Oregon Coast TODAY

Page 1

FREE!! FREE July 16, 2021

ROLL MODELS

Catch up with Tillamook’s Derby Dames See story, p. 8

JOB FAIR • JULY 20, 2021 • 10AM-2PM

Siletz Bay Buffet Dining Room • Hiring Managers On-Site • chinookwinds.com/careers

$1000 SIGNING BONUS

CONDITIONS APPLY • SELECT POSITIONS

$15/HR MINIMUM WAGE

EXCLUDING HIGHLY TIPPED POSITIONS

$5/HR SUMMER BONUS ALL POSITIONS


More than a record store

Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Northwest Real Estate Netarts Bay, OR

Pam Zielinski Mobile

503.880.8034

Principal Broker

HOMES BY THE WATER

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GRAND ENTRY leads to luxurious, meticulously maintained & elegant 3,508 sq ft interior with all essential living on entry level. Secluded setting & ocean view from 1.25-acre lot. Great for serene & private living, short term rental, weekend retreat or even a wonderful B&B.

We’ve got the summertime blues. And jazz.

August 27-29, 2021 Long Beach Penninsula, WA

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ULTRA CONTEMPORARY oceanview estate on 2.74 acres, gated. Main house 5,432sf with dbl attached garage, detached shop/Carriage House with room for four cars and 1,000sf unfinished studio on upper level. Upscale neighborhood with 35-acre commons incl lake & trail to Netarts Bay.

Netarts MLS 21-29 $1,483,000

Copyright 2021 OCT Media Company PO Box 962, Lincoln City, OR, 97367 news deadline 5 pm Friday ad space deadline 10 am Monday

Patrick Alexander

Gretchen Ammerman

Larayne Higgins

owner & publisher palexander@oregoncoasttoday.com 541-921-0413

editor gammerman@oregoncoasttoday.com 541-272-2622

marketing rep lyaeger@oregoncoasttoday.com 541-992-1920

coast tidings

N

othing says summer quite like the arrival of Oregon berries. Imports from points south are all well and good for satisfying the occasional out-of-season craving, but when you want berries that explode with summer sweetness, there is no substitute. And, so that we may fully appreciate each one, the offerings come spread out through the summer like a perfectly staged parade. First come the strawberries, ripening from early May through to the end of June. They pass the baton to the plucky raspberry, which starts to come into season from mid-June through July. Then, the

peak summer glory of the blueberry is upon is, lasting from July through September, and flanked in those first couple of months by the boysenberry and marionberry — the perfect time for a berry cobbler. August and September offer a second bite at the cherry, so to speak, with late-season strawberries and raspberries coming back to offer even sweeter, sun-drenched delight. There are very few ingredients that you can enjoy in all three courses of a meal — tossed with a salad, served in a reduction atop a salmon fillet, and crowning a decadent dessert — so grab your Oregon berries today and make it a summer to remember.

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Natural Organic Wellness For today’s healthy lifestyle

NORTH 2429 NW Hwy 101 541-994-3031

Lincoln City, Oregon Since 1941 kennysiga.com

Large 21-25 Shrimp Cooked and Peeled

11

$

SOUTH 4845 SW Hwy 101 541-996-2301

Fresh Pacific Rockfish Fillets

99

lb.

7

$ 99 Prices good 07/15/21 - 07/20/21 Fresh items subject to availability

lb.

Sheet Pan Shrimp Fajitas

Located in Salishan Homesites you’ll find this oversized lot with HOA amenities that include pool & tennis and nearby beach accesses

At the Beach Real Estate

MLS 20-1103

541.994.1156

$

109,900

1 pound shrimp raw 3 bell peppers sliced (I used a red, orange, and yellow three pack from Aldi.) 1 onion sliced 3 Tbsp avocado oil or oil of choice 1 Tbsp chili powder 1/2 tsp paprika 1 tsp cumin 1/4 tsp black pepper 1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp coriander 8-10 tortillas Avocado Sauce 1 avocado 1 clove garlic pressed 1/4 cup cilantro stems and leaves 1 Tbsp lime juice 1 Tbsp greek yogurt 1 Tbsp water or more for thinner sauce 1/4 tsp salt

Directions: Heat oven to 400 with sheet pan in the oven. Toss shrimp, peppers, and onions in a large bowl with avocado oil and spices. Spread shrimp mixture onto hot sheet pan. Place in oven and cook for 8-10 minutes or until shrimp are cooked through. While shrimp are cooking, prepare avocado sauce. Combine all ingredients in a food processor or blender. Blend until combined.

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Your event. Our pizza. With a wood fired pizza oven in tow, we are ready to wow your guests with live flame and scratch made pizza, salads and other thoughtfully prepared dishes. 2065 Boat Basin Road, Netarts • Tuesday-Sunday 12-8 pm • 503-815-9900 • www.theschooner.net

www.hearthandtableevents.com

Take out or drive through we have your coffee just the way you like it. Wed-Fri: 3-9 Sat: 1-9 Sun: 3-8 www.blacksquidbeerhouse.com • 541-614-0733

Dog-friendly Taproom

And don’t forget to check out our wide range of coffee gifts

Big Mountain Coffee Roasters

7am-1pm, Wednesday-Monday • 3930 Hwy. 101 • Depoe Bay Next to Thriftway • 541-764-2195 • bigmountaincoffees.com

Dine in, Take out, Delivery

Order Online! momijiexpressor.com

1500 SE DEVILS LAKE ROAD #305 LINCOLN CITY, OR 97367 PHONE: (541) 996-8886

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at the Lincoln City Outlets OPEN MONDAY - SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 9:00 PM


n a t u r a l i s t ’s c a l e n d a r

Love the ocean? You’re shore to enjoy this.

Do a little Hat-field research If you’ve missed your fix of the fun, interactive exhibits and cool, science-based displays at Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport you’ll be pleased to hear that, after a nearly 17-month closure, the visitor center plans to reopen on Sunday, Aug. 1, with reservable, one-hour time slots. Visitors will find a new interactive exhibit that simulates the bridge of a research vessel that is being built in Louisiana and will be operated by OSU. Standing at the helm, you can steer the 199-foot R/V Taani through Yaquina Bay and watch the computer-animated surroundings pass by on a semicircle of five screens. You will also find a new exhibit featuring tanks of different species of locally caught crabs. To celebrate the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s 50th anniversary, which occurred in 2020, there’s also a timeline of the agency’s research in the Pacific Northwest. Long-standing favorites are still there, including the indoor tidepool, where people can touch sea anemones, and

tanks where you can learn about erosion and wave energy by crashing waves against Lego structures. Coastal photos by Newport’s Bill Posner will be hung in the space of a former gift shop. Reservations can be made for times as far ahead as Sept. 30. If the maximum capacity has not been reached, you can buy tickets online at the door using your smartphone. A temporary $3 admission fee for those ages five and older will be charged to help pay for extra staffing and public health measures including enhanced cleaning. Before the pandemic, about 150,000 people each year passed through the doors of the visitor center, which opened in 1965 and has been managed by Oregon Sea Grant since 1997. The Hatfield Marine Science Center is located at 2030 SE Marine Science Drive, Newport. The visitor center will be open from 10 am to 4 pm, Thursday through Monday. For more information, go to hmsc.oregonstate.edu.

The Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition will celebrate five decades of protecting the coastal environment with free on shore and online events on Thursday, July 29. The day begins with two guided beach walks. On the south coast, citizen science trainer Fawn Custer will lead a tidepool-oriented walk at Sunset Bay in Coos County at 10 am. Meanwhile, to the north, marine ecologist Stewart Schultz, author of “The Northwest Coast: A Natural History,” will conduct a more sandy shore-focused tour of the Manhattan Beach State Recreation Site in Rockaway Beach at 10:30 am. The remainder of the day’s activities take place online, beginning at 3 pm with a brief talk by Executive Director Phillip Johnson on Oregon Shores’ history and the organization’s current programs and plans for the next 50 years. Throughout the day and during intermissions, early leaders of Oregon Shores or their descendants will share their memories in short video interviews. Also featured will be a visit to Oregon Shores’ live auction site, and the CoastWatch Mile-by-Mile fund-raising competition. At 4 pm, Dr. Orrin Pilkey will speak on “The Future of Our Beaches.” Pilkey is a professor emeritus of Earth and Ocean Sciences at Duke University, and founder and director emeritus of the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines, currently based at Western Carolina University. He has co-authored several books, including “The Rising Sea,” which sounded the alarm about the global loss of beaches, and “Retreat from a Rising Sea,” which explores the need to move back from the coast as it retreats due to sea level rise and “Lessons from the Sand,” which offers easy experiments to help learn about beach processes. At 7 pm, Mary Ellen Hannibal will address “The Future Role of Citizen Science in Coastal Conservation.” Hannibal is the author of “The Spine of the Continent” and “Evidence of Evolution.” Her latest book, “Citizen Scientist: Searching for Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction,” is both an exploration of an often-overlooked aspect of the history of science and a deeply personal encounter with the natural world and the grave threats to our environment, told through the lens of citizen science. She will discuss the essential role of popular engagement with monitoring the natural world and providing data to scientists if we are to conserve ecosystems in the face of climate change and species extinction. For more information, go to oregonshores.org.

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Get a piece of the action

DINE IN OR TAKE OUT

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BLACKFISH CAFE

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For inclusion in the TODAY’s dining guide, call 541-992-1920

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

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dining guide

Enjoy Neskowin’s living room By Gretchen Ammerman

W

Oregon Coast TODAY

hen Genie and Frank Ullrich decided to pass the torch of the Cafe on Hawk Creek on to new owners, they took care that it went to the right

people. “They were really nervous about someone messing up their baby,” said new owner Josh Johnston. “It’s such a big part of the Neskowin village community and they didn’t want that to change.” So the couple did research into Independent Restaurant Concepts, the company Johnston owns and operates with partner Jim Hall, and decided they were just the right people for the job. “They found out about some of our projects, like the Cadillac Cafe,” Johnston said. “There was already an amazing following when we bought it, so we didn’t want to do anything to lose the essential flavor of it. Our goal was to not change anything in the front, but do what we could in the back to help it thrive.” Another of the business partners’ pet projects is Paddy’s Bar & Grill, the oldest Irish pub in Portland. “That was another place with an amazing history and a dedicated local following,” Johnston said. “We mostly wanted to keep it open and continue giving the same customer experience it’s had all along.” Projects like these assured the Ullrichs that the Neskowin village’s “living room” was safe. “It’s hard to create character and history in a strip mall,” Johnston said. “These historical institutions are gems and we like to preserve them as much as possible.” Johnston and Hall met roughly 20 years ago at a Harriers run which, now that they are shared pub owners, makes perfect sense: the Hash House Harriers groups welcome “drinkers with a running problem,” and value fun as much as they value a good workout. Johnston, an OSU alumnus who played professional rugby for many years, had recently returned to Portland after playing internationally. “Jim was a merchant marine based out of Portland and I was getting ready to quit my job and go backpacking with my girlfriend but we broke up before the trip so I put out a message to anyone who wanted to go. Jim mailed me a walky-talky, which immediately charmed me, and we met up in Cuzco then backpacked through Peru and Bolivia and just got along really well. He was already working on opening a business when the trip was over and I was planning to open a bar so we decided to partner up. We opened our first place, North 45, then took over Paddy’s and the rest is history.”

The addition of the cafe at the coast has brought the number of places they own to nine. “I’m obviously biased, but I think we are a neat company because we are just two owner-operator guys that are pretty accessible,” Johnston said. “But because we own multiple restaurants we can also provide the kind of things corporations can, like stability through seasonal changes.” Based in Portland, the company purchased a home in the Neskowin village and retained the Cafe on Hawk Creek chef, who lives locally, so that they can be as much a part of the community as possible. This also gives them the opportunity to enjoy the menu. “I try to mix it up,” Johnston said. “The pizzas are fantastic but I order the shrimp melt a lot and the halibut bites, which are one of our biggest sellers.” One change that the business partners make when they begin operations of a new place is to keep all the customer favorites on the menu but remove anything that doesn’t sell so that they can try new things and give customers more options. “One of the things we added is the truffle cheese bread,” Johnston said. “It is really fantastic and fast becoming a customer favorite.”

The truffle cheese bread is cooked in the wood oven and topped with hot honey, truffle oil and green onions and served with marinara. “Another thing that blows my mind is the truffle ravioli,” Johnston said. “It has the perfect balance of richness and brightness.” Mushroom truffle ravioli comes topped with sautéed asparagus, snap peas, balsamic tomatoes and herb cream sauce. The Hawk Creek Cafe has long been known for its wood oven fired pizzas, so any changes made there were made carefully. “Pizza is such a big seller but also a big choke point since they are all cooked in the wood-fired oven, so we can only do a few at a time. It sounds counterintuitive, but we expanded the signature pizza menu to make it more efficient.” They are also making small but fun changes to the Village Scoop, the little van that vends ice cream and other treats in front of the cafe’s large, open deck. “With the evolution of to-go drinks with alcohol, we came up with what we are calling ‘easy slushies,’” Johnston said. “We’ll have a rotating menu of flavors like margarita. But we’re keeping the rest the same. Why mess with what works?” The Ullrichs can sleep well knowing that their baby is in good hands. The Cafe on Hawk Creek is located in Neskowin at 4505 Salem Avenue and is open from noon until 8 pm, Sunday through Thursday and noon to 9 pm Friday and Saturday. For more information, go to www.cafeonhawkcreek.com.

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on the cover

ROLL MODELS

Catch up with Tillamook’s Derby Dames Story & photos by Gretchen Ammerman

R

Oregon Coast TODAY

oller derby has come a long way since Raquel Welch knocked women off the track with a well-timed hit from a well-shaped hip in the 1972 movie, “Kansas City Bomber.” Often covered in tattoos, going by self-appointed names that can tend toward the shocking, derby girls of the modern era are all bark and no bite. “They look mean and tough, but they are the sweetest and most inclusive people you’ll ever meet,” said Margo McClellan, aka Hellcat Maggie, who attended her first practice in Arizona in 2012. “I’ve skated most of my life, but I’ve always been kinda nerdy, so I thought, ‘Roller derby isn’t for me.’ But there’s a quote that I am pretty sure was said by Eleanor Roosevelt, ‘Do one thing that scares you every day,’ and I try to live like that. So I showed up to an open practice and these women kinda swooped down on me and, by the time I got home, I had seven new Facebook request from these bad-ass but super-friendly, sweet women; many of whom are still friends to this day.” McClellan skated with that team for a few years, until she followed her heart to the Central Oregon Coast and briefly paused her derby days. “In 2017, I heard from a neighbor that there was a fledgling team getting started in Tillamook,” she said. “It actually started as an introduction to derby class at the community college but enrollment was too low so they cancelled it. But all of us who had signed up stayed in touch and decided to do it on our own.” Now called the Derby Dames, the team primarily practices at Tillaskate, a building on the Tillamook County Fairgrounds that is used a few times a year for events, but the rest of the year can be rented for skating by groups large or small. These days, the Dames have not only a very cool logo, but a solid number of skaters for a new team in a small area. “It’s a whole different breed of women from the way I grew up,” said McClellan, who identifies as a GenXer. “It’s so inclusive. My generation was much more brought up to see other women as competition and it was more normal for us to be catty to each other.

With derby, it’s all about support and encouragement. It doesn’t matter your size your age. As a matter of fact, the more out of shape or older you are or have any other perceived setbacks, the more impressed we are that you showed up to try derby!” If that sounds like propaganda, I can attest, as a person over 50, that when I rolled in on my nonregulation wheels and healthy fear of pain, I was welcomed with open arms. I briefly flirted with derby roughly a decade ago, and skated under the name Killa B, as I was a beekeeper at the time. So I gave that name when asked what I wanted my derby name to be. For the next hour, the sound of “Killa B” rang out as I was encouraged to participate fully in all aspects of the practice session. Not for one second did a single derby girl on that fairgrounds floor make me feel that I was at least a person older than most of the other girls there. I was just part of the team as much as I wanted to be. “Our message to anyone interested but unsure is, show up, watch a practice, introduce yourself and meet some of the girls,” McClellan said. “Even if you don’t know how to skate, we’ll teach you, and we even have loaner gear. And you don’t even need to skate. We have plenty of people that fill support roles and are considered full members of the team.” And, for those who think that roller derby died out with wide lapels and disco balls, it is alive and well and represented internationally. “It still feels like a small community, though, because we know skaters from countries all over the world like Australia,” McClellan said. “There is an international derby cup and the Rose City Rollers in Portland have won it three times in the last four years.” One of the few requirements to join the Derby Dames is that skaters are at least 18 years old. There was a junior league in the works when the pandemic hit. “Right now, we don’t quite have the resources to start it back up again,” McClellan said. “But there’s a lot of interest from the community so we’re hoping to get our juniors back on the track at some point soon.” The Derby Dames currently practice every Tuesday at 6 pm. For more information, go to @ tillamookrollerderby on Facebook. You can also check out the dames skating in the Garibaldi Days parade on Saturday, July 25.

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Hellcat Sticky Pockets Splat! Octopussy Carnage À Trois BREWtal Booty Scraper Brigade Skid Vicious Radd Pittstains (Coach) CaTty WompAss Dances with Wheels


get out!

Looking forward to some Gray days T

here’s no threat of seasickness during the ninth annual Summer Whale Watch Weekend, being held on land in Depoe Bay on Saturday, July 31, and Sunday, Aug. 1. Hosted by the Oregon Chapter of the American Cetacean Society, volunteer members and certified naturalists will be on hand from 10 am to 1 pm each day at Boiler Bay State Park to help you watch for whales and other wildlife and provide information on whales, dolphins, porpoises and their habitats. The most frequently observed cetaceans along the Oregon Coast are Gray whales. Learn about the Pacific Coast feeding group of Gray whales and the myth of resident whales. Whales are facing many threats and some species and populations are on the verge of extinction. Learn how you can make a difference wherever you live

in the world. Watching from shore means you can observe the whales in their natural habitat without disturbing them, but feel free to pepper the volunteers with questions, such as the big one: what exactly is a cetacean? Other questions they are prepared to answer include: what are the differences between a dolphin and porpoise? What is baleen? What whales, dolphins and porpoises are found off the Oregon Coast? What do they eat and what eats them? What are the threats affecting them? And most importantly, what can I do to help? The American Cetacean Society was founded in 1967 to protect whales, dolphins, porpoises and their habitats through public education, research grants and conservation actions. For more information, go to www. acsonline.org or call 541-517-8754.

Michelle Dienee Carlon, Broker licensed in the state of Oregon 541-205-1425 • mcarlon@bhhsnw.com • www.michelledieneecarlon.com

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COAST CALENDAR COAST CALENDAR Friday, July 16

Saturday, July 17

Daytime Find unique gift ideas, one-of-a-kind crafts and handmade goods from Oregon vendors at the Specialty Farmers Market & Artisan Faire. 11 am-5 pm in the Salishan Marketplace, 7760 NW Highway 101, Gleneden Beach. Plus live music from the Foulweather String Band, 11 am to 2 pm.

Daytime Newport Farmers Market offers 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 just off Highway 101 next to Newport City Hall.

Daytime The Manzanita Farmers Market has new digs at Underhill Plaza. 4-7 pm, Manzanita Avenue & Division Street.

Daytime Find unique gift ideas, one-of-a-kind crafts and handmade goods from Oregon vendors at the Specialty Farmers Market & Artisan Faire. 10 am-4 pm in the Salishan Marketplace, 7760 NW Highway 101, Gleneden Beach, three miles south of Lincoln City.

Daytime Get great deals while supporting the South Tillamook County Library at this thrift store sale, featuring the $1 rack. Cash or check only. 11 am to 4 pm, Thursday through Saturday, 6330 Ferry Street, across from the Grateful Bread in Pacific City. Live Music Ronnie Jay Pirrello — Bluesy stuff with guitar, harp and vocals. 5-7:30 pm, Luna Sea of Seal Rock, 10111 NW Hwy. 101, Seal Rock, 541-563LUNA.

Daytime The place to be for fresh produce, find Neskowin Farmers Market at its new location on the corner of Highway 101 and Summit Road, across from the Neskowin Beach Wayside. 9 am-1 pm.

Live Music da Boyz — Come groove with Eric Levine on vocals and guitar and Jim Hobbs on guitar. 4:30-7 pm, at Luna Sea of Seal Rock, 10111 NW Hwy. 101, Seal Rock, 541563-LUNA.

Live Music Cook & Colt Duo — Classic rock and blues. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Daytime Commander Salamander’s Super Circus Sideshow presents circus, sideshow and Wild West stunts. $5. 11 am, noon, 1 pm, 2 pm 3 pm and 4 pm, Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays, Primaltones Community Venue and Didjeridu Gallery, 2925 SE Ferry Slip Road, Newport. Evening Karaoke continues, with local host Doctor B. Have a great time and support a small, local venue. 8:30 pm-midnight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd., Newport. Live Music Cosmic Strings — This husband-and-wife duo spin love and peace into their folksy tunes. Call for reservations. 7-9 pm, Schooner Restaurant & Lounge, 2065 Netarts Basin Boat Road, Tillamook, 503-815-9900.

Cof ASES CASh

Daytime Unity by the Sea Spiritual Center holds its Grand Re-opening today, with meditation at 10:45 am followed by a service at 11 am. 1922 NE 17th Street, Lincoln City. FMI, call 541-418-0345. Daytime It’s Jazz Jam Session time at Beachcrest, featuring the house rhythm section: Gregory Ernst on guitar, Greg Berton on bass, and Sandy Schaefer on drums/vibes. 4-6:30 pm, Beachcrest Brewing Company at Salishan, 7755 N. Highway 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-234-4013. Live Music Richard Sharpless — Retired from his days of playing in Nashville, Sharpless plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Highway 101 North, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Evening Karaoke continues, with local host Doctor B. Have a great time and support a small, local venue. 8:30 pmmidnight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd., Newport.

Live Music Join DJ Metal Mix and the Ultrasonic Events crew for a socially distanced lounge experience. 9 pm-1:30 am in the Convention Center, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665.

Daytime Set up on the front lawn, the Lincoln City Farmers Market offers homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-2 pm, Lincoln City Cultural Center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www.lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

Live Music Fox and Bones — Head to the Beachcrest beer tent for music reminiscent of ’70s songwriters like Simon and Garfunkel, Cat Stevens and Fleetwood Mac with a modern bluesy/new retro twist. 6-8 pm, Beachcrest Brewing Company at Salishan, 7755 N. Highway 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-234-4013. Live Music Buffalo Kitty — Jazz swing and soft rock courtesy of the house band. Kitty’s Food & Spirits, 7:30 pm(ish), 204 1/2 Main Avenue, Tillamook, 503-354-2463.

Live Music John Shipe — Spend an evening with this acoustic guitarist-vocalist from Eugene. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Highway 101 North, Yachats.

Sunday, July 18

Evening John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John hit the high notes as the Bijou Theatre’s summer drive-in series continues with “Grease.” 9 pm at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. Tickets, $25 per carload, includes large popcorn, available at the Bijou, 1624 NE Hwy. 101.

Live Music Join DJ Metal Mix and the Ultrasonic Events crew for a socially distanced lounge experience. 9 pm-1:30 am in the Convention Center, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665.

Play Wednesdays for a cut of $5000 CASH! drawings 7pm • 8pm • 9pM ON JULY 28, 2021

“It’s Better at the Beach!” • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwinds.com 10 oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 10 •• oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • June 26, 2020

Tuesday, July 20

Evening The Death Cafe offers a place to drink tea or coffee and eat cake while talking about the tricky subject of death. Facilitated by Death Doula Crystal Akins. 5 pm, Driftwood Public Library, 801 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City. To register, contact Crystal Meneses at EmbraceDeathDoulaCare@ gmail.com or text 503-358-6143. Live Music Buffalo Kitty — Jazz swing and soft rock courtesy of the house band. Kitty’s Food & Spirits, 7:30 pm(ish), 204 1/2 Main Avenue, Tillamook, 503-354-2463.

Thursday, July 22

Daytime Shop till you drop at Toledo Waterfront Market, with craft vendors, fresh produce and a food court. 10 am-3 pm, Memorial Field, 385 NW A Street, Toledo. FMI, call 541-336-5207.

Live Music Steve Cook — Classic ballads and love songs form the ’60s and early ’70s and some old blues classics. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Wednesday, July 21 Daytime Presented by The Elisabeth Jones Art Center, “For the Seventh Generation” is a half-milelong pano-mural, made up of hundreds of paintings of the entire western coastline of the United States. Free. 11 am-7 pm Wednesday to Friday; 11 am to 5 pm Saturday, outdoors at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994.

Daytime Do your midweek veggie stock up at the Corvus Landing produce stand. 11 am-2 pm, behind Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital, 3043 NE 28th Street, Lincoln City. Evening A free program of poetry and readings inspired by the pano-mural art exhibit “For the Seventh Generation.” Free. 6 pm in the auditorium at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, 540 NE Hwy. 101.

Monday, July 19

Live Music Jazz vocalist Annie Averre and guitarist Attila Csikos perform originals and public domain songs, with a sound influenced by jazz, folk and blues. 5-8 pm on the outdoor patio of The Coffee House, 156 SW Bay Blvd., Newport.

Daytime Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. 10 am to 2 pm, Driftwood Public Library, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City. FMI, call 541-557-9400.

Live Music Swing by the Toledo Eagles for open jam night. 6 pm, 161 SE 2nd Street, Toledo. Live Music Dave Cowden — Top-40 classic rock from the ’50s to the ’80s. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Live Music Lavinia Ross — Lavinia sings songs from sources as varied as Joni Mitchell, Kate Wolf and Peter Rowan, as well as her own compositions. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Highway 101 North, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Live Music Ian Smith — Folk, originals and covers. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Evening Karaoke continues, with local host Doctor B. Have a great time and support a small, local venue. 8:30 pm-midnight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd., Newport.

FREE ENTRY | $3500 in prizes | DOUBLE POINTS 6-11pm Register at a promotional kiosk beginning at 5pm.

JULY 22 | 6pm-10pm “It’s Better at the Beach!” • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwinds.com oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 11 oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • June16, 26,2021 2020 •• 10


artsy

Create something to crow about

T

hose who have had the good fortune to enter the artistic realm of the Crow's Nest Gallery and Studio in Toledo, have found a place of unusually rich imagination and ability. Two summer classes in July invite kids and adults try their hand at some creativity, too; beginning with the free Fairy House Workshop on Saturday, July 17. In collaboration with the Toledo Public Library, the festive afternoon of fairy fun will begin with children’s librarian Miss Denyse reading “Come One Come All to the Fairy Ball” by Sarah Gayle Strickland. The book tells the tale of someone accidentally invited to a fairy ball and is targeted to anyone who has ever built a fairy house and wondered what the fairies do when you are not there to watch them. Next, the story will be used as inspiration to build fairy houses with help from artist Janet Runger, founder of Crow’s Nest Gallery. All materials will be provided and families will also go home with a copy of the book, which includes activity ideas and blank pages for adding your own artwork to the story. Though the event will be held at the Crow’s Nest,

Families will go home with a copy of the book, “Come One Come All to the Fairy Ball” by Sarah Gayle Strickland as well as whatever they create in the fairy house workshop.

12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 16

registration is required and can be completed in person at the library, located at 173 NW 7th Street, or by calling 541-336-3132. Next up, on Sunday, July 25, bigger kids will have a chance to create interesting, wearable jewelry creations. The class is an introduction to soldering, taught by jewelry artist Laura VanLandingham. Soldering is the process of joining metal parts together by heating an alloy that melts at a lower temperature than the metals being joined. Instructions will cover the basic steps, then you can choose any of the class suggestions or you can create something of your own design. Basic materials will be provided including a soldering gun, solder, flux, pliers, copper tape and tiles. Because some supplies, like the soldering guns, are limited, please bring your own if you have them. You are also welcome to bring materials that you would like to use for creating your jewelry: glass, metal, shells, pottery shards — anything except plastic and paper. Other usable objects will be available for sale at the gallery. The class fee is $60. The fairy house event is from 1 to 3 pm and the jewelry class is from 1 to 4 pm, both held at the Crow’s Nest, 305 N. Main Street. For more information, email janet.runger@gmail.com or call 541-207-8088.


THE WALDPORT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHARITY GOLF TOURNAMENT 2021 Presented by Wave Broadband

SATURDAY, AUGUST 14 9-Hole Tournament Shotgun Start at 10 am Lunch & Awards Ceremony to Follow Playing Spots are $50 each CRESTVIEW GOLF CLUB

Sprinkle a little joy into your day at Hawk Creek Cafe! Sit out on our large open deck and enjoy fresh cooked meals like our Shrimp Melt or Mushroom Truffle Ravioli. Sip on a spiked slushie or one of our local beers on tap and finish it all off with an ice cream from The Village Scoop — our beloved vintage ice cream truck — open 12-8 pm Sunday through Thursday, 12-9 pm Friday and Saturday. See you there! 4505 Salem Ave, Neskowin • 503-392-4400 • cafeonhawkcreek.com

Proceeds benefit local businesses, community events and our friends at ABCA.

CONTACT TOM FULLMER FOR TICKETS, SPONSORSHIPS AND VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES. 503-789-9686 • director@waldportchamber.org Chamber Welcome Center & Gift Shop is open every day from 11 am-3 pm, 585 NW Hemlock Street, Waldport findyourselfinwaldport.com oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 • 13 17


artsy

Walking 'bout my generation F

or four special days, the lawn of the Lincoln City Cultural Center will become an outdoor art gallery and the epicenter of a coastal conservation project, when a nearly half-mile long pano-mural brightens the grounds from Wednesday, July 21, through Saturday, July 24. “For the Seventh Generation: A Community of Coastal Watchers” is a long-term project first envisioned two decades ago. It aims to create a system of ocean observers, “so that any untoward action on the ocean or its accompanying landscape will not go unnoticed.” Each year, painters in California, Oregon and Washington are invited to choose a mile to revisit and paint. “This gives the artist the opportunity to intellectually and emotionally connect with the land” said project leader John Teply, “and to take the role of both sentinel and chronicler of a specific ocean location. The resulting freestanding pano-mural, made up of landscape paintings that are two feet tall and four feet wide, is getting longer every year. This summer, while on display outdoors at the Cultural Center, it will be displayed on fencing installed throughout the cultural center lawn. A collection of other large landscapes will be exhibited in the center’s Hallway Gallery. When you visit the “For the Seventh Generation”

pano-mural, you can start your walk in Tijuana, passing by the Huntington Beach Pier, San Francisco Bay, Cascade Head, Haystack Rock, Astoria Bridge and Puget Sound before ending your trek with a view of the Peace Arch on the Canada border. Teply calls his project “A Visual State of the Ocean Address.” “Perhaps each of us has a favorite spot along the coast,” he said. “Looking out over it, we may find ourselves asking, ‘will it survive?’ The ocean is continually under threat. Pollution, coastal development and over-fishing all tax the health of its finite system. Without our strong environmental conscience and a voice to express it, threats to the ocean will be left unchallenged and its health subject to the whims and manipulations of politics and industry. This project provides such a voice.” This free coastal community event is co-sponsored by the Elisabeth Jones Art Center and the Surfrider Foundation with generous contributions from Chinook Winds Casino Resort and The Bijou Theatre. "For the Seventh Generation” pano-mural will be open to the public from 11 am to 7 pm on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday and from 11 am to 5 pm on Saturday, at the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101. For more information, go to lincolncityculturalcenter.org or call 541-994-9994.

Art and ocean lovers are also invited to these free, associated programs: For the Seventh Generation Spoken Word: Hear poetry, prose and other spoken word submissions on the coast, the ocean and conservation. 6 pm on Thursday, July 22, in the cultural center auditorium. Film Festival: A 90-minute juried collection of videos about connecting to place, inspired by specific beach locations along the Pacific Coast. 11 am on Friday, July 23, at the Bijou Theatre, 1624 NE Hwy. 101. Oceans Festival Art Picnic: Live music, food trucks and artmaking on the last day of the outdoor art exhibit. Noon to 5 pm on Saturday, July 24, at the cultural center.

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021


potpourri

Natalie Schaefer

Time for a little gala-vanting Tickets are now on sale for the annual North Lincoln Hospital Foundation Summer Gala – this year held virtually, and free, on Saturday, Aug. 28. The gala will feature a mixture of live and pre-recorded moments including a welcome by hospital CEO Lesley Ogden, MD, and the foundation’s new executive director, Natalie Schaefer. You’ll recognize friends from the community and will witness the emotional story about a local woman whose life was saved, thanks to the hospital’s emergency services and high-tech diagnostic imaging. Along with the free virtual gala, the weekend of activities includes the 25th Annual Charity Golf Scramble, being held this year in honor of Ann Butler, a longtime and devoted member of the foundation’s board of trustees. The scramble will be held Friday, Aug. 27, at Salishan Coastal Lodge & Resort, with a shotgun start at 1:30 pm. “While I am new to the community, I have quickly learned how important this hospital is to the wellbeing of residents as well as visitors,” Schaefer said. “The foundation has been instrumental in raising funds in support of health care services, and Ann Butler has been a driving force on the board that oversees these efforts. For this reason, we invite and welcome everyone to attend the Summer Gala, the golf scramble or both.” Proceeds from this year’s event will support the new MRI building project, being constructed directly adjacent to the hospital. To attend the gala, which begins at 5 pm, guests will need a mobile device or computer with audio. Registration is required. For more information, go to samhealth.org/NLHFGala or call 503-780-8737.

It’s all fore the kids Neighbors For Kids will hold its 12th Annual Kids Zone Classic Charity Golf Tournament on Saturday, July 17, at Chinook Winds Golf Course in Lincoln City. There will be a 9 am shotgun start with a foursome scramble format. The entry fee is $400 per foursome, or $100 per individual golfer. The cost covers green fees, golf cart, breakfast snacks, executive box lunch, goody bag and opportunities for contests, silent auction, awards and prizes. All golfers get a chance on hole 18 to make a holein-one and win a brandnew Jeep Cherokee. All of the proceeds from this fundraising event will go toward NFK’s programs to support children and families living on the Oregon Coast. Since March 2020, NFK has responded to hunger and

food instability in the local community with weekly “picnic baskets,” which provided healthy, kid-friendly meals and fun enrichment activities. The organization also sponsored a program providing kids with five days’ of freshly prepared breakfasts and lunches. Each week, thanks to an ODE-Farm to School grant, staff distributed enrichment supplies, ingredients and cooking projects that taught kids about Oregon agriculture, health, culinary arts and gardening. In addition to continuing picnic basket efforts, in February NFK re-opened the Little Kids Zone Preschool for ages three to five; this was the first in-person program back on site in the Depoe Bay facility. In mid-June, NFK launched a summer day camp for school-age kids which will operate until late August. For more information, or to sign up to play golf in the tournament, go to www.neighborsforkids.org or call 541961-7985.

oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 •19 15


Crossword

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

Last Week’s Answers:

com/learning/xwords.

ANSWERS: 1. Monkey bars. 2. Handlebars. 3. Candy bars (chocolate bars). 4. Stars and Bars. 5. Parallel bars. 6. Chin-up (pull-up) bars. 7. Color bars. 8. Behind bars. 9. Gold bars.

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 16

8/12

PH.D. LEVEL 7. These barriers limit interactions between different races. 8. This two-word expression means “in jail.” 9. These bars may be held by central banks or traded by investors.

7 4 2 6 9 8 5 1 3

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Three-word term for the first Confederate flag. 5. Gymnastic equipment consisting of two horizontal bars set at the same height. 6. These home-gym bars may be doorway mounted, ceiling mounted or free-standing.

3 8 6 1 7 5 9 2 4

FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Children play on these playground structures of poles and bars. 2. They are used to steer a bicycle. 3. Kit Kat, Milky Way and Snickers are examples.

2021 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

SUPER QUIZ Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: ALL KINDS OF “BARS” (e.g., Bars patronized especially by people who are unmarried. Answer: Singles bars.)

8/12

5 9 1 2 3 4 8 6 7

S T E A K

Difficulty Level

1 2 9 4 5 7 3 8 6

B R A D

E R S

9 5 6

3 8 9

4 6 3 8 2 1 7 9 5

O V E R P A S S E S

5 2 1

8 7 5 9 6 3 1 4 2

R A D I O N O I S E

1

2 3 8 7 1 6 4 5 9

C R O S S

R I G H T

8 4 2

6 1 7 5 4 9 2 3 8

A L A S

6 7 9

8

9 5 4 3 8 2 6 7 1

C O M E

5 1 4

5 3 8

8 4 6

Difficulty Level

S L I M

28 Flotsam and Jetsam in “The Little Mermaid”

No. 0623

47 What a QR code 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 at a restaurant might link to 13 14 15 16 48 Verdant 29 Crusty piece of 17 18 19 bread 49 Digs 20 21 22 23 51 Most desirable, 31 Stick up say, as a ripe 24 25 26 27 34 The Lorax’s final peach word 55 “Can it!” 28 29 30 31 32 33 36 ___ Duncan, 57 Where Boxing Obama education 34 35 36 37 Day comes secretary before Christmas, 38 39 40 41 in brief? 37 Musician Yoko 58 Ill 42 43 44 45 38 Hollywood’s Dwayne Johnson, 59 Jiffy 46 47 48 with “the” 61 Underwater ecosystems 39 Like the blood of 49 50 51 52 53 54 a universal donor 63 Cooling 55 56 57 58 succulent 41 Tech that enables 64 It may be taken 59 60 61 62 contactless in protest credit card 63 64 65 65 Start of a saying payments about staying fit 66 67 68 42 Neither’s partner 66 Lairs 43 Wedge, e.g. 67 Is the pope PUZZLE BY KATE HAWKINS Catholic? 44 Loquacious 68 Adam who 10 Fleeting romantic 32 “Roger that, 52 Good things to 46 Bit of water or directed “The Big interest strike boss!” snow equipment Short” 11 Give feedback on 33 Corpus 53 Actress Vergara Yelp, maybe TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 34 Locales for some DOWN 54 Quick to snap 12 Fall short Grecian art 1 Malware, often A B R A P T A F T 15 “Beats me!” 55 Lone 35 Cozy place T A A L A O B O E 2 “Curiosity killed 19 It may turn at a 40 Thither the cat,” e.g. E D Z I T T O R E 56 One providing station a ride at a fair, 41 Farrier’s tool E S O H E A V E N 3 Author of maybe 22 Shift blame to “Jurassic Park” I G E R S S L E W 43 Strike hard, in someone else the Bible L G A E Y E B A R 4 Who wrote “To 59 Tricked 25 Nerdy sort Helen” and “For L H E A R T O R O 45 Like the same Annie” 60 French word B O W L S S A N A 26 “Get it together!” old same old between two 5 Ambles … or a hint to the A R E A P A R E D 50 Hiding soldiers in names highlighted letters 6 Support structure T I S N Y E D D S the Trojan horse and such 62 “Exit” key A E N T E R S 7 Not in the closet 30 ’Fore O N E S L H E L L 8 Muscat’s For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20and per more minute;than or, with7,000 credit card, Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle past 1-800E A R L E A G U E sultanate 814-5554. (Or, just wait for next week’s TODAY.) puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). O D D E R R O R S 9 Actor John or Share tips:and nytimes.com/puzzleforum. for young solvers: nytimes. N E S D A I S E S Sean Read about comment on eachCrosswords puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay.

ACROSS 1 Plays for time, in a way 6 Word repeated by Hamlet before “solid flesh” 9 Hairstyle for Audre Lorde 13 Bozo 14 13th-century Persian mystic who is one of the best-selling poets in the U.S. 16 Cookout side dish 17 Mario Kart contestant 18 The Aggies of the Mountain West Conference 20 “Blech!” 21 Black ___ 23 Indigenous 24 Decorative items washed up on the beach 27 Meal accompaniment at a trattoria

ANSWER

Edited by Will Shortz

2021 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green


Lincoln City Farmers and Crafters Market 9-2 every Sunday at the Lincoln City Cultural aCenter! t the Produce Plants • Sauces Baked Goods Crafts

Friday, 11am - 5 pm

Specialty t e k r a M s r e Farm e r i a F n a s i t and Ar

Plus live music from the Cape Foulweather String Band, 11 am-2 pm

Saturday, 10 am - 4 pm

Face masks are required No pets allowed

At the Salishan Marketplace on Hwy 101 South of Lincoln City Weather permitting

Please check our Facebook page for the latest updates

Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi

Date Low Tides

ired u q re ce sks distan a m ial ts soc no pe

Thurs., July 15 Fri., July 16 Sat., July 17 Sun., July 18 Mon., July 19 Tues., July 20 Wed., July 21 Thurs., July 22

11:06 am 11:51 am 12:54 am 2:03 am 3:10 am 4:13 am 5:10 am 6:03 am

-0.2 0.5 1.8 1.1 0.3 -0.4 -1.1 -1.7

H igh Tides

11:48 pm --- 12:42 pm 1:40 pm 2:43 pm 3:49 pm 4:51 pm 5:50 pm

2.2 -- 1.2 1.9 2.5 2.9 3.0 2.9

4:41 am 5:40 am 6:50 am 8:09 am 9:33 am 10:53 am 12:02 pm 1:01 pm

--- 12:01 pm 12:48 pm 1:42 pm 2:44 pm 3:50 pm 4:54 pm 5:54 pm

-- 0.5 1.0 1.5 1.9 2.2 2.3 2.2

4:10 am 5:12 am 6:28 am 7:56 am 9:25 am 10:43 am 11:47 am 12:41 pm

11:26 pm --- 12:10 pm 1:04 pm 2:06 pm 3:12 pm 4:16 pm 5:16 pm

2.5 -- 1.5 2.3 2.9 3.3 3.4 3.3

4:01 am 5:03 am 6:19 am 7:47 am 9:16 am 10:34 am 11:38 am 12:32 pm

--- 12:11 pm 1:00 pm 1:56 pm 2:59 pm 4:04 pm 5:06 pm 6:05 pm

-- 0.6 1.2 1.9 2.5 2.8 2.9 2.8

4:42 am 5:43 am 6:55 am 8:13 am 9:33 am 10:48 am 11:56 pm 12:54 pm

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City

Date Low Tides

Thurs., July 15 Fri., July 16 Sat., July 17 Sun., July 18 Mon., July 19 Tues., July 20 Wed., July 21 Thurs., July 22

11:18 am 12:04 am 1:13 am 2:23 am 3:31 am 4:32 am 5:29 am 6:21 am

0.0 1.7 1.3 0.8 0.3 -0.3 -0.8 -1.1

Date Low Tides

10:40 am 11:23 am 12:35 am 1:45 am 2:53 am 3:54 am 4:51 am 5:43 am

0.0 0.7 2.0 1.2 0.4 -0.4 -1.1 -1.6

Date Low Tides

11:28 am 12:08 am 1:13 am 2:21 am 3:28 am 4:31 am 5:29 am 6:23 am

0.0 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.3 -0.4 -1.0 -1.4

5.6 5.1 4.6 4.3 4.4 4.6 5.0 5.3

5:41 pm 6:22 pm 7:07 pm 7:56 pm 8:48 pm 9:42 pm 10:37 pm 11:31 pm

5.8 6.1 6.4 6.7 7.0 7.3 7.5 7.6

H igh Tides

Alsea Bay, Waldport Thurs., July 15 Fri., July 16 Sat., July 17 Sun., July 18 Mon., July 19 Tues., July 20 Wed., July 21 Thurs., July 22

7.2 7.5 7.8 8.2 8.5 8.9 9.1 --

H igh Tides

Yaquina Bay, Newport Thurs., July 15 Fri., July 16 Sat., July 17 Sun., July 18 Mon., July 19 Tues., July 20 Wed., July 21 Thurs., July 22

7.0 6:02 pm 6.4 6:45 pm 5.8 7:32 pm 5.5 8:23 pm 5.5 9:17 pm 5.7 10:13 pm 6.2 11:09 pm 6.6 ---

7.2 6.6 6.0 5.6 5.7 6.0 6.5 6.9

5:32 pm 6:13 pm 6:58 pm 7:47 pm 8:39 pm 9:33 pm 10:28 pm 11:22 pm

7.6 7.9 8.3 8.7 9.1 9.4 9.7 9.9

H igh Tides

6.3 5.8 5.3 5.0 4.9 5.1 5.4 5.7

5:59 pm 6:42 pm 7:28 pm 8:18 pm 9:10 pm 10:05 pm 11:00 pm 11:54 pm

6.4 6.7 7.0 7.4 7.7 8.0 8.2 8.3

Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov.

oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 •21 17


www.88grainsasianbar.com 541-418-5361 Tues-Thurs 12-7 •Friday 4-9 Saturday 12-9 • Sunday 12-8 4660 SE Hwy 101, Lincoln City

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Have a ball 6119 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR 97367 info@freedgallery.com 541-994-5600 www.freedgallery.com

Garibaldi Days promises a weekend of music, food and fun

W

hen Garibaldi city councilors voted to move forward with the annual Garibaldi Days event, they decided to float it as a “Lite” version. But things don’t always go as planned. “What started out as something small just keeps getting bigger,” said Laura Schmidt, tourism and events specialist. “We’re now looking at an event with a very full schedule.” Beginning at noon on Friday, July 23, and lasting until 4 pm on Sunday, July 25, more than 30 vendors will be set up in the middle of town. The event reaches its zenith on Saturday, July 24, with the 61st annual parade. “We close down Highway 101 for the parade,” Schmidt said. “We have over 40 entries already, so it’s going to be a good one.”

22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 18

Starting at 1 pm, the Fire Department vs. Coast Guard Water Ball fights begin, so prepare to get wet. The action-packed day closes with a firework display at dusk. Also on Saturday will be street performers entertaining the crowds beginning at 1 pm and lasting until about 6 pm. Performers include the bluegrass band Mojo Holler, singer Elena Sheldon and “the coast’s best bagpiper.” For all three days, three restaurants in town, Kelly’s Place, Portside Bistro and the Ghost Hole Public Place, will be participating with beer gardens and live music. For more information, go to visitgaribaldi. com.


Cancer care with close-to-home convenience When it comes to cancer care, we are here for you with many high‑quality services offered in Lincoln City and Newport.

OUTDOOR EXHIBIT OF LANDSCAPE PAINTINGS

JULY 21-24

• Hematology and oncology. • Lab. • Infusion. • Imaging.

Wander your way up the Pacific Coast, as seen through the eyes of artists in California, Oregon and Washington. “For the Seventh Generation” is a panomural, featuring hundreds of paintings, stretching nearly half a mile across the LCCC grounds ˜ FREE SPECIAL EVENTS ˜

INDOOR EXHIBIT IN THE LCCC HALLWAY POETRY SLAM: Thursday, July 22, 6 pm OCEANS FESTIVAL ART PICNIC: Noon-5 pm, Saturday, July 24 Plein Air Painting, Live Music & Food Trucks

Samaritan Hematology & Oncology Consultants Lincoln City & Newport 833-222-5600 | samhealth.org/Cancer

540 NE U.S. 101, LINCOLN CITY • 541-994-9994 LINCOLNCITY-CULTURALCENTER.ORG

CASCADE HEAD SCENIC AREA

Live the magic on the Oregon Coast! This rare property is in a conservation forest high above the Salmon River with glorious views and abundant natural light. Large single level home with hardwood floors and many recent improvements. Very private but only 15 minutes to town. MLS#21-900 • $950,000

Gail Stonebreaker Principal Broker Cell 541-992-4317 Office 541-764-3323

Distinctive Coastal Properties

A new concept in women’s fashion from your friends from Converge, combining curated boutique, vintage and resale women’s apparel all under one roof.

Come flourish with us! At the Lincoln City Outlets • 541-614-4046

25% OFF ENTIRE PURCHASE with coupon expires 07/21/21

oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 •23 19


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July 16 & 17 9:30pm, $15 Tickets available at our Box Office. Buy by phone at 1-888-624-6228 or online at chinookwinds.com. Doors open at 9pm with a no-host bar. 21 years old and older.

chinookwinds.com • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK 24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com • oregoncoasttoday • july 16, 2021 20


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