Current Listing

Choir Forming: Sing for Selfcare and/or as a Ministry

Submitted By: oquinnhomestead@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
To start, we will gather monthly in Nehalem as a healing circle of singers to learn songs written for the purpose of bringing comfort to those at important thresholds of life (including end of life).

Although these songs were written with this intention, singing as a ministry is not required. We invite you to bring your voice and let your soul be nourished.

Please email to indicate interest, and we will share more about this newly forming Threshold Choir chapter.
oquinnhomestead@gmail.com

Nehalem Bay Health District Board Meeting

Submitted By: nbhdistrict@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
PUBLIC NOTICE

Nehalem Bay Health District
Regular Meeting
7:00 PM, Wednesday, March 08, 2023
Location: Zoom Remote Video Conferencing

This Meeting is open to the public.
The Zoom link is below for members of the public who wish to attend

Join Zoom Meeting
us02web.zoom.us/j/83125890009

For general questions or to request a meeting packet contact:
nbhdistrict@gmail.com

Agenda

7:00 PM NBHD Regular Meeting Agenda

I. Call to order

II. Nehalem Bay Health District’s DEI Statement

III. Consent Agenda:
A. Approval of NBHD February 08 minutes
B. CEO’s February financial report

IV. Public comment

V. New Business
A. Geological Survey discussion with Carlson Geological
B. CEO project update
C. Discuss and approve date for Supplemental Budget Hearing

VI. Old Business
A. Website buildout and content update
B. General update on Land use project, upper and lower properties

Adjournment

NOTE: Nehalem Bay Health District regular board meetings are scheduled for the second Wednesday of each month at 7:00 PM.

TAKE A FUNKY LITTLE ROMP THROUGH THE SWAMP WITH MARIA MULDAUR AND RED RED HOT BLUESIANA BAND

Submitted By: barbaraandchuck@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
PUT ON YOUR DANCING SHOES

NORTH COAST MUSIC PROJECT IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE RETURN OF MARIA MULDAUR AND HER RED HOT BLUESIANA BAND

It is going to be a Cajun dance party

March 26, 2023
White Clover Grange
Doors 3:30 PM

Tickets available at:
tickettomato.com/event/7935

Opener 4:00 PM
Neahkahnie High School Choir directed by Michael Simpson

5:00 PM Maria Muldaur and Her Red Hot Bluesiana Band (2 sets)

This show is a benefit for the Neahkahnie High School music department

Take a funky little romp through the swamp with Maria with this JJ Cale song , Cajun Moon:

https://youtu.be/E_uA-buFEu4

North Coast Music Project would like to thank their community partners:

Maynard J. Keller Trust
Rockaway Roastery, Cosmo Jones, owner
Nehalem Bay Health Center
Fulcrum Community Resources
All of our crew and volunteers

GoBag PopUp Store March 11

Submitted By: brad.hart@evcnb.org – Click to email about this post
evcnb.org/events-and-training/gobag-popup-031123

Get a complete GoBag filled with a 3-day supply of essentials so you’re prepared for an emergency.

You can also find individual items to create your own GoBag or supplement one you already have.

Don’t forget, each member of your family should have a GoBag. Consider having one in your vehicle as well.

Large area rug for sale $75 obo

Submitted By: dave.a.rosen@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Skye Blush/Grey 7 ft. 6 in. x 9 ft. 6 in. Traditional Polyester Pile Runner Rug

$75 obo. We have had it for about 3 years but need to make room (getting new flooring). No stains or issues.

New at Home Depot $357:
www.homedepot.com/p/LOLOI-II-Skye-Blush-Grey-7-ft-6-in-x-9-ft-6-in-Traditional-Polyester-Pile-Runner-Rug-SKYESKY-01BHGY7696/316423582

March at Buttercup Homemade Ice Creams & Chowders

Submitted By: juliebuttercup22@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Our new menu starts today!

ICE CREAMS

Irish Coffee on brown butter cone
Burnt Chocolate on salted almond cone (coming later this week)
Marshmallow on chocolate-dipped graham cracker cone
Strawberry Honeycomb on vanilla bean cone
Chocolate Mint Cookies n Cream on chocolate cone
Thai Peanut Swirl (vegan) on vegan/gluten-free cone (still in development this week 🙂
Lemon Violet Sorbet (vegan) on vanilla vegan/gluten-free cone

CHOWDERS

NW Clam Chowder…same as always

Thai Red or Green Curry…same as always

Tuscan Sausage Chowder…creamy parmesan base, house Italian sausage, white wine, kale, fennel, potatoes, celery, leeks, grilled red peppers, garlic topped w/house pesto, spiced tomato butter

Mulligatawny Chicken Chowder…coconut base, red lentils, curry, garam masala, tomatoes, wild rice, potatoes, celery, onions topped with apple chutney and cilantro

Served w/Wolfmoon bread

Add an organic green salad w/toasted hazelnuts, sheep’s milk feta, pear vinaigrette

We make our own drinks!

Ginger…hot or cold, this cures everything!

Vietnamese Iced Coffee…dairy-free. sugar-free w/French Roast brewed w/cardamom and almond, coconut milk and coconut sugar

Honey Lavender Lemonade

French Press…Buttercup’s own, exclusive blend by Wolfmoon sold by cup or retail bottles

North Fork CommuniTeas

HOURS

Thursday – Saturday, 11:30 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Sunday 11:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.
CLOSED MON – WED

35915 Hwy 101 North
Nehalem-by-the-River

Call ahead and we’ll have your order ready….503 368 CHOW

AUDTIONS THIS WEEK FOR ’12 ANGRY JURORS’ AT NCRD PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

Submitted By: frank@wandascafe.com – Click to email about this post
www.RiverbendPlayers.org

Hi, I’m Frank Squillo and I’ll be directing our June production of ’12 ANGRY JURORS’.

The stage play was first performed on CBS TV in 1954. It was then turned into the highly acclaimed movie version in 1957 starring Henry Fonda, and remains a classic to this day!

The stage production can now incorporate men and women into the plot with each character remaining very close to the original script, despite gender differences.

Auditions are this week (Thursday and Saturday) and I would love to see you at either of our two audition dates being held at the NCRD Performing Arts Center.

For more information go to www.riverbendplayers.com and click on the AUDITIONS tab.

Ecstatic Dance : Comet Beneficence

Submitted By: neahkahniespiritdance@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Thursday March 2nd
at the White Clove Grange on HWY 53
5Rhytmns inspired playlist by Fae

Doors open at 6:00 PM for warmup/setup
6:30 PM – opening circle/dance set
8:00 PM – closing circle

$10 (or what you can)
*Kids dance free*
____
“Hello everyone,
You are invited to come dance and play with an abstract painting. This painting can be felt as a strong living presence.
The painting was created a month ago when planet Earth had a rare visitation of a beautiful comet, only coming close to Earth every 50,000 years. Perhaps you saw images of it. The unique comet energy was said to support a great shift on Earth, from old limited ways to new expansive hearted ways of living and being. Powerful blissful descending energies of the comet were channeled into this painting, bringing down the bright cosmic motions into embodiment.
Let us dance together with these happy energies, and participate in anchoring them further into our bodies and the Earth.” -Shaukya
‘Comet Beneficence’, by Shaukya Dekker. Oil on canvas, 48 x 36 inches, 2023
_____________________
Dance Etiquette:
*Please limit talking on the dance floor. Setup and breakdown is a great time to catch up with people. Stepping into the foyer for conversations during dance would be appreciated.
*All ages and all bodies are welcome. We ask this to be a sober space.
*We are encouraging everyone to be mindful of each other’s safety and health and stay home if you are not feeling well, or have been exposed to someone sick. Follow your own judgment on whether to wear a mask or not.

Writers Read Celebration March 10 Ponders What Hemingway Would Say

Submitted By: nmccarthy1276@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
If Ernest Hemingway arrived on the North Coast, what would he say?
Talented writers who will read at the Writers Read Celebration on March 10 at the Cannon Beach Library have all sorts of ideas. He might: ask why he left Cuba; tell stories and knock back a bourbon at the Driftwood Inn; recount how a boy reeled in a seagull; discuss fishing with a youngster at the library; or describe how a 12-step program member took flight as a crow.
The Writers Read Celebration will begin at 7 p.m. in the library, 131 N. Hemlock St. It will be a hybrid event, with an online link available on the library’s website, cannonbeachlibrary.org
Most of the writers, who range from Longview, Washington to Tillamook, Oregon, will read their short stories and poems in person at the library, while at least three will read online.
This is the fifth year for the Writers Read Celebration. Writers from everywhere were asked to submit entries in any form, including stories, essays, poems, haikus, etc. on a theme; entries were limited to 600 words, and writers could submit up to three pieces each. This year’s theme was “Hemingway at the Beach: What Would He Say?”
A six-member panel of volunteers chose 16 from among 47 submissions without knowing who wrote them. Selections were made based on how closely the pieces followed the theme, word usage, content and the emotions evoked.
Writers who were invited to the Writers Read Celebration are:
Darrell Clukey, Cannon Beach, Oregon: short story, “The Passing Visitor”
Celeste Deveney, Nehalem, Oregon: short story, “A Dog’s Tale”
Butch Freedman, Tillamook, Oregon: short story, “An Old Man Surfs”
Dian Greenwood, Portland, Oregon: short story, “On First Seeing”
Craig Allen Heath, Longview, Washington: short story, “Papa at Cannon Beach”
Marc Imlay, Longview, Washington: short story, “The Young Boy and the Seagull”
Eve Marx, Seaside, Oregon: short story, “Nothing’s Going to Happen”
Steven Mayer, Cannon Beach, Oregon: short story, “Hemingway at the Beach”
Russell Myers, Vancouver, Washington: short story, “The Library”
Jennifer Nightingale, Astoria, Oregon: poems, “Papa’s Bindlestiff” and “Eel Grass”
Steve Price, Portland, Oregon: short story, “Leaving Cuba”
Scott T. Starbuck, Vancouver, Washington: poem, “Salmon Prophet”
L Swartz, Wheeler, Oregon: short story, “12-Step Famous”
James A. Tweedie, Long Beach, Washington: short stories, “Castaway” and “Birthday at the Beach”

BUY TICKETS NOW FOR NEIL SIMON’S AWARD-WINNING PLAY ‘BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS’

Submitted By: frank@wandascafe.com – Click to email about this post
Log on to select your performance date and select your seats at www.riverbendplayers.org.

Set in the Brighton Beach section of Brooklyn, New York in September 1937 during The Great Depression, this coming-of-age comedy focuses on Eugene Morris Jerome, a Polish-Jewish American teenager who experiences puberty, sexual awakening, and a search for identity as he tries to deal with his family, including his older brother Stanley, his parents Kate and Jack, Kate’s sister Blanche, and her two daughters, Nora and Laurie, who come to live there after their father’s death.

The new living arrangement is taking its toll on Jack’s health, as he has to work two stressful jobs to support the extended family.

Meanwhile, Aunt Blanche is interested in dating their neighbor, who has a drinking problem, despite Kate’s objections; Stanley faces problems with his own job when he stands up to his somewhat tyrannical boss, and later resorts to some shady means to support the family’s struggle; cousin Nora, whom Eugene has a crush on, is eager to be a paid dancer in a Broadway musical, even though the family’s circumstances might not allow it, much to her dismay; and cousin Laurie, who has heart problems and requires frequent doctor visits, is a source of annoyance for Eugene.

All the while the family has other relatives living in Poland, which is under invasion, and they are worried about what might happen if they remain there, or how they’ll be able to put them up if they escape and come to Brooklyn.

www.riverbendplayers.org

Outcall Massage

Submitted By: shawnmarieflynnlmt@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Outcall Massage
Aloha I have weekend availability!!
60/90/120 min sessions
Gua SHA, Tui Na, Traditional Lomi Lomi, Swedish, Aromatherapy, Reiki, Deep Tissue, Acupressure as well as spa treatment s like body scrubs and foot treatments!! OR LMT 12654
E mail shawnmarieflynnlmt@gmail.com
Or call (503)484-4963
Organic Body Butters and Aromatherapy products also available! All organic And Fair trade.
Mahalo

Yellow Radio Class March 18, 2023 11 am – 1 pm

Submitted By: brad.hart@evcnb.org – Click to email about this post
evcnb.org/events-and-training/yellow-radio-03182023
Sign up for this popular class today.

Communication during and immediately after an emergency is an important component of response and recovery. It connects affected people, families, and communities with first responders, support systems, and other family members.

Communication is one of the most important components of emergency preparedness and response. In many emergencies, especially a major earthquake and tsunami like the anticipated Cascadia Subduction Zone event, usual communication pathways like landlines, cell phones, and the internet will be unavailable.

The Yellow Radio program teaches people to
communicate among neighbors about news, needs, and available local resources.

5,800 kicker tax

Submitted By: dixiegainer@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
SB 990 would change state practice around what is colloquially called the “Kicker”. Meaning, that money that is returned to taxpayers if revenue collected exceeds 102% of what was budgeted. If you’ve been an Oregonian for awhile like me, you remember getting kicker checks during the good years. A number of years ago, the law was changed to make it so that, instead of receiving a kicker check, taxpayers would receive the money as a tax credit on the following year’s taxes. That might have been all fine and good when we were talking about $100 kicker checks, but now we’re talking about an average of $5,800 per person! That’s more than a full month’s salary for a lot of people in rural Oregon. The government shouldn’t be holding onto that money for a year for convenience. That money belongs to the taxpayers and it should be returned ASAP. Unfortunately, SB 990 hasn’t been scheduled for a hearing. I encourage you to contact Senator Mark Meek, the chair of the Committee on Finance and Revenue in the Senate and ask him to schedule a public hearing and a work session ASAP.

Sen .MarkMeek@oregonlegislature.gov

ART BARN – Open studio & Jam session – March 7 in Cannon Beach

Submitted By: tolovanaartscolony@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Join us for ART BARN, Tuesday, March 7th at Tolovana Hall.

What’s ART BARN, you ask?

ART BARN is an open studio. A jam session. A friendly place to hang out with other creative minds, doodle, tie-dye, strum, weave or whatever else catches your fancy.

We’ll be there from 6-to-8PM. Feel free to bring snacks, friends, art supplies, guitars and so on.

We know there’ll be a few musicians, so the jam session is on!

If you have any questions, email tolovanaartscolony@gmail.com or call 541-215-4445.

See you at the… BARN!

An Easy Going Weekly Drawing Class led by Sharon Amber in Cannon Beach

Submitted By: tolovanaartscolony@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Join us for an easy-going weekly drawing class, led by Sharon Amber, beginning Thursday, March 9th.

The hour-long class, at Tolovana Hall, begins at 6:30PM.

The class will begin with basic concepts like shading and figure studies, moving along at a pace decided collectively by the class. It’s going to be a very welcoming, supportive and easy environment.

Sharon calls it a “informal, meandering class,” add that “whatever we want to do, we’ll do.”

As much as it’s about Sharon teaching basic drawing concepts, it’s about community coming together to be creative.

Sharon encourages students to bring pencils and pens they like. She’ll provide paper.

Tuition is $5 per class, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds.

Students of all ages are welcome, but the class is not a substitute for babysitting—if kids or teens come, parents must stay with them.

Tolovana Hall is located at 3779 S. Hemlock St. in Cannon Beach.

For more, email tolovanaartscolony@gmail.com or call 541-215-4445.