V k a i V ili It < A S < A I »I A l l >S i *«« > ji < i A « (« lie « • C oJteclfck« • C 4 t* M a x im u m B ro w s a b lllty l B o c k r o o m b o o k s to r e p rin ts a r , d a rt • KXW UUtft OO Arcadia Tc«Dua» ftsriaaus ffTDiTXXSUMSBO Wt StA'I I W* ah K oo a oxu fUMibs I HMOCMSKH f 43W r3iw LOCKI'KMQ l&RO MQU T » i« ’ The Nestucca River runs out of the h ills where it originates in the Coast Range, a rugged, ovec-lug^d stretch of h ills that sits along the northern quadrant of Oregon between the Willamette Valley and the sea Some folks have called the Coast Range a "sacr if ice jone* for the timber industry, yet even so the area s till contains some magnificent scenery, trees and waterways that s till allow salmon to make the ir way home to fam iliar spawning grounds year after year Alarmed about dropping fish populations and dwindling natural habitat, environmentalists and sportspeople have overseen the enforcement of some regulations that have curtailed lugging and fishing in the area Yet others see this area as a potential tourist mecca. or as the ground on which dollars for e weak local economy may be generated The Nestucca is only one of the numerous riv e rs that flow out of the Coast Rsngr along this stretch of Oregon, but it is one of the larger , and it is especially popular (or its sport fishing and natural beauty Several years ago, Tillamook County and the U S Department of Tr anspor tat ion got together around a road project that would rebuild and widen a piece ot roadway that runs along the Nestucca River east of the tin y community of Beaver , into the Suislaw National Forest daep in the Coast Range h ills The funds would come in the form of a grant to the county to improve local roads which lead into national forest land L ittle was said about the proposed project, although some folks in the a r « opposed it from the onset Their protests seamed to fall on deaf ears The project was to involve reconstruction of approximately seven and a half miles of roadway, the cost of the project was estimated at some 8 4 m illio n dollars The work would be completed in two phases In the summer of 1993, despite lawsuits pending and environmental impact questions unresolved, the firs t phase of the project was begun on a stretch between ten and fourteen miles aapt o< Beaver At this p o in t, with that piece s till not completed, numerous problems have been encountered, and all the money is spent The Tillamook County Commissioners want to make this winding scenic byway into a b ig -tim e highway acroos the mountains If three unfinished miles have cost over eight m illio n dollars, not to mention the devastation to the h ills and r iv e r , whet do they think another fo rty or so miles w ill mean9 In 19 92 , a friend and l purchased a tract of land which fronts along the Nestucca River for approximately a thousand yards at the beginning of the proposed project site We were never informed about the road construction plans, so the letter suggesting that survey crews would be in the area came as a su rprise, not quite so surprising, unfortunately, came the realisation that even though the letter had stated - C GiO/tear safj tb/y ( would happen 9 j • -.If l 3 , * '»r p'/z f to w n • • .they start to tbrtjet _ Just Utf/e thing; O f ir s t but F0n.6ET.fF PONT DO t h a ,.—, 1» ■ —........ " emember M ushy one Writer, you know M ushy? bear i W eats s o ft onyvuay Mushy started f o s tu ff and one he Couldn't fin d • A lm o s t- frr: on op . ,Jiu5wyf Ob well... $ec... t ? that permission would be asked before entering our property, nothing of the sort took place thelolluw ing was my reaction the morning last August when that even, took place 'Who do you think you are, crashing in like this w ith machetes, theodolytes and your funny-colored plastic rib b o n 9 " "Why, we re with the gover nmen,, me am ’ Maybe that explanation was supposed to provide a viable excuse tor whatever mayhem they wanted to create Don t know why any one hasn , talked w ith you. the county should have ' "Your letter said someone from your o utfit would gjk permission to enter our property W e ll. here you are on it and nobod, asked W ell, uh, they should have We re just doin our job This is only a proposal, anyway, somebody'll be out to negotiate la te r, about buying the land and all * l see Well maybe i ll just go give somebody a call in the meantime fhe i^iyw h o signed that le tte r. he anybody you know9' "Oh yeah, that s a grad idea, ma am , they ve got it a ll up there Somebody up there 11 answer all your questions, just gtve em a c a ll'" Does this peaceful riv e r valley really need a fancier, wider road through it? Somebody 'up there has already decided it does When you ask them why9 ' they come up w ith a lot of nebulous explanations about logging tra ffic in the past (present9 ), helping out with county funds. added tra ff ic Never m ind that therr are seven winding substandard miles before one even gets to this proposed p ro ject. and on beyond, nothing but tores! service roads leading into the h ills to towns forty miles away And when w ill they stop'1 The questions only generate rh e to ric, no answers The real insult comes when nobody asks Nobody asked those of us who live up here it we wanted this road to be re b u ilt Nobody asked if they could tromp around on our land over there and stick stakes all over it w ith blue and white and orange ribbons on them Nobody asked us if we want to sell that property over there, the piece we just bought and gut surveyed and recorded less than a year ago. the part that buffers the riv e r and our place from the exist inq road with its noise and high spend trucks rum bling up and down to the firs t phase of the blasted road project four miles upstream What is it they presume, anyway', r iding around in their government owned wagons9 That the land is theirs to use as they please9 And I . because I have a deed registered in some courthouse someplace, pr esume ,t s mine The riv e r just keeps flowing on by, end only she knows the reel tru th I guess I didn t feel like being so tough, or I would have told that gover nment survey crew to get off my property u n til somebody asked permission and jsve me a good enough reason tor needing to be there Control Just a game of control That tacti might have worked for a minute or two, and made me feel vaguely powerful in the face ot a behemoth that dnesn, think much about J ¿unset ‘Dinner ¿ < rv « d 4;OO-5i3O p.m. ¿ u n d u y - ¿IJhursduY. except hotLin^s ‘ W a ln u t £* C r a n b e r r y ¿ t u | | c d C h ic k e n Hreasl af UuffeJ chicken. baked anti lapped wiih orange cream sauce SV 75 .* ' (g ro u n d ¿ lr ( o ln Tender ¡leak, ground and cooked lo perfection Served with mushroom Madiera sauce $8 75 j**, t v tb ih k m .. Cant remempt-r.. . . ¿ o ie a (a 1 W ayfarer OL l VPV --- Fresh Oregon tale ¡teamed and lopped with Hay shrimp A lob tier Hollandaise sauce $1025 4}eef tQouryul^non Something lo Preserve In that mad and broken lime we landed on this shore my while crash cousins ancestors of Gary Gilmore James WaU Jim Jones Diamond Jim a bloated tornado on that eastern seaboard We ripped this virgin girl with smallpox liquor the plow the cotton gin the handgun - my ancestors Flea market knights and barons of bathtub gin -* we split forest gods into toothpicks and sold you slum in dusty neon carnivals you never knew you wanted My Grand Da plundered paper and lost it all tong before I saw life and my uncles, fighting for the freedom to commit ruination the only god th e y bowed to Tenderloin of beef sauteed with mushrooms, garlic, and red wine Tossed with pasta and served with garlic toast $V 50 S eafood l\e\v4mrtf Fresh seafood sauteed with garlic in a sherned mushroom cream sauce $11.75 ‘ pinners Include soup or sola J. choice of starch, veyeiahie of the day, and coffee, lea, or decaf. ‘¡Reservations ¿u^gesUd And now now after the smoke has cleared the chips have fallen and the babies they re stillborn now when the only smiles are thoee of cadavers in the woods, now when 1 must remember my obligation to love 1 stand on this far off western shore close to the water the last place to rip apart and ale hemal Lie into bank account securities now at last what s left of a tired and rapacious seed turns nflf* to stare stupid and ashamed to search dull and terrified to look praying for something there behind me to preserve ^ W a y fa re r - Q c e a n jr o n t ( D lnln0* 1190 ‘^Mctfk ‘J > . L>mnon‘Qeach 4 5 b -1 108 Kitzhaber ‘94 — Bill Cluaie 4800 S W Griffith Park Drive. Suite 300 Beaverton, Oregon 97005 the riv e r s tru th or mine, lust that somebod» said some bucks should be thrown this way and these guys were given a job assignment, and to get their paychecks they re doing it That s the ir tru th It the riv e r gets fu ll of s ilt and stops flowing, or the salmon stop coming up it to spawn, who knows what difference it w ill make in their private hearts at night, when they (ace the wall w ith just themselves and the dark9 The state owns the road, they say. and. w ell, the state says it owns the r iver too I only “own" up to the high water mar k if it's consider ad navigable, and it doesn't seem to matter that only a white water r aft would itere to take on these rocky shoals At one time, fifty years or so ago. before they logged out all the forest up above, drying out the land and devastating many ot the ftwder streams along the way, folks say it was Must have been a sight to behold bark then' By most standards it's one of the most picturesque riv e rs around today, except where the u priver projert has dug out streambeds and caused washes that made the river run red in the middle of the driest month of the year And it the State owns the road, and the State owns the r iv e r , which one comes firs t, in the scheme of things9 Would they' sacrifice this beautiful, p ris tin e r iv e r , the trees alongside h e r, the earth that bounds her. (or a bigger highway. seven miles ot brand new road in the middle of the woods, to help the c ity folks d rive (aster for a little while on their way to fish and litte r and leave campfires smoldering9 Don t get me wrong. I ve been one ot those, wanting ns bad as the next per son to find some p m r and quiet in one of those National Forest campgrounds Now i live tiere But even back then, I never really minded dr iving over rough roads or tr aveling a little more slowly to get to those spots, much nicer to see the riv e r left undrfi led once I got there Not like the mess up the road1 Looks like a war Tone up there, like tanks and a rtille ry have been blasting away' at the landscape for months, then ear thmovers brought in, try in g to cover up the chaos Then they have the audacity to spray putrid green stuff all over the reddish black soil, "instant grass", to pretend the whole thing won t wash away the firs t time it rams Streambeds have been disrupted, huqB chunks of embankment a rv a d out and moved, no living thing has been left undisturbed, bugs, people and a ll. and they s till haven't stopped the hillside from sliding down the way it has for eons, rig h t across their fancy new roadbed Some of the folks up there male a fuss to star t w ith, but it didn t stop the machines from cominq in and doing it anyway Other folks, whoever they may be, think the roed project brings them bucks, I suppose, although nobody that I can tell is really owning up to much Any way you cut it, the rive r doesn't win When my kids were small, we used to r eed a book about a tree that loved a little boy. and the little bay who thought he loved the tree, but the little boy just kept going to the tr« * and ask ing for more and more u n til one day he came and there was nothing left but a broad stump for the then-old man little boy to sit on and think about all he d lost Any guesses which one knew the most about the real meaning of the word Love9 Trees, and riv e rs , jus, give and give to all the little boys who come and ask for one more favo r, laboring under the delusion that they can make the trees and riv e rs come back the same as they were before all the asking star tod Just like you can't plant an old growth fores, and make it come bark , you sure as heck can I make a river run after you've plundered and polluted, maimed and bur led her The r iver keeps on giving and giving, a lesson in the k md of Love we al I need to k now a good deel more about But s till we can t get the message W ill we grow up and see before the riv e r is gone and all we have is an empty bed of rocks to sit beside and tell our children and grandchildren about9 Ah, the grand times we had here' How pretty the water looked when the sunlight shone Jus, so' And the ftsh , ha, 3wam here once, came home to lay I heir eggs so new ones could leave and re tu rn year after year' The lush fe rn s , ha, used grow along her bank s where the water lapped gently against the rocks' What w ill it take9 I wr ite this and choke back a large lump tha, rises in my chest, sits there, and pushes up the tear s that wait just behind my eyes The g rie f about what we re doinQ to the land, the trees, the riv e rs , a ll over this earth, is so overwhelming tha, i, mostly goes denied Who wants to feel it 9 If everybody did, there'd be so much weeping and raging going on all around there'd be no time to get the work done Those fellows on that survey crew, (to they ever get a wave of it. looking up from the numbers in their scopes and charts9 Or what about the workmen up above, wteldinq the ir huge machines while they rearrange the landscape in irre v e rs ib le ways, a landscape that was perfectly splendid before they came9 I'd like to think maybe some of them do The one fellow said, "We re lucky We get to leave before the Bad Boys move in " ( It's not e n tire ly clear which ones he was re fe rr mg to ) But if any of them fer I it, 1,'s not enough to stop them Government jobs, and contracts, are plums these days Road construction pays well too What w ill i, take9 Joyce L Cochran Blame, Oregon Fall 1993 It's better to debate a question without settling it than to settle a question without debating it. Joseph Joubert UFFLR LtfI Ibtt. MUCHIW I 7