FROM THE LOWER LEFT CORNER To Build A Fire...Or Not Victoria Stoppiello LUMIE JOHNSOM REAL ROTATE. Sunday morning, August 16th A day for a daydream. Cerulean blue skies, light airs, a whisper o f fall in the alder trees, a pending road trip culminating in a concert pairing two hero-legends o f the folk-stnng style, the Doc and the "Dawg." A convocation o f the usual desperates, the Brothers Logan, Uncle Dean Bonde and your Professor gathered together for our long anticipated pilgrimage to see the good doctor from North Carolina and his mandolin- frenzied crony, the "Dawg," David Gnsman. Lots o f doctors practice; few heal. Arthel "Doc" Watson possesses the musical prophylaxis and curative power necessaiy for curing the human spirit. The very air hummed electrically in 4,1 T lw io y s and I had parlayed together and decided by mutual consent, to follow a route that wound lazily through secondary roads to the French Praine area near Newburg where the concert would be held. We eschewed the freeways. Dashing to a Doc Watson concert on the jangle of freeways seemed sacrilege. In our minds we wanted to travel up the lazy river in the noonday sun. My mates were pnmed and ready. Someone brought a six-pack o f our favorite bailey-pop, a few road sodas for the pilgrimage. Chief Bonde had blessed the journey with his special shamanic offerings to the powers. The sun was in the heavens and all was right with the world. We traipsed and lolled our way slowly through the Coast Range, noting the latest toll on the forests o f the Tillamook Bum, indulging in tales o f what once was, revelling in good company and comradeship. Our path toward Newburg glanced off Highway 26 at Manning and meandered through farms and foothills, hawks in the air, sleepy thickets o f willow in the bottomland, fall com assembled like armies at attention, deserted ball diamonds in little towns like Banks and Carlton, an old dog shambling down a clover meadow. Our destination, specifically, was Champoeg State Park One hundred and fifty years ago, Champoeg was the site o f events important to Oregon and regional history. In the region called "French Prairie" (an area burned over by the Indians to keep down brush and shrub) on May 2,1843, Joe Meek, the infamous "Mountain Man," and a gathering o f rough and ready settlers, trappers, and French Canadian voyageurs gathered to decide if the region should remain allied with Great Britain and the Hudson Bay Co. or align itself with the United States as a territory, the "Oregon Country," that would include Oregon, Washington, Idaho and parts o f Montana and Wyoming. In accounts that have become somewhat apocryphal at this late date, 102 settlers gathered at Champoeg to decide the fate o f the region. By some accounts, a line was drawn on the ground. 50 settlers stood on the British side o f the line; 50 stood on the American. Two French-Canadians, Stephen Matthieu and Etienne Lucier, strode to the American side after some politicking by Meek. Oregon became a territory o f the United States. Travelling to this place o f legend to watch and listen to two legendary musical heroes seemed particularly meet and proper. Attending a concert featuring artists like Doc Watson and David Grisman is like visiting the Louvre. You've seen paintings in books, Titians, Turners, Rubens, Monets, but y n n 'v e never really seen them. It catches your breath. The magic transports you. "So that's it," you say to yourself. Watching and listening to Doc Watson and Grisman is that kind o f experience. The first time I listened to Doc Watson perform years ago, I was struck dumb. As a teenager, I just figured he must have had a much better guitar than anyone else had. Whew! When those fingers flew across the neck o f the guitar, I was mesmerized like a jackrabbit fixed by the headlights o f a car. After all these years, for both o f us, he still has that string magic par excellence. I have heard legions o f guitarists drag their Martins and Gibsons out o f the case and pick, but in my mind he has no peer. For those o f you who know me, few things bring me to tears. A good poem does it, a song certainly can. On this Sunday at Champoeg, when Doc, David Grisman and his quintet worked through the Kentucky Waltz, The Beaumount Rag, and Shady Grove, my eyes were more wet than dry. It's the best o f what we can be. Like Tiresias, Doc Watson is blind but can "see." I'm sorry if you missed it. His like only comes down this road once. ’ 7ll' F or A ll Y our R eal E state N elos like Mike'f b/kc <1- 0 Mike's Bike Shop Rentals • Repairs • Sales 24 years downtown, on Spruce Street 436-1266 (Out o f state inquiries, 800-492- 126b) THE LARGEST GROCERY STORE ~ IN CANNON BEACH! Come join us for dinner near the pounding surf at Laneda & Carmel ] in Manzanita G ourmet P izz A A selection o f OREGON WINES & fine BEERS always o n hand. Jfólavtnev Jfftavhet Over 5 ,0 0 0 fo o d Si. non food item s fe a tu rin g th e high est q u a lity fr e s h m eat Si fre sh produce. • Large selectio n o f drug store produ cts. Deli. Oregon Lottery • Video Si VCR rentals: over 1,000 videos. 503/368-5593. What’s the use of a house if one doesn’t have a tolerable planet to put it on. Henry Thoreau At Yuba Lake in the dry hills of southeastern Utah, sheep bleat in the background and a grebe's hoarse call nses from the water. Two boats have gone by, runabouts with fishermen. The campful of young people nearby is still quiet. They had a bonfire last night and therefore were seduced into slaying up late. My interest in campfires has steadily waned. I remember camping in Tuolumne meadows in \ oscmilc National Park 30 years ago. Being among the first few campers that early spring night, I was so afraid of bears that I insisted on having a fire all night. Of course, my fear wasn’t totally unfounded. A year or so later, a friend was snow camping in the Sierras and awoke in the middle of the night to see a bear literally walking over him in search of a late w inter snack. Thirteen years ago, however, my views had begun to shift. I irritated fellow backpackers when I resisted building a lire to fiy fresh trout. In the middle of an 85 degree day in the Steens Mountains of southeastern Oregon, already hot and irritable, I had a poorly articulated, multipurpose policy about camp tires: They should be employed only when needed to produce warmth and light, as well as a means of cooking. On that hot afternoon, we had plenty of heat and light without a campfire. We had a backpacker s stove with us, so we had a cooking alternative. We were camping in an arid region without abundant firewood. (ottonwixxl, aspen and sagebrush don’t bum well, and the chokechcrry and other hardwoods that grow there are sparse and slow growing. It would take the environment a very long time to reproduce the wood that we burned. I felt a fire was therefore a waste of fuel and an unjustified taking from our immediate environment. Nowadays, I’ve learned more and added even more reasons to my rationale. Dead and downed wood is the only wood truly cured enough to burn, but left on the forest floor it will slowly compost to provide nutrients to the plant community. Then there’s the problem ol global warming: All the combustion of fossil fuels from our vehicles, the emissions from coal-fired electricity generation, the slash and burn approach to rain forest agriculture—these are all contributing to the greenhouse gas layer that enhances global warming, then climate change, triggering larger and more powerf ul El Ninos. Ha! you say, my little lire is just a puff of emission compared with these global, industrial forces. However, am I any better than the person running the coal-fired plant at Hour Comers, the plant whose plume can be seen from space as a murky blotch? Am 1 not part of the same consciousness or unconsciousness? Who am I to criticize a big industrial polluter if I behave the same way in my own puny undertakings. I don t believe I have the moral right to criticize if I haven’t examined my own behavior and corrected it. Then there s the issue ol incremental impact. IÍ a great mass of individuals change their behavior, won’t that change be felt? And best of all, once in a while an individual who has developed conscientious habits moves into a decision-making position and can determine how one of the big organizations will do business. This perspective is pretty far afield from a simple campfire, but I’ve found that I get reinforcement in a more down-to-earth fashion. Anyone who has sat around a campf ire late into the night knows the syndrome: Your front stays toasty while your backside gets cooler, then cold. Occasionally you have to stand with your back to the fire to warm up. Meanwhile, stars twinkle in a black velvet sky, but blinded by firelight you miss them. Dew is forming on the grass and the day’s warmth is radiating from the earth to the black hole of the night. The warm microclimate around the fire lulls you to the fact of the deepening avid and the freezing sleeping bag waiting in your tent. Oh! those minutes shuffling amund inside it, trying to warm its now frigid interior, your body heat warming the bag instead of vice versa. The seduction of the campfirc-and now it’s time to pay. If I’d only gone to bed a few hours earlier, my sleeping bag would be that much warmer. Just one more reason not to build a fire. THE Conveniently located downtown next to the Post OfDcc w ith omplc parking. 430-2442 G R A M IC C I PANTS & SH O R TS In s ta n t C o m fo rt F o r M on W e also carry... ojillapa ’ ^ cstaur * ^ P.Ö. Box 95 • Nahcotta, WA 98637 S unday B enches u . o « a « ~ 2 som i Best view on the Peninsula! Overlook Willapa Bay and enjoy delicious Northwest specialties, homemade breads and desserts. Bakery and gift shop. Featured in Food and Wine, Newsweek and three cookbooks. Families welcome and casual relaxed atmosphere. At the Nahcotta Dock, Nahcotta, WA. 360-665-4133 reservations recommended. •TE V A & MERRELL • PATAGONIA • MONT-BELL •WOOLRICH • RUSTY SURFWEAR Casual Dining Overlooking the Nestucca Bluer Spirits • & W om en ...for a great time on the coastl Hot Sandwiches Fresh Seafood Dinners • Home Baked Desserts (5 0 3 ) 9 6 5 -6 7 2 2 • SANDALS •FEET HEATERS • SWEATS • T-SHIRTS •SHORTS PACIFIC CITY, OREGON Cannon Bauli 1 WEBSITE www.dlgftol-alta.coin/outdoor/ (503) 4 3 0-2832 230 N. Hemlock • P.O. Box 005 Cannon Baach, OR 071W A SH O E & A C C E S S O R Y B O U TIQ U E 503 4 3 6 0 577 2 39 N HEM LO C K CANNON BEACH, OREGON urrot left Et»«, itrraittt -nn t (