Current Listing

CAR FOR SALE: 1998 Volvo V70 XC

Submitted By: seneca.siegel@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
We bought a new car and need to get rid of our old one! This car has been a great car for us. Sad to see it go. Some details about the car:

All wheel drive
Automatic transmission
191k Miles
CD player
Moon roof (opens and is still waterproof)
Power windows — all work
Power door locks — all work
Hatchback — all doors are functional
Registration good until 8/23
New battery
No dents — car in great condition
Oil changed less than 100 miles ago
Small tear on driver’s side seat
We have the title

Asking $2500

Serious inquiries ONLY please

503 801 Four 050

It’s Complicated

Submitted By: ben.killen.rosenberg@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Posting on behalf of Kim Rosenberg loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com
It’s Complicated
The reason I never name people in the posts I’ve been writing is because it’s really not about the who but about the how and the why.
I spoke at length with the builder yesterday at the lot after I’d posted the Case of the Missing Marsh the night before. I don’t think he’s evil and I never have. He’s doing what the rules say he can.
We had a good talk and I learned something about the process and his plan that made me hopeful. The thing I was most worried about–a lot full of big ocean view houses–isn’t happening. There’s room for things to change. I wish I would’ve talked to the builder earlier after DSL approved the application and before the bulldozing started.
I’m still mad but I’m mad about something that can never be changed–a place I loved died and the creatures who lived there have been displaced all because the rules and the people that should’ve protected The Marsh didn’t. DSL decided that .34 acres of wetland wasn’t worth saving nor were the birds and animals living there. The City decided not to enforce the Ordinances about tree removal or replacement on Open Space Land.
That’s not about the developer or the builder or the guys excavating at all. That’s about a piece of land that was supposed to be protected and then it wasn’t. None of the rules that applied were followed when it was logged which begs the question–why? There is no answer to this because there are no records.
I’m mad at myself about this, too. I took it on faith that the land was what it looked like to all of us neighbors–a sanctuary in the heart of town. But I didn’t look into it. I didn’t check the zoning or its history back when I might have been able to do something.
The varied thrush that used to nest back there lost its home, the elk lost their winter lunch counter, all the little ground squirrels that used to scamper over to wrestle some sunflower seeds from my feeders were probably buried. I haven’t seen the deer that used to come peeking out from the brush at the back of the lot. The bobcat is gone and I miss the big cedar tree at the corner on 3rd and how it felt to walk to the Apple past all that forest in the summer with the sun slanting through the trees.
The builder said to me that it’s never coming back and that change is hard. He wasn’t being unkind. And of course, he’s right. I’m old enough to know that but still, it breaks my heart.
What’s driven me throughout all the digging I’ve done hasn’t been personal and that’s why I never use names. It’s about the discrepancies I find between the way things actually work and the way they’re supposed to work, the lack of transparency in the government and agencies that make a person trying to understand feel gaslit or like Alice in Not So Wonderfuland.
I’ll keep showing up for the hearings and the meetings because I want to be part of solutions. There are solutions but sometimes they’re little ones like maybe I build my own bird sanctuary in my yard. The good news is my backyard is as big as my imagination and I’ve got room to grow out there and patience to wait. And I’ll keep talking to folks who have different ideas and perspectives because if we don’t keep talking to each other, then what?
Kim Rosenberg loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

Pyrex Storage for sale

Submitted By: johnfreethy@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Pyrex Glass Food Storage Kit.

15 pieces with 15 lids:
2x 11 cup rectangle
3x 3 cup rectangle (1 lid with crack)
2x 6 cup rectangle
3x 4 cup circle (1 lid with crack)
5x 2 cup circle (2 lids with crack)

All lids are BPA free!

This is 2 sets combined, purchased at Fred Meyer for about $125. Asking $40. In Nehalem.

johnfreethy@gmail.com

Meditations

Submitted By: robbro@coastwifi.com – Click to email about this post
In the spring of 2020 I made some videos of meditation exercises with Dawn Kahrs She has recently updated our website and put it all together you can go to greece for waves chiropractic.com scroll to services scroll down to meditations and they are available for your use. For all those interested. Thank you Bob

New Scholarship Opportunity

Submitted By: director@netartsbaywebs.org – Click to email about this post
RE: Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS announces a new scholarship opportunity for Tillamook County graduates.

Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS (WEBS) works to build a community of environmental stewards around the Netarts Bay watershed and the areas between Cape Meares and Cape Lookout. We recognize the role that students can play in this stewardship, and we are pleased to announce a new scholarship opportunity for Tillamook County residents that plan to enroll in any University, College, Junior College, or Trade School and work toward a degree or certification in the field of natural resources.

“WEBS is committed to supporting local students who care about our natural resources. We are thankful for the support we have received from our community. As a result of these contributions over the years, we are excited to announce a new scholarship opportunity open to individuals pursuing careers in science and conservation that inform future natural resource decisions related to the Netarts Bay watershed,” says WEBS Executive Director Chrissy Smith. “We are excited to be able to pay it forward and hope this will make it easier for residents and students to start a career in science, watershed health, bay ecology, oceanography, or a related field.”

Multiple scholarships may be awarded each year at the discretion of the board and based on applicants. This scholarship opportunity is available to any graduate of Tillamook County schools and current residents. Applications are due February 28, 2022. Funds will be allocated via the Tillamook School Foundation. More information can be found on the Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS website at www.netartsbaywebs.org/scholarships.

Questions about this opportunity can be sent to Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS by emailing director@netartsbaywebs.org.

PRESIDENTS DAY REFLECTIONS

Submitted By: tim4surf@yahoo.com – Click to email about this post
THE PATH TOWARDS THE DARKNESS

In school… Kennedy was shot.
Loudspeakers calmly announce the news,
directing us to go home.

Raking leaves, I ask our neighbor if he knows.
He nods quietly.

At our house. Cronkite, intoning the dark story.
Grim and resolute.
Words go on for hours.

Years later.
Martin too..
Tears of sadness
A huge void in our world.

Finally,
Bobby..

We’ll never see that light again.

The Case of the Missing Marsh: A Manzanita Mystery

Submitted By: ben.killen.rosenberg@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Posting on behalf of Kim Rosenberg. loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

The Case of the Missing Marsh:
A Manzanita Mystery

When I heard from the City in January that .34 acres of wetland on the 3rd Street lot did not exist, I was confused. How did a little more than a third of an acre of land go missing? I thought wetlands were protected in Oregon. Forested marshy swamps are especially valuable to the environment and in great danger because they depend on developers for protection.

The forested land formerly called The Marsh by old timers was where elk wintered, songbirds lived and deer birthed their babies every spring. That land was like the rug in The Big Lebowski–it really tied the room together. Did it not?

Searching through the records, I found the Wetland Delineation Report that was filed with the Department of State Lands back in April 2021. It shows where the wetlands are located and how large they are. So, unlike the ice cream I thought was in the freezer, I didn’t dream this up. I asked a couple of people I know with expertise in land use to look over the report, too. They advised me to ask for the mitigation plan to understand how the water from the wetland would be managed. Sometimes there’s an engineering solution or a site plan change to incorporate wetlands into a development’s landscape.

If you walked down 3rd Street this winter and watched the giant houses at Whispering Pines going up, you saw water standing a foot deep on the concrete foundations. On the south end of the lot between Merton and Edmund you’ve watched as existing trees and brush were bulldozed, No Trespassing signs put up and trenches filled with water even when it wasn’t raining.

We’d just experienced the latest atmospheric river events. Many of our neighbors on the north side of Edmund adjoining the 3rd Street lot had flooded yards, and many houses on both sides of the street had standing water underneath. The water table on the lot is super high already (thus, The Marsh) and water has to go somewhere. We were worried.

The City doesn’t issue, maintain or review Wetland Mitigation Plans and I learned that what is happening on the lot isn’t called grading; it’s called surface preparation for fill. Good to know because there is plenty of fill on its way.

I contacted DSL for the mitigation plan and learned that instead of the other options available, the developer simply bought his way out of those messy wetlands by purchasing $102,000 in credits in the mitigation bank. This is why small, forested marshes like 3rd Street are in trouble. They are small. They are on land that can be developed. It doesn’t “pencil out” for developers intent on making as much cash as possible to think of preserving trees or wetlands or wildlife or existing neighborhoods.

When you have a lot of money you can make things like wetlands and dunes disappear. You can poop in one place and flush in another.

In 2017, before buying the property, the developers first made the proposal for a similar style pocket-neighborhood. It was denied by the Planning Commission and strongly opposed by residents. After the meeting one of the developers is quoted in the Tillamook Headlight Herald saying, “I’m not entirely sure the city understands what a pocket-neighborhood is.”

I think we actually do know what a pocket-neighborhood is and why we didn’t want it then and don’t want it now.

In the current proposal for the Heron’s Rest pocket-neighborhood, the land will be raised higher with fill–yes, raised–to afford the 26 two-story houses an ocean view while dwarfing the existing homes and businesses surrounding them. Much of Neahkahnie will be blocked from view in the south part of town by these two story houses. Facing 3rd Street a “residents only” 29-space parking lot with an additional 12-space lot on Hallie also for residents of the development only. I think together that’s bigger than the IGA’s lot.

Contrary to what some people think, no workforce housing is included in the proposal.

And those big Whispering Pines houses going in behind Wild? First off, there are no trees left there to whisper and likely to be none that can thrive in the space left on those lots. The houses are zoned R4 and can immediately be used as vacation rentals.

The proposal for Heron’s Rest hasn’t gone to the Planning Commission yet but when it does there will be a public hearing like the one coming up about awnings and variances for the winery tomorrow, February 22 at 4pm.

If you don’t like the way things are looking in our town, read what’s on the Planning Commission’s agenda, read the Ordinances involved, read the Comprehensive Plan. She may be old but she is still the primary land use document acknowledged by the State of Oregon. Write emails and letters to the City Council and the Planning Commission, show up at the meetings, be part of the decision making process.

Whose town? Our town!

Kim Rosenberg
loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

Abuse of One Party Rule

Submitted By: dixiegainer@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This week, Democrat Oregon state Representative Marty Wilde has left the Democrat House Caucus because of how the caucus was hiding things from the public and how decision making power was made behind closed doors. Representative Wilde explains in a very bold and eye-popping letter in the Oregonian:
He said his Party overrode the duty of the people:
“I could not continue to participate in a caucus that had stopped acting democratically. We had failed to set a positive example of transparency and engagement and stopped supporting laws that returned power to the people we represent. Instead, we let our partisan desire to maintain power override our duty to the people….”
They kept the public in the dark:
“Since I joined the caucus in 2019 as a freshman legislator, it has become less and less democratic. My fellow Democratic lawmakers and I met privately each day during the legislative session. We debated proposals like the Student Success Act and public pension reform, and we did not even inform the public about the topics of our discussions and preemptive decisions.”
It was extreme partisanship:
This excerpt from Oregon catalyst: oregoncatalyst.com/57996-rep-wilde-latest-democrat-defect-abuse-power-experienced.html

Red Leather Three Piece Sectional

Submitted By: suemcgrath069@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This Lazy-Boy three-piece sectional is sturdy and comfortable, however the leather is deteriorating. It breaks my heart to part with it, but it’s yours if you can haul it. The end pieces recline. They are 55″ long, 40″ tall and 32″ deep. The curved center piece is 55″ across the back and about 10″ wide across the front. The sectional lives in a no pet, no smoking home in Manzanita.
If you think you want it text Sue 541-868-4404

Winter What’s Up at Wild: Local Grocery and Cafe

Submitted By: kelleywebb731@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Winters at Wild are Cozy and Warm Let the warmth of Wild keep you cozy and nourished during these dark, cold and wet winter months. From delicious and hearty soups to toasty sandwiches and warm and filling entrees, our cafe has something sure to delight your soul.
If you are like many locals who do their grocery shopping with us, you know that you can find organic, local, vegan, gluten free, and the best brands of vitamins, supplements and herbal tinctures at Wild. We do our research and source from the highest quality producers we can find.
Speaking of high quality producers, may we encourage you to try Just Thrive Prebiotics, Probiotics and Vitamins. Their strain of probiotic produces antioxidants directly in the digestive system where they can be best absorbed by the body.
New Product Alert! In addition to Blue Scorcher Bread, we now also carry their Bagels and Baguettes! We have a wide variety of bagels to choose from and the best day to grab them at their peak of freshness is Friday morning.
Learn more about our favorite local producers on Wild TV (www.wildmanzanita.com/wild-tv). Supporting local keeps our community strong and resilient. Good news for these challenging times.
We have also been expanding your favorite section: Bulk Foods. The most sustainable way to shop is to bring your own containers, buy only what you need and fill your cupboards with the finest bulk spices, teas, flours, beans, nuts, dried fruits, coffee, and more.
Stop by to check out our latest offerings, and thank you for shopping Wild!
298 Laneda Avenue Manzanita wildmanzanita.com @wildmanzanita

Happy Presidents Day — John F. Kennedy

Submitted By: ellisconklin@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
John F. Kennedy

By Ellis Conklin

On a cold February morning five years ago, I embarked on a dark and dismal pilgrimage to Dallas, Texas, to witness the exact place where John Kennedy was killed on November 22, 1963.
Before entering the old Texas School Book Depository building, I stood for a long moment near the “X” that denotes the very spot where Lee Harvey Oswald’s murderous bullets rained down on the young president as his black limousine passed the grassy knoll to the north of Elm Street.
The horror that day took place in Dealey Plaza, a 15-acre city park in the West End Historic District of downtown Dallas, sometimes called the “birthplace of Dallas.”
The sixth floor of the 85-year-old brick building was christened the Sixth Floor Museum on Presidents’ Day, February 20, 1989. Up here is the sniper’s nest, where Oswald did the devil’s work. I stood in a window where the shots were fired.
Visitors move about slowly, quiet as ghosts. The 8 mm Zapruder film, 40 seconds of hell on earth, plays in a soundless loop, endlessly.
All of us know where we were and what we were doing upon learning that John Kennedy’s life was severed in that glaring Friday noontime in Dallas. That moment is forever fixed, the mind stopping like a clock, a bright trajectory ending in midpassage. Our pain makes us precise.
Countless times we’ve shared with others our own private story of those haunting, heart-stopping seconds. Such unthinkable vividness: The screaming, tire-squealing rush to Parkland Memorial Hospital, our parents’ helpless tears, the blood-splattered dress Jackie would not remove, (“I want them to see what they’ve done!”), and on to Arlington National Cemetery, where a little boy saluted a long mahogany box draped with the American flag.
As the great essayist Lance Morrow once wrote: “It is Kennedy’s deathday, not his birthday, that we observe.”
I recall a cold January morning in 1986 when the Challenger blew up with a school teacher aboard. TV commentators asked, “Is this their JFK moment?” The same question was asked again, when 9/11 shook our senses, with its rubble and flames and smoke and death, and later, at Columbine and Sandy Hook. “Is this their JFK moment?”
No, there has been only one JFK moment, for John Kennedy still occupies a rare and unusual place in our national psyche. Some have suggested the Sixties began that tragic day.
It is the myth of Kennedy that nearly 60 years later continues to overshadow, to outlive the substance of what he achieved.
Wrote Morrow: “The death of John F. Kennedy became a participatory American tragedy, a drama both global and intensely intimate. And yet Americans felt Kennedy’s death in a deeply personal way: they, and he, were swept into a third dimension, the mythic.”
Perhaps it is the myth, a sense of hope, that anything is possible, even going to the moon. That may be the central accomplishment of his presidency – that for one brief and shining moment we stole fire from heaven. Perhaps. As Yeats wrote, “How can we know the dancer from the dance?”
Does it matter?
When Kennedy was killed, a Washington D.C. reporter said to Daniel Patrick Moynihan, “We’ll never laugh again.”
And Moynihan, who later became a U.S. senator, is said to have famously replied, “Mary, we’ll laugh again, but we’ll never be young again.”

Engineered Hardwood Flooring for Sale OBO

Submitted By: lizmenke@me.com – Click to email about this post
Salvaged engineered hardwoods needs a new home. We tossed broken click-n-lock boards but kept quite a stack of various sized boards. Cannot confirm square footage available but imagine somewhere in the 500 sq ft range. www.lowes.com/pd/Style-Selections-allen-roth-5-in-Natural-Acacia-Engineered-Hardwood-Flooring-32-29-sq-ft/50223067
U-haul from Cannon Beach. $200 obo

CoWorker Wanted at Jupiter’s Books

Submitted By: wattchildress@yahoo.com – Click to email about this post
Would you like to be my co-worker at Jupiter’s Books? Does your work experience make the idea feel practical as both a business opportunity and a means of personal growth? I need a part-time collaborator who knows books and is interested in all aspects of the trade. This includes oversight of a brick-and-mortar retail space, online sales development, plus the procurement of new, used, and collectible inventory. Pay starts at $17/hour. Currently I need someone for two days a week, but this could increase over time.