A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 2021 Dancing: ‘A big lesson in using your body to be more expressive’ Continued from Page A1 Clatsop County, like every county in Oregon, is considered a “child care desert” — a fact only exac- erbated by the pandemic as parents struggled to care for children and continue working while schools, day cares and other care facil- ities shut down or were severely restricted in how many children they could accommodate. Sweet had already run a performing arts pre- school out of Encore for 10 years and was famil- iar with the state’s require- ments for child care, as well as the lengthy paper- work involved. At the end of the summer, she shifted Encore’s operations entirely, changing it from a dance studio into emer- gency child care. The fac- ulty who stayed on became certifi ed to work in child care. “I wanted to do every- thing I could to help our families through this year,” Sweet said. “It was either going to work or it wasn’t.” Encore serves around 100 students, down from the 275 to 300 enrolled in dance classes before the pandemic. Now, the stu- dents do their school work at the studio, whatever dis- tance learning program or school district-based curric- ulum their families chose to follow. Then, depending on their age, they have one or two dance and movement classes. Sweet is looking at devel- oping a full Encore-based academy next school year — her own “Fame” school, she likes to say, referencing the competitive performing arts school showcased in the 1980 fi lm . Dana Jones’ daughter has attended classes at Encore since she was 5 years old. Now, at 13 , the studio has become one of the few options she has to socialize Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Astoria School of Ballet director Maggie Wall sanitizes a hula hoop that the dancers use in their routine. Hailey Hoff man/The Astorian Emily Madsen teaches a ballet class at Maddox Dance Studio. All students and instructors are required to wear masks while in the studio. with her peers during what has proved to be an iso- lated school year for many students. Online school through the Seaside School District was a rough transition — an alternate reality at fi rst, Jones said. But being able to do schoolwork at the studio and continue dancing has been transformative for her daughter. She’s doing things like running for student vice president that she wouldn’t have done in middle school. ‘Mind your spacing’ At the beginning of the pandemic , there was little talk about going virtual in the dance world, Wall said. “I think because nobody thought it was going to be for very long,” she said. But over the past year , many of the studios have relied on some virtual component to supplement classes or to deliver a type of performance. When the studios were required to be fully shut down, Wall would send out links to her students — videos created by other professionals for classes they could take at home. It exposed her students to a variety of styles, but it couldn’t replace in-person instruction. Still, she added, fi lming things like a small showcase from “The Nutcracker” that her students performed in December meant even out- of-town family could eas- ily enjoy a recital without needing to travel to Astoria. At Maddox Dance Stu- dio in Warrenton, Jeanne Maddox Peterson’s young students helped her nav- igate Zoom so she could teach one group in person while other students fol- lowed along at home. For Peterson, these virtual les- sons made it feel like she could better pinpoint things she needed to address with dancers. But there are logistics of dance as an art form that are diffi cult to overcome — even with all the technology in the world. “So much of ballet is speaking without words,” Wall said, “and your face is so expressive.” Because of the corona- virus, everyone’s faces are covered in masks. When her ballet students fi lm their spring recital in April for release in May, they will all be wearing masks. Wall and her students practice being expressive with their eyes and foreheads, but they must rely on body language even more. “It’s a big lesson in using your body to be more expressive,” Wall said. After all: “A person in the back of the theater can’t read your eyes or your face, but they can read your whole body language.” At Maddox Dance Stu- dio, large squares are marked out on the studio fl oors, designating where students can stand and move during lessons. In the center of each square, a printed cir- cle reminds them to “mind your spacing.” But even this limitation has turned out to have some benefi ts, Peterson said. A dancer doesn’t always Clam digs: State called situation a ‘perfect storm’ Continued from Page A1 In mid-January, one razor clam came back with a test result of 140 parts per mil- lion, well over the state’s threshold of 20 parts per million . The surge followed a large, harmful algal bloom in the fall, just after clams fi nished a second, late-sum- mer spawning and were gob- bling up food in preparation for the lean winter months. Unfortunately, the food they were eating — and stor- ing for energy reserves — was full of toxins, said Mat- thew Hunter, the shellfi sh project leader for the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife. A “stall” in ocean winds and currents in the early fall helped create conditions for the bloom and essentially held it along the Oregon C oast. More normal condi- tions during this seasonal transition period would have likely broken up the bloom. The state called the sit- uation a “perfect storm of harmful algal blooms, weather, ocean currents and the clams’ own physiology.” Now, fi shery manag- ers are waiting to see what an upcoming spring transi- tion period brings. If there is not the usual transition in ocean conditions, waves and winds, “we could see some issues,” Hunter said. To reopen beaches for razor clam digs, the Ore- gon Department of Agricul- ture requires two consecu- tive tests with results below the closure limit. Harmful algal blooms have become a regular part of fi shery managers’ con- siderations when it comes to both razor clam and Dunge- ness crab fi sheries. In 2015, a massive harm- ful algal bloom shut down razor clam digging in Ore- gon from the spring into the winter. In 2016, the fi shery weathered another bloom with a closure that continued through 2017. But the blooms remain unpredictable. The cells that produce the toxin may be present in huge concentrations in the water, but not producing any toxin. Then, if there is toxin pres- ent, whether clams and crabs accumulate domoic acid in their tissues can depend on the time of year, food avail- ability and their need to hold onto food. Oregon does not have as many razor clams as Wash- ington state and the Clatsop beaches account for the bulk of the clams harvested in the state each year. Unlike Wash- ington state, which opens digs at set dates and times throughout the year, Ore- gon’s beaches are generally open to clamming except for a seasonal closure from July 15 to Sept. 30 north of Tilla- mook Head. As of March 4, Wash- ington state is continuing to sample razor clams reg- ularly. Fishery managers are waiting for domoic acid levels to drop to safe levels before they announce har- vest dates. know what size of stage she or he might be asked to dance on. The social dis- tance boundaries help rein- force to Peterson’s stu- dents that they can’t just go “gallop into the wild blue yonder.” It has been a scary, long and traumatic period, Wall said, but coming back together in classes has felt joyful. Weird, yes, — danc- ing in masks, sanitizing everything — but joyful, Consult a PROFESSIONAL Discuss Printer Features LEO FINZI Astoria’s Best Containers have tradition- ally then gone to rural areas of the Pacifi c Northwest and have been loaded with prod- ucts such as hay cubes, pota- toes and lumber, before being sent back for export, said Peter Friedmann, the execu- tive director of the Agricul- ture Transportation Coalition. But demand is high for consumer imports, which earn ocean carriers a higher freight rate. The pandemic and uneven economic recov- eries around the world have led to a shortage in contain- ers and a dramatic increase in shipping costs. Carriers have opted to send containers back to Asia empty to expedite the import of more high-value consumer goods. “The steamship lines are all private companies all around the world,” Friedmann said. “They apparently don’t care about the U.S. exporter, and they don’t really care about the consumer either. 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Exporters: Demand is high for consumer imports Continued from Page A1 and the students have been resilient. “As dancers we’re trained to pivot and turn and leap: Go to the fl oor, get up, turn, go the other way, change lanes,” Sweet said. “It’s constant changing and you have to be prepared. You can’t get fl ustered when the gear changes. You have to adapt and you have to adapt with grace and style.” You have to make it look good. ASTORIA CHIROPRACTIC Alicia M. Smith, DC Owner A: Absolutely! We would be happy to give you a second opinion. Call to 503-325-3311 1490 Marine Drive schedule a free consult. Suite 202 Astoria, Oregon Q: I’m going out of town and need to stop my newspaper. What are my options? have different options for A: We you if you are heading out of Jeremy Feldman town. We can switch you to a Web subscription while you are away and Circulation Manager you can read the paper online, or you can have your delivery stopped and donate your missed papers to local schools. Whichever option fits your needs, just call our circulation department at 800-781-3214 or go www.dailyastorian.com online and enter your vacation at 949 Exchange St., Astoria, OR www.dailyastorian.com under “Subscriber Services.” 800-781-3214