*7Ae JÜowe'i’ G osm & i Victoria Stoppiello All I want for Christmas is... ^ » ESPRESSO The Professor would like to present a couple o f bits o f doggerel as prefatory material for his screed this month: "Rory, get your dory. There's menhaden in the bay!" Rory got his dory, But the fish had gone away. & £+■ The clams might show, But you won't know, If you don't go. ^PORTLAND R0AS17NS COFFEE ¥ Sadly, both clams and menhaden appear to have vanished in many parts o f our country. Unlike schools of migratory fish, our regional bivalves, the northwest razor clams, move only a scant distance in their short lifetimes. They scuffle up to the surface o f sand bars to feed on plankton, then kick back down a few feet into their sandy beds. Tagged clams have been found to travel only 50 feet or so laterally in a year. The little rascals, toothsome and tender as they are, take a terrible beating from armies of shore side diggers. They've always reminded me of Schmoos, those small, vulnerable little mushroom-like entities that appeared in early A1 Capp cartoon strips. Schmoos, like razor clams, were succulent and helpless. They practically begged for predation. For decades the harvest remained bountiful and seemingly boundless here. Numbers started to fall off on local beaches by the 70's. People blamed El Nino, the eruption o f Mt. St. Helens ("lots o f pumice on the offshore bars. The clam spat can't establish itself properly"), and shifting currents from the South Jetty of the Columbia River. Forget that clams were once extracted by bulldozers from local beaches, that cars skimmed across clam beds at low tides, and that armies of diggers yanked, maimed, and pillaged with abandonment for most o f the 20th Century. Clamming on northern Oregon beaches for the last two decades could be optimistically described as "spotty." By the 90's, the average person's daily catch included a preponderance of yearling clams about the size o f an extra small oyster removed from the shell. Oregon's bag limit remained 24 clams. The season ran from September to July, digging permissible on any low tide series. Commercial diggers dug in the same areas as sports diggers; less than ethical commercial harvesters hauled sacks home to stock the freezer. On November 11th of this year we travelled to the southern Washington beaches for their short opening. Conditions were sweet: gentle surf and mild weather. In 10 minutes each o f us dug our limit o f 15 clams, each o f them the size of a basketball sneaker. Other clam diggers we encountered evidenced the same success. One needn't be a Rhodes Scholar to see the wisdom o f Washington's radically curtailed seasons, strict bag limits, and stringent enforcement. I feel obligated to nudge the State o f Oregon gently out o f sheer embarrassment. When will our Oregon Department o f Fish and Wildlife stand in and make some tough decisions? Thirty miles away in the State o f Washington the clam fishery is thriving. Here in Oregon the creatures seem destined to go the way of the dodo and the abalone. Commencing changes tomorrow may be too late, but to do nothing is unthinkable. « TRILLIUM 4 NATURALT90DS » ESPRESSO .. DR1HKS o&tcaf*. C fi 7 T/ < A 500UWPAW -7^50 The Republican Party either corrupts its liberals or it expels them. H a rry S. Trum an IL L A M O EL A O Ù O O NELW &USELD B O O K 5 150 A ve .U, £ An autobiography usually reveals nothing bad about its w riter except his memory. Franklin P. Jones C annon B each O utdoor W ear We Carry Clothing that makes you feel great! • Patagonia • Teva • Woolrich • Kavu • Gramicci & More F or y o u r D eck, C e d a r S id in g , o r Log H om e... A Wood Finish that Works in All Kinds of Weather 239 N. HEMLOCK, CANNON BEACH Sunlight and water rob wood of its natural strength and beauty DEFYs unique water-based formula penetrates deeply to keep wood moisture-free and has powerful sunscreens to block damaging UV rays O pen Daily, 11-5 436-2832 Victoria Sloppiello is a writer living in Ilwaco at the lower left corner o f Washington state. Man-machine identity is achieved not by attributing human attributes to the machine, but by attributing mechanical limitations to man. M ortim er Tanbe T h e P ro fe s s io n a l Solution F o r Wood ♦ Highlights the Natural Beauty o f Wood ♦ Will Not Flake or Peel ♦ Easy to Apply and Maintain The morning o f winter solstice arrived w ith fresh snow on the ground. M y husband asked, "Why do people get so excited whenever it snows?" M y intuition replied, "Because it's a transformation." It's the time o f year we look for magic. M y thoughts turned to Christmas. A while back I heard a radio host reading children's letters to Santa. One writer wanted a bunch o f Barbies and a computer. I thought back to my own past Christmas wishes; I wanted a horse at six, requested a miniature refrigerator and range when I was seven, and a bicycle at nine. You'd think I w anted a car at 16, but all I wanted then was to gel out o f Vernonia! — ■ - As an adult, I've been asked what I'd like fo r Christmas and a few years ago, my w ish fo r a new bathroom sink was fulfilled. This year I've been thinking about Christmas wishes and have come up with a few: I'd like to stop worrying as much as I do. I wish that those 1 know who are struggling with cancer would fu lly recover. I wish my older relatives would find peace o f mind as they approach the end o f life. I wish we'd all get along a little better—a retreaded version o f "peace on earth" that applies to the where I live just as well as to the Middle East. But most o f all, I wish the salmon would return. M y feelings about this aren’t totally rational. I don't fish and I know I can live without eating salmon, but it goes deeper than the material fact o f fish coming and going in the rivers. I f the salmon runs returned, then I'd know things are going to be all right. I used to take salmon for granted. We caught them, smoked them, canned them, cooked them, ate them. Carved them, painted them, counted them, waited for them. And now we wait for them some more and the counts aren't very good. I feel myself growing tense, wondering if their numbers are so depressed that they might not make it back. A combination o f events could deliver the fatal blow, not just to one run, but to many. How far down can we push them and still have them bounce back? What are we waiting for? Are we really w illing to take the chance o f losing them forever, like the passenger pigeon, just plain gone, no more, none, not any? I feel a frightened twitch in my gut about this. Salmon are not just a symbol, not just an artifact from another era. They are an indicator o f our own chances. I f w ild salmon can't make it in this land o f the salmon and cedar people, this environment to which they are wonderfully adapted, what are our chances? Do we really believe that we can live beyond nature, beyond the restraints o f clean w ater, clean air washed by forests? Can we live w ith polluted streams, a landscape of pavement and buildings only? Can you eat electricity? The other night I asked a few friends the rhetorical question, "How many people are thinking they want the salmon to return?" and the other three said in unison, "Everyone does." But the realist in the group said, "That's not the issue. The problem is everyone wants someone else to make the change, no one wants to stop building, reduce their electricity, stop dredging, stop elcarcutting, get the cows out o f the streams, stop fishing. We all point our fingers at someone else to change their behavior so the salmon can come back." That's both a realistic response and a disheartening one. M y little efforts arc so insignificant compared to the Corps o f Engineers blasting and dredging three feet out o f a hundred miles o f Columbia River. M y little house's energy conservation is only a drop saved from the m illions o f megawatts that get swooshed through the Columbia River's dams. M y little voice asking to protect wetlands and streams w ithin the town o f Ilwaco is a whisper compared with the txMim o f "can't stop progress" and "it'll be good for economic development." But I've got to start somewhere in order to have any peace o f mind. I can suggest, I can wish, I can imagine. As the song goes, "you may say that I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one. And maybe someday you w ill jo in us..." DLANL JOHNSON K LM tS T A T t Sun Country Log Home Store Timber and McMinnville, Oregon (800)827-1688 www. TheLog HomeStore.com Free S a m p le Available! Though we travel the w orld over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it n o t Ralph W aldo Emerson THE OSBORNE WORKING STUDIO & GALLERY IN AN UNJUST W O RLD... JUSTICE. Personal Injury Lawyer “ GREGORV KAFOl'RV 202 Oregon Pioneer Building 320 S.W. Stark Street Portland. OR 97204 h FINE ART, .... -*/••*.. V/¡f4í "w ~ . SPECIAL EDITION PRINTS, ft COMMERCIAL RENDERINGS 6 3 5 MANZANITA AVENUE P.O.BOX 301 MANZANITA, OREGON 9 7 1 3 0 PHONE OR FACSIMILE Phone: (503)224-2647 503 368 7518 F o r A l l V our R eal E state . N eeds • UPPER LEFT EDGE DECEMBER 2000 I I I