ABOVE: New this year, Matt the DJ elf will spin holiday tunes starting at 4 p.m. Saturday. RIGHT: Spectators watch fi reworks at the lighting of the Crab Pot Christmas Tree in 2020. The Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer A uniquely Ilwaco Christmas Illahee Apartments Crab Pot Christmas Tree will be lit Saturday By NIKKI DAVIDSON COAST WEEKEND Why Live Anywhere Else? 1046 Grand Avenue Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-2280 4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Surrounded by a maze of commercial fi shing gear and boats at the Port of Ilwaco, a group of volunteer elves strate- gized their next move. “It’s kind of like a big ver- sion of Jenga,” said Jenna Aus- tin as she sized up the towering pile in front of her. Austin, the Ilwaco Mer- chants Association president, was focused on the mountain of approximately 170 retired crab pots in front of her. They were carefully positioned into a pyr- amid to create the unmistakable fi gure of a Christmas tree. A pair of volunteers had already climbed the structure as if it was an adult-sized jungle gym, balancing near the top to string lights throughout the wire netting. The quirky holiday tradition started in Ilwaco 15 years ago, created by a grassroots com- munity group. Inspired by lob- ster-pot trees on the East Coast, they wanted to create something similar in Ilwaco to connect the city’s fi shing industry with a growing community of artists. Building the crab pot tree has become more complicated over the years, as the number of pots used to create the tree have now quadrupled. There’s even an employee with the Port of Ilwaco who has been dubbed the “crab engi- neer,” to ensure the makeshift Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer A decorated Jeep drives through the Ilwaco Crab Pot Christmas Tree lighting in 2020. creation is structurally sound. The crab pots are donated by local fi shermen, but they need to be in good enough shape so the tree won’t collapse in stormy weather before Christmas. See Page 5