THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 2019 // 3 SCRATCHPAD On breaking out of a routine By ERICK BENGEL COAST WEEKEND H ow easy it is, when you’ve lived in an area long enough and the nov- elty starts to wane, to suddenly stop exploring it. I am fortunate, though, to have people in my life who sense when my routine may be calcifying into a rut, and politely pull me out of it. As our region underwent a brief bout of ridiculously nice weather, I found myself hitting several sites I’ve never seen — places mundane to others, perhaps, but to me were small, uninvestigated wonders. Last weekend, my partner and coast I ventured southeast on Oregon Route 202 to get acquainted with the Blue Jays’ track — the blue jewel of the Jewell School District. We’d half feared it wouldn’t be as blue in real life as it was in The Daily Astorian when the track was fi nished last spring, that Colin Murphey’s Photoshop wiz- ardry had maybe deceived us. But no. That track is seriously blue — Papa Smurf blue — and though our multimile run was probably a one-and-done, it was worth the 45-minute trip. We then stopped by the Jew- ell cemetery, located on a shel- tered hill a short drive off the main road. A solid layer of snow INSIDE THIS ISSUE weekend arts & entertainment 4 7 8 THE ARTS The Oikos Collective was untouched save for faint deer tracks. The burial ground holds several persons born in the mid- 19th century; their lives began at roughly the midpoint between the last Cascadia Subducton Zone earthquake and the present. It’s one of those tucked-away spots of early settlement where, when you squint and blur out the traces of moder- nity (newer tombstones, a random traffi c cone, litter), you can picture how the white winter scene might have appeared to previous genera- tions of mourners. As we headed back to Asto- ria we came upon a white van that had fl ipped onto its side. The young occupants were milling about, apparently uninjured, and, along with others in their caravan, remarkably calm. We checked on COAST WEEKEND EDITOR ERICK BENGEL CONTRIBUTORS KATHERINE LACAZE LYNDA LAYNE BARBARA LLOYD McMICHAEL CARA MICO PATRICK WEBB Arts and crafts for all ages FINE LINES PoetryFest 2019 Event off ers workshops, readings with major writers FEATURE ‘Living on Love’ 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. Romantic comedy opens at Coaster Theatre TO SUBMIT AN ITEM 12 TRASH TALK Message in a (water) bottle HRAP program turns beach plastic into art 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. them, saw they were OK, drove on and, once we had wireless bars, called emergency services. Our last planned stop: the Olney Saloon (“The Big O”) for Taco Sunday. But, after the graves and the rollover, cheap deluxe tacos didn’t entirely displace my thoughts of mortality. I suppose the subject has been on my mind since my back seized up last month (many years of sloppy posture fi nally taking their toll) and forced me to accept that my 20s are well behind me. Years ago a friend said I already walk and behave like an old man, somewhat hunched over and prone to getting trapped in daily cycles. It was a friendly observation but also an admonition, one I try to remem- ber whenever I feel content to enjoy the same diversions day after day, month after year. So while I believe in seeking new experiences for their own sake, I’m also fi ght- ing against a natural impulse to get too settled. We creatures of habit cling to the safety of sameness — the same hangouts and eateries, the same views and vibes. And, when what you do for a living requires con- stant engagement of the gray mat- ter, there’s a seductive comfort in not thinking too hard or pushing yourself too far, especially when no one’s making you do it. It often takes, at least for me, great strength of will to break that pattern, to escape its gravitational pull. Luckily, the escape can begin by fi nding nothing more than a different road to drive on. CW