Current Listing

2015 Sprinter 3500HD 4WD Adventure Van

Submitted By: howler.aortas-01@icloud.com – Click to email about this post
2015 170” MB Sprinter 3500 heavy duty, high payload dully, custom ordered from the factory as a 4×4 crew cab with factory heated MB swivel captains chairs and the towing package. Converted by the owners to support adventure travel, remote work, and still function as a utility vehicle (room for kayaks, skis, and snowboards). Less than 42,000 miles on the odometer.

Kelly Blue Book on base vehicle is $65k Asking $89,950

See the full ad with many more pictures and contact the owner at:
vanlifetrader.com/listing/2015-mercedes-sprinter-4×4-7/

House Swap

Submitted By: paula25lee@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
My 2 bedroom apartment in NW Portland, next to Forest Park in the Willamette Heights neighborhood, near NW 23rd will be available November 15. I am looking for someone who is interested in talking about exchanging their space in Manzanita, Nehalem, or Wheeler for a few months.

Please contact me for more details,
Paula
503 764 7591
paula25lee@gmail.com

Wooden newborn baby ‘play gym’

Submitted By: aprilclarkyoga@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This is a sweet little baby play zone/ “gym” which can hang toys for interest above a baby. Or you can use to hang baby clothes like a little clothing rack. You can buy toys to hang on it separately, or you can tie colorful fabrics and things on it for interest …babies like it all.
We used for both purposes. It was originally $45 + shipping on Etsy (photo of that ad included) and is in perfect condition. We are asking $35 obo

Some wonderful art supplies for sale in Nehalem

Submitted By: banbaaeval@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
These are very high quality art supplies, all new. They were for a shop that no longer sells art supplies, and are being sold at a big discount. Contact us directly to pick them up! What we have:

1. Two water brushes for watercolor painting. $5 each (retails for $11)

2. Two wooden tabletop easels, MEEDEN brand, adjustable and very good quality. $35each (retails for $50)

3. Natural “Akrylic” paint set made from natural dyes (all plants and minerals) – $60 (retails for $150)

4. Gouache paint sets (we have 12 color sets and 24 color sets). Gouache is a type of paint that is often described as an “opaque watercolor.” Beautiful colors in these sets, by the Japanese paint brand Nicker Colour- very high quality and popular paints.
12-color set – $30 (retails for $70)
24 color set – $50 (retails for $120)

5. Marker sets – brush markers and some fine-tip, and others. These are not all pictured but are all half off and are around $9-12 each.

6. Paint pen sets. Not pictured but great acrylic paint sets.

Free baby things- used but great quality in Nehalem

Submitted By: banbaaeval@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
We have a couple free baby items in NEHALEM/ Bayside Gardens area to give away:

1. Baby Carseat – this is a high-end carseat in great condition. A little messy (babies) but easy to clean. This came from a family whose kiddo grew out of it.

2. Baby swing – this plugs in and swings, and also plays music (not too annoying either!). It works GREAT, our little one just grew out of it and we got it handed down. Now we want to pass it on.

3. A baby pop-out, portable infant changing station / play mat. This is great for pre-rollers and pre-movers. Easy place to set a little infant down, and also could be a good changing station.

Surviving the Holidays

Submitted By: mariehennessy@msn.com – Click to email about this post
Welcome: For those grieving the loss of a loved one. This is a helpful tool to navigate through the upcoming holidays. This seminar is approximately two hours.
It is a safe, confidential seminar. Please bring a photo of your loved one you have lost. You will receive a small booklet, along with candle lighting, prayer and short video with testimonials. At the end we will share a light luncheon. Please register online St.Mary by the Sea is the host site. Free Everyone is welcome.
Peace be with you.

NVHS Annual Meeting and Ice Cream Social

Submitted By: info@nehalemvalleyhistory.org – Click to email about this post
Why does it have to be boring? This year we will try to make an Annual Meeting that you might actually want to attend. We will have a quick business meeting while we serve up some ice cream and then get on to some recognitions that are long overdue. Some of our most dedicated members, Owen Nicholson, Mark Beach, Lyla Hendrickson and Tom Mock, have served our organization in an exemplary way for years. Let’s take a moment and say a special thank you to them. Be at the Pine Grove at 3:30 on Thursday. See you there.

thanks Jim

Submitted By: dwieb1@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
This is in response to (codger) Jim’s post Dark Times on Sept 19. It has been on my mind all this time while reading related articles. In his post, Jim offered the introduction to a Sept 18 NYT column written by David Brooks.

Brooks says politicians use dark passions to motivate voters. He delves into dark passions and how they take hold. He laments the loss of morality and sees an era of mass ignorance as we are fed an endless stream of entertainment he calls spiritual nutrients. I would call it something else. Most people I encounter don’t seem to have a lack of morality or intelligence. The flood of entertainment vying for our attention on the other hand… but then it’s just entertainment, we can choose to turn it off. Spirituality and intelligence come from somewhere else.

In the conclusion of David Brooks’ column there are 3 paragraphs that, for me, summed it all up:

“So to return to my original question: Why does politics feel so different now than in times past? My short answer is that over these years, demagogues in politics, in the media and online have exploited common feelings of humiliation to arouse dark passions, and those dark passions are dehumanizing our culture and undermining liberal democracy.”

Brooks defines humiliation as a result of being denied expected rights. He goes on to say people humiliated can lash out. Trump certainly exploited that at his rallies. Bernie Sanders too, but doesn’t get as much traction with his promotion of free everything. As an aside, Brooks wonders if history would have been different had Obama not humiliated Trump at the correspondent’s dinner on 30 Apr, 2011. Brooks conveniently omits Trump’s frequent attacks on Obama’s birth, religion, and election legitimacy prior to that dinner.

Brooks continues, “I often hear Democrats say their party needs to fight harder. These are people who don’t really believe in democracy. Fighting is for fascists. Democracy is about persuasion. Democrats would do well to get out of their urban and academic bubbles and understand the people they need to persuade and then persuade harder.”

At his many rallies, Trump (seeking adoration) refined his messaging for the base, building on what he previously learned from right wing media. The people think he really cares about them. It translated to tremendous voter support. Many only vote when Trump is on the ballot. Liberals feel ignored, as Brooks implies. Voters are quietly changing affiliation to Independent, while Bernie Sanders is the one connecting with the electorate. So the Democratic Party needs to figure it out, not just find a charismatic leader – I think we need more politicians who speak clearly and can explain complex matters. Their electorate must begin to feel like the party is really paying attention to average folks who are not the proverbial squeaky wheels or special interests.

I think the real nugget in Brooks’ column is this: “I’d add only that in order to repress dark passions and arouse the good ones, leaders need to create conditions in which people can experience social mobility. As philosophers have long understood, the antidote to fear is not courage; it’s hope. If people feel their lives and their society are stagnant, they will fight like scorpions in a jar. But if they feel that they personally are progressing toward something better, that their society is progressing toward something better, they will have an expanded sense of agency, their motivations will be oriented toward seizing some wonderful opportunity, and those are nice motivations to have.”

Persistent wealth disparity, and now unregulated big tech, have for too long trampled rights while duping us with counterfeit hope. Yet, adding to our frustration, nobody seems to know what to do about it. Those with money and power think they can soon get by without us by automating everything. What are they smoking?

Just the other day I found an idea in another article. Maybe it’s simplistic but in my experience uplifting and powerful. With some exceptions of course, those controlling our country and society are acting in bad faith and exhibiting very poor character. Rather than responding in kind or taking the bait, we can change what we consume, and modify how we behave to act with good character. By noticing and commending better character in others the movement can spread.

ICE protests in Portland are a good example. It’s brilliant to wear non-threatening costumes and deny the administration any sort of war zone appearance, which they so desperately need to support their bad faith narrative. Opportunities to apply this kind of strategy are in everything we do. We just need to be kind and considerate. We don’t have to participate in or contribute to whatever is harmful. From the bottom up, we can model a better way. Many do already, and those who’ve been angered by dark passions and dreadful news can try exercising their good character. Benefits will begin immediately.

This is not any revelation. It’s something we’ve been taught all along in many different ways. “Helping others is what makes us happy” (from the movie Last Christmas).

– Dave

Car seats for sale

Submitted By: megfbowles@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Good condition Diono car seats for sale. I have two – manufacture dates are 2020 and 2021 (both purchased in late 2021). These car seats are so good – they have steel frames and last for 10 years from the manufacture date. No accidents. Covers regularly washed. Lots of life left!

$50 each. Retail for $200+ each.

MUsiCAL STORYTIME FOR PRESCHOOLERS AT THE MANZANITA LIBRARY

Submitted By: sdawagner@icloud.com – Click to email about this post
Pete the Cat is one cool dude as he strolls around in his new white shoes. Preschoolers
and their parents and caregivers can find out more about Pete the Cat’s adventures when
attending North Oregon Coast Symphony’s FREE Musical Storytime October 20 at the
Manzanita Library at 10:30. Musical Storytime is a hands-on musical activity for preschoolers.
This free outreach program is for children ages 2-5. This month’s story is Pete the Cat, I
Love My White Shoes and will be accompanied by flute player, Shelley Loring. Pete the Cat is
silly, fun, and has brightly colored illustrations. Pete loves his bright white sneakers so much that
he sings about them wherever he goes. Children will love singing along to this story. Loring will
talk more about her flute after the story is read and demonstrate the various sounds she can
produce. Then different wind instruments will be handed out for the children to play.
Similar events are being planned monthly in partnership between North Oregon Coast
Symphony, North Tillamook Library, Seaside Library, and Astoria Library. For more
information, visit the symphony’s website at www.nocsymphony.org., or seasidelibrary.org, or
catalog.tillabook.org/Events/Calendar, or www.astoria.gov/dept/Library.

Yoga with Veterans and with Molly and with Janet

Submitted By: briantjmcmahon@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Hey everybody

Come join us for Yoga with veterans, with Molly and with Janet. It’s fun, healthy and will limber you up. Everyone is welcome, so come on in, the water is fine. Molly and Janet are excellent teachers.

Here is the info:

Yoga with Molly
Day – Monday
Time – 10:45 PST
Place – Tillamook YMCA

If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link.
us06web.zoom.us/j/85009203244?pwd=kewlp3KzlW0sKcbRbW8m3xMy0t5yOA.1

Yoga with Janet
Day – Wednesday
Time – 10:30 PST
Place – NCRD in Nehalem

If you can’t join in person, you can still zoom in via the following link:
us02web.zoom.us/j/82315818270

See you there.

Brian

2nd Annual Lee Blackmon Soccer Scrimmage and Picnic TOMORROW Sunday October 19th 2PM

Submitted By: Christy@cosmichealingnw.com – Click to email about this post
Hello BBQ Community-

RAIN OR SHINE!! Join us for the second annual Lee Blackmon Soccer Scrimmage and Picnic, TOMORROW Sunday October 19th, 2 PM, at NES Field!!! ALL are WELCOME to join the FUN!! There will of course be a soccer scrimmage- everyone is invited to play, let’s see how many people we can get on the field at the same time (like LEE used to). Don’t want to play soccer, no problem! We will have face painting, animal ornament painting, snacks, and a community picnic!

Please bring a chair/blanket for sitting
Wear your Halloween costume, if possible
Be ready to have some FUN

Contact Christy (503) 800-1092 for info/questions
Thank you

Pinochle at NCRD

Submitted By: knappgj@yahoo.com – Click to email about this post
Would like to know if there are pinochle players out there who would enjoy playing in The NCRD Fireside Room on Wednesday afternoons.

The type of pinochle can vary from 4 handed to 3 handed, to even 2 handed. Larry knows how to do this.

No charge, just a fun time playing with like minded card players.

Contact Jane via this email.