THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2017
COMMUNITY
1B
ALL WASHED UP — NOT
THE ELK WHISPERER
BE MY VALENTINE
T
he 2011 Japanese tsunami is the gift that just can’t seem
to stop giving. The Hawaii Herald Tribune reports that tsu-
nami debris is still washing ashore in Hawaii, even almost six
years later, with no end in sight (http://tinyurl.com/tsujunk).
Not all debris is easy to categorize, or even figure out where
it came from. But Japanese boats come in fairly often, even now,
and one was spotted off Kona as recently as January. “We can
track them back,” Nikolai Maximenko, a researcher at the Uni-
versity of Hawaii who models ocean currents, said.
In the meantime, the International Pacific Research Center
has been keeping tabs on what’s been rolling in, and has created
a debris catalog (http://tinyurl.com/tsujunk1). A photo of a Jap-
anese fishing vessel, found last November, is shown. The IRPC
is also collaborating with NASA to develop remote sensors in
satellites that would track marine debris.
“It’s hard to tell (how long tsunami debris will arrive) because
this is kind of a unique experience,” Maximenko observed.
“Looking at trends … it will continue for at least a decade.”
BAD NEWS, GOOD NEWS
A
nother footnote from the 2011 Japanese disaster: The
Fukushima nuclear power plant was badly damaged, and
leaked radiation into the ocean. Many North Coasters worried
the irradiated water would make it to Oregon, but as it turned
out, the levels on this end were less than miniscule.
Now there’s news from Fukushima that, on its surface, sounds
downright alarming. ScienceAlert.com reports that the radiation
levels in one of the reactors have climbed to an “unimaginable”
530 sieverts per hour (http://tinyurl.com/fukurads). What does
that mean? Think of it this way: Just 10 sieverts will kill a per-
son within three weeks.
No one is sure yet exactly what’s causing the dramatic
increase (melted nuclear fuel? melted fuel rod?) or how to stop
it. Even remote control robots/cameras can’t help find out what
happened — they only last a couple of hours in that environment.
On the bright side the Tokyo Electric Power Company (who
provided the photo shown) insists the radiation is “safely con-
tained” within the reactor, “so there’s no risk to the greater pop-
ulation.” Feel better?
N
S
ince Valentine’s Day is Tuesday, a reminder of how it
came to be is apropos. However, the exact history is a
bit muddy, according to History.com, http://tinyurl.com/
ValenTale.
One legend contends that a priest, Valentine, imprisoned
and sentenced to death by the Romans, wrote a letter to a
young girl he loved signing it, “from your Valentine.” The
expression has stuck, and marked St. Valentine as a symbol
of romance, as well as martrydom. The date of his death (or
burial), which was in mid-February, became his feast day.
A more cynical view of how the St. Valentine’s Day date
was picked is that the church was actually trying to distract
its members from the Roman fertility festival of Luperca-
lia, celebrated on the ides of February (Feb. 15). The priests
would sacrifice a goat, cut the hide into strips, dunk them in
the blood, then slap the women and fields with the bloody
strips to boost fertility. Then there would be a lottery, during
which the single men would pick a woman’s name and then
stay with her for a year.
Needless to say, the church frowned on these antics,
calling the festival “un-Christian” in the late 400s, when a
pope declared Feb. 14 as the official St. Valentine’s Day. It
was a date that, coincidentally, both the French and English
believed to be the start of bird-mating season. There was just
no getting away from associating St. Valentine with love in
the air.
Valentine greetings were popular in the Middle Ages, but
apparently the oldest known written Valentine was a poem
written by Charles, Duke of Orleans, in 1415, while he
was locked up in the Tower of London (again, that prison
connection).
Presently, according to the Greeting Card Association, an
estimated 1 billion Valentine’s Day cards are sent every year.
On that note, Happy Valentine’s Day, gentle reader.
LOCAL BREVITIES
orth Coast resident Lorinne had what she calls a “Harry
Potter moment” Tuesday morning. An elk wandered into
her backyard, literally close enough to touch. And she did. Her
mother, Pauline, took a photo of the meeting.
“It was so magical,” Lorinne recalled. “Lots of friends warn-
ing me he could have hurt you, blah, blah, blah. He was hurt, and
just wanted love. I bowed to him, he bowed to me, let me pet him,
then followed me and stuck his nose in for one more love. It was
just like that scene in Harry Potter, but I didn’t get a ride.”
Her mother wasn’t worried, either. “Animals love Lorinne!”
Pauline declared. Which is true enough, as the Ear has heard from
several sources.
“He is so majestic,” Lorinne noted. “Poor guy has an injured
back leg. … He had a round hole in his leg. I’m thinking some-
one shot him.”
The elk encounter made Lorinne’s day. “It was definitely
bucket list worthy!” she declared.
INVISIBLE INDUSTRY
J
oanne Rideout and her radio show on KMUN, the Ship
Report, were featured on a recent episode of OPB’s “Oregon
Field Guide.” She is pictured, in a screen shot from the show. If
you haven’t seen it, you can catch it online at http://tinyurl.com/
opb-rideout
Joanne, who moved here from the desert Southwest 15 years
ago, is fascinated by all things maritime, and especially the Colum-
bia River ship traffic. She shares her enthusiasm on her show.
“Most of the houses face the water,” she old OPB. “People are
always looking at the river, one way or another, and I think I’m just
sort of tapping into that sort of curiosity that people have.”
Bar Pilot Capt. Robert Johnson has become her mentor over
the years, and she’s been out on the pilot boat with him many
times. “When I get on a boat I just light up,” she said. “I’m one
of those people. I’m in my happy place when I’m on something
that’s floating.”
“The thing I find quite fascinating about the maritime industry
in general is that it’s so invisible,” she added. “… Most of these
folks really operate in obscurity. That’s part of what I love to bring
to it, is to help people realize that even though you don’t know it,
those folks play a big role in your life.”
LEGO MY GOONIES
A LITTLE HANDFUL
o tiny, so fierce, and now so free!” the Wildlife Center
of the North Coast (www.coastwildlife.org) posted on
its Facebook page Feb. 2, along with the photo shown. “This
adorable little handful of saw-whet owl was cleared for release
today, and was quite eager to leave!”
A few owlish
facts from AllAbout-
Birds.org
(http://
tinyurl.com/about-
whet): This noctur-
nal bird got its name
because its call (a
high-pitched “too-
too-too”) sounds like
a saw being sharp-
ened on a whet stone.
Only 7 to 8 inches long, with a 16 to 19-inch wing span, these
little critters prey on mice (one lasts for two meals) and the
occasional small bird or insect or two.
While nesting, the female stays with the eggs, while pop
goes out hunting, but when the youngest chick is about 18 days
old, she takes off and leaves pop in charge of the food supply.
“She originally was admitted after being found weak and
unable to fly,” the Wildlife Center’s post continued, “but luckily
made a beautiful full recovery. Saw-whet owls are native to this
area, but they can be difficult to spot as they blend into their sur-
roundings so well, and their tiny size helps them go unnoticed.
Don’t let that small size fool you though, they are mighty little
hunters who are much tougher than they look!”
‘S
L
ocal brevities from The Daily Morning Astorian, Tues-
day, Feb. 14, 1888:
• This is St. Valentine’s day. Sometime this used to be a
nice, sentimental, romantic sort of a day, when young peo-
ple sent tender effusions to each other, and conveyed by post
intimation of the love that filled their hearts.
Now-a-days it is a day when cowards send anonymous
insults, and curs used the post office to annoy respectable
women with indecent doggerel. Malice loves a shining mark,
and many a pure minded girl has had her soul sullied by
forced contact with the mire in perverted observance of St.
Valentine’s Day.
• Rescue No. 2’s team was hitched up to the Silsby (fire
engine) yesterday and the outfit took a spin around the block.
After they get curried a little and get some city feed into
them, they’ll look better. At present the engine looks a good
deal slicker than the horses.
• The wind blew in puffs from the south and with great
force about noon last Sunday. The chimneys, etc., around
town got considerable of a shaking up, and some little dam-
age was done here and there. Over on Youngs’ River, the
Grangers’ hall was picked up bodily and carried about
eight feet, and parties from that vicinity report seeing a two-
story house, 18x24, come floating down, and, sliding by the
island across the tideland, apparently none the worse for its
trip.
O
K, Goonie/Lego fans, you don’t have to wait much longer.
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment has finally revealed
that the long-awaited new, and highly collectible Goonie expan-
sion packs for Lego Dimensions (pictured courtesy of Warner
Bros.) will be available May 9, according to Newsarama.com
(http://tinyurl.com/goonleg). The minifigures in the pack also
have a Toy Tag to unlock a free play Adventure World, and a Bat-
tle Arena (reached through Vorton, the main hub world of Lego
Dimensions) unique to the world of the character that unlocks it.
Here’s a tiny description: “… Players can help Sloth and
Chunk escape the Fratelli hideout and join the rest of the Goonies
on their search for One Eyed Willy’s treasure. Players can use
Sloth’s Super Strength to smash through walls or play as Chunk
and use his infamous Truffle Shuffle. The rebuildable One-Eyed
Willy’s Pirate Ship will sail on water and can also be built into the
Fanged Fortune and the Inferno Cannon …”
No doubt there will be rejoicing in the Goonie universe in May.
COMMUNITY NOTES
SATURDAY
Lower Columbia R/C Society
— 8:30 a.m., back room at Uptown
Cafe, 1639 S.E. Ensign Lane, War-
renton. Local Academy of Model
Aeronautics (AMA) chartered radio
control model aircraft club meets for
breakfast and business. All model
aircraft enthusiasts are welcome.
For information, call 503-458-5196
or 503-325-0608.
Chinook Indian Nation Coun-
cil Meeting — 11 a.m., Chinook
Tribal Office, 3 Park St., in Bay Cen-
ter, Washington. Open to all tribal
members. Attendees are reminded
to bring a potluck item.
Sit and Stitch Group — 11
a.m. to 1 p.m., Custom Threads,
1282 Commercial St. Knitting, cro-
cheting and needle work. For infor-
mation, call 503-325-7780.
Columbia Northwestern Mod-
el Railroading Club — 1 p.m.,
in Hammond. Group runs trains
on HO-scale layout. For informa-
tion, call Don Carter at 503-325-
0757.
Spinning Circle — 1 to 3 p.m.,
Astoria Fiber Arts Academy, 1296
Duane St. Bring a spinning wheel.
For information, call 503-325-5598
or go to http://astoriafiberarts.com
Pacific Green Party, Clatsop
County Chapter — 4 p.m., Room
101, Art Building, Clatsop Commu-
nity College, 1651 Lexington Ave.
Discussing endorsement of candi-
dates for upcoming Clatsop County
special elections in May.
Line Dancing — 5:30 to 8 p.m.,
Seaside American Legion, 1315
Broadway. For information, call
503-738-5111. No cost; suggested
$5 tip to the instructor.
SUNDAY
National Alliance on Mental
Illness (NAMI) Support Group
— 2 to 3:30 p.m., Seaside Public
Library, 1131 Broadway. Family to
Family Support Group, for anyone
with friend or loved one suffering
from a serious brain (mental) illness.
For information, contact Myra Kero
at 503-738-6165, or k7erowood@q.
com, or go to www.nami.org
and quilting. All are welcome. For
information, call 503-325-1364 or
503-325-7960.
$6.75 for those younger than 60.
For information, call Michelle Lew-
is at 503-861-4200.
Mothers of Preschoolers — 10
to 11:30 a.m., Crossroads Com-
Columbia Senior Diners —
11:30 a.m., 1111 Exchange St. Cost
is $6. For information, or to have
a meal delivered, call 503-325-
9693.
munity Church, 40618 Old
Highway 30, Svensen. MOPS
group is a time for moms to relax
and enjoy each others’ company.
For information, call Tracy Wilson at
727-514-1611.
Chair Exercises for Seniors
— 9 to 9:45 a.m., Astoria Senior
Center, 1111 Exchange St. For in-
formation, call 503-325-3231.
Astoria High School Class
of 1970 — 11 a.m., Koffee Klatch
at Rod’s Bar and Grill, 45 N.E.
Skipanon Drive, Warrenton. For in-
formation, call ShawnAnn Hope at
503-791-1231.
Scandinavian Workshop —
10 a.m., First Lutheran Church, 725
33rd St. Needlework, hardanger,
knitting, crocheting, embroidery
Senior Lunch — 11:30 a.m.,
Bob Chisholm Senior Center, 1225
Avenue A, Seaside. Suggested do-
nation $3 for those older than 60;
MONDAY
Warrenton Senior Lunch Pro-
gram — noon, Warrenton Com-
munity Center, 170 S.W. Third St.
Suggested donation of $5 for se-
niors and $7 for those younger than
60. For information, or to volun-
teer, call 503-861-3502 Monday or
Thursday.
Astoria Rotary Club — noon,
second floor of the Astoria Elks
Lodge, 453 11th St. Guests always
welcome. For information, go to
www.AstoriaRotary.org
Parkinson’s Support Group
— 1 p.m., Peace Lutheran Church
library, 565 12th St. For informa-
tion, call 503-440-1970 or 503-440-
1985.
Peninsula Quilt Guild — 1 p.m.,
Peninsula Church Center, 5000 N
Place, Seaview, Wash. Newcomers
welcome. Bring nonperishable food
donation. For information, call Janet
King at 360-665-3005.
Knochlers Pinochle Group —
1 p.m., Bob Chisholm Community
Center, 1225 Avenue A, Seaside.
Cost is $1 per regular session per
person. Players with highest and
second highest scores split the
prize. Game is designed for play-
ers 55 and older, but all ages are
welcome.
See NOTES, Page 2B