The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, March 29, 2019, WEEKEND EDITION, Page B1, Image 13

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    B1
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MARcH 29, 2019
CONTACT US
ewilson@dailyastorian.com
(503) 325-3211 ext. 257
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IN ONE EAR • ELLEDA WILSON
ALL ABOARD
I
n case you’re wondering how long it can take to
resume rail service after being disrupted by a mega-di-
saster, you can take a lesson from Japan.
The Japan Times by The Yomiuri Shimbun reports that
the final 34-mile section of the 101-mile Rias Line coastal
railway is complete at last (bit.ly/iwaterail). The train con-
necting Miyako and Kamaishi in Iwate Prefecture —
one of the hardest hit areas in the 2011 earthquake and tsu-
nami — ran for the first time in eight years on March 23,
and is pictured, courtesy of The Yomiuri Shimbun.
“I rode this line before the quake,” one young train rider
noted, “and I want to see how the cityscape has changed,
while remembering that time.” The cityscape is probably
unrecognizable.
A VALIDATING MOMENT
WHERE’S PIPER?
‘I
didn’t think I’d get to write this post, to be hon-
est,” Maria Nagy of the Tillamook Animal
Shelter (@TillamookAnimalShelter) posted
recently on the shelter’s Facebook page. “I didn’t really
think we’d ever know what happened to Piper.”
“Piper went missing in Neskowin back on March 13,”
she said. “She’s an older girl, 13 years old, and doesn’t get
around that well. Her parents, many people in the Nes-
kowin community searched for her nonstop. Her family
doesn’t live here, they kept driving back to search. Things
were looking grim … maybe she wasn’t coming back.
“Then March 22, we got a call from some vacationers
who had just arrived at their vacation home, and discov-
ered a dog, stuck on the hill behind their place … on the
other side of the creek! A long way from where she started.
“The gentleman who found her coaxed her down and
led her across the creek to safety and rescue. He called us
to find out what to do next. He said he found a yellow dog,
I joyously yelled, ‘It’s Piper!’ and within a few minutes her
parents were contacted, and all was good with the world.”
Piper is back home, and seems no worse for her adven-
ture except for being a bit tired. Of course, her “parents”
are very grateful and thankful for the good people of Nes-
kowin who looked for her, and for her rescuers, who
finally found her.
In the aftermath of the ordeal, Piper’s very relieved
“mom” offers one bit of advice: “Never lose hope.”
OLD SALT
T
he remote Makah Tribal Reservation town of
Neah Bay is on the northwest tip of Washington,
near the mouth of the Strait of Juan de Fuca (Salish
Sea), right across from British Columbia.
It is two hours from the nearest city and, like many
coastal Oregon and Washington towns, the land nearest
the sea is flat, and would be vulnerable when the Cas-
cadia Subduction Zone unleashes a megaquake and
tsunami.
Makah tribal elder Melissa Peterson worries about the
old people and children in her village. She knows they will
only have 10 minutes to reach the high ground nearby after
the earthquake, and took it upon herself to start a grass-
roots effort to build a tsunami trail to help bay residents
climb to safety.
Although it is steep, care is being taken to make the trail
accessible for the elderly and disabled — which means
small bridges and wide stairs over steep switchbacks are
needed. One holding and rest area/platform is planned at
about 150 feet above sea level; emergency services will be
at the top of the hill.
Work has begun. On the lower level of the trail, gravel
has been laid, and two bridges and 30 stairs to the first ele-
vation level have already been built. There have been sev-
eral donations of time, money and materials, but her per-
sonal funds have run out, and more is needed to build the
250 to 300 stairs necessary to reach the top of the hill. To
help, contribute at Melissa Peterson’s GoFundMe page at
bit.ly/MPtsutrail
The unfinished trail has already been declared an offi-
cial tsunami evacuation route, which Peterson calls an
“amazing validating moment.”
“It’s been an amazing journey,” she told the Peninsula
Daily News (bit.ly/MPpdn). “It provides hope.”
I
t’s time for an update on the adventures of Astoria’s
wayward sailor/Kon Tiki drifter, Rimas Meleshyus.
When he returned to the U.S. from Vietnam (boat-
less) in January after his latest around-the-world attempt,
the first order of business was to have the cataracts fixed
on both eyes. Sailing alone is hard enough, without badly
impaired vision.
With that done, and all healed up, he recently went sail-
ing at Penn Cove, Washington. “So wonderful to be back
on the water,” he exclaimed, “and to be able to see with my
fixed eyes!” Many of his devoted fans hope he picked up a
few sailing lessons in the process.
A true “old salt,” Rimas, who is in his late 60s, is
not one bit deterred from making his around-the-world
dream come true. “I look forward to finding a boat in the
future, and sailing again,” he posted on his Facebook page
recently. “My eyes are now open to the world. Thank you
for prayers and supporting me.” Stay tuned.
A LEGACY OF LARD
T
T
T
he news from Astoria’s favorite expatriate, Chef
Daymon Garrett Edwards, is that he and his part-
ner, Luke, closed their successful Tartine Bak-
ery and Cafe and Rusty’s Smokehouse in Itaewon, South
Korea, last fall.
There were several reasons for the move, “but most of
all,” the chef explained, “I turned 70 years old and I had
been cooking/baking for 22 years. … Luke and I wanted
and needed a change. I have no regrets. We soared higher
than I ever thought possible.”
He’s not totally retiring, though. Just going in a differ-
ent direction. “I have fallen back on modeling/acting,” he
wrote. He used to model, part time, in San Francisco in
the 1990s.
However, this time around, he has an idea to pitch.
“While I was playing Santa Claus in 2018, I realized
that I looked a bit like Col. Sanders (of Kentucky Fried
Chicken) … and thought I could pull off a look-a-like.”
“Of course,” he recalled, “I grew up seeing Col. Sand-
ers and KFC, and at the time, I never even considered that
I would grow up and age to look like him.”
So, he’s submitting his promotional idea and new pho-
tos to KFC Korea, Japan and China.
“The advantage I have,” he mentioned, “is that I live
here, and am available at short notice, same with Japan
and China.”
Once again, he is reinventing himself, “and will con-
tinue on my merry road as a true 20th/21st Century
boulevardier.”
“I celebrate the past,” he added, “and close my eyes and
jump forward to open them and gaze upon a new frontier,
and Luke will be by my side, as well as my friends and
supporters.”
THE PERFECT PLACE
MYSTERY EGGS
he Seaside Aquarium has been getting lots of ques-
tions about egg clusters that have been washing
ashore. Wonder no more: They’re squid eggs, as
shown in a photo, courtesy of Seaside Aquarium.
“During the spring and summer, large schools of opal-
escent squid move into shallow coves and bays to mate,
lay their eggs and die,” an email from the aquarium says.
“Each female lays about a dozen cigar-shaped egg cap-
sules, each containing 180 to 300 eggs.
“The newly laid egg sacs attach to each other, form-
ing massive clusters. The capsules have no taste or odor,
thereby ‘hiding’ them from predators. It takes three to five
weeks before the eggs hatch and juvenile squid emerge.”
Now you know.
NO REGRETS
he wreck of the 343-foot Russian cargo ship Vaslov
(aka Vazlov) Verovsky on April 3, 1941, occurred
when the steering mechanism jammed while out-
bound on the Columbia River bar. She ran hard aground on
Peacock Spit, not far from Cape Disappointment.
No lives were lost, and the 37-man crew was rescued.
Capt. Tokareff insisted on staying aboard, but wisely ske-
daddled after 24 hours. The ship quickly broke up and dis-
gorged its legacy, thousands of cases of lard that washed
ashore.
“One local, Harry Smith, remembers working around
the clock with a group of friends to transport and store
around two thousand cases of lard,” FluxStories.com says,
“which they later sold to an Astoria bakery for $4 a case.
“To this day, a number of Long Beach Peninsula locals
have memories of eating pies and pastries made with short-
ening from the doomed Vazlov Verovsky.” (bit.ly/vaslov1,
bit.ly/vaslov2)
s you may know, Capt. John Couch was the first
ship’s master to sail past the (Columbia River)
Bar and up to the Willamette River; then up the
Willamette almost to Oregon City, site of the main Hud-
son’s Bay Co. trading post,” Graham Lewis wrote.
“The man owned a good chunk of what is now northern
downtown Portland.”
“In the early 1840s, on his first trip, Couch guided his
first ship, the brig Maryland, from Newburyport, Mas-
sachusetts, around the Horn and up to the mouth of the
Columbia in hopes of establishing trade with the Hud-
son’s Bay Co. A member of Couch’s crew made a color
drawing of the Maryland in 1841 before they left Mas-
sachusetts, and it has been in my family for many years.
Now in my 70s, I’ve been looking for a new home for
the drawing where it will be valued and, at least part
time, displayed.”
Since they only made it to the mouth of the Colum-
bia on this maiden voyage, “that’s why it’s appropri-
ate that this drawing remain, in perpetuity, in Astoria.
The Columbia River Maritime Museum is the perfect
place for it.”
The drawing, with a drawing of Capt. Couch (inset
left), is shown, courtesy of Graham Lewis (inset right).
By the way, if you’re wondering how Graham Lewis
is connected to Capt. Couch, he’s the captain’s great-
great-grandson, and the family has expanded quite a bit
since the 1840s.
“Turnout at the Couch Family Reunion in 2013
astounded me,” he wrote, “and all the 250 or so others who
showed up.”
A few of those family members came to Astoria on Sat-
urday to help deliver the drawing to the museum, where it
is now safely ensconced.
“Your town has a rich and colorful history,” he added.
“We are happy to be a part of it.”
‘A
COMMUNITY NOTES
SATURDAY
Sit & Stitch — 11 a.m. to
1 p.m., Homespun Quilts &
Yarn, 108 10th St. Bring knit-
ting, crochet or other nee-
dlework projects to this com-
munity stitching time. All skill
levels welcome.
Columbia Northwestern
Model Railroading Club —
1 p.m., in Hammond. Group
runs trains on HO-scale layout.
For information, call Don Car-
ter at 503-325-0757.
Spinning Circle — 1 to
3 p.m., Astoria Fiber Arts Stu-
dio, 1296 Duane St. Bring a
spinning wheel. For informa-
tion, call 503-325-5598 or go
to astoriafiberarts.org
SUNDAY
Seniors Breakfast —
9 a.m. to noon, Astoria Moose
Lodge, 420 17th St. Cooked
to order from menu, includes
coffee. Cost is $5 for seniors
62 and older, $7.50 for those
younger than 62. Breakfasts
are open to the public. Pro-
ceeds after expenses help sup-
port local and other charities.
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.
MONDAY}
Chair
Exercises
for
Seniors — 9 to 9:45 a.m.,
Astoria Senior Center, 1111
Exchange St. For information,
call 503-325-3231.
Grace and Encourage-
ment for Moms — 10 to
11:30 a.m., Crossroads Com-
See Notes, Page B4