Season’s eatings
Thanksgiving in America is traditionally the season when family and friends step off life’s treadmill and come together to watch dad attempting to carve up a dried-out turkey with a steak knife, mom dusting off the Monopoly board and grandparents coming to terms with their granddaughter’s Celtic tattoo and nose ring.
Reflecting on a rocky relationship
Rocky habitats along the Oregon coastline are a primary attraction for the tourist economy and enrich the lives of all those living in coastal communities.
A glassy little souvenir
Commemorate your visit to the Oregon Coast with one-of-a-kind original glass float, being given away to some lucky winners by Newport merchants this winter.
The alchemy of art
Like many people who received evacuation orders during the Echo Mountain fire, Arlene and Lyle Gowing figured that safety officers were acting out of an abundance of caution and that they would soon be able to return to their home in the Salmon River Mobile Village.
Step by step
For decades, North Lincoln County residents have prepared for a tsunami, a wall of destruction coming out of the Pacific. “Never turn you back on the ocean,” they said.
Chinook Winds hits peek comedy
Chinook Winds Casino Resort will welcome back Comedy on the Coast this Friday and Saturday, Nov. 20 and 21, with the show shifting to the Concerts by the Sea Showroom to allow for social distancing.
Say ‘aye’ to pie for the holidays
For most people at Thanksgiving, baking just one pie can be enough to tip them over the edge into a full-blown kitchen crisis.
Author, author
Make sure you have something to write on when you tune in for another offering in the Authors in Conversation series on Saturday, Nov. 21, hosted by Manzanita’s Hoffman Center for the Arts.
It’s a ruff life
On the Oregon Coast, the ability to have our canine companions with us most of the time feels like a protected right.
Meet the host with the compost
As both an environmentalist and claustrophobe who’s fairly horrified by the idea of being filled with chemicals and then placed in small, strong box for eternity, I was immediately intrigued to see the next speaker for the Art of Aging/Art of Dying program series presented by the Hoffman Center in Manzanita.
Paper view
Lincoln City’s Chessman Gallery welcomes art lovers into the fold with its latest show, “Beautiful Pulp,” a collection of paper, book and print art by Jane Hodgkins, Julia Goos and Helen Abe-Ichiens.
Signs of the times
Local bird enthusiasts flocked together recently to create and install eight new permanent interpretive signs along the Alder Island Nature Trail path in the Siletz National Wildlife Refuge. The signs serve to bring attention to the flora and fauna found along the trail, including great blue herons, red alders, Coho salmon and 12-spotted skimmer dragonflies.
An offer I couldn’t refuse
My children can be left alone in the car on mild days and will always be ridiculously happy to see me every single time we are reunited, even if I was only gone for five minutes. But with a vocabulary limited to “woof,” they’re a little dull in the conversation department.
Bid good-buy
The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce is providing a safe way to get a head start on your holiday gift list by hosting an online auction featuring more than 50 locally donated items, open for bidding from Monday through Saturday, Nov. 16 to 21.
King Tides Project surges in Oregon
In winter, extreme high tides, commonly called “King Tides,” occur when the moon’s orbit comes closest to the Earth, the Earth’s orbit is closest to the sun and the sun, moon and Earth are in alignment. These tidal events are also known as perigean spring tides.
Fun, any way you slice it
Tillamook area nonprofit Food Roots is hosting the first virtual version of its popular Pie Night. Get your appetite primed and ready to choose one or more of the tasty local creations that will be auctioned off at Food Roots’ online local marketplace through Saturday, Nov. 21.
Good tidings
As part of its continuing quest to raise awareness of historical and current conservation, research and stewardship on the Oregon Coast, the Cape Perpetua Collaborative presents the 8th Annual Cape Perpetua Land-Sea Symposium on Thursday, Nov. 19.
Art both sacred and propane
As far as artistic mediums go, few sound as fun as that used by Calisse Browne, the November featured artist at the Artists’ Studio Association’s Beachstone Gallery in Lincoln City.
Breaching to the choir
The Oregon Chapter of the American Cetacean Society is offering the chance to get deep into whales this Saturday, Nov. 14, with a presentation by Alie Pérez of the Cascadia Research Collective (CRC).
Welcome to the t-rainy season
Early train travel was not a smooth ride. Rough, sometimes uneven tracks over often unforgiving terrain meant that, down to the dinnerware, everything that needed to survive even a short trek needed to be built to last.