Current Listing

HUMMINGBIRD 110 FISHIN’ BUDDY

Submitted By: jjrl333@protonmail.com – Click to email about this post
Use it on your boat, your buddy’s boat, a dock, or even a float tube. Fishin’ Buddy Fish finders give everyone the ultimate in portability, with an ergonomic clamp mount design you can use nearly anywhere, with absolutely no rigging or wiring, or even a transducer to mount. You’ll love the high resolution monochrome display and the 24″ transducer tube housing reaches the water from most small or mid-size fishing boats.
• 240ft Depth Capability
• 4″ Monochrome LCD
• 4 Level Grayscale
• Temperature Included
• 30 Hours of Operation

$75 OBO
Joseph (541) 951-9012

Hoffman Gallery Annual Community Show

Submitted By: HoffmanArtsNews@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
News from Hoffman Center for the Arts <hoffmanartsnews@gmail.com>
Attachments
Wed, Jan 26, 10:03 AM
to bbq

Hoffman Gallery
Hoffman Gallery January 7 through February 27, 2022
Open Friday through Sunday | 1:00-4:00pm
Free and open to the public
Hoffman Center for the Arts | 594 Laneda Avenue | Manzanita

Annual Community Show — TREASURE

Ride needed to Portland

Submitted By: waterlover44@startmail.com – Click to email about this post
I need a ride to Portland from Nehalem/Manzanita on Sunday, March 13th. The buses here on the coast don’t work for my schedule (I need to get to the airport for a flight). Ideally, I would love to get a ride to downtown by 2 p.m. or to the airport by 3 p.m. Stipend offered. Thank you. Contact Karen (text 971-408-9613 or email).

Levering is the February artist at Manzanita News & Espresso

 

Submitted By: lynnleveringthomas@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Levering is showing 10 paintings at Manzanita News & Espresso this month. This body of work shows the changing directions in her painting from landscapes to abstract mixed media. It has been a fun and challenging time of growth. Levering’s work will be up through February 28. Come enjoy some coffee at this wonderful, peaceful destination and enjoy the art!!!

 

Art opening “Fire & Light” at Clatsop Community College February 17

Submitted By: ben.killen.rosenberg@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
A reception for “Fire and Light: Five + Four” is scheduled for Thursday, February 17th at 6:00 – 8 p.m. Please join us at The Royal Nebeker Gallery for an evening celebrating Fire and Light, and support the work of our extraordinary local artists. Ben Rosenberg a resident of Manzanita and whom also runs the Printmaking department at Clatsop, is in the exhibit.
More info: www.clatsopcc.edu/fire-and-light-art-exhibit-illuminates-the-royal-nebeker-art-gallery/
The ''Art Center'' which houses ''The Royal Nebeker Gallery'' is at 1799 Lexington Avenue. It is the last building on your right before heading down the hill to the lower parking lot. Exhibit ends May 5, 2022.

Chamber Orchestra concerts in March

Submitted By: sdawagner@icloud.com – Click to email about this post
CHAMBER ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCES MARCH CONCERTS

The North Coast Chamber Orchestra is proud to present two concerts of classical favorites titled “Concert Overtures.” This unique ensemble, under the direction of Conductor Cory Pederson, is a group of dedicated North Coast musicians offering live classical music in an intimate concert setting.  Each concert features overtures that will recall some of classical music’s most endearing operas, ballets, and oratorios.  
  
The first concert will take place on Friday, March 11 at St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church (36335 N. Hwy 101, Nehalem, OR) beginning at 7:00pm.  The second concert will be on Sunday, March 13 at the Charlene Larsen Center for the Performing Arts (formerly known as the PAC — 588 16th St. Astoria, OR), beginning at 3:00pm.  Tickets for the Astoria concert are available online at www.partnersforthepac.org or by calling 503-338-9132. Admission for the concerts will be: $10 adults, $5 students, and children under 12 (with adult supervision) free.

 ALL audience members (children and adults) will be required to show proof of vaccination against COVID-19 and wear face coverings in order to attend the concerts.
    
Selections performed by the orchestra will feature “Echoes of Ossian” by Niels W. Gade, as well as other overture favorites such as “Light Calvary Overture,” “Romeo and Juliet Overture,” “Tragic Overture,” and “Overture to Rienzi.”   
The programs will also include solo performances by Cannon Beach pianist Diane Amos, playing Felix Mendelssohn’s, ”Spring Song,” and  Johannes Brahm’s “Waltzes, Op 39 No. 15 & 16. To round out the program, a cello duet by F.A. Kummer will be performed by NCCO’s Judy Woodward and guest artist Mike Woods. 

Let’s Get Internet Along the 6!!! and More!

Submitted By: weneedhighspeedinternet@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
We CAN HAVE High Speed Internet Throughout the County.
There''s a big meeting this Friday and we need to show that the community wants this. Please sign and share the letter.
————————————————————– Tillamook County has been building a massive Internet fiber system throughout the county for over 20 years, but it has not been available to the general public.
Because of the pandemic, millions of dollars in Federal grants have become available in an effort to get high-speed Internet to EVERY home in rural America. We need to let county leaders know that we want and need high-speed, AFFORDABLE Internet. Please sign the letter for better, cheaper Internet throughout Tillamook County!
It, along with the list of signatures will be presented to the County Commissioners, and the boards for TPUD, the Port of Tillamook Bay, and the board of Tillamook Lightwave, which is the entity that has been managing the building of the fiber system.
To sign the letter go to: tinyurl.com/weneedhighspeedinternet
The letter was prepared by an Action Team of Local Citizens. If you have questions you may email WeNeedHighSpeedInternet@gmail.com
Thank you!
——————————————————————- THIS IS THE TEXT OF THE LETTER:
To our County Commissioners and to the board members of the Tillamook PUD, the Port of Tillamook Bay, and Tillamook Lightwave;
Through your collective efforts over the past twenty-two years Tillamook Lightwave has achieved the vision of building a robust fiber-optic network throughout our county that has helped businesses and public entities thrive.
We now ask that you make every effort to bring accessible and affordable high-speed Internet to every household in Tillamook County.
The need is great. Utilizing the Internet is no longer a luxury. It is a solution to keep us connected; not only to each other, but to the world. It is a tool, a teacher, and sometimes a lifeline. It has become as necessary as any other utility and is used on a daily basis by nearly every resident in the county.
But access is limited by high costs, vast areas with no coverage, and painfully slow speeds. For a large portion of our county, both Internet and cell phone coverage are unavailable. This includes areas like Oceanside, Miami-Foley Road, and the dangerous Highway 6 corridor, which claimed seven lives last year. You have the power to change this.
We are families, farmers, students, artists, workers, creators, entrepreneurs, retirees, travelers on the roads, long time residents, and senior citizens. We live downtown and down long, lonely roads with no neighbors for miles. We, the citizens of Tillamook County, ask that a new vision for the future of Tillamook Lightwave be set. A vision that has room to continue the great work that Tillamook Lightwave has done for industry, but one that also has room to encompass the people.
Thank you for your time and your service.

Writers Read Celebration Explores ‘Recovery’ on March 5

Submitted By: nmccarthy1276@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
In an era when the word “recovery” is on the minds of many people, the word manifests itself in myriad ways.
For 11 writers selected to read during the Cannon Beach Library’s Writers Read Celebration, “recovery” ranges from life after Covid to tending to an ailing bird. Recovery also means a light-splashed winter day, finding the path after being lost on a trail, discovering an old swimming hole or relearning to garden as a cyborg.
The Celebration begins at 7 p.m. Saturday, March 5 on Facebook Live. Viewers don’t have to be Facebook members. To access the program, go to the library’s website at www.cannonbeachlibrary.org and click on the banner at the top of the page. The event can also be reached by going to the library’s Facebook page.
Last year, the Writers Read Celebration reached more than 1,300 viewers.
This is the fourth year the Cannon Beach Library has hosted the Writers Read Celebration. Sixteen pieces to be read include poems, essays, a rap and a “shuffle” poem, where individual lines are written and shuffled to create different poems.
From November through January, the Cannon Beach Library’s NW Authors Series Committee asked writers to submit entries on the theme, “Recovery?” to be read at the Writers Read Celebration. The pieces were to be no longer than 600 words.
A five-member panel selected 16 pieces from 45 entries without knowing who wrote them. The writers range from Camas, Washington to Wheeler, Oregon and include several from Clatsop and Tillamook counties. The writers who will read their works are:
• Scott T. Starbuck, Battle Ground, Washington: poem, “Slim’s Tree”
• Bill Grafius, Gearhart: poems, “The Cyborg Gardener,” “Deciding Factor”
• Steven Mayer, Cannon Beach: essay, “On Recovery”
• Phyllis Mannan, Manzanita: story, “Holes” and poem, “Poem with a Line from Lao Tzu”
• John Ciminello, Naselle, Washington: poems, “The Douser,” “Back to the Beginning”
• Karen Keltz, Tillamook: poems, “Another Kind of Resilience,” “Realm of Possibility”
• Emily Ransdell, Camas, Washington: poems, “Consider the Blackberry,” “Our Pandemic Year”
• Jennifer Nightingale, Astoria: poem, “Everything Changed”
• Kristen Nekovar, Astoria: rap poem, “Pill Bug”
• L Swartz, Wheeler: shuffle poem, “Hunger, edges, falling”
• Adria Bagadnani, Manzanita: poem, “Bird”