THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2019 // 3 SCRATCHPAD Fisherpoets ask how to make people care about the environment By ERICK BENGEL COAST WEEKEND P oems, stories and personal essays presented at the annual FisherPoets Gath- ering often ask: How can humans live in balance with the natural world, what do we lose when we don’t, and how do we commu- nicate this message in a society running on self-interest and short attention spans? I talked about this over coffee at The Logger Restaurant with Billie Delaney, a commercial fi sherman who lives in Browns- mead, the day after she gave her coast fi nal performance at last week- end’s Astoria event. Fishermen who, like Delaney, work in Bris- tol Bay, Alaska, are heavily rep- resented at FisherPoets. Some sported buttons opposing the Peb- ble Mine, the proposed mineral extraction operation that critics believe would endanger fi sh pop- ulations in the Bay region. To get people to understand possible threats posed by large- scale projects like the Pebble Mine, awareness-raising groups often focus on the things peo- ple interact with — the sock- eye salmon they eat, or the native tribes they admire — that may INSIDE THIS ISSUE weekend arts & entertainment ON THE COVER Blues guitarist Terry Robb. be harmed. (By some quirk of human psychology, people have trouble getting activated around the need to defend natural forma- tions like river bars and water- sheds, she said.) Delaney said organizations often resort to using “charismatic megafauna” — whales, bears, seals and other cuddly crea- tures — as mascots or symbols to make environmental issues seem real and urgent. But the starving polar bear whose pathetic, bony image breaks ours hearts is only dying because the animals it eats are dying, a pattern that rumbles through the food web. COAST WEEKEND EDITOR ERICK BENGEL CALENDAR COORDINATOR SUE CODY CONTRIBUTORS NICOLE BALES DAVID CAMPICHE RYAN HUME KATHERINE LACAZE BARBARA LLOYD McMICHAEL NIATECHNIQUE See story on Page 8 COASTAL LIFE 4 Meet and drink 8 Ministering through music 12 The 10th annual Savor Cannon Beach FEATURE A Q&A with blues guitarist Terry Robb DINING Columbia Bar Charlie’s Old-Fashioned FURTHER ENJOYMENT MUSIC CALENDAR .....................5 CROSSWORD ...............................6 SEE + DO ............................. 10, 11 CW MARKETPLACE.......... 15, 16 CLOSE TO HOME ..................... 18 BOOKMONGER ........................ 19 Find it all online! CoastWeekend.com features full calendar listings, keyword search and easy sharing on social media. To advertise in Coast Weekend, call 503-325-3211 or contact your local sales representative. © 2019 COAST WEEKEND New items for publication consideration must be submitted by 10 a.m. Tuesday, one week and two days before publication. TO SUBMIT AN ITEM Phone: 503.325.3211 Ext. 217 or 800.781.3211 Fax: 503.325.6573 E-mail: editor@coastweekend.com Address: P.O.Box 210 • 949 Exchange St. Astoria, OR 97103 Coast Weekend is published every Thursday by the EO Media Group, all rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced without consent of the publisher. Coast Weekend appears weekly in The Daily Astorian and the Chinook Observer. It would be nice, in Del- aney’s view, to be able to have an intelligent public dialogue that accounts for the complex- ity of these issues without rely- ing solely on cheap emotional appeals. The disappearance, for example, of krill, a life form essential to the diet of many Antarctic animals, tends not to inspire strong feelings, but it is a big deal nonetheless. “It’s really hard for people to be like, ‘We gotta save these krill!’ because nobody cares about krill,” she said. Remember that grieving killer whale who carried her dead calf for 17 days off the coast of Can- ada and the Northwestern U.S. last summer? That sort of painful, high-profi le incident takes place against a backdrop of interlock- ing factors, from the overfi shing of orcas’ food supply to distur- bances and pollution caused by putting urban infrastructure on natural waterways. Just getting people to pay atten- tion to these issues, though, seems to require exposing them to a fl ood of tear-jerking social media posts that, while perhaps inspiring people to care, invariably dimin- ishes the conversation right when it should be deepened. CW