Current Listing

Nehalem Bay Garden Club Plant Sale this weekend May 7-8

Submitted By: barbaraandchuck@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
There are some new additions to the annual Nehalem Bay Garden Club’s plant sale.

A raffle for a iRobot Vacuum Model 805 Roomba, complete with all the paperwork in the cardboard tray it came in. Tickets are $5 each or 6 for $20.

River City Flower Farm will be selling their dried flower arrangements and wreaths as well as dahlia bulbs. Please note that they will only be there on Saturday.

There will be gifts for Mom, including garden themed cards handmade by Garden Club members.

The sale will be held this weekend: Saturday, May 7th from 9-4 and Sunday, May 8th from 10 to noon. Location of the sale is 43080 Northfork Rd, Nehalem at the junction of Hwy 53 and Northfork Rd. Look for the horse sculpture!

And don’t forget we have TOMATOES! About 600 gallon pots of at least 19 varieties of tomatoes will be available including heirloom, cherry, grape, roma and beefsteak types among others. These varieties were specifically chosen by experienced members because they are proven performers in our coastal climate.

Besides tomatoes, club members have started other vegetables from seed so gardener’s plant selections will be available from a local source. Also on offering will be the club’s usual annuals, perennials, natives, herbs, succulents, shrubs, and trees.

Club members want to share their appreciation to the folks at the Lower Nehalem Community Trust. Since Alder Creek Farm is not having a plant sale this year, due to a gap in garden management resources, they graciously made their hoop house available for the Club’s use. It is currently stocked with the tomatoes growing big and lush in the heat and light of the hoop house.

Nehalem Bay Garden Club donates proceeds from the sale to local organizations that share the Club’s mission. Recently the focus for these grants has been on food security. Past recipients include North County Food Bank, Nehalem Bay United Methodist Church for their food programs, Food Roots, Hoffman Gardens, Alder Creek Farm, Nehalem Elementary Garden Program, and the mural at Nehalem City Park.

Vote Yes for Measure 29-164 Support our Libraries

Submitted By: allanmadeline@aol.com – Click to email about this post
The North Tillamook Library in Manzanita is one of the beauties of the area that first attracted us to Manzanita. Years later when I retired, I made my first volunteer commitment to the library. Libraries are the heart and soul of communities and are reflective of the community the serve.
Our Library serves the three villages and the surrounding rural areas in north County. It makes available books, movies, free WiFi, computer and printer access, assistance in finding resources, the next great read and the use of free community space and programs. With your free library card, you also have access to digital books, movies, magazines, out reach programs and the Bookmobile. It continued to safely provide these services during COVID restrictions.
The Library system in Tillamook County receives 95% of its operating support from a 5-year levy which expires June 2022. Measure 29-164, on the May ballot, will renew the operating levy for another 5 years. The current rate of 65 cents per $1000 assessed value will be the same for the next 5 years. The libraries are a widely recognized asset by the people who live here.
Failure of the levy will mean the loss of libraries and the programs they provide. Programs such as literacy for preschoolers, summer reading activities designed to sustain readers between school years and online homework and tutoring services. The Bookmobile brings books to residents of nursing homes and rural families. Libraries provide resources for job seekers including access to computers, assistance and instruction for seeking employment.
I urge you to join us in voting YES for Libraries by voting YES for Measure 29-164, keep open our Library in Manzanita, as well as those in Rockaway Beach, Garibaldi, Bay City, Pacific City and Tillamook. Thank you.
Madeline and Allan Olson

Kayak Netarts Bay Excursions: Bay Entrance and Inner Bay Trips

Submitted By: shelby@netartsbaywebs.org – Click to email about this post
Kayak Netarts Bay Excursions: Bay Entrance and Inner Bay Trips with Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS and Kayak Tillamook County Naturalists
May 7, 2022

Our popular kayak trips are back! We are offering a tour for beginners and a tour of the inner bay on May 7th. Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS interpreters and Kayak Tillamook County Naturalists will guide our exploration of this diverse marine habitat.

Bay Entrance: Novice Kayak Tour
This tour is designed for beginning kayakers, taking advantage of the last outgoing tides. Participants will meander through the bay while making stops to appreciate the variety of animals and algae within the bay. All equipment will be provided.

Register: www.eventbrite.com/e/kayak-netarts-bay-bay-entrance-novice-spot-request-form-tickets-328038099787?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&a…

Restrictions: Tweens and older are free to join this trip. People with serious medical conditions should exercise caution in joining. Anyone under 90 lbs or over 230 lbs should notify us during registration to ensure we have the proper gear.

Where: Netarts Bay area. Sign up for the specific location!

Cost: There is no charge for this event. Tax-exempt donations to Netarts Bay WEBS to enable programs like this are highly encouraged, but not required.

Inner Bay: Intermediate Kayak Tour
The journey to see the abundant marine life, aquatic plants, and algae within Netarts Bay is no easy float. While this adventure is full of wonder, it isn’t for the timid! On the return trip, we will be paddling against both an incoming tidal current and a Northwest headwind. If you are up for a challenge, this is the trip for you.

The first half of this trip takes advantage of an incoming tide, flushing participants far up into the inner bay toward our favorite destinations. Because the NOAA tides predictions are only predictions, participants should be prepared for anything. For instance, the journey may involve short portages and using teamwork to carry the kayaks with us. All equipment will be provided.

Register: www.eventbrite.com/e/kayak-netarts-bay-inner-bay-tour-intermediate-spot-request-form-tickets-328024057787?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-sou…

Restrictions: Children under 16 yrs. and people with serious medical conditions are not allowed on this trip. Anyone under 90 lbs. or over 230 lbs. should notify us during registration to ensure we have the proper gear.

Where: Netarts Bay area. Sign up for the specific location!

Cost: No charge. Tax-exempt donations to Netarts Bay WEBS to enable programs like this are highly encouraged, but not required.

This is an Explore Nature co-hosted event. Explore Nature Partnership offers a series of meaningful nature-based experiences highlighting the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve the area’s natural resources and natural resource-based economy.

Baby Douglas Fir and Cedar trees need a homes

Submitted By: Be@pauseful.com – Click to email about this post
GOOD NEWS: There are lots of baby trees, like 200+! They need homes ASAP.

These 12″+ babes can be potted, or planted. Plan to water them during dry spells for a couple of years.

Trees are leftover donations from Natural Resource Conservation Services (NRCS).

“The best time to plant a tree was 25 years ago, the second best is today.”

They can be found at the bottom of steps to Pauseful Massage & Botanicals. Take some for you, & pass some on to friends.

Keep them moist and out of direct sun until you pot or plant them.

What a dream,
Christina

503-457-1092 text with questions
www.Pauseful.Love

Improving your Smart Phone Photography Workshop

Submitted By: info@cannonbeacharts.org – Click to email about this post
Improving your Smart Phone Photography workshop! Join us May 21 from 5 – 7PM to learn how to make the most of your smart phone Camera. Instructor Bob Kroll will teach students how to adjust focus, exposure, improve composition, edit photos, and introduce different photography and editing apps.
Register on our website: www.cannonbeacharts.org/workshops

Massage, Sauna & Foot Reflexology Available this Friday

Submitted By: revolutionginger@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Kick Mother’s Day weekend off with a massage, wood fired sauna or luxurious foot soak and reflexology session!

North Fork 53 Communitea Wellness has appointments available for Friday May 6th!

Get the relief and relaxation you deserve and book your appointment online today.

Gift Certificates also Available!

www.northfork53.com/book-wellness?p

Mothers Day Tea Gift Boxes for Sale

Submitted By: revolutionginger@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
There is still time to send tea for Mother’s Day!

Looking for a locally crafted gift that’s easy to send and personalize?

North Fork 53 Communitea has 3 Mother’s Day tea gift boxes to choose from!

In just a few minutes on your computer you can customize the tea gift box of your choice and add personal gift note.

We hand assemble and wrap each gift for you and ship directly from our farm to all your favorite moms!

Order today to get it there by Mother’s Day!

www.northfork53.com/new-products-1

BERBER BLING

Submitted By: helidoni@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
Berber-inspired Hamimi handcrafted tri-loop necklace for sale to benefit the children of Ukraine. Three brass-dotted loops on an adjustable leather band. Total length approx 24” with loops 4” long. Comes in signature Hamimi jewelry pouch.
Handcrafted in Marrakech, Morocco.

Purchased for $145 on the Hamimi website. Yours for only $45 (plus any donation amount you wish to add). All funds go to Save the Children’s Ukraine campaign. Thanks!
Contact Terri Maragos at (503) 368-5203 or emailhelidoni@nehalemtel.net

Leave the Trees? Yes, Please!

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

Leave the Trees? Yes, Please!

During the discussion of PUD’s contract renewal at April’s City Council Meeting, the City Manager and the Director of Public Works talked about tree clearing by PUD. Not every tree PUD removes is interfering with power lines, not every tree is an actual danger, not all lots have to be stripped bare of mature trees. In the past, PUD has removed healthy mature trees without the City’s permission. The City Manager and Director of Public Works pushed back hard on PUD until they agreed to change their chain saw ways. No more removals of healthy mature trees without the City’s permission. This kind of robust oversight by the City will preserve and protect our trees into the future.

The City Manager has also begun enforcing Ordinance 95-4: Tree Provisions and Regulations. After a permit is submitted to remove mature trees, our inspector now takes a look-see to make sure the trees have to come down. If in doubt, an arborist takes a look before the permit is approved. A recent application was denied after an arborist concluded that the trees to be removed were healthy.

As we’ve lost our tree canopy we haven’t done a good job of replacing it with the trees that like our rainy climate and poor soil, support our birds and wildlife, prevent flooding and suck up carbon. While I happen to be a fan of all trees, I’m talking here about the Grand Master Flash of the North Coast, the Sitka Spruce, a sump pump of a tree. These bad boys take care of business sucking up water like a shop vac in a flooded basement and sequestering carbon while they’re at it. They get huge like the giant in Cape Meares State Park, but I’ve planted two in my back yard in soggy places to help with the standing water. All the heavy-duty conifers in the area will do the job, but the Sitka Spruce does it especially well and because it only lives in a ten-mile range close to the coast, it’s a vanishing breed like a native of the South Coast, the Port Orford Cedar. Conifers, like these, are of our specific place and help to retain the character and history of the coast in addition to all the environmental benefits they provide.

Trees are making the news everywhere these days. You can read Cannon Beach’s mayor, Sam Steidel’s essay about trees in a recent North County News. And for those with an interest in environmental science, OSU’s Director of the Estuary Technical Group at the Institute of Applied Ecology, Laura Brophy has written reports for MidCoast Watersheds Council, the Oregon Shores Conservation Coalition and NOAA on how we in Oregon have lost 90% of the coasts forested marshes. These small stands of water-sucking, oxygen-producing, pollution-fighting, forested habitat occur in small little pockets on buildable land like the .34 acres on the 3rd Street lot. The trees on that lot were natural flood protection from the high water table.

We’ve always had Ordinance 95-4 on the books, which prohibits clear cutting without a permit or tree replacement plan so it begs the question why were the property owners allowed to log those 100+ year-old trees on designated Open Space Land and not put even one back? A condition of Open Space Land is that the property owners aren’t supposed to extract resources or develop the land while receiving the tax benefit. They’re supposed to wait until it’s delisted.

Let’s not blame the tornado anymore for damaging the lot. The trees that blew down were removed immediately but the unpermitted logging happened 2 full months later and there’s no arborist’s report that would attest to the condition of any of the trees. Development on the lot had always been denied before because of the old growth trees and the marshy wetland.

You might think that nobody at City Hall knew the logging was happening. But from the phone calls that were made that day by concerned folks, like my neighbors and I, they did. So why wasn’t a permit issued? Why was no replacement plan on record and why were no trees ever replanted?

Had the City required the previous property owners to follow the Ordinance, would the lot have been cleared at all? Would DSL have approved the in fill of wetland if it were still forested? Every step in the process was in violation of Ordinance 95-4 and it was allowed. Why?

We have Ordinances that are the rules creating the town our Comprehensive Plan describes. If you want to build a house or a motel or tattoo parlor there are codes and ordinances that give you the rules to do so. Most of us follow the rules as best as we can, knowing that there are consequences, if we don’t. At least that’s how it’s supposed to work. The rules that govern some of us, should apply to all of us.

It should be a simple thing to find out why, in this case, the rules didn’t apply but it hasn’t been. What I’ve learned this last couple of years since I started this depressing little research project, is that the work of government belongs to every single one of us every single day, not just the few people elected to office. To be a good citizen is to engage. When I fail to show up and be a participant in the stuff I care most about, I’m not part of the discussion and I don’t have a voice in what happens.

Now go on out and plant you something. I sure am.

Kim Rosenberg loretta.kim.rosenberg@gmail.com

Free China Cabinet Hutch

Submitted By: aprilclarkyoga@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This is a beautiful large, vintage hutch, circa 1970s. It is FREE because we inherited it when we bought our house, so we want to pay it forward (and we just don’t have the space for it).

Use it in your dining room/kitchen for dishes, or as a display cabinet of any kind. It has its original finish and details, and is in wonderful condition. It’s solid hardwood, with thick glass, which is rare nowadays.

(It is missing the bottom drawer handle but is in excellent condition other than that, and that should be easy to replace. It is free after all!)

MEASUREMENTS:
It’s 75 inches wide, 25 inches deep and 85 inches tall when fully assembled.
– Please check the dimensions before you come, it’s pretty big but perfect for the right space!

Also, note that it’s heavy, so you’ll need a couple people to move it, and a truck. We can help get it to your truck from the garage if you need.

We are on the OR coast near Manzanita.

We look forward to your email! Thanks!

Do your jeans fit? If not, we’d love to have them!

Submitted By: nc.clothing.bank@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Maybe that pandemic fitness program really paid off. Maybe not. In any case, if you’ve got jeans that don’t fit, we’ll be happy to help you get them out of your closet.
The North County Clothing Bank needs donations of men’s and women’s jeans right now. Our stock is low! We also need the following items:
Children’s toys and stuffed animals Clothing for kids 5-12 years old Practical shoes for men, women, and children Blankets
Donate at the North County Clothing Bank 278 Rowe Street Wheeler, OR Tuesdays 11:30 am – 3 pm
If that doesn’t work for you, send us an email and we’ll try to arrange a pickup.
Thank you for anything you can provide!

LNWC Speaker Series: Marine Heatwaves and their Effect on Coastal Fishes

Submitted By: info@nehalemwatershed.org – Click to email about this post
Virtual Presentation: Marine Heatwaves and their Effects on Coastal Fishes w/ Jessica Miller.

On May 12th, 2022 Jessica Miller, OSU Professor of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences, will talk about a very pertinent issue, Marine Heatwaves. Marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency and intensity around the world. From 2014 to 2016, anomalous atmospheric conditions resulted in the largest known marine heatwave in the northeast Pacific Ocean, and another heatwave occurred in 2019. These extreme ocean warming events impacted all levels of the food web, resulting in reduced condition of many marine species. The abundance of Pacific Cod in the Gulf of Alaska declined by more than 75%, leading to the closure of the fishery and a disaster declaration.

Jessica Miller and her colleges are documenting how this heatwave affected the growth and condition of Columbia River Spring Chinook salmon and the growth and phenology – or timing of life history events – of Pacific Cod in the Gulf of Alaska. They combine field studies with laboratory analysis of fish ear stones, which are balance and orientation structures that lay down daily growth rings, to age fish, determine their hatch date, and reconstruct their growth and migratory history. Jessica will provide an overview of what we are learning about how these ecologically and economically important species responded to these extreme ocean temperatures, which are predicted to occur regularly under future climate change scenarios.

Jessica Miller is a Professor in Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences at Oregon State University. She is also a member of the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station and leads the Marine and Anadromous Fisheries Ecology Lab in Newport, Oregon. Her research focuses on ecology of marine and anadromous fishes, with an emphasis on how environmental and climate variation affect their growth and survival. She received a BA in Zoology from the University of Montana, a MS in Fisheries from University of Washington, and a PhD in Biology from the University of Oregon.

The talk will be on May 12th at 7 pm, hosted on Zoom, and is free to the public. The zoom link is us02web.zoom.us/j/83353175742 or on the Facebook event at www.facebook.com/lnwc1. You can also contact the watershed council at info@nehalemwatershed.org. A recording of this presentation will also be posted on the LNWC’s YouTube channel with our other recorded presentations. Just search for “Lower Nehalem Watershed Council” on YouTube.

Stay posted for the Lower Nehalem Watershed’s Speaker Series other great talks coming up:
• November: Kellie Carim (USDA), eDNA Tracking Lamprey in the Pacific Northwest

Event Information: This event is FREE and open to the public. Find more information on our speaker series and the links for access on our Facebook page (www.facebook.com/lnwc1).

Time & Agenda:
7:00 PM Presentation
8:30 PM Adjourn

World Wide Labyrinth Walk this n Saturday

Submitted By: Colleen.schwindt@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
The World Wide Labyrinth Walk for peace is on Saturday, May 7 at 1:00 at St. Catherine’s Community Labyrinth located at 36335 Hwy 101 in Nehalem.
We will walk as one at 1:00 with the focus on world peace especially for the people of Ukraine.
Please join us for a meditative walk, plant sunflowers and writing your intentions, thoughts and prayers.

BLACK BEAUTY TOMATO STARTS

Submitted By: onesmartwoman99@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
For sale: Black Beauty Tomato Starts. Black beauty is a super delicious, meaty tomato that turns a rich blue-black. Our favorite tasting tomato so far. Stores well and flavor gets even better when stored at room temperature after picking. You really have to wait until they are fully ripe to eat- a deep black and slightly soft. Google ’em. Grown for the flavor. $5 Each, you pickup. We’re in Nehalem.
Email if interested: onesmartwoman99@gmail.com
Elisabeth

Democratic Candidates for Governor Forum

Submitted By: bluefishout@earthlink.net – Click to email about this post
Registered Democrats, here is a link to the forum that was held this weekend with the candidates up for the Democratic Nomination.

www.facebook.com/ordems/videos/1029334721319844

If you feel like you never have a choice just know that there are over 30 people running for Governor of Oregon. The PRIMARIES are where you have a choice.

Be sure and vote by May 17th.