Cannon Beach gazette. (Cannon Beach, Or.) 1977-current, February 10, 2017, Page 8A, Image 8

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    8A • February 10, 2017 | Cannon Beach Gazette | cannonbeachgazette.com
‘Life in the River’ at Seaside Library Goodding memorial concert
For nearly 20 years, the Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife has
been closely monitoring the survival
and downstream migration of salmon
in coastal river basins. As the assis-
tant project leader of the Salmonid
Life Cycle Monitoring Project, Der-
ek Wiley has spent the past decade
researching salmon and steelhead
and making estimates about their
abundance and survival rates on the
northern Oregon coast, often tak-
ing his GoPro camera into the fi eld
with him to capture fi sh behavior
and spawning. On Wednesday, Feb.
15, join Wiley at the Seaside Public
Library for the second of this year’s
Listening to the Land presentations
focused on wildlife. Admission to
“Life in the River” is free.
Wiley will provide a special
screening of his fi lms documenting
the freshwater life of native salmon
in our region. Journey’s End is an
18-minute video capturing underwa-
ter behavior and spawning of wild
chum salmon, Chinook salmon, coho
salmon, and Pacifi c lamprey in sev-
eral rivers and creeks on the north-
ern Oregon Coast. He will also share
footage documenting Salmonid Life
Cycle Monitoring Project activities
on the North Fork Nehalem River
from fall 2015 and give us an update
on more recent monitoring results.
As a research biologist with
ODFW, Wiley supervises a fi eld crew
responsible for monitoring abun-
dance of adult and juvenile salmonids
in the North Fork Nehalem River for
the Salmonid Life Cycle Monitoring
Project. He earned a bachelor’s de-
gree in biology from Towson State
University and a master’s degree in
fi sheries and wildlife from Frostburg
State University, both in Maryland.
In 2004 he moved to John Day, Ore-
gon, to work for ODFW on a steelhead
research project. Two years later he
moved to Tillamook to take his current
position. Derek is an avid fl y fi sher-
man, photographer, and videographer.
Coast Happenings Calendar
features ZZ Top tribute band
The fi rst Jason Goodding Me-
morial Concert presents a Texas
Tribute to ZZ Top at the Seaside
Elks Club on Feb. 11. All dona-
tions benefi t the Oregon Fallen
Badge Foundation in honor of
Jason Goodding. Doors open at 8
p.m.
State’s poet laureate comes to CB
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Derek Wiley
Listening to the Land is a month-
ly winter speaker series offered Jan-
uary through May and presented by
North Coast Land Conservancy and
the Necanicum Watershed Council in
partnership with the Seaside Public
Library. For more information, visit
NCLCtrust.org.
Oregon’s poet laureate, Eliza-
beth Woody, will give a free read-
ing in Cannon Beach, Friday, Feb.
17, at 7 p.m. at Tolovana Hall.
Besides reading, Woody will
dive into her process, provide con-
text and background on her poems,
and also hold a question and answer
session. As such, aspiring writers
are especially encouraged to attend.
Woody got her start in aca-
demia. She studied at the Institute
of American Indian Arts, Ever-
green College and Portland State
University.v Over the course of
her two-year term she hopes to
visit the more far fl ung pockets of
the state, bypassing populations
centers like Portland that she feels
are well served by the arts. In the
early 2000s, Woody was part of the
group that revived the state’s poet
laureate position, which had laid
dormant for decades.
The reading is free. Tolovana
Hall, 3779 Hemlock St., Cannon
Beach. For more information vis-
it tolovanaartscolony.org, email
tolovanaartscolony@gmail.com or
call 541-215-4445.
YOUR GUIDE TO MUSIC, ART, COMMUNITY AND CULTURAL EVENTS ON THE NORTH COAST
Fish Tales
Friday, Feb. 10
Quilt Run 101
9:30 a.m., Center Diamond, 1065
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
888-305-0854, www.quiltrun101.
com. Quilt Run 101 is the annual
shop hop from Astoria to Brook-
ings where shoppers can pick up
one challenge fat quarter from
participating shops, make a quilt
and enter to win prizes.
Thistle & Rose
6 p.m., Seasons Café, 255 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
1159. Th istle and Rose play folk,
Americana and bluegrass music
from the 70s and 80s, and origi-
nal tunes.
Wes Wahrmund
6 p.m., Th e Bistro, 263 Hemlock
St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
2661. Wes Wahrmund’s classical
guitar skills amaze with light jazz
and original tunes.
Maggie & the Cats
6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, www.cafesweet-
basils.com, no cover, 21 +. Mag-
gie & the Cats play world-class
blues music, Creole, jazz, funk,
rhythm-n-blues and soul.
Texas Hold’em
7 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-
436-2973, 21 +. Cannon Beach
American Legion off ers a Friday
night Texas Hold’em poker tour-
nament, doors open at 3 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 11
PBL Tournaments
8 a.m., Seaside, Warrenton, Asto-
ria, 503-717-4308, www.seaside-
basketballtournaments.com. En-
joy the excitement of the annual
Pacifi c Basketball League tourna-
ments held at schools in Seaside,
Warrenton and Astoria.
Barbara Drake to speak at authors series
The Northwest Authors Series
continues at the Cannon Beach
Library on Feb. 11 with Barba-
ra Drake, author of “Morning
Light,” describing life in western
Oregon’s Yamhill Valley and les-
sons learned from her long sting
of country living.
On March 11, Ellen Urbani,
a former mental health special-
ist for the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security joins the
program. Her book “Landfall”
is a nuanced fi ctional interpre-
tation of historic events around Hurricane
Katrina. Urbani has also written “When I
was Elena,” documenting her life in Guate-
mala during the fi nal years of that country’s
civil war.
Portland mystery writer Warren Easley,
author of the Cal Claxton Mysteries: “Mat-
ters of Doubt,” “Dead Float” and “Never
Northwest Author Series
2 p.m., Cannon Beach Library,
131 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1391,
www.cannon-
beachlibrary.org, free. Barba-
ra Drake, author of “Morning
Light” will be featured.
Julie Amici Trio
6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, www.cafesweet-
basils.com, no cover, 21 +. Th e
Julie Amici Trio plays jazz, blues
and country music.
Maggie & the Cats
6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, www.cafesweet-
basils.com, no cover, 21 +.
Wes Wahrmund
Trunk Show
10 a.m., Primary Elements Gal-
lery, 232 Spruce St., Cannon
Beach, 503-436-0220, www.pri-
maryelementsgallery.com. Meet
Pamela Burkland Recherche,
who hand craft s custom bags
from Japanese obi silks and fas-
tens them with vintage buttons
at this one-of-a-kind Valentines
Trunk Show.
Drawing Workshop
1 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
738-6742, www.seasidelibrary.
org. Dorota Haber-Lehigh will
lead a free “Drawing Natural Ob-
jects” workshop covering light
and shadow aff ects, shade and
texture; sign up required, all ma-
terials provided.
6 p.m., Th e Bistro, 263 Hemlock
St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
2661. Wes Wahrmund’s classical
guitar skills amaze with light jazz
and original tunes.
“The Curious Savage”
7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts
Th eater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem,
503-368-7008,
www.ncrd.org,
$15. “Th e Curious Savage” is an
entertaining and fanciful come-
dy, giving the audience a feeling
that kindness and aff ection is not
entirely lost in a world of greed
and dishonesty.
Goodding Memorial
Concert
Look Down,” will be the
April 8 speaker.
The series concludes
May 13 with Mindy Hard-
wick, author of “Sweetheart
Wedding.” Though Hardwick
mainly focuses on teen and
tween books, she also writes
sweet contemporary romance
books; she facilitates poet-
ry workshops for teens at the
Denny Youth Juvenile Justice
Center and is the co-author of
four anthologies of their writing.
The Northwest Authors se-
ries takes place the second Saturday of each
month from October to May except Decem-
ber and is free to the general public. All li-
brary events are free and open to the public.
Cannon Beach Library is located at 131 N.
Hemlock St.; 503-436-1391, or at www.can-
nonbeachlibrary.org.
Concert features live music by
Texas Tribute, a ZZ Top tribute
band with Bruce Smith; dona-
tions go to the Oregon Fallen
Badge Foundation.
Shep Gold
8 p.m., Public Coast Brewing Co.,
264 3rd St., Cannon Beach, 503-
436-0285. Shep Gold plays folk
rock and indie music.
Sunday, Feb. 12
NAMI Meeting
2 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
738-6165, www.nami.org. Th e
National Alliance on Mental Ill-
ness welcomes individuals and
caregivers of anyone who suff ers
from a mental illness.
“The Curious Savage”
2 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts
Th eater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem,
503-368-7008, $15.
4 p.m., Seaside Convention Cen-
ter, 415 First Ave., Seaside, 503-
738-3311, www.sunsetempire.
com, $35, 21 +. Wines from the
northwest, appetizers from local
restaurants and an assortment of
treats are highlights of A Sweet
Aff aire, a fundraiser for scholar-
ships and Seaside Rotary Foun-
dation projects; includes silent
and live auctions.
7 p.m., Seaside, Warrenton, Asto-
ria, 503-717-4308, www.seaside-
basketballtournaments.com.
OF PLACES YOU CAN PICK UP A
COMPLIMENTARY COPY OF THE
LOTS G
CANNON BEACH
AZETTE
CANNON BEACH
Cannon Beach Bakery
Cannon Beach Book Company
Cannon Beach Beach Store
Cannon Beach Chamber of Commerce
Cannon Beach City Hall
Cannon Beach Conference Center
Cannon Beach Family Market
Cannon Beach Historical Center
Cannon Beach Hotel
Cannon Beach Liquor Store
Cannon Beach Property Management
Cannon Beach RV Resort
Cannon Beach Vacation Rentals
Cascade Sotheby’s Realty
Duane Johnson Real Estate
Ecola Creek Lodge
EVOO
Hallmark Inns & Resorts
Inn at Cannon Beach
Inn at Haystack Rock
Mariner Market
Martin Hospitality
Mo’s Restaurant
Burgers & Jam
6 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-2973. Th e Legion off ers
burgers and music on Monday
nights.
Tuesday, Feb. 14
Picnic Basket
Pig ‘N Pancake
Purple Moon/Morris’ Fireside Restaurant
RE/MAX Coastal Advantage
Sea Ranch RV Park
Sea Sprite at Haystack RockSea Sprite on the Estuary
Surfcrest Market
Sweet Basil’s Cafe & The Wine Bar
The Land’s End Motel
The Ocean Lodge
The Stephanie Inn
The Waves Motel
Tolovana Inn
US Bank/La Luna Loca
Windermere Stellar Real Estate
SEASIDE
Providence Seaside Hospital
Rite Aid
Safeway
Seaside Outlet Center
Seaside Signal/Cannon Beach Gazette Office
GEARHART
Windermere Stellar Real Estate
4,000 COPIES DISTRIBUTED EACH MONTH
Floating Glass Balls
7 p.m., Bill’s Tavern, 188 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-
436-2202, www.billstavernand-
brewhouse.com, no cover. Th e
Floating Glass Balls plays beach-
grass music – a blend of blue-
grass, Caribbean, folk, swing,
contemporary and country.
Friday, Feb. 17
Thistle & Rose
6 p.m., Seasons Café, 255 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
1159.
Maggie & the Cats
6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, no cover, 21 +.
Poet Reading
7 p.m., Tolovana Hall, 3779 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 541-215-
4445, www.tolovanaartscolony.
org. Oregon’s Poet Laureate
Elizabeth Woody will give a free
reading and discuss her writing
process, followed by a Q&A.
TOPS Meeting
Texas Hold’em
9:15 a.m., North Coast Family
Fellowship, 2245 Wahanna Road,
Seaside, 509-910-0354. Take
Pounds Off Sensibly (TOPS) fo-
cuses on healthy lifestyle changes
for weight loss.
7 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-2973, 21 +.
City Council
5:30 p.m., Cannon Beach City
Hall, 163 Gower St., Cannon
Beach, 503-436-1581, www.
ci.cannon-beach.or.us. Th is is a
work session.
Wednesday, Feb. 15
Garden Club Meeting
A Sweet Aff aire
PBL Tournaments
8 p.m., Elks Lodge, 324 Avenue
A, Seaside, 503-738-6651. Th e
fi rst Jason Goodding Memorial
Monday, Feb. 13
7 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
738-6742, www.seasidelibrary.
org, free. Food writer Jennifer
Burns Bright helps participants
explore the relationship with the
products of the sea, understand-
ing the ocean’s bounty and chal-
lenges.
Noon, Tolovana Hall, 3779 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, www.
tolovanaartscolony.org. Attend-
ees should bring lunch; coff ee,
tea and dessert are provided. An-
nual dues are $5, new members
welcome.
Overeaters Anonymous
3:30 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
440-4390. OA groups seek re-
covery through the Twelve Steps
program.
“The Curious Savage”
7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts
Th eater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem,
503-368-7008, $15.
Saturday, Feb. 18
Tuesday, Feb. 21
TOPS Meeting
9:15 a.m., North Coast Family
Fellowship, 2245 Wahanna Road,
Seaside, 509-910-0354.
Wednesday, Feb. 22
Overeaters Anonymous
3:30 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
440-4390.
Thistle & Rose
5 p.m., Th e Bistro, 263 Hemlock
St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661.
Thursday, Feb. 23
Floating Glass Balls
7 p.m., Bill’s Tavern, 188 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
2202, no cover.
Jazz Festival Kick-off
7 p.m., Elks Lodge, 324 Avenue
A, Seaside, 503-738-6651, $10.
Th e Seaside Jazz Festival kicks off
with a warm-up party featuring
Dave Bennett & Memphis Speed
Kings; limited seating.
Friday, Feb. 24
Yoga Festival
8 a.m., Cannon Beach Yoga Arts, 251
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, 503-
440-1649, www.cannonbeachyogaf-
estival.com, $190 to $375. Th e annu-
al Cannon Beach Yoga Festival off ers
workshops, meditation, music and
health/wellness treatments; multiple
venues, registration required.
Seaside Jazz Festival
3 p.m., Seaside Convention Cen-
ter, 415 First Ave., Seaside, 866-
345-6257, www.jazzseaside.com,
all ages. Th e annual Seaside Jazz
Festival at the coast features top
performers of traditional and
contemporary jazz, multiple
times and venues, check website
for schedule.
PBL Tournaments
8 a.m., Seaside, Warrenton, Asto-
ria, 503-717-4308, www.seaside-
basketballtournaments.com.
Thistle & Rose
6 p.m., Seasons Café, 255 Hem-
lock St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-
1159.
Bar-K Buckaroos
6 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, www.cafesweet-
basils.com, no cover, 21 +. Bar-K
Buckaroos play country music,
Western swing and a tribute to
Buck Owens.
Manzanita Writers Series
Maggie & the Cats
6:30 p.m., Sweet Basil’s Café, 271
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1539, no cover, 21 +.
“Bye Bye Birdie”
7 p.m., Seaside High School,
1901 Holladay Drive, Seaside,
503-738-5586 $4 to $8, all ages.
“Bye Bye Birdie: A Musical Com-
edy” is a family friendly musical
loosely based on Elvis’ journey
into the Army in the 1950s.
5 p.m., Th e Bistro, 263 Hemlock
St., Cannon Beach, 503-436-2661.
7 p.m., Hoff man Center, 594 La-
neda Ave., Manzanita, 503-368-
3846, www.hoff manblog.org, $7.
Th e Manzanita Writers Series
presents a reading and Q&A with
Arthur Bradford reading from
his short story collection “Turtle
Face and Beyond;” open mic to
follow.
Listen to the Land
“The Curious Savage”
6 p.m., Seaside Public Library,
1131 Broadway, Seaside, 503-
738-9126,
www.nclctrust.org,
free. Derek Wiley will discuss
“Life in the River” documenting
native salmon of the region.
7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts
Th eater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem,
503-368-7008, $15.
Bunco!
6:30 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach. Th e
Cannon Beach Women’s Auxilia-
ry off ers monthly Bunco games
every third Wednesday.
9 a.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach, $8
adults, $4 children. Proceeds help
support local veterans, families,
community organizations and
the high school scholarship fund.
7 p.m., Cannon Beach History
Center, 1387 Spruce St., Can-
non Beach, 503-436-9301, www.
cbhistory.org. Th e Stomptowners
play Celtic, Americana and folk
music blending Irish instrumen-
tation, voice and foot percussion.
Cannon Beach Reads
Evensong
Film Screening
Thistle & Rose
7 p.m., Cannon Beach Library,
131 Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-1391,
www.cannon-
beachlibrary.org. Th is month’s
selection is “Looking aft er Mini-
doka: An American Memoir” by
Neil Nakadate.
Thursday, Feb. 16
Senior Craft Fair
10:30 a.m., Bob Chisholm Com-
munity Center, 1225 Avenue A,
Seaside, 503-738-9323, www.
sunsetempire.com, $3 to $6.75,
all ages. Local artisans highlight
their creative talents during the
third Th ursday Craft Fair, in-
cludes handmade craft s, jewelry
and more.
Sunday, Feb. 19
Legion Breakfast
6 p.m., Cannon Beach Commu-
nity Church, 132 Washington St.,
Cannon Beach, 503-436-1222.
Evensong features performers
Jennifer Goodenberger and Wes
Wahrmund, meditative songs
and quiet refl ection.
PBL Tournaments
7 p.m., Seaside, Warrenton, Asto-
ria, 503-717-4308, www.seaside-
basketballtournaments.com.
Monday, Feb. 20
Burgers & Jam
6 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-2973.
Texas Hold’em
7 p.m., American Legion, 1216
Hemlock St., Cannon Beach,
503-436-2973, 21 +.
“The Curious Savage”
7 p.m., NCRD Performing Arts
Th eater, 36155 9th St., Nehalem,
503-368-7008, $15.
The Stomptowners
7:30 p.m., Hoff man Center, 594
Laneda Ave., Manzanita, 503-
368-3846,
www.hoff manblog.
org, $5. Manzanita Film Series
presents a selection of 12 fi lms
created by teens from the Pacif-
ic Northwest for the “Fresh Film
Northwest” program; running
time is 60 minutes.
Moody Little Sister
8 p.m., Public Coast Brewing Co.,
264 3rd St., Cannon Beach, 503-
436-0285. Moody Little Sister
brings together a mix of 60s rock,
classic country and soulful blues in
a show delivered with powerful pi-
ano and acoustic guitar, combined
with foot percussion and harmo-
nies with a side of story telling.