Oregon Coast Today September 8, 2017

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TODAY oregon coast

FREE!

Sept. 8, 2017 • ISSUE 12, VOL. 13

E N I ty i C H S oln c n i A in L

Celebration of CWCR_OCT_09-08-2017_4x1_Honor.indd 1

E ay B K e Aruisin’ th T oC

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SEPTEMBER 13 -17, 2017

Field of Honor • 5K Run For Honor • Cost of Freedom Tribute Oregon Traveling Memorial Wall • Iwo Jima Statue

"It's Better at the Beach!" • Lincoln City, Oregon • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com 8/28/17 10:06 AM


FALL TIRE SALE 1025 Hwy 101, Lincoln City • 541-994-3676

Doing the right thing matters.

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www.LesSchwab.com PRICES GOOD THROUGH OCTOBER 31 2017

Patrick PatrickAlexander Alexander editor editor&&publisher publisher 541-921-0413 patrick@oregoncoasttoday.com News deadline 5 pm Fridays

What can nature do for you? Find out at tillamookcoast.com

oregon coast

TODAY Founded by Niki & Dave Price • May 2005 Copyright 2017 EO Media Group dba Oregon Coast TODAY

Larayne Higgins Larayne Yaeger advertising advertising 541-992-1920 larayne@oregoncoasttoday.com Advertising deadline 10 am Mondays

Mailing: PO Box 962, Lincoln City, OR 97367 800-882-6789 Billing or business questions? 877-737-3690

Pretty trippy

T

Assistant editor Quinn channels his inner fish

ODAY Towers is positively abuzz with anticipation this week, as assistant editor Quinn and I prepare for his first visit back to his ancestral realm — a three-week trip to visit family in Ireland and Scotland.

“But wait!” I hear you cry. “With our smart-aleck editor and his mischievous assistant both out of the country, who will provide the steady supply of lame puns that we need to get through each week?” Fear not dear reader, the TODAY is in safe hands, with longtime freelance contributor Gretchen Ammerman stepping in to the editor’s spot. And if ever proof was needed that Gretchen and I are on the same wavelength, just take a look at the photo she took for this week’s cover, featuring Scott Arehart and his prized ’55 Chevy Bel Air. Now compare that to the shot I took for our cover two weeks ago, featuring Bill John from Chinook Winds Casino Resort pictured with … a ’55 Chevy Bel Air — in pedal car form. After 13 years in business, the TODAY suddenly featured two versions of the exact same car twice in three weeks. Coincidence? I think not.

2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

from the editor


8th Annual

Cruisin’ The Bay Natural Organic Wellness

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NORTH 2429 NW Hwy 101 541-994-3031

th

Saturday, Sept. 9 Lincoln City, OR

FRESH ALBACORE TUNA LOIN

At The Beach, On Siletz Bay The Bay House - 5911 SW Hwy 101

Free Admission! 30+ Classes/Awards. All Cars Welcome! Advance Registration is $10/Car; $15 Day Of The Show. Live Music! 50/50 Raffle. Register 9:00 AM; Awards 2:00 PM Info: (541) 921-9329. ScottArehart@earthlink.net

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Directions

Caramelized Onion Sauce: Saute onions in oil, stirring only to prevent burning. We want the onions to be dark brown, but not burnt. Add vinegar and wine and cook 2 to 3 minutes. Add cream and cook 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in butter to thicken. Season with salt and pepper.

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3305 S.W. Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City • 541-996-2230 oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 3


Play safe...

Walk-in clinics

... but when you need care NOW, visit the Samaritan walk-in clinic or emergency department nearest you.

Depoe Bay A department of Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital offering primary and walk-in care

EVERYONE DESERVES A LOVING HOME

Samaritan Depoe Bay Clinic 531 NW Hwy 101, Suite A 541-765-3265

Lincoln City A department of Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital offering primary and walk-in care

Samaritan Coastal Clinic 825 NW Hwy 101 541-996-7480

Newport

National Pet Adoption Weekend September 9th Coldwell Banker Homes For Dogs Project

Come meet the dogs currently available for adoption! WHEN: WHERE:

A department of Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital

Samaritan Pacific Walk-In Clinic 930 SW Abbey St. 541-574-4860 If you have a life-threatening emergency, call 911.

Always here. Always ready.

Saturday, September 9th 10:00am to 12:00pm Coldwell Banker Gesik Realty, Inc. Parking Lot 1815 NW Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR 97367

Participants: Lincolnanimal County shelter

Tillamook animal shelter

510 NE Harney St, Newport, OR

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4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

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beach reads

On Friday, Sept. 8, the cultural center’s Chessman Gallery will hold an opening reception for its children’s book illustration show from 5 to 7 pm. The month-long exhibit will feature work by Sarah Gayle, Aria La Faye, Matt Fitzwater and Krista Eddy.

Photo by Linda Hosek, Blue Eye Productions

No cover charge at book festival A day-long celebration of the written word will fill the auditorium of the Lincoln City Cultural Center this Saturday, Sept. 9, as authors and performers gather for a literacy festival. From 9 am and 4 pm, several Oregon authors will be selling and talking about their books against a backdrop of food and family activities. As well as selling their books in the main hall, authors will break out into side rooms to read from their work, play music or demonstrate a craft. The free event is jointly sponsored by the cultural center and Penman Productions as well as Oceana Family Literacy Center. “We planned this celebration to coincide with International

Literacy Day, celebrated around the world the day before,” said Oceana Director Vickie Meneses. “More than 30 million adults in the US cannot read or write or do basic math. Worldwide, that number is 758 million. Reading is the key to everything in life. If you can’t read and write you cannot get the job you want or make the income you need to support your family.” And the fun will continue into the evening, with a music and theater starting at 6 pm. Wellknown violinist Kathy Follett will play selections from Mozart, Grieg, and Handel, accompanied by Walt Hoggset on cello. At 7 pm, Lincoln City theatrical mainstay Patti Siberz

will perform her one-woman play, “The Bookshop.” Written as a senior project for her degree from Linfield College, the play tells the story of Rose, who has worked in the same shop for the past 50 years. On the last day, for both Rose and the business, she reminisces about the customers she has met and the books she has loved. Tickets for the evening event are $10 at the door. All proceeds from the festival will benefit Oceana Family Literacy, which has been providing educational services to the residents of Lincoln City for the past eight years. For more information, contact Meneses at 541-921-1865.

Reading rocks

Sign up, write away! A new writing course in Newport is aiming to help people put pen to paper, whether they want to preserve their memories or plumb their imagination to craft new tales. “Renegade Writers is a class for those of us who wish to fiercely confront the truth of our memories and imagination in the presence of a supportive, encouraging community,” said course leader Larry Lehnerz, adding: “Beginning with a prompt, we’ll write for a timed period, bypassing our inner critic to allow the ideas and freshest writing to flow.” The class is designed for both newcomers and experienced writers who wish to write memoir, fiction or both. It will cover writing concepts such as plot, point of view, character, tense, description, scene and setting. Students who choose to share their work will receive supportive, encouraging feedback. A native of Seattle, Lehnerz is a 25-year Boeing employee who first began writing in earnest while earning BA and MA degrees from Antioch Seattle University. He met his wife in Fiction Writing program at the University of Washington, later joining her to write for a social justice newspaper. Now retired and living in Newport, he is currently marketing two novels to literary agents. This six-session class will meet from 10 am to noon on Tuesdays, from Sept. 12 through Oct. 17, at the Newport 60+ Activity Center, 20 SE Second Street. Class size is limited to 12 students. To book a spot, drop by the center or call 541-2659617.

Throughout Saturday, people traveling throughout Lincoln City will be able to see the brightly decorated entries in a CHAIR-ity auction to benefit Oceana Family Literacy. “What better way to represent intergenerational reading than a rocking chair,” said Oceana Director Vickie Meneses. “It’s as easy process. A person sits in a rocking chair, children gather around, and everyone listens.” Decorated by local artists, rocking chairs of all shapes and sizes will be on display around town as well as at the cultural center. They will be sold in a silent auction on Sunday, along with baskets containing everything from wine and books to violin lessons and art instruction. Winners announced at the Sunday Farmers Market.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 5


potpourri

Sounds belly exciting A new class in Newport is offering the chance to get fit and have fun while learning the ancient art of belly dance. The Beginning Belly Dance Fusion classes begin on Monday, Sept. 11, at Dance and All That Jazz, taught by instructor duo Breeze Powell and Amber Philpott. The pair mesh perfectly together as instructors, drawing from their diverse dance backgrounds and philosophies. Breeze grew up in Lincoln County and started dancing at the age of eight with the Dance And All That Jazz studio. She went on to learn many forms of dance including ballet, jazz, modern, hip hop and hula. She discovered her love for belly dance at the age of 18 while traveling in India and has since studied many forms

Amber Philpott

and learned from world-class dancers. Amber began her journey with movement expression as a little girl pretending to be

Wonder Woman, spinning in her front yard. Since she never did turn into the superhero but decided being a gymnast was a close second. A long career as a competitive artistic and rhythmic gymnast followed. Then a fascination with martial arts led to years of studying and teaching Bok Fu in the Bay Area. Her passion for belly dance was ignited when she saw Jill Parker— the mother of Tribal Fusion — dance at a Northern California Renaissance Faire. Amber began learning tribal belly dance from Parker in the early 2000s and hasn’t looked back. Beginning Belly Dance Fusion runs from 6 to 7:30 pm each Monday at Dance And All That Jazz, 630 SW Hurbert Street. For details, call Amber at 503-729-1792.

Great Egrets on the Little Nestucca River • Photo by Jack Doyle

A chance to A full-scale salmon party ’yak about birds On Sunday, Sept. 10, the Westwind camp and wilderness area just north of Lincoln City will honor Oregon’s most iconic fish with “Welcome the Salmon Home,” a community event to celebrate the late summer and fall salmon run. Located at the mouth of the Salmon River, Westwind is a 529-acre camp, farm and wilderness area set in the middle of the Cascade Head UN Biosphere Reserve. From 1 to 5 pm, guests at the event can enjoy boat and canoe tours of the Salmon River estuary, gyotaku print making and other art projects along with presentations, citizen science demonstrations and the chance to learn about the salmon cycle. An open-fire salmon bake

Photo by Duncan Berry

will be serving up perfectly prepared salmon fillets, and other refreshments will also be available. Ferry trips to and from Westwind will depart every half hour from Knight Park, with check-in starting at 12:30 pm. Take Three Rocks Road from Highway 101 and look

for signs. All ages are welcome. Participants should RSVP at https://westwind.org/ welcome-salmon-home-2017 and are encouraged to make a $10 donation to the nonprofit Westwind Stewardship Group. For more information, email info@westwind.org.

Lincoln City’s Audubon group will head out for its annual kayaking field trip this Sunday, Sept. 10, taking to the waters of the Little Nestucca River and the Nestucca Estuary. The group will be kayaking through a portion of the Nestucca National Wildlife Refuge, aiming to get a good look at the Nestucca River purple martin colony, waterfowl, raptors, migrating shorebirds and riparian birds. Everyone is welcome to come along, but participants must bring their own kayaks or canoes, weather-appropriate clothing, safety gear and watercraft permits. The group will launch at 9 am

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

Heard about the bird? Audubon Society of Lincoln City offers free birding field trips with experienced trip leaders on the second Saturday of most months during the year. The group’s next monthly birding field trip is a Saturday, Oct. 14, driving tour from Boiler Bay State Scenic Viewpoint north of Depoe Bay to Devils Punch Bowl on Otter Crest. For a list of upcoming field trip descriptions, go to http://lincolncityaudubon.org/calendar.html.

from the Little Nestucca county boat launch, located on the south bank of the river, a quarter-mile east of Highway 101 on Meda Loop. The group plans to return to the boat ramp by 11 am, but boaters are welcome to stay on and explore other areas of the estuary on their own. Beginning birders are welcome and binoculars and birding field guides are available to borrow.

In addition to their own kayak or canoe, participants must bring a whistle and a life vest. Participants with vessels 10 feet or longer must also have an invasive species permit. Meda Loop is a 14-minute drive north from Neskowin or a 39-minute drive south from Tillamook. The launch parking lot provides a vault toilet but no water. For more information, call 541-992-9720.


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide ď Ž

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 7


SLIME-NADO! E

By Steve Sabatka

arly summer, just a few weeks before the eclipse — and all the chimp-chattering madness wrought by a cool, blind sun. I was in a café in Siem Reap, Cambodia, at the time, decompressing after a long school year, sitting with Miss Seng, and listening to the soft click and tap of her chopsticks, when my brother, knowing my interest in late night, B-movie weirdness, especially when it strikes the Oregon Coast, sent the astounding details: First, luminous, worm-like creatures — some more than two feet in length — had, suddenly and without warning, invaded the Pacifica, from Baja to the Gulf of Alaska, fouling commercial fishing gear and washing ashore in their dead, rotting millions. These tubular, pus-seeping sea-freaks, known to conventional science as pyrosomes, or “fire bodies,” but more commonly as “sea pickles,” have never been observed in such overwhelming, almost Biblical numbers. And no one knows why. (One politically unpopular explanation involves the apparent cooling of the California Current.) Thought to be harmless — individually, at least — the multitudinous beasts are now wreaking havoc on the local salmon fishing industry, flooding nets to breaking point, and threatening to actually capsize boats. In fact, several independent contractors are already on the verge of bankruptcy, and entire crews are out of work. The economic and psychic implications for canneries, sushi bars and local fishmongers — not to mention casino buffets — could be both catastrophic and irreversible. “Strange,” I said. “Even for Oregon.” “Certainly.” Miss Seng’s right eye, clouded over with a cataractous veil, and glinting in the early morning sunlight, gave her an air of ancient, third-world wisdom. She knew it, too. “Strange.” The second bizarre incident involved a truck that had accidentally spilled its cargo of 7,500 pounds of live hagfish onto Highway 101, causing a four-car pile up — and triggering a full-blown gag fest among onlookers. Hagfish are an eel-like relative of the lamprey and a culinary prize in South Korea, but are, nonetheless, a repulsive species, with wrinkly bodies and burrowing, flesh-sucking mouths. When threatened

or otherwise stressed, hagfish actually tie themselves into knots, and deploy a singularly disgusting self-defense mechanism — in the form of seemingly impossible amounts of translucent, viscoelastic, slime. Fortunately, nobody was seriously harmed in the collision. But I could just imagine sitting in my Civic and being abruptly surrounded on all sides by knotting, scum-secreting leechoids, flopping on the road, and wriggling across the windshield. First responders broke out the fire hoses to clear the scene of suppurating hagfish. But for a brief, heart-pounding moment, it seemed as though slime would win, and that the Western Seaboard, and then the world, would be consumed by fish mucus. “Son of a dead Khmer king!” At the time, I did not realize that these outlandish occurrences were just harbingers of the solar insanity that was, even then, rolling into place with with astro-mathematical certainty. “Of course,” I said, “this kind of thing has

happened before.” Miss Seng nodded as if she understood. I had a sepia-toned flashback to November of 1970 — when a dead sperm whale washed ashore in Florence. The 45-foot, eight-ton cetacean was quite the tourist attraction. For a few days, at least. But then the decaying beast started to smell so bad that tourists chose to spend their disposable income elsewhere. Engineers from the Oregon Highway Division (known as ODOT today) decided to dynamite the dead and malodorous grumpus back to the ocean from whence it came. BLAM! The explosion went off without a hitch, but instead of blowing safely, neatly out to sea, the whale came raining down onto the crowd that had come to witness the detonation, spattering them with rotten blood, and clubbing them with Flinstonian slabs of blubber and bone. It was scene out of Queequeg’s worst nightmare, and I remember watching it on TV when I was fifth grade.

8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

fiction “Queequeg?” Apparently, Miss Seng had not read Melville. And I wasn’t aware that I’d said the name aloud. “Nothing.” By this time, my brother had logged off, promising to keep me posted. A few hours later, after reflecting on the Lovecraftian goings on back home — and all the rich, video-on-demand potential — I sat in a tuktuk, on the way to a borderland chophouse that was reputed to have the best blowfish and chips in all of Southeast Asia. I held Miss Seng’s hand and rehearsed my pitch: “Somewhere on the scenic stretch between Newport and Depoe Bay. Traffic is backed up on both directions due to construction. A refrigerated truck idles in the northbound lane. Inside, the driver is pale and shaking. His arms and forehead are damp. But not with sweat. When the truck driver looks in the rearview — and sees that he is already starting to transform, he freaks out, stomps on the accelerator, nearly misses an innocent flagman, and then careens directly into the opposite lane, sideswiping a school bus carrying the Newport High School marching band. The truck flips onto its side, unleashing four tons of hagfish — genetically engineered by greedy Californian aquaculturists, and cross bred with Venezuelan piranhas, each pulsing with a highly contagious, mutagenic slime and armed with a fierce metallic underbite — onto the road in a squirming, oozing, snapping tsunami of mucoid terror!” I had to take a breath. Miss Seng, who had witnessed real-world horror in her lifetime — war, genocide, famine — gasped. “Chaos!” I shouted, with as much movie trailer melodrama as I could muster, and startling the tuk-tuk pilot. “Burning trees and twisted oboes! Blood and goo! Courage and cowardice! All headed to a plasma screen near you!” Miss Seng’s head tilted to one side, allowing her long black hair to fall over the left half of her face, and she smiled with perfect teeth. “Like ‘Sharknado?’” She did understand! The rest of my trip continued without incident, save for a nasty run-in with a Chinese stewardess on the mind-numbing, 14-hour flight back to the States. I’m back in Newport, now, still dealing with jet lag, as well a persistent, but not unpleasant tingling, which may have something to do with blowfish neurotoxin, waiting for Mr. Spielberg’s office to return my call — and wishing Miss Seng was here now, to guide me through the New Darkness. Steve Sabatka’s young adult novel, “Mister Fishback’s Monster,” is available from Black Bed Sheet Books.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 9


artsy

LET THERE BE LIGHT Photography that uses light like a paintbrush will be on display this Friday, Sept. 8, as the Newport Visual Arts Center presents a new show from Oregon-born artist Thomas Wheeler. The show, entitled “Punctum,” opens with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm, including a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm. Wheeler’s photographs, shot on solitary, vast locations, highlight the bewildering wonderment of distinct landscapes. Wheeler uses a combination of long exposures and hand-held light-emitting tools to create a personal touching detail, which then establishes direct relationship with an object or person through a distinct point — or punctum. The haunting and playful images are created wholly at the time of exposure, without the use of any post-production software or equipment. While traditional photography generally captures a frozen moment in time, Wheeler’s images are developed within the fluid period of long-exposure. “Like some sort of sci-fi episode, I manipulate the

world within a moment, not just reacting as a viewer of any particular scene,” he said. “I encourage movement, painting of subjects with light, and the addition of various elements to the photo with whatever light tools or props come to mind.” Wheeler calls the ease of digital photography equipment “simply relative.” He puts many hours and effort into each image, what

he calls the “slow-food” of photography. Each image is wholly created by hand during the image-capture process, which can be as long as 30 minutes. And before that moment, Wheeler has spent time scheduling his shoot, considering moonphases and sunset/sunrise charts, researching locations, and making or acquiring light tools. His photographic journeys into remote

landscapes can last upwards of four days, not knowing exactly how the images will turn out. Wheeler grew up in Portland, and currently resides with his family in Palos Verdes, California. His creative photography pursuits stand beside his work as the founder of a Los Angeles-based recycling company working closely with Hollywood studios. More and more though,

Photgrapher seals the deal Photographer Tim Moore is the featured Artist of the Month at the Artist’s Studio Association in Lincoln City, showcasing images of Pacific Northwest scenery and wildlife. Moore developed his first pictures in his parents’ basement darkroom. Today, he works with digital images and notes that his parents would be amazed at the

advancements in photography. “No more messy chemicals,” he said. “No more stumbling around in the darkroom.” After retiring from a career working in financial institutions, Moore made his home near Beaver, where he can get out and roam the outdoors, seeking elusive photographic subjects. He travels the region and the

West, trekking through forests and waiting along waterways to get that perfect image. Moore’s show will be on display through September, available to view from 10 am to 5 pm every day at the Artist’s Studio Association, 620 NE Hwy. 101 For more examples of Moore’s work, go to moorenorthwestimages.com.

10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

Wheeler is being recognized as much for his artistry as his entrepreneurial business spirit. His work was recently included in the inaugural international juried art exhibition, “CA -32 Degrees Latitude: Landscapes,” at the California Museum of Art, Thousand Oaks. He was featured in the 5th Biennial of Fine Art for Abstract and Fine Art in London, 2017; the Soho Photo Gallery in

New York, 2016; Berlin’s 4th Biennial of Fine Art in 2016; and in the Top 40 Artist Show at the LA Center for Digital Art in 2015. “Puctum” hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, will be on display through October 28 in the Upstairs Gallery at the Newport Visual Arts Center, open from noon to 4 pm Tuesday through Saturday at 777 NW Beach Drive.


Sure to draw a crowd draw to a crowd Sure draw a crowd aM crowda crowd o draw

artsy

a crowd Get in line for the Chessman Gallery’s illustration show

Sure to draw a crowd

Sure to draw a crowd M “Bruno the Bear Who Stayed Awake” by Matt Fitzwater

agical tales will spring to life in Lincoln City this Friday, Sept. 8, as the Chessman Gallery unveils its latest exhibit, showcasing children’s book illustrators of the Oregon Coast. The show will open with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm, offering wine, light refreshments and a chance to chat with some of the four featured artists. The show features original illustrations and prints from “Come one, Come All to the Fairy Ball,” by Sarah Gayle, “Bruno the Bear Who Stayed Awake” by Matt Fitzwater, “The Land of the Fizzy Pop Tree” by Krista Eddy, and “Poet” by Aria La Faye. Completed versions of all four featured books will also be on display and available to buy. A former resident of Toledo, Oregon, Sarah Gayle is an accomplished author and illustrator who wears many other hats — sometimes literally — as painter, designer, paper artist and costumer. Through all of her experiences, Gayle has looked for opportunities to be creative and to see the world differently. Her secrets are simple: nice matters, never lose your childish enthusiasm and remember to play. She is currently on a sailing adventure, making art and discovering beauty all around her.

“Come one, Come All to the Fairy Ball” by Sarah Gayle “Poet” by Aria La Faye

Matt Fitzwater, of Lincoln City has a background in graphic novel illustration and takes a philosophical view of existence. “Atomically, I am a concentration of molecules and placement,” he said. “Geologically, I am the current sum of minerals whose origins lay in the stars. Biologically, I am the convergence of genetics and timing. Sociologically, it’s events and interaction.” Matt’s book, “Bruno the Bear Who Stayed Awake” is the culmination of many years’ work, capped off with a well-organized Kickstarter campaign. “This whole project started when my daughter asked why her bear was, one day, wearing a tutu,” Matt said. “I answered

her with this story which turned out to be popular enough to be repeated.” Krista Eddy went to school to be an illustrator. She graduated with BFA in Illustration from Long Beach State University and kept her drawing skills alive by filling countless sketchbooks as she traveled the world having adventures. She has had careers as a barista, faux painter, muralist, art teacher and, most recently, director of the Chessman Gallery. “The Land of the Fizzy Pop Tree” is a project that Eddy has worked on for the best part of two decades and has finally brought to life through an experimental self-publishing technique using high-quality newsprint. The black and white, ink illustrations draw on the styles of Howard Pyle and NC Wyeth as they illuminate an inspiring tale about rescuing our

“The Land of the Fizzy Pop Tree” by Krista Eddy

If you go, book some extra time This Children’s book Illustration exhibit coincides with a celebration of books and authors taking place in the cultural center auditorium on Saturday, Sept. 9. The free festival will run from 9 am to 4 pm, with an author fair, author readings, storytelling, music and food. Festivities will resume in the evening, with a $10-per-person program of music and theater from 6 to 8 pm. For details, see story on page 5.

playful, childlike side. Aria La Faye is an experienced floral designer, a polished artist and the owner of La Faye Art Studios in Seal Rock. Her wide range of artistic skills reflect an adventurous imagination that is often captured in her work. Something of a traditionalist at heart, La Faye’s love for conventional methods defines her as a professional, although it is her interpretation and captivating use of color that sets her apart from other artists and florists. The show will be on display through Monday, Oct. 9, available to view from 10 am to 4 pm daily except Tuesdays. The Chessman Gallery is located inside the Lincoln City Cultural Center at 540 NE Hwy. 101. For more information, call 541-994-9994 or go to lincolncity-culturalcenter.org.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 11


Friday, Sept. 8 “Punctum”

Rock ’n’ Roll Bingo

Salishack Tavern • Glenden Beach This 21-and-over evening offers the chance to win literally “tens of dollars” and enjoy live music from Oyster Bang Bang. Admission and bingo cards free. 6725 Gleneden Beach Loop.

Fall Blues Car Show and Shine

Yachats Inn A coastal get together for fans of pre-’76 cars and pickups and all-year motorbikes. Check in any time from 3 to 7 pm and spend a leisurely evening talking hot rods on the hotel lawn. 331 Hwy. 101. Continues through Sunday.

“Punctum” • Opens Friday, Sept. 8 in Newport

Newport Performing Arts Center Imelda Staunton, Conleth Hill, Luke Treadaway and Imogen Poots star in Edward Albee’s landmark play, broadcast live by the National Theatre from the Harold Pinter Theatre, London. 7 pm, 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $16 for adults, $13 for seniors and $11 for students available at www.coastarts. org or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

Manzanita Farmers Market

Laneda Avenue • Manzanita This evening market features farm-fresh produce, prepared foods, crafts and a rotating winery booth. 4-7 pm, Laneda Avenue and 5th Street South. FMI, call 503-939-5416.

Runquist reception

Bay City Arts Center An exclusive chance to see and purchase rarely seen artwork by the Runquist brothers. The family will be available

Westwind • Otis Celebrate the return of Coho and Chinook salmon at this all-ages event, featuring boat tours, art projects, presentations and an open-fire salmon bake. $10 donation suggested. 1-5 pm, with ferries departing Knight Park every half hour. Take Three Rocks Road from Highway 101 and look for signs. RSVP at https://westwind. org/welcome-salmonhome-2017.

Artists’ Studio Association • Lincoln City Create a ready-to-hang painting using non-toxic oils in this one-day class from Ruth Stewart. Today’s theme: “Country Sunflowers.” $70. 10:30 am-4:30 pm, 620 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 720-480-7185.

INHOUSE Jazz

Newport Performing Arts Center Celebrate the release of “Indigo,” the new album from NYC sensation Lady Rizo, a homegrown provocateur with an electric wit and a formidable voice. 7 pm 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $20 in advance or $25 on the door, available at www.coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

Fall Blues Car Show and Shine

Yachats Inn This coastal get together for fans of pre-’76 cars and pickups and all-year motorbikes concludes with breakfast followed by the awards ceremony.

Private home • Seal Rock The series of intimate house concerts continues with a performance from pianist Greg Goebel and bassist Dave Captein. 2:30-5:30 pm. Suggested donation $15-$30. For reservations and directions, call 360-606-7136 or email aaverre@hotmail.com.

Birding kayak trip

Little Nestucca River • Neskowin Join the Lincoln City Audubon group for this excursion in search of purple martins, waterfowl, raptors and more. Bring your own boat. Meet at 9 am at the Little Nestucca county boat launch, a quarter-mile east of Highway 101 on Meda Loop. FMI, call 541-992-9720.

Lincoln City Farmers Market Lincoln City Cultural Center

Fall Blues Car Show and Shine

Set up on the center’s front lawn, the market’s vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www.lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

plants, great food and amazing art and crafts at this buzzing market. 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N.

Pacific City Farmers Market

Library • Pacific City Find local fresh farm products, unique handicrafts and live music. 10 am-2 pm at Brooten Road and Camp Street.

Yachats Farmers Market

Yachats Commons Find locally grown produce, fresh-cut flowers and

Illustration show

Lincoln City Cultural Center Get carried away to magical lands at this opening reception for an exhibit showcasing children’s book illustrators of the Oregon Coast, featuring original illustrations, prints and published books by Sarah Gayle, Matt Fitzwater, Krista Eddy and Aria La Faye. 5-7 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994. to answer questions and share history about the artists. Light refreshments will be served. 5-7 pm, 5680 A Street.

"It's Better at the Beach!"

12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

Curtis Salgado

Chowder & Brewfest

Lincoln City Outlets Taste beers and ciders from near and far and sample some of the best chowder on the coast at this funfilled event. Enjoy vendors, games and live music, including a set from blues star Curtis Salgado. Noon-7 pm, 1500 SE East Devils Lake Road. $30 for over 21s, $10 for under 21s and $20 for designated drivers at the gate. Under 11s get in free. Advance tickets available at chowderbrewfest.com.

Tuesday, Sept. 12 Clamming clinic

Beginning Belly Dance Fusion

Dance And All That Jazz • Newport Get fit and have fun while learning the ancient art of belly dance in this new class from Breeze Powell and Amber Philpott. 6-7:30 pm, 630 SW Hurbert Street. FMI, call Amber at 503-729-1792.

Book Sale

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. Special deals on health/diet/exercise, religion, philosophy, foreign languages, education, reference and yearbooks throughout September. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.

Triple Edge

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

Newport Farmers Market

Monday, Sept. 11

September 8 & 9

CHINOOK’S SEAFOOD GRILL 8PM-12AM • FREE COVER

Yachats Inn A coastal get together for fans of pre-’76 cars and pickups and all-year motorbikes. Start the day with a pancake toss breakfast, followed by a 15-stop Poker Walk through town and capped off with dinner and blues from the Purple Cats. Continues through Sunday. FMI, go to www. fallbluessns.com.

“Poet” by Aria La Faye

“Welcoming the Salmon Home”

One-day painting

Album release party

The Bay House Restaurant • Lincoln City Admire everything from pre-’30s to muscle cars accompanied by rock ’n’ roll with unbeatable view of Siletz Bay. 8 am-3 pm, 5911 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, go to http://cruisethecoastlc. com/#cruisin.

“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf”

Sunday, Sept. 10 FMI, go to www.fallbluessns.com.

Cruisin’ the Bay

FMI, go to www.fallbluessns.com.

Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this exhibit of painted light photographs from Portland-born artist Thomas Wheeler, created using long exposures and hand-held light-emitting tools. 5-7 pm, with a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. Show runs through Oct. 28.

COAST CALENDAR

Saturday, Sept. 9

Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Join shellfish expert Bill Lackner for this free, hands-on class, staring with a 45-minute talk at the library before moving on to dig in the sand of Siletz Bay. Hosted by the Lincoln City Visitor & Convention Bureau. 11:30 am, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 800-452-2151 or go to www.oregoncoast.org/ crabbing-and-clammingclinics.

Don’t forget

Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita The Art of Aging series continues with this practical update about memory loss from Janet Holboke and June Longway from Greater Oregon Behavioral Health, Inc. $5. 3-5 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue. FMI, email

jholboke@gobhi.net.

Oregon Coast Learning Institute

Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The fall term continues with, at 10 am, “Eruption of Mt. St. Helens” from geologist Sheila Alfsen, followed at 1 pm by “The Austin Automobile” from Geoff Lavear. At 2 pm, naval retiree Rob Parks will give an update on efforts to restore Portland’s P.T. Boat 658. $75 for all 24 sessions or try one for free. FMI, go to www.ocli. us or call a member at 503392-3297 or 541-265-8023.

Renegade Writers

Newport 60+ Activity Center The first in a six-session course for both newcomers and experienced writers who wish to write memoir, fiction or both. 10 am to noon, 20 SE Second Street.

Highway 101 & Angle Buy local at this outdoor market, featuring locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 9 am to 1 pm, across from Newport City Hall.

Waldport Farmers Market

Neskowin Farmers Market

Neskowin Beach Wayside A fun, friendly, vibrant market with a great assortment of fresh local produce as well as baked goods, fresh dory-caught fish, pastureraised meat, cheese, granola, hand-crafted items and much more. SNAP accepted. 9 am to 1 pm, right off Highway 101.

Yvonne Hsueh Trio

Ocean-view home • Depoe Bay The Oregon Coast Chamber Music Society launches its season with a concert featuring Yvonne Hsueh on violin, Robert Ashens on piano and tenor David Gustafson. 3 pm. Tickets, $30 per person, available by calling Mark Sanders at 760-922-4175 or online at www.siletzbaymusic. org.

Free Beach Yoga

Roads End • Lincoln City Bring a towel, water and a smile for this free beach yoga session led by Britt Canese. All levels

welcome. 11 am-noon, 64th street and Logan Road. Check the Humble Warrior Facebook page for rain cancellations.

One-day painting

Artists’ Studio Association • Lincoln City Create a ready-to-hang painting using non-toxic oils in this one-day class from Ruth Stewart. Today’s theme: “Hot Stuff.” $70. 10:30 am-4:30 pm, 620 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 720-480-7185.

The Unexpected Elephant

South Lincoln Resources • Waldport Come find a treasure at this rummage sale while raising funds for Waldport Food Share and Adventist Clothing Share. 10 am-2 pm, 3710 Crestline Drive. FMI, call 541-563-2388.

Thursday, Sept. 14 Celebration of Honor

Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City An event to honor the sacrifices of veterans and their families, featuring the Oregon Traveling Memorial Wall, the Field of Honor flag display and a free buffet and comedy act for military and veterans. FMI, call 541-996-5815.

Congregational Church of Lincoln City Learn how to reduce added sugar and live longer in this interactive class from Jane Siebert 1:30-3 pm, 1760 NW 25th Street. FMI, call 541-994-2378.

Newport Public Library Join in a discussion of “Bucking the Sun” by Ivan Doig, or start reading “At the Water’s Edge” by Sara Gruen for next month. All welcome. Noon, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541265-2153 or go to www. newportlibrary.org.

Teatro Mundo

Café Mundo • Newport An evening of Guerilla Shakespeare, with scenes, sonnets and songs from the Bard of Avon. 6-8 pm, 209 NW Coast Street.

Medicare class

“Julius Caesar”

“In a Landscape” Agate Beach Golf Course • Newport Acclaimed pianist Hunter Noack plays his grand piano in the great outdoors to celebrate the dedication of Newport’s Ernest Bloch Memorial Wayside. Featuring guest appearances by Pink Martini trio Thomas Lauderdale, Nicholas Crosa and Pansy Chang. Suggested donation $25. 6 pm, 4100 NE Golf Course Drive. For ticket reservations, go to www.HunterNoack.com.

Oregon Coast Community College • Lincoln City This Senior Health Insurance Benefits Assistance class is aimed at anyone who wants a better understanding of their Medicare benefits and options for changes. Spouses and other relatives are also welcome to attend. 10:30 am-12:30 pm, 3788 High School Drive. Free but registration required. Call 541-574-2684 or email mmiller@ocwcog.org.

Lincoln City Cultural Center A day-long celebration of the written word, with Oregon authors selling and talking about their books against a backdrop of food and family activities at a free festival from 9 am and 4 pm, followed by a $10 evening show featuring music from Kathy Follett and Walt Hoggset, plus a performance of one-woman play, “The Bookshop” by Patti Siberz from 6 to 8 pm. 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994.

Café Mundo • Newport The summer-long block party wraps up with indigenous World Beat music by the Thunder & Lightness drum and Native American flute ensemble plus surprise musical guests in a blockparty atmosphere. Noon-3 pm, 209 NW Coast Street. FMI, call 541-272-4615.

Sweet talk

Reading Circle

Literacy Festival

Second Saturday Summer Celebration

Wednesday, Sept. 13

To book a spot, drop by the center or call 541-265-9617.

Newport Public Library The Literary Flicks series continues with this 1953 adaptation of the Shakespeare tragedy, starring Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, James Mason as Brutus and John Gielgud as Cassius. 6:30 pm, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www. newportlibrary.org.

Waldport Community Center The place to shop for flowers, potted plants, jewelry, tie dyes, glass art and more. 10 am-4 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.

Gleneden Harvest Market

Side Door Café • Gleneden Beach Find granola, berries, fresh meats, produce and more. 11 am-4 pm, 6675 Gleneden Beach Loop.

Steven Espianola

Tunes in the Dunes

Lincoln City Cultural Center A rousing, all-star ukulele concert featuring amazing sounds from some of the world’s finest ukulele virtuosos, including Steven Espaniola, Aaron and Nicole Keim, and Jim D’Ville. Bring your ukulele to play and sing along. $ 20 with proceeds benefitting Camp Westwind. 7 pm, 540 NE Hwy 101. FMI, go to lincolncity-culturalcenter.org.

Elks Pledge Meeting

Wapiti Park • Lincoln City Find out about efforts to reconstitute an Elks Lodge for Lincoln City at this meeting, where pledge forms will be on hand. Food available. Bring your own beverage. 6 pm, Drift Creek Road. FMI, call 541-921-7287.

Toledo Farmers Market

Main Street • Toledo Produce and crafts from more than 40 vendors, right in downtown. 10 am-3 pm.

ACES & NINKASI DINNER

Saturday, September 16 at 6pm $30 PER PERSON • 3 COURSE CEDAR PLANK SALMON WITH BREW PAIRINGS

“It’s Better at the Beach” • Aces Bar & Grill • 3245 NE 50th Street • Lincoln City • (541) 994-8232 • chinookwindscasino.com CWCR_OCT_09-08-2017_4x1.5625_Brewers_Dinner.indd 1

8/22/17 1:04 PM oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 13


lively

It’s pouring at the coast But we are happy as a clam at Chowder & Brewfest in Lincoln City

F

inding the finest chowder on the Oregon Coast could easily become a summer-long quest, involving a prolonged road trip, extensive sampling and a family-sized packet of Pepto Bismol. But guests at Lincoln City’s Chowder & Brewfest can whittle that gargantuan task down to a single afternoon’s work, sampling chowders from some of the coast’s finest chefs alongside an impressive array of beers and music from artists including blues star Curtis Salgado. Returning for its second year on Saturday, Sept. 9, the gourmet event will take over the top deck of the parking structure at the Lincoln City Outlets, a venue that local tourism chief Ed Dreisdadt has dubbed “The Party in the Sky.” “This is the kickoff celebration of the fall coastal season with a day of neverending fun,” said Dresidadt, executive director of the Lincoln City Visitor & Convention Bureau. “Nothing else like it anywhere, this is Lincoln City at its goodtime best.” In return for their entry fee, guests will get a souvenir tasting glass plus tickets for five beer tastings and five samples of chowder from a host of coastal favorites including Mo’s, Dory Cove, the Horn Public House and the Newport Café. Full serving sizes of chowder and beer will be available for purchase and food vendors will also have a variety of nonchowder items for sale throughout the day. An afternoon of live music will kick off at noon with a performance of highenergy, reggae-influenced pop from Sacramento-based band ZuhG. Band leader and Lincoln City resident Bryan Nichols is well known for his acoustic performances at local venues, and is looking forward to getting the party started with a more dynamic sound. At 2:30 pm, with the stage suitably warmed up, guests will be treated to a

Brew’s who? Curtis Salgado

headline performance from blues star Curtis Salgado, fresh off a plane from Las Vegas. With a career spanning 40 years, Salgado is a musical giant whose accomplishments range from touring with Steve Miller and Santana to helping transform John Belushi into “Joliet” Jake Blues for “The Blues Brothers.” Returning by popular demand after last year’s event, Portland cover band Hit Machine will close out the festival with a high-energy show starting at 5 pm. This effervescent five-piece play hits from all eras, and it’s not uncommon to hear the Bee Gees, Prince, Taio Cruz and AC/DC all in the same set. Games including Giant Jenga will be on offer throughout the day, while a corn hole tournament will give guests the chance to test their bean bag toss for a chance at winning a souvenir corn hole set. The festival is a major fund-raiser for the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce, which aims to strengthen the local economy through networking opportunities and civic projects. “Chowder & Brewfest got off to a great start last year and is fast becoming our

signature event,” said Executive Director Lori Arce-Torres. “This year’s festival will be bigger and better than ever, so come along and join the fun.” The Chowder & Brewfest will run from noon to 7 pm at the Lincoln City Outlets, 1500 SE East Devils Lake Road. The event is family friendly and also suitable for well-behaved dogs who stay on their leashes. Advance tickets are $25 for over 21s, which includes a commemorative tasting glass, five beer tastings and five chowder samples, as well as $5 in slot play at Chinook Winds Casino Resort. For people aged 12 to 20, admission is $10 and includes five chowder samples. Kids aged 11 and under get in free. A special Designated Driver ticket is available for people aged 21 and over, priced at $15 and including five chowder samples plus $5 in slot play at Chinook Winds. Advance tickets are on sale at chowderbrewfest.com. On the day of the event, tickets at the gate increase to $30 for over 21s and $20 for designated drivers.

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

As off press time, the following breweries, wineries and cider houses were confirmed: McKenzie Brewing Company McMenamins Lighthouse Brewery Ninkasi Brewing Pelican Brewing Company Rusty Truck Brewing The Horn Public House Stout Brewing Company Three Creeks Brewing Co. Portland Cider Company Modern Times Beer Coopers Hall Winery & Taproom Ordinance Brewing Burnside Brewing Merchant du Vin Ground Breaker Brewing Willamette Valley Wine


ISTANBUL RUG BAZAAR direct from Istanbul to the Oregon Coast one-of-a-kind handwoven rugs antique & vintage modern & tribal

handmade ceramic lamps & huge selection handwoven Suzani pillows After 21 yrs on NW 23rd in Portland Thurs – the Tues 11-6 and by appointment second Istanbul Rug Bazaar is now open in downtown

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OCEANFRONT LANDMARK HOME. Rare OCEANFRONTISH SECLUSION. Gorgeous opportunity to purchase this one owner custom home on 1/2 acre in a private natural grand beauty designed with all essential setting. Oceanside MLS 17-432 $775,000 rooms accessible on ground floor. Oceanside MLS 15-311 $1,599,000

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OCEANSIDE LANDMARK HOME located at the entrance to the village right across street from 3 mile long beach. MLS 17193506 $594,000

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 15


in concert

Urgent Care

For you and your loved ones in Lincoln City, Tillamook and Manzanita. Open Sundays.

Wig out, with Lady Rizo

Manzanita Urgent, Primary & Specialty Care 10445 Neahkahnie Creek Rd., Manzanita 503-368-2292

Bayshore Medical—Lincoln City 1105 SE Jetty Ave., Lincoln City 541-614-0482

Tillamook Medical Plaza 1100 Third St., Tillamook 503-815-2292 adventisthealth.org/trmc

NEWPORT FARMERS MARKET

Newport’s homegrown cabaret star Lady Rizo will return to her home town to celebrate the release of her second album, “Indigo,” with a one-night-only concert this Sunday, Sept. 10. The New York City-based artist has earned a name for herself by transforming nightclub pop into experiences that are more soulful and theatrical. A

SATURDAYS 9am-1pm

Summer Location HWY 101 and ANGLE ST May 13th thru Oct 28th

Across the street from City Hall

Rain or h S ine!

Plenty of Parking at the County Courthouse

LOCALLY GROWN FOR ALL SEASONS

Large sit down Food Court Area

16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

provocateur with an electric wit, Lady Rizo is a vessel for the spirits of Edith Piaf and Freddie Mercury. The former teen punk rocker won praise from the New York Times as “a formidable belter who can sustain phrases and notes even when sprawled on her back on a piano and scissoring her legs.” “An anarchist streak still

Family Gifts at Family Prices

runs through me,” Rizo said. “I love the idea of claiming something that’s uncool and making it authentic.” The concert will start at 7 pm at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W Olive Street. Tickets, $20 in advance or $25 on the door, are available at the box office, by phone at 541-265-2787 or online at www.coastarts.org.

Join our team Become a lifeguard! •All ages! •Flexible schedules! •We will train! To apply see www.lincolncity.org Contact Loree at llafon@lincolncity.org or 541-996-1248


s o u n d wa v e s

Hidden Treasures & Fabulous Bargains!

Friday, Sept. 8

2 OFF

$ 00

TRIPLE EDGE — Classic Rawk, with a ‘w’. 8 pm-midnight,

Saturday, Sept. 9 TRIPLE EDGE — Classic Rawk, with a ‘w’. 8 pm-midnight,

Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. CURTIS SALGADO — The veteran blues star headlines at Chowder & Brewfest, supported by the high-energy groves of ZuhG and crowd-pleasing covers from Portland favorite Hit Machine. Noon-7 pm, Lincoln City Outlets, 1500 SE East Devils Lake Road. $30 at the gate; $25 in advance at www.chowderbrewfest.com. UNDRTOW — Reggae with an Oregon Coast twist from this homegrown crew. 9 pm, Rusty Truck Brewery, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. RECKLESS ROCKHOUNDS — Classic rock, blues and rockin’ originals. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. KAT COGSWELL — This Portland vocalist specializes in jazz, blues and pop. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — Finger-snappin’, toe-tappin’, can’tsit-still New Wave Swing. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp, and Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 8-11 pm, The TapHouse @ Nye Creek, 520 NW Alpine Street, Newport, 541-272-5545. ST JAMES’S GATE — A Celtic-inspired band offering dynamic vocals, three-part harmonies, scorching hot fiddle, funky upright acoustic/electric bass, tight acoustic rhythm guitar and drums. 9-11 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. JUNE RUSHING TRIO — Vocals by the lovely and talented June, backed up by her partner Joren run the gamut from old to new, soulful ballads to classic rock and originals. 7-10 pm, Cafe Mundo. 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE BRONNIE GRIFFIN BAND — This New Hampshire trio transcends genres with their bright and lively sound, from Irish traditional to Americana, they bring an infectious joy to every concert. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. LOZELLE JENNINGS AND THE PURPLE CATS — Chill out with blues at the Fall Blues Show ‘n’ Shine car show. 8 pm-midnight, Yachats Inn Clubhouse, S. Hwy 101, Yachats.

Sunday, Sept. 10 STEVE SLOAN & CASEY EPS — Acoustic. 8:30 pm, Snug

Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. LOZELLE JENNINGS AND THE PURPLE CATS — present The Pentacoastal Blues Jam. 3-6 pm, The TapHouse @ Nye Creek, 520 NW Alpine Street, Newport, 541-272-5545. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam.

Open Tues-Sat 10-4 Sunday Noon-4 541-574-1861 www.folcas.com

Your purchase of $10 or more with this ad Hurry! Expires 9/14/17 On the county Fairgrounds in Newport, NE Third St. between Eads & Harney

SATURDAY MORNING CINEMA SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 9TH

NOW PLAYING--FINAL WEEK

JAMES STEWART AND CAROLE LOMBARD

Jeremy Renner in

WIND RIVER Friday & Saturday 2:00 5:15 8:15 Sunday & Monday 2:00 4:30 & 7:30 Tuesday --Thursday 4:30 & 7:30

Rodney Turner of UNDRTOW • Saturday, Sept. 9, in Lincoln City 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. RANDY MCCOY — Performing for 30 years, McCoy offers originals along with some covers from artists including Blitzen Trapper, James Taylor, Joni Mitchell, Eddie Vedder, Neil Young and many more. 6:30-9 pm, the Drift Inn 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

$1

OFF

your purchase of $10.00 or more with this ad (expiration date of October 31, 2017.)

Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! Starting at $30 & up

Create beautiful plates, platters, bowls, coasters, sconces, window pieces, etc. Gift Certificates Available

Wednesday, Sept. 13 LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this “front porch

thang,” with Jedi-Jim Hobbs on guitar, lots of original blues, Cajun, swampytonk and American roots tunes, plus tall tales, outright lies, and talented local sit-ins. Family friendly. 5-8 pm, O’Downey’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, 10 Bay Street, Depoe Bay. THE ALL-ORIGINAL COVER BAND — Sing along to all your favorites at this regular jam session. 7-10 pm, Hoovers Pub & Grill, 3539 Hwy. 101, just south of the Yaquina Bay Bridge, Newport, 541-867-3303. IAN SMITH — Folk, originals and covers. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

1624 NE HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY 541-994-8255 • cinemalovers.com

1273 SW 51ST SUITE C, LINCOLN CITY

Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-9 pm, the Drift Inn 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

& Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. ROCK’N TACOS OPEN JAM — JRC and Friends host this weekly jam, paired with 50-cent tacos for one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. JOHN BRINGETTO — Classic jazz favorites. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

11:00am $2 (1940)

INTO THE MYSTIQUE 541-614-0810 IN HISTORIC TAFT,

RICHARD SHARPLESS — ‘Retired’ from his days playing in

OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar

R

BIJOU THEATRE

Monday, Sept. 11

Tuesday, Sept. 12

MADE FOR EACH OTHER

GLASS FUSING STUDIO

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

46-14

Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. KAT COGSWELL — This Portland vocalist specializes in jazz, blues and pop. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. ST JAMES’S GATE — A Celtic-inspired band offering dynamic vocals, three-part harmonies, scorching hot fiddle, funky upright acoustic/electric bass, tight acoustic rhythm guitar and drums. 9-11 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. GAEA — This new age trio from Portland are also leaders of the Portland Gaea movement. 7-10 pm, Cafe Mundo. 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. ROB CONNELL AND EVANS LONGSHORE — Classic acoustic rock. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. THEY WENT THATAWAY — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Weave your own wool rug A one-day experience. It’s washable! $60: Includes all materials! Pick your own colors! Class size limited to four people at $60 each. Rug size approx. to 2-1/2 x 4-1/2

Thursday, Sept. 14

Reservations: 541-764-3997 • 4210 N. Hwy 101, Just 3 miles N of Depoe Bay

ACOUSTIC SHOWCASE — Enjoy ocean views and the sunset

while listening to 20-minute sets from talented local acoustic musicians. 7-9 pm, Mist Restaurant and Lounge @ Surftides Resort, 2945 NW Jetty Avenue, Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BARON WARD — Dynamic duo from Portland. Original songs and much more. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — Finger-snappin’, toe-tappin’, can’tsit-still New Wave Swing. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp, and Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 5:30- 8 pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.

541-994-4453 3412 SE Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City Across from Christmas Cottage

20% OFF AUDIO BOOKS Coupon must be presented at time of purchase.

CASH OR CHECK ONLY • EXPIRES 9/21/17

541-994-4467 1747 NW Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City • North of Maxwell’s

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 17


in concert

Dropping in for a visit N

ewport’s Agate Beach Golf Course will be the unlikely venue for a star turn by pianist Hunter Noack on Wednesday, Sept 13, as he travels the Pacific Northwest with his ninefoot Steinway grand piano. The performance is part of the “In a Landscape” series, which will see Noack perform 13 outdoor concerts at venues throughout Oregon and Southern Washington, including the Columbia Gorge Hotel in Hood River, the Astoria Column and Crater Lake National Park. “This project brings together two things I love most,” Noack said, “classical music and the great outdoors.” Noack is scheduled to appear alongside a trio of guest artists from Pink Martini: Thomas Lauderdale on piano, Nicholas Crosa on violin and Pansy Chang on cello. The project has been designed in the spirit of the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Music and Theatre Projects, which presented

thousands of free concerts and plays in theaters, public spaces and parks across the country during the Great Depression. A donation-based reservation system allows guests to reserve tickets for free, as well as for a recommended donation of $25. Concertgoers will receive wireless headphones on a first-come-firstserved basis, allowing them to take in the performance from wherever they choose on the golf course.

Golf course owner Ramona Martin, a family friend of Noack’s, made the venue available to help draw attention to the work of the Ernest Bloch Legacy Project. The concert is part of the formal dedication ceremony for the Ernest Bloch Memorial Wayside that honors the Swiss-born American composer Ernest Bloch, who lived in Newport from 1941 to 1959. Noack is a native Oregonian and an internationally acclaimed concert pianist who integrates literature, visual art, dance, theater and design in his presentations of classical music. He studied at Interlochen Arts Academy in Michigan, graduated from the San Francisco Conservatory and received a bachelor’s degree from University of Southern California. The Sept. 13 concert will begin at 6 pm at Agate Beach Golf Course, 4100 NE Golf Course Drive, Newport. For ticket reservations, go to www.HunterNoack.com.

18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

Three by the sea A trio of world-class musicians will gather in Depoe Bay for the opening concert in the Oregon Coast Chamber Music Society this Saturday, Sept. 9. The Yvonne Hsueh Trio features Hsueh on violin, Robert Ashens on piano and tenor David Gustafson. A native of Los Angeles, Hsueh lives in Eugene where she is principal second violin of the Oregon Mozart Players and a member of the Eugene Symphony. An active symphonic violinist, recitalist, chamber musician and soloist, she has been the concertmaster of the Newport Symphony and has performed with the Siletz Music Festival, Chintimini Festival and the New Hampshire Music Festival. Hsueh received her B.M. and M.M. degrees in Violin Performance and Pedagogy from the University of Oregon. Her early precollege training was at the Colburn School of Music, where she studied with Margaret Shimizu and Rick Schwabe. Internationally recognized for his robust, expressive voice, tenor David Gustafson made his San Francisco Opera debut in 2010 as Sentinelle in “Cyrano Di Bergerac,” starring Placido Domingo. A frequent oratorio singer, Gustafson has sung masses of Beethoven, Verdi, Mozart, Schubert and Haydn as well as Weill’s “Seven Deadly Sins” and Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 9.” Robert Ashens travels internationally as a conductor and pianist and has a repertoire of 120 operas. He serves as artistic director West Coast Opera as well as music director

Robert Ashens

David Gustafson

Yvonne Hsueh

and conductor of Shedd (Institute) Theatricals in Eugene. As a lover of chamber music, he enjoys keeping his piano skills alive by playing with the Yvonne Hsueh Trio. Saturday’s concert will start at 3 pm in the ocean-view home of Dick and Laurel Young, with directions available upon reservation. Light refreshments will be served by the Taft high Culinary Club. Tickets, $30 per person, are available by calling Mark Sanders at 760-9224175 or online at www. siletzbaymusic.org.


MARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR

Calendar Girls Check Out the Entire Exciting 2017-2018 Season Online! OPENING OCTOBER 19

C an’t beachcom b... Find Treasures H ere!

Beginning Belly Dance Fusion Classes with Breeze and Amber

R ed B arn Flea M art

No dance experience needed! Classes Mondays 6:00-7:30 starting September 11, ongoing through school year. (Holidays off) $12 / class with purchase of 5 class card. $14 drop in.

Dance! And All That Jazz 630 SW Hurbert St., Newport 97365 Call Amber at 503-729-1792 for more info

9:30 - 5:00, Wed thru Mon. Closed on Tuesdays

33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale

Between Cloverdale & Hebo

Now PlayiNg liNColN CouNty AreA eveNts

• Newport Performing Arts Center: NAtioNAl theAtre loNdoN live iN hd – “who’s AfrAid of virgiNiA woolf?”, lAdy rizo “iNdigo” releAse PArty • lincoln City Cultural Center: A CelebrAtioN of books & Authors, suNdAy stories with doug forCe, tuNes iN the duNes • Private home, 360-606-7136: iNhouse jAzz – george ColligAN & dAve CAPteiN • Private home, 541-992-1131: oregoN CoAst ChAmber musiC soCiety – hsueh/AsheNs/gustAfsoN • Newport Public library: literAry fliCks – “julius CAesAr”

OregOn cOast cOuncil for the arts

Club KYAQ’s Featured Performer Rand Bishop - The Peace Pilgrim Singer, song writer, guitar player Friday Sept. 1st 7-9pm Listen live on the air or on KYAQ.org Public welcome at the KYAQ studio 321 SE 3rd Ave. Toledo Go to KYAQ.org for an up to date program schedule.

CelebratiNg 40 Years

More online at coastarts.org

541-635-0034

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017 • 19


Crossword

8

9

15

17

10

18

20

26

60 Pac-12 athlete

32

33

34

35

36

37

40

41

22

42 Attraction at Boeing’s Museum 63 Seat of Christianity? of Flight, for short

46 Carriage with its horse 47 It might prevent you from drifting off 51 James I and Charles I

I D O L P O N E A T C H H E A C E R A B E M E S I E S T E U T E S P Y E O M G B U E O C K D S A I E N D

R E C O N

E R I C

Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Subject: NICKNAMES FOR ANIMALS What animal is sometimes known by the nickname? (e.g., Tree rat. Answer: Squirrel.)

39 42

29

43

30

31

Difficulty Level 38

44

45

8

1 9 6 2 8

2 3 9 5

9/02

SUDOKU is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. King Features

46

DOWN 47

48

49

50

51

52

53

1 Standout in a quad

55

56

2 Dunham of “Girls”

58

59

60

61

62

63

3 “What you have to realize …”

57

4 Transmission element

PUZZLE BY JOHN E. BENNETT AND JEFF CHEN

5 “The Martha ___ Show” of 1950s TV

13 Banks of “America’s Got Talent”

6 Recluse’s problem, maybe

18 Spent the most?

7 What a “/” may mean

19 Something said by a put-out Putin?

54

27 Hairstyles that need lots of combing 29 Everyday 30 -NH2 attachment, in chemistry 31 Toy shooter 34 Seat of New Mexico’s Doña Ana County 38 Pose 43 Square one 45 Bucks 47 Somewhat

48 Letters that might precede 10001 49 Bloke 50 Darn it! 52 Newcastle upon ___, England

53 Add (up) 8 Procter & Gamble 24 Flippered animal cleaning brand 54 Distort along the Pacific Coast 56 Rare occurrences 9 Do a little at Super Bowls, cuddling 25 Don’t open it! briefly 10 ___ desk 57 Clutch hitter’s (newspaper post) 26 Indy racer sponsor stat 11 Roman emperor who overthrew Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and 7,000 For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 permore minute;than or, with creditpast card, 1-800Galba 814-5554. just wait for next week’s TODAY.) puzzles, (Or, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Read about comment on each Crosswords puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Share tips:and nytimes.com/puzzleforum. for young solvers: nytimes.com/ 12 Silent part of learning/xwords. “mnemonic”

FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Ship of the desert 2. Polecat 3. Darning needle

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. River horse 5. Quill pig 6. Wash(er) bear.

Last Week’s Answers:

PH.D. LEVEL 7. Earth pig 8. (Red) Cat bear 9. Sea cow

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

SUPER QUIZ

G L A D E A S E E M I L E M U D B O X A R V E W A N I S S N O B E D U P D A S L A W E R N A N E A R D S

28

5

ANSWERS: 1. Camel. 2. Skunk. 3. Dragonfly. 4. Hippopotamus. 5. Porcupine. 6. Raccoon. 7. Aardvark. 8. Red panda. 9. Manatee.

45 2016 Disney film

25

7 7

9/02

44 Sound of metallic impact

27

24

1

7 2 9 4 3 5 8 1 6

43 “J’adore ___” (ad slogan)

23

3 5 4 1 7

21

59 Short loin cut

62 Big rolls

13

19

40 Attachment to a job app

61 Like a workaholic

12

16

58 Together

41 Congested place, at times

11

8 5 1 6 2 9 3 7 4

T A S E S

7

6 3 4 8 1 7 2 9 5

A L B

6

1 4 7 5 8 2 6 3 9

B I N E T

14

5

5 8 6 3 9 1 4 2 7

S A S M S R I

4

39 Symbol of Christianity

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE A N T E M O O L C H E S I E D G E L E O F E T A D O U T R B E H A O M E L P E D E R O S E G G O P E S T

3

3 9 2 7 4 6 5 8 1

37 Latin American sweetie

2

2 6 5 1 7 3 9 4 8

36 Hoary

1

9 1 8 2 5 4 7 6 3

35 ___ Sound

55 Whatever it takes … as hinted at in the arrangements of black squares around the circled letters

6

4 7 3 9 6 8 1 5 2

34 Symbol of gentleness

2 6 9 8

Difficulty Level

ACROSS 1 Diner staple, for short 4 Wine, informally, with “the” 9 Astronaut Kelly 14 [Shrug] 15 Itching 16 Right to the point 17 Whatever it takes 20 Party person 21 Musician whose first name is a toy 22 ___ trick 23 Home to an annual Ideas Festival 26 First name of the second vice president to resign from office 28 Mulching material 29 Dynamite 32 “Pagliacci” role 33 China’s ___ Dynasty

No. 0810

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Edited by Will Shortz

By Dave Green


tide tables

LINCOLN CITY

FARMERS & CRAFTERS MARKET Outdoor Market Sundays, 9am - 3pm

Join the celebration!

New Food Vendors: Finni’s Fine Food Catalina’s Coffee Double Horseshoe BBQ Bread and Beyond Julie’s Beachin’ Pies

We invite you to celebrate with us at the ceremonial groundbreaking for the new Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital. Program begins at 3:30 p.m. Light refreshments will follow.

Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date

Thurs., Sept. 7 Fri., Sept. 8 Sat., Sept. 9 Sun., Sept. 10 Mon., Sept. 11 Tues., Sept. 12 Wed., Sept. 13 Thurs., Sept. 14

Tuesday, Sept. 12 Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital — main parking lot 3043 NE 28th St. Lincoln City, Oregon

8:03 am 8:39 am 9:16 am 9:56 am 10:41 am 11:34 am 12:44 am 1:53 am

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City

Follow our progress as we transform the hospital and its campus to meet the community’s needs for decades to come at samhealth.org/NewHospitalLincolnCity.

Date

Thurs., Sept. 7 Fri., Sept. 8 Sat., Sept. 9 Sun., Sept. 10 Mon., Sept. 11 Tues., Sept. 12 Wed., Sept. 13 Thurs., Sept. 14

8:12 am 8:46 am 9:23 am 10:03 am 10:48 am 11:42 am 1:04 am 2:17 am

Yaquina Bay, Newport Date

Thurs., Sept. 7 Fri., Sept. 8 Sat., Sept. 9 Sun., Sept. 10 Mon., Sept. 11 Tues., Sept. 12 Wed., Sept. 13 Thurs., Sept. 14

Pipe Dreams Dispensary Recreational Dispensary Highest Quality Lowest Prices Best Selection

Date

Stop in fo INCREDI r B Daily Sp LE ecials!

7:34 am 8:08 am 8:45 am 9:25 am 10:10 am 11:04 am 12:26 am 1:39 am

Alsea Bay, Waldport

Medical Dispensary Meds and Accessories

MONDAY - SATURDAY: 10AM - 8PM. CLOSED SUNDAYS.

1745 SW Highway 101 • Lincoln City, OR 97367 • 541-614-0682

Check out our Food Court! Max’s Juggling Act at 11am and 1pm Face painting, balloons and cotton candy for kids.

Thurs., Sept. 7 Fri., Sept. 8 Sat., Sept. 9 Sun., Sept. 10 Mon., Sept. 11 Tues., Sept. 12 Wed., Sept. 13 Thurs., Sept. 14

8:22 am 8:59 am 9:37 am 10:17 am 11:01 am 12:02 am 1:06 am 2:14 am

Located at the Lincoln City Cultural Center

540 NE Hwy. 101

lincolncityfarmersmarket.org Low Tides

-0.3 0.0 0.4 1.0 1.7 2.4 0.3 -0.3

Low Tides

0.0 0.3 0.6 1.0 1.4 1.9 0.3 0.3

Low Tides

0.1 0.4 0.9 1.5 2.1 2.7 0.4 0.3

Low Tides

-0.1 0.2 0.6 1.1 1.7 0.4 0.4 0.3

High Tides

8:22 pm 9:05 pm 9:51 pm 10:42 pm 11:40 pm --12:40 pm 1:56 pm

0.7 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.3 -2.9 3.2

1:56 am 2:39 am 3:25 am 4:14 am 5:08 am 6:10 am 7:22 am 8:41 am

8.1 8.0 7.7 7.3 6.8 6.4 6.1 6.1

8:29 pm 9:13 pm 10:01 pm 10:54 pm 11:55 pm --12:49 pm 2:08 pm

0.8 0.6 0.4 0.4 0.3 -2.2 2.3

1:23 am 2:06 am 2:53 am 3:45 am 4:44 am 5:54 am 7:14 am 8:36 am

6.5 6.4 6.1 5.8 5.4 5.0 4.8 4.9

7:51 pm 8:35 pm 9:23 pm 10:16 pm 11:17 pm --12:11 pm 1:30 pm

1.2 0.9 0.6 0.5 0.5 -3.2 3.4

1:14 am 1:57 am 2:44 am 3:36 am 4:35 am 5:45 am 7:05 am 8:27 am

8.5 8.3 7.9 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.3 6.4

8:43 pm 9:28 pm 10:14 pm 11:05 pm --11:54 am 12:58 pm 2:11 pm

0.8 0.5 0.4 0.3 -2.2 2.7 2.9

1:50 am 2:34 am 3:20 am 4:11 am 5:07 am 6:11 am 7:23 am 8:38 am

7.2 7.0 6.8 6.4 6.0 5.7 5.4 5.4

2:38 pm 3:12 pm 3:49 pm 4:27 pm 5:11 pm 6:04 pm 7:07 pm 8:18 pm

High Tides

2:05 pm 2:38 pm 3:13 pm 3:53 pm 4:39 pm 5:33 pm 6:37 pm 7:50 pm

High Tides

1:56 pm 2:29 pm 3:04 pm 3:44 pm 4:30 pm 5:24 pm 6:28 pm 7:41 pm

High Tides

2:29 pm 3:04 pm 3:40 pm 4:19 pm 5:04 pm 5:57 pm 7:00 pm 8:09 pm

7.9 8.0 8.2 8.2 8.1 8.0 7.9 7.8

6.3 6.5 6.6 6.6 6.6 6.5 6.3 6.3

8.1 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.5 8.4 8.2 8.2

7.0 7.2 7.4 7.4 7.4 7.3 7.2 7.1

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 • september 8, 2017 • 21


on the cover

Scott Arehart with his treasured ‘55 Chevy Bel Air

By Gretchen Ammerman

W

F  TODAY

hether you like the purr of a classic engine as you give it some gas, or the thought of not having to give your vehicle any gas at all, the Cruisin’ the Bay Car show will have something for you to drool over this Saturday, Sept. 9. Classic lines will meet cutting edge technology as the 8th annual show unfolds along the shores of Siletz Bay, with a range of electric cars on display alongside the oldschool gas guzzlers. Scott Arehart, who will be there with his pristine ’55 Chevy Bel Air, is part of the group the Ocean Motion Car Owners, who help organize the event with the Bay Area Merchants Association. “As a group we do ‘cruise-ins,’” he said. “But we wanted to try to organize a show too.” The Chevy Arehart enters into the show was the result of a father-son bonding exercise. “My dad bought it when I was a kid, and I did a lot of the work on it,” he said. “Then he gave it to me when I graduated college.” Arehart’s dad, who lives in the area, still doesn’t seem ready to give up the car completely.

“He still borrows it sometimes,” Arehart said. The style too was more his dad’s choice, though he has grown to love the car. “At the time, what I really wanted was a Mustang,” he said. The number of classic cars on display each year varies, but entries have the chance to win in a full 30 different classes, including Best of a Decade. “We want this to be a fun event,” Arehart said. “So we give people lots of ways to win.” One of the classes is “Best Project Car,” which gives people the chance to bring in

works in progress and get feedback from fellow petrol heads. A big crowd favorite last year, which won four categories, was a vintage VW bus. “We also have a couple who enter every year with a really nice dark blue Woody,” Arehart said. “The show falls on their anniversary, and they always win something.” As the show also falls during National Drive Electric Week, it’s only natural an electric vehicle show would add a little juice to the event. “We’ll have 10 electric cars there, most privately owned,” said Debbie Jimmerson, who serves as city captain for Lincoln City during the official week, which takes place from Sept. 9 to 17. “Three of the cars will be available for people to drive, including two Teslas.” Jimmerson, who owns a Tesla, says that driving one is something everyone should try at least once. “Teslas are pretty cool to experience,” she said. “And the best way to it is with your butt

22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • september 8, 2017

in the driver’s seat.” The cars that will be available to take for a spin are the Tesla model S, Tesla Model X and a Nissan Leaf. “My husband and I actually have the Tesla and a Leaf,” Jimmerson said. “We haven’t bought gas for over four years.” The Cruisin’ show will also be jammin,’ with music provided by the Ocean 2.0, who will begin rocking at 11 am. And if test driving a Tesla makes you work up an appetite, Central Coast Humane Society will be selling hot dogs and burgers to raise funds for their efforts to help the animals of Lincoln County. “Cruisin’ the Bay is a real collaborative effort,” Arehart said. “Steve Wilson of The Bay House provides our venue, Karl Bullard of Diamonds by the Sea orders and engraves our trophies, Jenny Dahrens organizes and does all the admin and work with the judges’ results, members of local car clubs help with the parking and judging at the event, and Siletz Bay area businesses contribute coffee and gifts. I serve to draw all the pieces together, but there are lots of people that actually make it happen every year voluntarily.” Cruisin’ the Bay will run from 9 am to 2 pm outside The Bay House, 5911 SW Hwy. 101. Registration will be available until 11:30 am, when judging begins. Awards will be presented at 2 pm. For more information, call 541-921-9329, or go to the Cruisin’ the Bay Car Show Facebook page.


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DEPOE BAY • OPEN DAILY • 10 - 6 (541) 765-4001 • 70 NORTH HWY 101

with coupon expires 9/19/17

in Oceanfront Dining.

Some say you can actually see the curve of the earth as you enjoy daily breakfast, lunch, dinner or our seasonal Sunday champagne brunch at the Inn’s 10th floor oceanfront restaurant and bar, Fathoms. Daily Early Bird Dinner Specials starting at $10.50, and enjoy our menu in Fathoms Bar with appetizers starting at just $4.00. Reservations recommended for dinner. *Voted “Best of the Best” in the “Best Restaurant to Take Guests” category by BOSS-FM and KCUP listeners seven years in a row.

Fathoms Restaurant & Bar

4009 SW Highway 101, Lincoln City, OR Dining Reservations: 541-994-1601 800-452-8127 SpanishHead.com

6

CONVENIENT OREGON COAST LOCATIONS

Thursday, Sept 21 - 7 pm

2017 sees the 100-year anniversary of the earliest jazz recordings by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band from New Orleans. Celebrate and savor the sounds of vintage jazz and blues with the Cherry Blossom Orchestra, a seven-piece band based out of Portland and led by Richard Basi.

Best of the Best*

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED

THE CHERRY BLOSSOM ORCHESTRA CELEBRATES 100 YEARS OF RECORDED JAZZ

Tickets $20 in advance; $22 door. LCCC Membership Discount applies.

LCCC

PRESENTS

Sofia Talvik

Sunday, Sept. 24 - 7 pm The LCCC’s New Folk series will begin with Sofia Talvik, a singer/songwriter playing Americana with Swedish roots. She’s a North Sea siren, blending sparkle and melancholy as she creates her own special niche, guitar and voice. Since she first began touring the US more than 10 years ago, Talvik has released six full-length albums and a number of EPs, as well. Tickets are $20 in advance; $22 door. $2 off for current members of the LCCC. Buy Tickets Online!

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3245 NE 50 th St. Lincoln City, OR

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