Current Listing
Free metal roofing scraps
2 edging pieces 10 1/2 feet long.
1 scrap piece 18″ wide, with piece cut out. Solid piece is 42″ long, 5 feet long overall.

SOLD – Antique Dresser with Mirror – $50
Thank You BBQ !
Community Game Night Saturday June 10th 6PM
It’s that time of the month again! Community Game Night is this Saturday June 10th, 6 PM
This is a free, fun event where all are welcome to attend – come play games with your friends and neighbors – bring your own favorite game to share, or play one of ours. Hope to see you there!!
Please call or email with questions or concerns (503) 800-1092, Christy@cosmichealingnw.com
Rising Hearts Studio
35840 7th St
Nehalem, OR 97131
(503) 800-1092
‘Lifting the community through education and services that promote healing on all levels”

Spiritual Journey Meditation Class with Jan Boal June 13th
Please join us at Rising Hearts Studio for a Spiritual Journey Meditation Class facilitated by Jan Boal. This new monthly event will help you journey within and connect to you Spirit Guides. Our forst meeting is Tuesday, June 13th 4-5PM. The fee for this class is $25.
“As far back as I can remember I felt a connection to the earth and animal kingdom. “I just knew” that this was sacred. For over 20 years I have continued my growth in learning about spiritual teachings which eventually led me to becoming a Shamanic Apprentice and then Practitioner emphasized with Ancient Wisdom Healing Knowledge. My strong animal allies and spirit guides have taught, escorted and healed me in my Shamanic journeys. Now, they work through me to help others whether individually or as a community.”
Positive Vibes
Holistic Care
Janboal.com
Janboalrn.com
509 828-7353
Rising Hearts Studio
35840 7th St
Nehalem, OR 97131
(503) 800-1092
“Lifting the community with education and services that promote healing on all levels’

Free Futon mattress

Motion Recliner and Sofa /Stanton Brand for SALE



Beautiful Charcuterie Boards
Melinda Veil



Beautiful artificial arrangements


hand tools for sale
gardening shovels,axes,pry bars,large
bow saws,metal snips,
extendable tree trimmer,
butane soldering kit,optical glass
magnifying lenses,inspection mirrors,
machinist vises,screw clamp vises,
corner vise and much more…………….
Many items are $3 each

Some humor!
But first, an alternative to the McGill study:
I’m honestly not sure who is right here. There are, of course, a million other reasons NOT to shoot that junk, and I think just about everyone who shot the junk got SARS anyway, right? What increased or decreased that chance may not be known??
Moving on to some great humor!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QathxavHSk
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MT532U7mNE&t=3s
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyNJdLSE9FQ
FUN SUMMER GAMES
Text me @503-812-5939.


unique piece

Repair Cafe and a Swap Shop!!
Saturday, June 10th
3:00-5:00
in the Heart of Cartm workshop
→ Please pre-register on our website
www.heartofcartm.org/repaircafe
These expert fixers come to the repair table with an enormous amount of professional experience. They dedicate these 2 hours to help folks keep beloved items from going into the garbage.
Susan Srofe
Judith Mills
John Goertzen
Gary Bond
Mark Balmer
John Beaston
Sign up now for a fix!
Examples of things you can bring:
Vacuum
Lamp
Kitchen appliance
Clock
Hand tool for sharpening
Jewelry
Small rips in cloth or leather
EARLIER IN THE DAY, SATURDAY, JUNE 10TH…..
The Town of Wheeler is hosting it’s Annual Clean Up Day for town residents. Heart of Cartm will be hosting a Swap Shop at the waterfront park until 1:00pm.
Wheeler residents can drop off reusable items and anyone can swap or shop!

Camel tan leather sofa $250 obo
Pickup Manzanita.
Dimensions (approximately)
Height: 34”
Width: 88”
Depth: 35”
Please email if interested.


vaccine alarmism
This is not really what the study found. Here is a review.
www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/covid-19-medical/vaccine-study-has-people-worried-being-misinterpreted
Broyhill Sofa and Chair FOR SALE
Like new blue/grey sofa and chair. Sofa $125.00 Chair $75


Sold Garden Seat
Vintage Books

Treadmill

Plants, compost, planters, bird feeders and vermiculture!
Pick your plants and put your cash in the bird house on the plant stand, or you can Venmo Kelley and Merle @kelleymerle
Delicious local compost by the 5 gallon bucket, or lovingly prepared for you in a reusable burlap bag for $30/bag.
Our Community Compost Club is getting ready to build an onsite vermiculture bin! In the meantime you can add your food scraps to one of the three bins onsite. Just make sure to read what can and cannot go in there before you feed the worms.
Planter boxes of various sizes are available pre-planted or made to order. We have small, medium, large and a tomato planter to choose from. All boxes are made from reused, upcycled wood by local artisan Mattias Ekstrom. Come take a look, pick the one you want and either buy it fully planted or email us to place your order.
Bird Feeders include a bottle style feeder where you fill a bottle with seeds and as they eat the seeds are released into the tray; and two traditional style feeders in medium or large. Super cute!
All prices are marked. If you want to pay something different feel free. Just put the money in the birdhouse or Venmo us.
Trellises available in three different sizes. Email queenbee@dirtybirdsgardencenter.com to get photos and measurements.
Check out our website for up and coming events, and feel free to suggest your own. This is a space for the community to explore, learn and reconnect with each other in ways that benefit you, us and this beautiful place we inhabit.
dirtybirdsgardencenter.com



Dark rich top soil



Hey, I’m Back!
Hey, I’m Back!
A few days ago, a neighbor stopped over at my house to tell me to get back to writing. I’ve appreciated the emails and phone calls of support from citizens in the community, many I don’t even know, urging me to keep writing. So here I am.
I didn’t take a break because I was afraid of the haters who emailed me. Disappointed and discouraged, but not afraid. A lot of those emails, I suspect, were written by people day drinking and leaving their minds behind.
I took a break to gain some distance and perspective about what’s happening politically in town and why it bugs me so much.
How do we hold people accountable for their actions in our shared public life, if not by naming both the action and the actor? If there’s no accountability, there’s no justice. If there’s no justice, there’s no peace. That’s not just a slogan.
Do the rules and laws we have apply to everyone, including our elected officials?
When the word civility is used as a tool to shut down talking about uncomfortable things, who wins? When being “nice” means being silent, how do we deal with the hard stuff?
The seeds of who we become start growing early in life. Both the bad seeds and the good seeds. Some we water and some we don’t. Some we’re aware of and some we aren’t. During my break I remembered something I hadn’t thought of for a long time that shows me one of the seeds I’ve watered and why I’ve been so bothered.
The summer I was nine we moved to Yakima, Washington from Portland. Our new home was in a quiet neighborhood with no busy streets and a cemetery at the end of the road. I could walk or ride my used pink and white Schwinn to McClure Elementary School and there were a ton of other kids about my age to play with.
Mrs. Green, my 4th grade teacher, was married to a police officer whose name was Peas. No kidding. Mrs. Green was a mixed bag. She had her favorites—Meg and Matt, Jeff and Jean—the four golden ones who got picked for everything. She was one of those adults you couldn’t trust. She acted one way when other grown ups were around and a whole ‘nother way when they weren’t.
I was somewhere in the middle of her list of kids she tolerated but there were a few kids she actively disliked—Lee who had warts on his hands and was painfully shy (I know because we were partners for square dancing). And Connie. Connie was maybe the only kid in our class who had a single mom and lived in a crappy duplex near my house. We weren’t friends really but we did walk to school sometimes. She didn’t have nice clothes like Meg and Jean. She got discounted hot lunch every day and she got excluded from things like field trips, when money was involved.
Connie got in trouble a lot for not staying at her desk. She’d get up about a million times a day to sharpen her pencil or go to the bathroom. Sometimes Mrs. Green would keep her inside at recess like that was going to help.
One day Connie got up one too many times and Mrs. Green used her husband’s handcuffs to cuff Connie to her desk. No lie. I don’t remember for how long. I do remember Connie’s face beet red with tears running down her cheeks and nose running with no way to wipe away the tears and snot.
This happened in 1969. I knew, as did every other kid in that classroom, that this wasn’t fair and it wasn’t right. If it happened today, Mrs. Green would’ve been fired and sued but none of us 4th graders told anybody. It was just another case of being a kid at the mercy of adults.
Fast forward to when the yearly school pictures came out sometime in the fall. Mrs. Green gave every kid who wanted, the smallest sized picture of her. I took one with a plan to revenge Connie in mind.
Fairness, facts, truth and justice matter more to me than just about anything else and always has, so I’m usually disappointed with how things play out in real life.
I drew a devil face and horns in ink on Mrs. Green’s picture and showed it to Connie after school. Other kids saw it and one of them snatched it from me and took it back to school to show Mrs. Green what I’d done.
I had to tell my mom and I told her why I’d done it. She wasn’t mad but she didn’t interfere with Mrs. Green’s punishment. I was supposed to write an apology and when I wouldn’t, because I was not sorry, I lost my recess for the rest of the year–months and months of sitting inside at my desk looking at Mrs. Green and wishing she was dead.
As a 9 year old, I didn’t have a way to challenge the hypocricy of an adult who pretended to be nice while using her power and control to bully a kid.
But I’m not a kid anymore.
I’ll be writing again this week. Until then, peace out.
Kim Rosenberg loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com
Yoga with Veterans and with Molly and Janet
Here is the info:
First we have Yoga with Molly.
Day – Monday
Time. – 11:15 PST
Place – Tillamook YMCA
If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link:
Link. – us06web.zoom.us/j/84115365249?pwd=Y1ZETEp1ZEtoS1JDTG9Sdmg3cGoyQT09
Next we have Yoga with Janet.
Day – Tuesday
Time – 10:30 PST
Place – NCRD in Nehalem
If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link:
Link. – us02web.zoom.us/j/84141817987
Brian
Electric Trike for sale
I havent been able to upload any images, but I can email or text them to you, you can also look at libertytrike.com.
Great fun to ride but not right for where I live in Nehalem. Too much traffic.
I am asking $1400.00 for it.
YES for Manzanita City Hall
We come down to it! Please send each councilor and the mayor an email [https://ci.manzanita.or.us/city-council/] urging them to vote to build Manzanita
a new city hall, and to fund it so that construction can start as soon as possible.
Each month of delay now costs the city about $20,000 ($240,000 annually)
Manzanita City Council will vote this week on whether to move ahead to
Build a new City Hall. If they vote to go ahead they will then vote to move
To Phase 2 of the project, including how to fund it. Here’s a link to the City Council
Agenda for Wednesday’s meeting: ci.manzanita.or.us/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Regular-Session-Agenda_Final-060723.pdf
I favor the State of Oregon’s loan that City Manager Leila Aman
outlined over the last month or so. It has a really low interest rate, an efficient and speedy application process, and will be funded mostly from Transient Lodging Fees. It is a win-win all around. It’s the most bang for our buck.
For those who need to bone up on any details concerning the construction of the new
City Hall, here’s a link to the city’s “City Hall Plaza Project” section on their website:
ci.manzanita.or.us/city-hall-project/
Let’s move ahead
Mark Kuestner
Manzanita, OR
