THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 2019 // 3 SCRATCHPAD A healer and harp builder Duane Bolster found musical success through medicine By ERICK BENGEL COAST WEEKEND F or decades, Duane Bolster, a harp builder from Portland, tried to learn one instrument after another — piano, clarinet, coronet, accordion — but reading music remained mysteriously diffi - cult for him. He couldn’t compre- hend how musicians sight-read so fl uidly. Then, about seven years ago, an ophthalmologist discovered coast growths on the focal points of Bol- ster’s retinas. His center of vision is gone in both eyes. He couldn’t notice the disorder; his brain fi lls in the missing visual informa- tion automatically. For example, a word with six letters might, to him, appear to have four. He can read text in his peripheral vision, but tracking sheet music, it turns out, is nearly impossible for him to do. He told me this story in the presence of a Celtic harp he built, now displayed in the window of Fairweather’s House & Gallery, during the year’s fi rst Seaside Art Walk, held earlier this month. The instrument, fashioned out of rib- bon mahogany, stands near his INSIDE THIS ISSUE weekend arts & entertainment 4 7 8 THE ARTS Celtic concert wife Carol’s handmade baskets, for which Bolster created the wooden bases. Bolster, 70, hails from a family of engineers and inventors, and can fi gure out the physics of a thing just by looking at it. He has been making harps for about 15 years. The harp at Fairweather’s took him about 60 hours to complete. The harp that took longest to make — an elaborate, circular work of Bubinga, a hard, heavy African wood — was made for the Children’s Cancer Association in Portland and required 200 to 250 hours. He crafted it so that the inside opens outward to project the sound — a design that led apprais- ers to remark, “You don’t build harps like that,” he recalled. “I could never stand doing COAST WEEKEND EDITOR ERICK BENGEL CONTRIBUTORS NICOLE BALES RYAN HUME KATHERINE LACAZE BARBARA LLOYD McMICHAEL PATRICK WEBB An ‘armchair’ pilgrimage to St. Patrick’s world COASTAL LIFE Pouring at the Coast Brewer’s festival takes over St. Patrick’s Day weekend FEATURE ‘Enigmatic! A Dance Extravaganza’ To advertise in Coast Weekend, call 503-325-3211 or contact your local sales representative. © 2018 COAST WEEKEND New items for publication consideration must be submitted by 10 a.m. Tuesday, one week and two days before publication. Ballet, jazz, belly dance, hip hop, drag and special eff ects at Liberty TO SUBMIT AN ITEM 12 DINING Mouth of the Columbia Bucket Bites food cart has rotating pasties FURTHER ENJOYMENT MUSIC CALENDAR .....................5 CROSSWORD ...............................6 SEE + DO ............................. 10, 11 CW MARKETPLACE.......... 15, 16 BOOKMONGER ........................ 19 Find it all online! CoastWeekend.com features full calendar listings, keyword search and easy sharing on social media. 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. something like somebody else did,” Bolster said. “You don’t get progress unless you improvise.” Bolster could probably have foregone the fi nal 50 hours of detailing — the sanding, polishing and perfecting of the roundness — without really changing the look. But it was only his second harp, and everything had to be just right. Bolster spent his career work- ing as a registered nurse at Pacifi c Northwest hospitals, doing dial- ysis and aphaeresis, specializing in children and newborns — kids who were critically ill and those suffering from chronic conditions. He remembers harpists who would visit the children and play for them, a ritual that at times eased the distress in the room bet- ter than pain meds and physical therapy. “The children just loved it,” he said. “And that was one of the things that inspired me to make a lot of harps.” When he retired from the medi- cal fi eld seven years ago, he did so knowing his harps would be used in medical ministry, to sooth sick children and other patients in hos- pitals and care centers. “They just do magic stuff,” he said. “Kids in pain … you’d just see them relax,” he said. “It was amazing. I watched that for many years.” He hasn’t taken up harp lessons; he’s been so busy making them and can’t stop. But he can tune them by ear. If he were to start all over with music, “I’d learn how to play by ear, and that would have solved it all,” he laughed. CW