11 am to 2 pm, including soups, Asian fare and desserts. 9 am-3 pm, 927 N Coast Hwy.
Yachats Commons With more than 70 exhibitors from around the Pacific Northwest, this juried craft festival is the perfect place to get a jump on your holiday shopping. Check out craft demonstrations, enjoy free gourmet food samples and chill out with a chair massage. 10 am-4 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, call 541-547-4664. Continues Sunday.
Winter bazaar Panther Creek Community Center 9 am-4 pm through Sunday. Lunch available each day.
Tuesday, Nov. 10
Book Sale
Oregon Coast Learning Institute
Tech-help sessions
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. Hosted by Friends of Driftwood Library, with all proceeds benefiting library programs and needs. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The fall semester continues with, at 10 am, “Reading Between the Lines of ‘Whitewashed Jacarandas” by Diana Polisensky, followed at 1 pm by “3-D Printing: That is the Question,” presented by Lou Boudreau. At 2 pm, Judy Heltzel will present brief book reviews from four institute members. $75 for the year. Guests can try one session free. 7760 Hwy. 101. FMI, go to www.ocli.us.
Newport 60+ Activity Center Infuriated by the Internet? Frustrated by Facebook? Livid your laptop? Help is at hand from youth intern Cameron Davis. Bring your own device or use one of the center’s desktops. Sessions limited to eight students each. 2:45 to 3:15 pm, 20 SE 2nd Street. FMI, or to book a spot, call 541-265-9617.
Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge Join refuge volunteer Lee Sliman for this earlymorning vigil, welcoming thousands of geese and ducks that winter at the Oregon Coast as well as the occasional exotic visitor. 7:45 am, turn west off Hwy. 101 on to Christensen Road six miles south of Pacific City. FMI, call Sliman at 503-812-6392.
Reading Circle Newport Public Library The group will discuss “When the Killing’s Done” by T.C. Boyle, recounting the conflict between a National Park Service biologist and an environmental activist over plans for a mass extermination of rats and feral pigs in California’s Channel Islands. Free. Noon, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Winter bazaar Panther Creek Community Center 9 am-4 pm through Sunday. Lunch available each day.
Live Music
Chinook’s Seafood Grill WT HT -YLL *V]LY
Wednesday, Nov. 11 Hatfield update Veterans Day Celebration Tillamook Air Museum • Tillamook Veterans of Foreign Wars Post & Auxiliary 2848 present “Honoring The Medics,” featuring guest speakers, choirs, a traveling military museum and local band Buffalo Kitty. Program starts at 11 am, following a fundraiser breakfast from 7:30 to 10:30 am, 6030 Hangar Road.
“Les Misérables” Newport Public Library The library’s Literary Flicks series continues with this 2012 musical based on Victor Hugo’s 1862 novel, cataloging the struggles of an ex-convict who decides to turn his life around and gets caught up in political turmoil, culminating in the Paris Uprising of 1832. Free. 6:30 pm, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www.newportlibrary.org.
Ducky at Dawn
"It's Better at the Beach!"
Holiday Bazaar
Congregational Church of Lincoln City Neskowin author Ger Killeen will read from works including his most recent book, “JuarOz,” a tale set in Juarez, Mexico, which gives voice to the victims of economic and gender violence, the perpetrators of horrifying crimes and the complicit bystanders.Free, but RSVP to 541-921-8168. 2-4 pm, 1760 NW 25th Street, behind Kenny’s IGA north.
Harvest & Holidays
Autumn Author Spotlight
Monday, Nov. 9
Newport Farmers Market
Ocean
November 6 & 7
Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach Get an update on plans to expand the Hatfield Marine Science Center as Director Dr. Bob Cowen addresses the Lincoln City Rotary Club. $13. Noon, 7760 Hwy. 101. RSVP by calling 541994-3070.
Thursday, Nov. 12 Glass art drop Lincoln City beaches Mark Veterans Day with a walk on the beach, keeping your eyes peeled for the 50 red, white and blue floats hidden by stealthy float fairy volunteers. FMI, call the Lincoln City Visitor & Convention Bureau at 800-452-2151.
Fall Teen Program Tillamook County Library • Tillamook A chance for teens to test their ingenuity by building a Hexbot maze and then guiding their little bug-like
robot to victory in a maze race. 5:30-7 pm, 1716 3rd Street.
“I Hate Hamlet” Theatre West • Lincoln City Theatre West’s latest production pits a hot young TV star against the ghost of the greatest Hamlet ever in a duel that covers women, art, success, duty, television and even his apartment. Curtain at 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $14 for adults, $12 for seniors or students and $9 for children 12 and under, available by calling 541-994-5663.
Crooked
November 13 & 14
• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 13
ROOSEVELT ELK: A few words about the herds By Nancy Steinberg For the TODAY Photos from Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife
“What’s the coolest thing you’ve ever seen while mountain biking?” my son asked me one day, while we were out mountain biking. That was easy, I told him: the coolest thing I’ve seen is the herd of huge, majestic Roosevelt elk that are regularly found by the Newport Municipal Airport, sometimes numbering 75 or more. When riding early in the morning or close to dusk, I frequently see them grazing in an open meadow to the east of the airport fence. If they see or smell me, they’ll get nervous and move off into the woods, sometimes in a stampede that gets my heart rate up faster than a steep climb up a rocky trail. If I’m lucky enough to be downwind of them, I’ll stop riding and watch them for as
long as I can before I have to move on. They are magnificently beautiful animals. Roosevelt elk are the largest species of elk in North America: males (bulls) typically weigh about 875 pounds but can get much larger, and females (cows) are about 700 pounds. The males have spectacular racks of antlers, which they lose every year and regrow. In Oregon these elk are found in the Coast Range, the Willamette Valley, the Klamath Mountains and the West Cascade. Rocky Mountain elk, a different subspecies, are also found in various regions of Oregon. They tend to frequent areas with new grass growth, as they are more “grazers” than “browsers,” animals that tend to eat tender branches of bushes and trees, according to Doug Cottam, supervisory wildlife biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW). ODFW manages Oregon Roosevelt elk via hunting regulations and other measures to ensure that populations are healthy throughout the state. The state is divided up into management units, with specific target population sizes and ratios of bucks to cows and cows
to calves determined for each. ODFW estimates the number of elk in a given management unit by conducting helicopter surveys in February when hunting season is over and bucks are easier to distinguish from cows because they haven’t lost their antlers yet. Once population numbers are estimated, using the helicopter counts and other data like hunting success from the previous year, ODFW establishes hunting regulations. Although there are several thousand elk in Lincoln County, the local elk population is currently smaller than the target, in part, Cottam said, because coastal females only have a calf every other year and hunting success here is high. In order to raise the numbers of elk, hunting is limited to very short periods of time (a total of 11 days in November for rifle hunting, for example) and other strict regulations are in place. ODFW’s job is complicated by the fact that they are also required to be responsive when elk damage private property by eating crops or trampling fences. They try to work with landowners to find solutions
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
n a t u r a l i s t ’s c a l e n d a r
that don’t involve killing animals. “Our effort is concentrated on having lots of elk where they are welcome,” Cottam said. If the only way you’d like to shoot an elk is with your camera, there are fairly reliable viewing sites up and down the coast, although they are wild animals, so a little luck is also required. Look for open, grassy areas like pastures and fields, especially when the grass is greening up in February and March. Reliable elk viewing spots on the coast include: • Siletz River Valley. • Cascade Head, especially on the north side of the Salmon River and west of the highway. • Tami Wagner Wildlife Area, an ODFW property five miles up the Yachats River Road. • East of the Newport Municipal Airport, if you want to hike or mountain bike on trails that originate behind Oregon Coast Community College. A free permit is required for these trails, available from
the sales office of the Wilder housing development, SE 43rd St. in South Beach. • A bit further afield, the Jewell Meadows Wildlife Area in Seaside. • Also a bit beyond the Central Coast, the Bureau of Land Management’s Dean Creek Elk Viewing Area, three miles east of Reedsport on Highway 38. Whenever I see the elk by the airport, I am wary. They are very, very large animals, after all. Cottam said that while they are not inherently aggressive, it would be unwise to touch a calf, or approach too closely in general. He especially warned that my dog, who accompanies me on my biking expeditions, should stay away from the herd, as she could easily be kicked or trampled if the elk felt threatened. Keep a respectful distance, but do try to find them — it’s worth the search.
lively
Whats up, shuck? Oyster Cloyster fund-raiser returns for its 15th year This Saturday’s Oyster Cloyster gala will see chefs from across Oregon descend on Newport, each bringing their own culinary philosophy and approach to flavors. But there will be one unifying ingredient running through all the creations on offer at the Oregon Coast Aquarium — oysters from Oregon Oyster Farms on Yaquina Bay. Just like wine, oysters boast their own terroir, or unique tasting experience, that reflects the conditions in which they grow. Water temperature, salinity, species and a variety of other factors influence oysters’ distinctive flavor profiles. Chefs representing eight restaurants will serve up their take on this local fixture of the Oregon Coast seafood scene. Competition will be fierce, with chefs vying for approval from a panel of professional judges as well as trying to win over the voting public in the People’s Choice Award.
Chinook Winds Executive Chef Jack Strong serving up a creation at a previous Cloyster
In addition to delectable foods from the land and sea, Willamette Valley Vineyards, Duck Pond Cellars, Capitello Wines, Territorial Vineyard and Rogue Ales will serve up tastes and glasses for menu price amid the aquarium’s exhibits. Behind-the-scenes tours, live music and no-stakes casino games with dealers
from Chinook Winds Casino Resort will provide hours of entertainment. The gala event begins at 6:30 pm at the aquarium, 2820 SE Ferry Slip Road. Tickets, $75, are available at OysterCloyster.org. Proceeds benefit the Oregon Coast Aquarium and Oregon Coast Community College Foundation.
Can you say fairer? Everyone who took part in the New Lincoln County Fair this August is invited to celebrate the event’s success at an After-Fair Party set for Friday, Nov. 6, in Newport. The party, at the Rogue Brewery in South Beach, will offer free appetizers and beer (while supplies last) to sponsors, vendors, exhibitors, entertainers and to the fair guests who made the event a success. The fair, which ran from Aug 14 to 16, attracted some 13,300 people, more than
double the attendance of previous years. Organizers are hoping guests will share their favorite stories from 2015, what they would like to see in coming years, and how they would like to be involved in making the 2016 fair even better. The party starts at 5:30 pm at 2320 SE Marine Science Drive. For more information, contact Michele Osterhoudt of OSU Extension Lincoln County at michele. osterhoudt@oregonstate.edu or 541-574-6534 ext. 57426.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 15
lively
Present yourself — —at the Harvest & Holidays Arts & Crafts Festival
DIG DEEP
All aboard the Yellow Submarine for BeatlesFest fund-raiser The sounds of the Beatles will fill the auditorium of the Lincoln City Cultural Center on Saturday, Nov. 7, as Neighbors for Kids holds a fund-raising music festival honoring the Fab Four. BeatlesFest promises an evening packed with classic hits, great food and gourmet whisky tasting, with all proceeds going toward the group’s Kids Zone program in Depoe Bay, which provides supplemental art, music, math and science activities for kids of all income levels. The fund-raiser will feature nonstop Beatles hits played by the June Rushing Band and High Fidelity, as well as a performance from some of the Kids Zone students.
Guests can enjoy Delicious foods, whisky tasting and a no-host beer and wine bar as they take a trip down memory lane (or should that be Penny Lane?) with hits like “She Loves You,” “Love Me Do” and “Strawberry Fields Forever.” Throughout the evening, the emcee will provide a running commentary on the group, including why they wrote the songs they did. The event will run from 7 to 9:30 pm at the Lincoln City Cultural Center located at 540 NE Hwy. 101. The auditorium will be decorated with colorful cutouts produced by Kids Zone art students and inspired by hits such as “Yellow Submarine,”
“I am the Walrus” and “Octopus’s Garden.” Kids Zone Assistant Executive Director Heide Lambert said the evening aims to bring people who have supported Neighbors for Kids throughout its morethan-15-year history together with people who are new to the program. “The event is an opportunity for us to celebrate where we are and share with people that don’t know about us,” she said. Tickets, $15 in advance and $18 on the door, are available at Kids Zone at 634 Hwy. 101, just south of the Depoe Bay Bridge or online at www. neighborsforkids.org.
By Linda Knox
By Dan Anderson
16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
We’ve all got one — that intensely organized friend who insists on posting photos of their completed Christmas shopping to Facebook, with each gift perfectly wrapped and topped with a cute bow. Don’t fume. Don’t unfriend. Get even, with a visit to the 18th Annual Harvest & Holidays Arts & Crafts Festival this weekend in Yachats. Presented by Crafts on the Coast, the juried festival sees the Yachats Commons packed with the handiwork of more than 70 exhibitors from around the Pacific Northwest on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 7 and 8. The goods on offer run the gamut from jewelry and woodcrafts to modern metal art and bath and body products. Guests can watch demonstrations of wool spinning, weaving, pyrography, Brazilian embroidery, beading and wire wrapping and even take a few minutes to ease the stress of holiday shopping with a relaxing chair massage from Melody Gandy. Gourmet foodstuffs will be on offer, including caramels and chocolates, seasoning salts, condiments, jams and pickles, with free samples available from many vendors. Depoe Baykery will also be on hand, giving guests the chance to refuel with a cup of coffee and a pastry. Community booths offer information and volunteer opportunities with local groups including the Yachats Fire Department and the Yachats Ladies Club. The festival will run from 10 am to 4 pm at the commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. Admission and parking are free. For more information, call 541-547-4664.
in concert
Splash out…
…with a trip to the inaugural Rainspout Music festival in Yachats
By Barbara B. Covell For the TODAY
Music lovers, prepare yourselves. The first Rainspout Music Festival is slated to transform the village of Yachats into a place of joy, laughter and musical wonder. Dovetailing off the former Yachats Celtic Music Festival, this weekend event features richly talented acoustic musicians performing blues, jazz, New Orleans brass, folk, country, ragtime, swing, Celtic and bluegrass. Co-organizer Linda Hetzler, owner of the Drift Inn, is excited about the new event, which will see musicians gigging all over town from Friday, Nov. 13, through Sunday, Nov. 15. “I really like a broad spectrum of music,” she said, “and small venues attract a more diverse group of fringe musicians.” The village of Yachats will participate fully by hosting music performances in multiple locations, including the Yachats Commons, Yachats Ladies Club, Little Log Church, ONA Restaurant, the Drift Inn, Yachats Farm Store, Yachats Presbyterian Church and the Overleaf Lodge. Other local restaurants and lodging locations will offer discounted services to Rainspout attendees. This weekend includes knockout entertainers Winifred Horan, Gerry O’Beirne, Walker T. Ryan, Del Ray, the Transcendental Brass Band, Kate Power & Steve Einhorn, Johnny B. Connolly & Cary Novotny, Green Mountain Bluegrass Band, Caravan Gogh, Nora Sherwood, Gideon Freudmann, Kim Angelis & Josef and Polecat. Performances include concerts, cameos and dance lessons, culminating with a Saturday evening show featuring five different acts. Musicians will offer a diverse range of talent rarely seen on the coast in a collective event. Former Yachats resident and musician Jim D’Ville co-organized the festival with Hetzler by arranging the weekend’s musical lineup. D’Ville said the event will showcase internationally acclaimed Oregon and Washington performers.
“These are one of a kind acts who will make a wonderful weekend of music,” he said. “The Transcendental Brass Band is like being on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. People will be dancing in the aisles. Del Ray on her steel guitar is a legend in the guitar community. Kate Power & Steve Einhorn give a terrific performance. Johnny B. Connolly is a world class Celtic musician. Every act offers something uniquely special. This will be the best weekend of music Yachats has seen.” “All the local venues are within walking distance,” he added. “People can come for the entire weekend, get a room, enjoy good food and be entertained by a level of talent you’d find in a big city.” Chuck Holloway of the Green Mountain Bluegrass Band thinks the formula for success will be the musical diversity. “There are 15 acts that will cover a multitude of genres, serving the differing musical tastes of the audience,” he said. “It will offer something for everyone.” Holloway said his group is a traditionally styled bluegrass band, which melds together the sounds of a 5-string banjo, rhythm guitar, mandolin, fiddle and stand-up bass. “Gathered around a single mic, we offer audiences tight vocal harmonies, rock-solid instrumentals and a musical dynamism which coalesces into a signature High Lonesome Sound,” he said. Musician Gerry O’Beirne agrees that a mix of genres is appealing to audiences of all ages. He says his background in Irish music helps create a signature sound that has strains of shadow popular music with classical influence. “I’ve adored classical music since I was a child,” he said. “My style is to play in as rhapsodic a way as possible. I think of my songs as short movies.” D’Ville and Hetzler concur that Yachats offers an additional draw for the festival with its beauty and community atmosphere. The “Gem of the Oregon Coast” was named one of the top 10 favorite destinations by travel writer Arthur Frommer in 2011.
Above: Winifred Horan Left: Gerry O’Beirne
Hetzler said she chose the name “Rainspout” because it signifies “a collection of eclectic musical performances, together orchestrating a symphony of joy, laughter, and musical wonder.” “Rainspout, as a festival, is an array of musical expressions,” she said, “each delightful in its own right.” Tickets are available online at www. rainspout.org or in person at Yachats Mercantile. All-Access passes are available for $65. Tickets can also be purchased for individual concert performances. There are also free events open to the public. For more information, email info@rainspout. org or go to www.rainspout.org. Barbara B. Covell is a contributing journalist with 10 years experience in Oregon newspapers and regional magazines. Feel free to contact her at bbcovell@me.com.
Del Ray
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 17
urchins
P M U J INTO ART
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Budding artists are being invited to develop their skills at a new series of workshops offered by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts throughout the winter in Newport. The Art Fridays series will run from Nov. 13 through Jan. 15 at the Newport Visual Arts Center, offering classes on mural making, birch-tree watercolors, eco-printing, felt ornaments and gifts, and basic drawing. The workshops are geared for 5th to 8th graders, with younger and older students welcome upon prior consultation. Students can sign up for one or more offerings, though the murals workshops are offered as a combined class
Some scholarships are available. To register or for more information, contact Tom Webb at twebb@coastarts.org, 541-265-6569 or go to www. coastarts.org/events/2015/01/ art-fridays-youth-artworkshops.
Class schedule
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and organizers recommend the basic drawing classes be taken together. Classes will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 pm and each will include a brief tour of the center’s galleries. The workshops cost $12 apiece or $70 for all seven.
Nov. 13 Marvelous Murals 1 Linda Livingston Students will study shark anatomy and draw a shark during the first session. After a brief summary of the life and art style of Henri Matisse, students will view photos of items unique to the Nye Beach area of Newport. Students will then sketch their Nye beach selection.
Nov. 20 Marvelous Murals 2 Linda Livingston Students transfer their sketches and patterns from Marvelous Murals 1 on to a canvas mural for outdoor display.
18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
Dec. 4 Birch Tree Forest Watercolors Linda Livingston Students will create a winter birch tree forest scene using liquid water colors, masking tape and salt.
Dec. 11 Eco-Printing Tash Wesp Students will make prints using leaves, bark and other natural materials.
Dec. 18 Felt Ornaments & Gifts
Tash Wesp Students will use felt to make holiday ornaments or gifts, including cell phone cases, wallets and purses.
Jan. 8 Drawing Basics 1 Sarah Gayle Students will learn basics of line drawing and perspective with an emphasis on proper technique and practice methods.
Jan. 15 Drawing Basics 2 Sarah Gayle Designed for students who have completed Drawing Basics 1, this class will continue to focus on the basics of line drawing and perspective.
s o u n dwave s Friday, Nov. 6 GARIBALDI JAMBOREE — 10 to 15 bluegrass musicians play country western ditties, faves from the ’40s and more. Admission by donation. 6-8 pm, Garibaldi Library, 107 6th Street, Garibaldi. BRYAN NICHOLS — The Lincoln City resident, songwriter and lead singer for the band ZugH will perform acoustic sets of his signature “funky, reggae, jam band” sound. 9 pm, The Nauti Mermaid, 1343 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. BOLT UPRIGHT — Rockin’ blues. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. 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. JIMMY KASNER — This singer-songwriter promises a good time for all with his selection of original ballads and up-tempo country-flavored rockers. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THEY WENT THATAWAY — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, Nov. 7 BRYAN NICHOLS — See Friday listing. 9 pm, The Nauti
Mermaid, 1343 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. BIG MONTI AND DOUG ROWELL — If one big blues guitarist is good, then two must be better. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BRET LUCICH SHOW — See Friday listing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — See Friday listing. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Rick and his band just keep on keeping on. Original blues, boogie and other roots galore. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE STELLAR JAYS — Local blues duo featuring Lozelle Jennings and Ronnie Jay Pirrello. 9-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. LUV GUNN — Swede and the Boyz will be serving up their brand of hard country/blues/rock in their inimitable style. 8:30-11:30 pm, at The Bayhaven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, 541-265-7271. DAVE ‘N CREIGHT — Classic Top 40, easy rock ‘n roll, ’50s-’80s. Remember, smile and sing along. 6-8:30 pm, Hilltop Cafe & Bistro, 828 SW Pacific Coast Hwy, Waldport, 541-563-2750 RICHARD SILEN AND DEANE BRISTOW — A friendly mix of Silen’s originals, ballads and blues standards and a lot of fun stuff that shows how great American music is. All done with Bristow’s harmonica adding some spice to the rue. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Sunday, Nov. 8 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. LEON FORREST — Acoustic. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — See Friday listing. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam. All musicians welcome. Free pool all day and happy hour while the music plays. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. RICHWOOD — Americana meets indy folk rock with a ruckus backbeat of driving rhythms, intertwined harmonies and soulful leads. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-5474477.
WHY ARE YOU READING THIS? Answer To find your favorite Central Coast Radio station! 102.7 KYTE # 1 station in Lincoln County The only adult contemporary format on the coast!
Bryan Nichols • Friday and Saturday, Nov. 6 & 7, in Lincoln City
Monday, Nov. 9 DAVE COWDEN — Top-40 classic rock from the ’50s to the ’80s.
6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
1400 KBCH AM Lincoln City, 820 KWDP AM Waldport & 1310 KNPT AM Newport News, Talk PLUS Local High School, OSU, U of O and TRAILBLAZERS Live Play by Play!
Tuesday, Nov. 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 — JRC and Friends host this weekly jam, paired with 50-cent tacos for one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. DAVE & CREIGHT — Easy-listening rock and pop from the ’50s to the ’90s to make you remember, smile, laugh and sing along. 6 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Wednesday, Nov. 11
96.7 KCRF FM our Classic Rocker 92.7 KNCU 92 FM Country Tune into your favorite Yaquina Bay Communications radio station
LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this front-porch-style
solo, packed with stories, outright lies and lots of laughs. 5-8 pm, O’Downey’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, 10 Bay Street, Depoe Bay. RICHARD SHARPLESS — Retired from his days of playing in Nashville, Sharpless 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.
Thursday, Nov. 12 BRET LUCICH SHOW — See Friday listing. 7-10 pm in the Attic
Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6 pm to close, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. All welcome. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-5748134. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — From the San Francisco Bay Area, these two swarthy Mediterraneans will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes tappin’. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and blues harp with Richard Robitaille on percussion and backing vocals. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? WHISPER THE DATE, TIME AND VENUE INTO THE EAR OF A MAJESTIC ELK AND POINT IT TOWARD MID CITY PLAZA. HARD-OF-HERDING? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.
WE ARE ON THE AIR EVEN WHEN THE POWER IS OUT! C an’t beachcom b... Find Treasures H ere!
R ed B arn Flea M art
Open Daily 9 to 5 PM Closed Tuesdays 33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale
Between Cloverdale & Hebo
NOW PLAYING LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS
t Newport Performing Arts Center: “FESTIVAL – THE SHOW,” “GROWN IN AMERICA” – NEWPORT SYMPHONY TRAVELS ROUTE 66, PORTHOLE PLAYERS – “AVENUE Q” MUSICAL t Newport Visual Arts Center: NYE BEACH BANNER AUCTION, YOUTH ART FRIDAYS t Theatre West, Lincoln City: I HATE HAMLET t Newport Public Library: LITERARY FLICKS – “LES MISÉRABLES” t Yachats Commons: RAINSPOUT MUSIC FESTIVAL t Various Locations, Toledo: 1ST WEEKEND ART t Lincoln City Cultural Center: KEN LAVIGNE, CANADIAN TENOR
OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS
More online at coastarts.org
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 19
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20 â&#x20AC;˘ oregoncoastTODAY.com â&#x20AC;˘ facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday â&#x20AC;˘ november 6, 2015
Last Weekâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Answers:
coast culture
tide tables
LINCOLN CITY FARMERS & CRAFTERS
Indoor Market NOW OPEN The life and soul of the party Don’t throw away that leftover Halloween face paint just yet. Sunday, Nov. 8, will present another opportunity for looking perfectly ghoulish, as Newport’s Aquarium Village hosts a Dia De Los Muertos celebration. Translated as Day of the Dead, the festival serves as a way of remembering family, friends and ancestors who
have passed on. Every November 2, families all over Mexico, and increasingly around the world, symbolically welcome their deceased loved ones back home for a feast of their favorite foods. The tradition dates back to the Aztec empire, where it was known as Mihcailhilt in the Nahuatl Aztec language.
Sunday’s celebration will feature a shrine presentation or ofrenda, pre-Hispanic music from Sonidos Del Mexico Antiguo, dancing from the Titlakawan Aztec group, face painting and music from DJ Ghost. The party will start at 6 pm at 3101 SE Ferry Slip Road. Admission is $10 at the door but kids get in free.
Expose yourself to festival culture The mosh pit that is festival culture will be laid bare on Friday, Nov. 6, when the Newport Performing Arts Center presents “Festival the Show.” The one-night-only performance will satirize the festival scene through various mediums, including sketch comedy, physical theatre, music, dance and circus arts. The high-caliber sketch comedy is the brainchild of producers Adam Doyle, Ethan Zirin-Brown and Lacy Todd, who retreated into the woods along with two other writer-performers, Anneke
Wisner and Phil Wood, to create the show. All three have been involved in festival culture since birth, attending, performing, volunteering,
producing, running food booths and cleaning the whole thing up at the end. The ensemble cast of 10 performers and writers have integrated into the show their own professional experience in a variety of fields including live musical instrumentation, dance, illusions and set construction. Friday’s performance will start at 7 pm at 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $15 in advance, $16 at the door and $13 for students, are available at coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS.
10:00 am to 3:00 pm
Bernard Farms Greenbridge Farms Enriques Produce Natural Meat Farm Fresh Eggs
Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date
Thurs., Nov. 5 Fri., Nov. 6 Sat., Nov. 7 Sun., Nov. 8 Mon., Nov. 9 Tues., Nov. 10 Wed., Nov. 11 Thurs., Nov. 12
1:24 am 2:20 am 3:10 am 3:54 am 4:35 am 5:13 am 5:50 am 6:26 am
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date
Thurs., Nov. 5 Fri., Nov. 6 Sat., Nov. 7 Sun., Nov. 8 Mon., Nov. 9 Tues., Nov. 10 Wed., Nov. 11 Thurs., Nov. 12
1:49 am 2:43 am 3:29 am 4:09 am 4:46 am 5:21 am 5:55 am 6:29 am
Yaquina Bay, Newport Date
Thurs., Nov. 5 Fri., Nov. 6 Sat., Nov. 7 Sun., Nov. 8 Mon., Nov. 9 Tues., Nov. 10 Wed., Nov. 11 Thurs., Nov. 12
1:11 am 2:05 am 2:51 am 3:31 am 4:08 am 4:43 am 5:17 am 5:51 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
Thurs., Nov. 5 Fri., Nov. 6 Sat., Nov. 7 Sun., Nov. 8 Mon., Nov. 9 Tues., Nov. 10 Wed., Nov. 11 Thurs., Nov. 12
1:33 am 2:27 am 3:16 am 4:02 am 4:45 am 5:26 am 6:06 am 6:45 am
at the Lincoln City Cultural Center
540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org
Low Tides
1.6 1.9 2.0 2.2 2.3 2.5 2.6 2.8
High Tides
2:22 pm 2.9 3:17 pm 2.3 4:02 pm 1.6 4:42 pm 1.0 5:20 pm 0.5 5:56 pm 0.1 6:31 pm -0.2 7:07 pm -0.4
8:17 am 9:04 am 9:44 am 10:20 am 10:55 am 11:29 am 12:27 am 1:08 am
7.2 7.5 7.8 8.1 8.4 8.6 7.3 7.4
2:52 pm 1.8 3:43 pm 1.4 4:25 pm 1.0 5:02 pm 0.6 5:37 pm 0.3 6:10 pm 0.0 6:44 pm -0.1 7:19 pm -0.3
8:12 am 8:54 am 9:29 am 10:00 am 10:30 am 10:59 am 12:09 am 12:48 am
5.7 5.9 6.1 6.3 6.5 6.6 5.4 5.5
2:14 pm 2.6 3:05 pm 2.0 3:47 pm 1.4 4:24 pm 0.9 4:59 pm 0.4 5:32 pm 0.1 6:06 pm -0.2 6:41 pm -0.4
8:03 am 8:45 am 9:20 am 9:51 am 10:21 am 10:50 am 12:00 am 12:39 am
7.4 7.6 7.9 8.1 8.4 8.6 7.1 7.1
8:10 am 8:57 am 9:38 am 10:15 am 10:51 am 11:25 am 12:24 am 1:07 am
6.5 6.8 7.0 7.3 7.5 7.7 6.3 6.4
Low Tides
0.9 1.1 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.7 1.8 2.0
Low Tides
1.4 1.6 1.8 1.9 2.1 2.3 2.5 2.6
6.4 6.5 6.7 6.9 7.1 -8.7 8.7
High Tides
Low Tides
1.3 1.6 1.9 2.1 2.3 2.5 2.7 2.9
8:13 pm 9:17 pm 10:12 pm 11:00 pm 11:45 pm --12:02 pm 12:36 pm
8:07 pm 9:10 pm 10:02 pm 10:48 pm 11:29 pm --11:29 am 12:00 pm
4.8 4.9 5.1 5.2 5.3 -6.7 6.8
High Tides
2:18 pm 3:17 pm 4:08 pm 4:53 pm 5:34 pm 6:14 pm 6:53 pm 7:32 pm
2.8 2.3 1.7 1.2 0.7 0.3 0.1 0.0
8:03 pm 9:01 pm 9:53 pm 10:39 pm 11:20 pm --11:20 am 11:51 am
High Tides
8:00 pm 9:03 pm 10:00 pm 10:52 pm 11:39 pm --11:59 am 12:33 pm
7.4 6.4 6.5 6.7 6.9 -8.7 8.8
5.7 5.7 5.9 6.0 6.2 -7.9 7.9
Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia II” in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest or Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 21
Don’t duck under the covers If the only bean you want to see at 7:45 am is a coffee bean, stop reading now. If, on the other hand, you would like the chance to spot a rare Tundra Bean Goose, the Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge wants to hear from you. Every Sunday in November, refuge volunteer Lee Sliman will be on site at dawn to welcome the return of waterfowl to the region. Thousands of geese and ducks spend their winter at the Oregon Coast along with other species such as Western Meadowlarks, Northern Harriers and Townsend’s Warblers. Last year, sunrise viewers spotted a rare Tundra Bean Goose among the regular visitors and Sliman said he will be keeping a special eye out to see if the bird makes a
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viewing experience, bring a hot beverage and bundle up — and don’t forget the binoculars or spotting scope. To get to the refuge, turn west off Highway 101 on to Christensen Road about six miles south of Pacific City. For more information, call Sliman at 503-812-6392.
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ELEG AN T BAY/OC EAN VIEW ho m e s eta ga in s t the fo res ted green s p a ce w ith m iles o ftra ils fo r yo u r en jo ym en t. Bea u tifu l co m m u n ity o fu p s ca le ho m es . L a rge ro o m s , gra n d en try, grea t b a ckya rd a n d d eck. Jetted tu b in m s tr. M L S 15494176 $324,000
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BUIL D HERE! Bea u tifu l lo t in the NW a rea o f L in co ln City. All u tilities a re a tthe s treeta n d this lo tca n b e a cces s ed fro m 2 s treets .Perfectlo ca tio n ! M L S 15219 $125,000
22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015
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St Augustines Catholic Church and The Lincoln City Farm ers & Crafters M arket
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015 • 23
Live Music
Vicki Lawrence
Chinook’s Seafood Grill WT HT -YLL *V]LY
Win W in your your sshare hare ooff oover ver $775,000 $7 5,000 in in cash cash & free free sslot lot ppla lay ay or a NNew or ew cchevy hevy ssilverado! ilverado! Drawings Thursdays & Sundays at 6pm NOW - November 15
a two woman show
Ocean November 6 & 7
Co Col olllle leecct ffree reee ree ee en entri tri tr tries ries es eve evveery ev every ry wee weeeek with w week with ith it h yo your your ur Win Winne W in inner ner ne ers Circ irrc rcle le car caaar ard rd, d, and aan nd nd coll co col ollle leec ect ct even vveeen n mo more more re whe wh w hen yyou he ou pla ou plla p lay in in the the he Cas Caas C asino asino ino no or or st sttay ay in ay in the tth he Hotel he tteeell! Draawin wiin ngs gs for ffo orr a sh o share sha hare ha re of of $70 $$7770000 00 in in ca cas cas ash aand ash nd fr nd fre free fre ree sslot lott pl lo lot play play ay on Thu on Thu Th Thursd hursd rssd days aayys ys an and Sund Sund und un undays ndays aayys ys at at 6p 6pm! m! Fiin Fin Finale F inale ale al le Drawing Drra D aw awi wi win wing ng g fo for a ne for new C CHEV HEV HE HEV EVY SILV ILV IL LVERA ERA ADO DO, DO, O, ca cash sh an and ffrre free fre ree slot lo lo ott pl play play ay Sun Su S un un nd day da day ay, Nove oveembe ov mb m be ber ber 1155 at 66pm. pm. p pm m. m.
Crooked November 13 & 14
Run and Tell That November 20 & 21
ZuhG Acoustic November 20 & 21, 8pm • Tickets $10 - $25 For tickets call 1-888-MAIN ACT (1-888-624-6228) or purchase online at chinookwindscasino.com. chinoo chi nookwi kwinds ndscas casino ino.com com. Discount Discou Dis count nt available availa ava ilable ble for for Winners Winners Winn ers Circle Circl Ci rcle e Members. Members Memb ers.
November 27 & 28 Actual truck may vary from illustration. Complete rules available at Winners Circle.
chinookwindscasino.com • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK 24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 6, 2015