Archive for February, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Very Special Performance by Ken Jacobsen
On Saturday, February 28, 2009 at 8:00 P.M., former Vashon resident, music teacher and artist Ken Jacobsen will perform classical guitar music of the Arabic and Hebrew world. ” This is classical guitar music from the intersection of the music and culture of the Middle East and North Africa.
The performance will be given at the studio space of the Vashon Music Store.
Ken Jacobsen classical guitar music of the Arabic and Hebrew world meets modern classical Classical guitar music influenced by music and culture of the Middle East and North Africa Saturday, Vashon Music Studio (upstairs from Vashon music store)
Add comment February 27, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Cafe Luna Lunavision, Marilyn Kay & Company, Timothy Everett Bertsch
Presented by Vashon’s Cafe Luna during the weekend of February 20 – 27:
Marilyn Kay & Company – Energetic, Innovative & Acoustic – No Cover.
Marilyn Kay & Company, an organic blend of acoustic musicians, will be bringing their energetic mix of Americana, bluegrass and classic country to Cafe Luna. Marilyn Kay & Company’s innovative approach to acoustic music unites tradition with modern sensibilities through the honesty and charm of Marilyn Kay’s original compositions and chilling harmonies.
Cafe Luna Hosts
Original Acoustic Compositions performed on Rare, Antique Harpguitars and Guitars
Tim Bertsch has been a disciple of the guitar and it’s resonance since the age of 10. Now at the age of 35, he has long since lived, composed and performed in three very different musical worlds being equally at home on the electric guitar as well as acoustic guitar/harpguitar. Heavily rooted in jazz, bebop, fusion, flamenco, rock, classical, blues, new age, celtic, and gypsy music his unique musical talents are equally as diverse. He has been a longstanding member of the rock dynamo Jaded Mary, as well as a valued member of the seasoned jazz group H.D. Fusion, sharing the headliner billing with many national acts. His versatility and competency on guitar, harpguitar, bass, mandolin and sitar have made him an in demand studio musician as well as a successful full time private music instructor since 1990.
”A seeker of lost knowledge and technologies, I am an eternal student of life and it’s expression. My voice is of wood and steel. I am a composer, performer, an expressionist.” Tim’s latest solo release “SOULRESONANCE” is a collection of well traveled, thoughtfully composed and arranged original works written and recorded on harpguitar, parlor guitar, and various other rare, unique, acoustic guitars most of which were aquired and personally restored by Tim himself. “I’ve been blessed to have studied with: Larry Coryell, Emily Remeler, Beppe Gambetta, Joshua Breakstone, Don Lamphere and John Stowell as well as many other masters of the resonance”. As a musical composer, performer, and recording artist, Bertsch is always looking for untapped resources of musical expression and inspiration. His lifelong goal: “To live a life of expression, to leave a lengthy, meaningful catolog of my soul’s finest resonances”. Tim’s parting words: “Long after I am gone, my soul’s song will carry on.” T.E.B.
Thursday, February 26, 7pm – No Charge
Lunavision Presents
Director: David Redmon. Running Times: 72 and 48 mins (plus extras including a diary from a worker in the factory)
Winner of twenty-one national and international awards, Mardi Gras: Made in China follows the path of Mardi Gras beads from the streets of New Orleans during Carnival – where revelers party and exchange beads for nudity – to the disciplined factories in Fuzhou, China – where teenage girls live and sew beads together all day and night. Blending curiosity with comedy, Mardi Gras: Made in China is the only film to explore how the toxic products directly affect the people who both make and consume them.
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Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Real Estate: For Sale By Owners?
Go! Real Estate offers a program to assist owners who wish to try their hand at selling their properties by themselves. The “For Sale by Owner” or “FSBO” alternative is superficially attractive because it may help an owner save money on commissions. However, the following article demonstrates the hidden dangers of going it alone. For more information about Go! Real Estate FSBO assistance program and the way it can save you significant money, contact us at (206) 388-3882.
People give several reasons for trying to do a For Sale By Owner (FSBO) on their property. The reasons are really as varied as the people doing it. In most cases, however, all those “reasons” boil down to one thing, the commission to an agent. It’s all over the Internet as well. Tons of posts on how to Sell it Yourself and SAVE the Commission. Simply type in FSBO tips, or FSBO how to and see the list. Here’s the real truth and why it’s a Big FSBO Lie; whether you sell it yourself or you list with an agent, you will rarely, if ever, save the commission.
Wow, I bet you’re saying, “harsh words.” Especially if you are, or are considering, selling FSBO. This article is not about whether it’s a good idea to sell a home yourself or not. If you are planning on trying, you need to do it for the right reasons. If it’s because you think you can save the commission, read on.
First, determine where you read that you can save the commission by selling it yourself. Most FSBO articles are written by one of two groups of people. The first group is the FSBO websites and magazines. Of course they are going to be saying that. They make money off of you, as a FSBO (by the way, there went some of that ’savings’). Tack on their Premium Flat-Fee Listing Service for listing on the MLS that many offer and you’ve lost some more of that savings.
The second group of people that promote this are real estate investors that have the “We Buy Houses” systems in place. Real estate investors buy property at a discount and resell. Their primary source of properties? You guessed it, FSBO’s. Now, if you need to sell fast and are in a position to do so, this may be an excellent option, but don’t pretend that you’re saving the commission, here. Any money that would have been paid as a commission is going into the investor’s pocket, not yours.
Second, you have to determine your marketing costs to advertise your property effectively. Selling a house is just not as easy as buying one of those nice red and white “For Sale By Owner” yard signs and waiting on the phone to ring. You have to do some serious marketing in order to give yourself the best chance of getting a qualified buyer in the door. All that marketing, and marketing dollars, are usually spent by the agent. That’s part of the commission cost. If you don’t hire an agent, then you have to foot that bill. At a minimum, you can expect to spend approximately $1000 to $2000 dollars on advertising a property. Nudge a little more off that savings, again.
Third, you have to determine the value of YOUR time. Almost no one considers this aspect of FSBO. It is going to take a lot of your personal time to sell your home. Answering phone calls, showing the home, updating information on the Web, qualifying buyers are just a small sampling of what you will be responsible for when selling on your own. If you spend just 60 hours total working on selling your home, at $50 an hour, you’ve racked up a $3000 charge to yourself. It will probably be a lot more than 60 hours, too. You may be fine with that, but you’re going to EARN that $3K, not save it!
Fourth, you have to know who really pays the commission. What? you say. The seller pays the commission, everybody knows that! Do they now? Sure, the commission comes out of the seller’s proceeds (ie, the sales price), but where does that money come from? The buyer. Without a buyer, there is no sale. Without a sale, there is no commission. Simple comparison: if I’m pumping gas and I give you $10 to pay the cashier, who actually paid the cashier? (Credit to John Locke for the analogy)
Buyers looking at FSBO’s know this and if you have any chance of selling to them, you’re going to have to reduce the price of your house by the commission amount in order for them to buy. Now, it’s the buyer that is saving the commission, not you, the seller. Add in your time and marketing expense to this and it’s a good chance that you may even have lost money in the process.
If you want to sell FSBO, give it a try. I hope you succeed. But don’t fall into the lie that you’ll save the commission by selling it yourself.
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Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Backbone Campaign – Spring Tour Christening
Vashon’s own Backbone Campaign is hosting a Christening Party for its Spring Tour on Friday, February 20, at the Land Trust Building, 10014 SW Bank Road, Vashon, WA. (206) 463-2644. 7-10 PM FREE.
Music provided by Resonance.
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Party with the Backbone Campaign this Friday Toast the Tour Party and Procession Send Off
Friday night, February 20th 7-10 pm, Land Trust Bldg; free ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Join the Backbone Campaign this Friday night to launch the Spring Tour of the Procession for the Future. The party will be at the Vashon Land Trust Bldg (10014 Bank Rd, one block west of the four-way stop in town). Join the Backbone crew for wine, beer, music, and a chance to meet the team taking the Tour on the road!
The Procession takes off on Saturday for Tempe, AZ where we’ll be February 26-28. Subsequent stops are: Boulder, CO March 5-8; Austin, TX March 12-14; Gainesville, FL March 18-21; Raleigh-Durham March 25-28; Baltimore, March 31; New York City, April 1-4; Hartford, CT April 9 – 11; Boston, April 16-18; Rochester, NY April 22-25; and Chicago, April 29-May1st. We’re also looking for hospitality on the route so if you know anyone with some spare beds let us know by calling (206) 408-8058. The Backbone Campaign Board, Staff and Volunteers look forward to celebrating with you this Friday. Spread the word! |
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Help us train young activists around the country in effective tactics for grassroots change. Consider making a contribution and investing in real change we can believe in. A donor in Maryland has committed to match all contributions up to $5,000 to the Backbone Campaign, so the power of your gift is doubled. Click the donate button to donate securely online today, or send a check to Backbone Campaign, PO Box 278, Vashon, WA 98070. Thank you!
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email: info@backbonecampaign.org
phone: 206-408-8058
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Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Blue Heron Art Center Presents Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel
Blue Heron Art Center – Saturday, Feb 28 7:30 pm
Tickets $15/$17
Tingstad and Rumbel CD release concert
Grammy award winning duo, Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel return to Vashon with a brand new 2009 CD in tow, Leap of Faith. Internationally known for their perfect blend of finger style guitar, double reeds and ocarina, they have expanded the duo in this, their 19th recording. They will perform works from the new CD as well as previous recordings, including their 2003 Grammy winner, Acoustic Garden. They will be joined by one of the Northwest’s most sought after electric bass players, Gary Shelton.
Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Events: UMO Ensemble Presents “Rubble Women”
The women of the UMO Ensemble collaborate with Sheila Daniels (director), Gretta Harley (composer), and musician Marchette DuBois to create an extraordinary piece inspired by women in contexts of endurance.
UMO presents “Rubble Women” from February 26 – March 15, 2009, performances at 7:30 pm on Thursday through Sunday.
Location: David Smith Furniture Warehouse (MAP) 1107 Harrison St, Seattle, WA 98109
The piece asks the question “What is it within women that gives them the power to continue providing, creating and moving forward in the face of seemingly unendurable hardships?”
From the actual Rubble Women of post WWII Berlin to historical and mythological sources, along with interview material from current day refugees, a powerful 8 woman ensemble physically explores the endurance of women throughout the ages.
Written by Martha Enseon and directed by Sheila Daniels, the cast includes Elizabeth Klob, Marchette DuBois, Amy Rider, Carina Jingrot, Kajsa Ingemansson, Mik Kuhlman, Tracy Hyland, Martha Enson
Not only is the UMO ensemble based on Vashon Island, but the bricks used for the set came from a Vashon construction company!!!!!
Tickets: Tickets are on sale and may be purchased through Brown Paper Tickets online at www.brownpapertickets.com or 1-800-838-3006. Tickets are $20 for adults and $12 for students and seniors.
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Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Miscellaneous – Oscar Night, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Flea Markets
Vashon Island’s 11th annual Academy Awards party kicks off on Sunday, February 22, at 4 PM at the Vashon Theater. Join the community as the Oscars at the 81st Annual Academy Awards are handed out to a bevy of celebrities and marvel at our fascination with glitter. Limo rides, a high-stakes costume competition, and entertainment by local performers will enhance the evening. Proceeds from the event benefit the Vashon Community Scholarship Foundation. Prices have been kept low to encourage all people to attend. Tickets in advance are $10 for adults and children, $15 at the door, and are available at Vashon Theater, Books by the Way and Vashon Book Shop. Admission includes appetizers by local restaurants.
Storyteller Debbie Dimitri will perform as Harriet Beecher Stowe at 7 PM Saturday, February 21, at the Methodist Church. Stowe is known for writing “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and is considered by some to have been instrumental in mobilizing anti-slavery passions leading to the Civil War. The historical drama is presented by the Lighthouse Theater in honor of Black History Month. Tickets are $10 at the door. For more information contact Deb Pierce at 686-4325.
Two flea markets on Vashon Island begin in March. The first beginning March 8 from 9-4 PM is presented by the Open Space for Arts and Community, or -O-, at 18870 SW 103d Street. Vendor spaces are available by calling Karen Biondo at 408-7241. The entrance fee for shoppers and browsers is $3 or a donation to the Vashon Food Bank.
The Vashon Youth Council will present a weekly flea market beginning the weekend of March 14 and 15 in the lot just north of Pandora’s Box. The market opens at 9 AM. Vendor booths are available by calling SHeila McGuffin at 719-2691 or emailing vashonfleamarket@gmail.com.
Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island Events: The Red Bicycle – Sugarcaine Mutiny, the Adrian Xavier Band and Church of the Great Rain
Vashon’s Red Bicycle Bistro presents Sugarcaine Mutiny and the Adrian Xavier Band this coming weekend:
Friday, February 20 at 9:30 – Sugarcaine Mutiny
According to the Red Bike, quoting the band’s myspace promotional materials, the band blends the dark humor and storytelling of Cracker or Wilco with the loud jangly pop of the Smithereens and Fastball. Writes Brad Allen of the Weekly Volcano, “these seasoned cats found a common thread – smart songwriting, stringent, catchy melodies and a dose of twang.”
Saturday, February 21 at 9:30 PM – Adrian Xavier Band - Free
- Jeff Echert – THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST INLANDER
Sunday, February 22 at 7:00 PM – The Church of the Great Rain – FREE
So what the heck is The Church of Great Rain? Well, it’s not exactly a bunch of Lutherans from Minnesota. But it is a group of Vashon Island performers who aspire to be the pacific northwest’s answer to A Prairie Home Companion.
Add comment February 19, 2009
Vashon Island’s Cafe Luna: A Valentine Weekend
Vashon Island’s Cafe Luna kicks off Valentine’s Weekend with a Wine and Jazz Event on Friday, February 13, from 6 – 8 PM. Admission is $8 for wine tasting. This is the first of a series of wine tastings to be held on the second Friday of each month. Each tasting will feature five reasonably priced wines. This inaugural event is host by Vashon Winery owner Ron Irvine.
The wine-tasting will be followed by a free jazz performance by the Hobson Person Trio, starting at 7:30 PM. The trio consists of Islander Jim Hobson on piano, Vashon native trumpeter Richard Person, and vocalist Lauri Hennessey.
On Sunday, February 15 at 6 PM
The Celtic Players Meet The Knitters!
Here’s a Vashon institution that just happens to find its home at cafe Luna each Third Sunday of the month. So, grab a beer and have a great time with these fun-loving folks. At least a dozen of the 70 musicians show up to play most of the merry melodies (mostly Irish jigs, reels, and polkas) from memory. Beginners are welcome; staying with the beat is the only requirement. Get a head start with the 250 tunes on their website, homecomcast.net/saustin98. [Editors note: the link to the site does not seem to work at present . . . but you may have better luck].
And then there’s the Knitters! Knitters of all abilities and persuasions are invited to bring their projects to the Cafe, knit, schmooze, and learn from each other while the Celtic Players work their understated and very merry magic. What a fabulous combination! For more information about the knitting, contact David Guion, 463-1680.
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Add comment February 13, 2009
Vashon Island’s Red Bicycle Bistro: Valentine’s with Baby Gramps, Fashion Show, Watermark
Friday, 02/13/09 Americana Roots — Free Show — 9:30 PM — 21+
The Starlings play music ranging from “pin-dropping ballads” to “foot-stompin’” barn-burners. The band, featuring Joy Mills and Tom Parker, features banjo, guitar and harmonica.
VALENTINES DAY with BABY GRAMPS (Folk/Americana)
Saturday, 02/14/2009 at 9:30 PM — 21+ FREE COVER!
The Red Bicycle Bistro presents Baby Gramps, an amazing amalgamation of everything that anybody’s ever heard including Mississippi John Hurt, Uncle Dave Macon, Charlie Patton, Blind Blake, Captain Beefheart, the Tuvan Throat Singers and Popeye. Baby Gramps has created a highly developed and completely original musical concoction that is easily the most intriguing synthesis to come out of the roots revival of the late 20th Century. He plays beautifully “betwixt the cracks in the piano” a la Ornette Coleman, can scat the blues three notes at once, and has invented his own guitar technique he calls “scribbling”. Gramps does amazing tricks with timing, timbre, tempo and pitch that no one can hope to imitate, and reinvents himself nightly, never performing a song the same way twice.
If the “Pirates of the Caribbean” film has any associative power, this may finally be the public moment for Baby Gramps, an eccentric, seemingly very old (though nobody seems to knows how old) singer and steel-guitar player based in Seattle, with a voice like Popeye after smoking an entire tin of Prince Albert. His performances on “Rogue’s Gallery” (Anti), a two-disc set of sea chanteys produced by Hal Willner, are among the album’s best, and that’s saying a lot: among the other contributors are Sting, Lou Reed, Lucinda Williams, Bono, a gravel-voiced Bryan Ferry, a midnight-voiced Nick Cave, a twee Van Dyke Parks and Bill Frisell with a beautiful guitar track.
Baby Gramps performed on The Late Show with David Letterman Aug. 28, 2006 backed up by Tony Garnier (Bob Dylan’s band leader and bass player), The Akron Family, and Jason Krekel from “The Mad Tea Party”.
Baby Gramps finger picks an old steel national guitar and sings in a wild, extemporaneous gravel vocal style with phenomenal vocal rhythmic improves and a guitar technique that borders on early ragtime. He combines early jazz, blues, ragtime, and good-time novelty music… Most important for Gramps is not his obvious musical genius, but the ability for having fun; and this is all pure delight…
Come witness Baby Gramps unique Valentine’s songs for bugs and other loveable creatures & critters…..you’ll love it! A very special Valentines Day show for Vashon, get your tickets early because this is a very rare visit from a legendary musician.
Island Artisan Couture – Runway Fashion Show and Sale
Sunday, 02/15/2009 at 02:00 PM.
$10 Cover. Doors open at 1:30pm – Curtain goes up at 2:30pm. Advanced tickets on sale now call the Red Bike at 206-463-5959, 11am to 5pm.
Come enjoy Vashon’s own “Project Runway” featuring our local textile artists’ latest creations in Wearable Art.
Hand Dyed Clothing and Costumes by: Dova Silks, Dorthy Dunniclif – Art Projects & Design, Patricia Toovey. Designer Clothing by: Cicada, Elizabeth Klob – Elemental Stitches, Tess Crocker – Wild Like CLothing Co., Sally Shivers. Original Hand Bags by: Re Genr 8, Roxy Hathaway – Nancy Scott Wienkler. Jewelers: Ciszek Designs, Ginny Ciszek – Danielle Carbone, Kristen Ford, Anne Gordon, Jade Grace
Sunday, 7:00 PM Vashon’s own Watermark.
WATERMARK is:
Roger Taylor – guitar and vocals
Kevin Almeida – bass and vocals
Larry Lawson – flutes
Charles Reed – guitar and vocals
Add comment February 13, 2009
Letter from Vashon Island: Community, Activism and Glacier Mining
These thoughts are especially directed towards those who reside on Vashon.
We are in the midst of very serious times and i do ponder daily how the community will rise to deflect harm from those we know and love. Ours is a most apathetic country where those still getting by with remnants of privilege are stymied. Is it fear? It can’t happen here? Am i the only one feeling isolated in the face of what unfolds locally and globally?
For two years, my child and i have found sanctuary on Vashon. In that time, each of us shaped a niche participating in a progressive and unique culture. We came and remain due to family ties and magical connections, otherwise it would be impossible to continue. Perhaps we would be experiencing homelessness which happened in the past when my oldest 2 were small.
In the late ’80’s we traveled the peace path in our homey van parking it along the way in yards of friends or parks for a night or two. Now i would fear much more for our well being as the desperation level escalates and the simmering undercurrent of violence strikes down the most vulnerable, invisible, marginalized. The frontline destinations are crumbling as people resist in isolation or leave traditional lands, disappear into the grind, die, or become addicts. Now all facets of class are impacted. Millions join the ranks of the voiceless. Millions.
Recently i participated in civil disobedience with a group of courageous people opposing the Glacier Sand and Gravel Mine. How inspiring to work with so many people of my children’s generation who display such fearless nonviolence and commitment! My prayer is that thousands of Vashonites will participate fully in the call of Gandhian nonviolence with conscious intent and resolve. Our Earth and her inhabitants so need this spirit of life, truth and love. Essential.
Activism has been central to my existence for close to 30 years. As i age in a privileged white male dominated culture, i have been witness to who continues to be heard or silenced. The template laid out by over educated white males is what one is pressured to replicate in order to attain “respectability”. One must conform to a standard that has been the hallmark of death and destruction all over the planet, tho supposedly more benign. The men in suits display the uniform appearance of what is supposed to open doors to success. I always wondered when i saw photos of Nelson Mandela in a suit and tie. My heart sang when i saw him in traditional clothing. Tho a suit may not be necessarily preferred garb, the attitude of superiority in knowledge and experience excludes. The preferred cliques tend to be overwhelmingly white, male and those who can meet certain standards of behavior, style, and articulation.
When will the all inclusive rhetoric be actually activated?
The more roots radical people become, the less such standards matter. Hence the longtime young activists devoted to supporting Black Mesa are more along anarchist lines, more broadly inclusive with a studied commitment to dismantling oppressive behaviors. Yet the struggle of the “isms” that divide us rise to the surface everywhere a frontline of struggle exists. Similar dominator models emerge regardless of political or social persuasion. The struggle to change behaviors is one of life’s hardest.
In 1986, i drove Pauline Whitesinger and her daughter Bonnie, who translated, in the van to the northwest to speak about the impending threats of forced relocation being resisted by her traditional Dine people along with traditional Hopis. Pulling into a remote truck stop in Utah or Idaho, we walked inside to use the restroom. Beefy men stared at her with hostility and she muttered defiantly in Dine Bizaad under her breath.
In Seattle, an educated Indigenous film maker asked Pauline if she wasn’t afraid that her use of the term “Mother Earth” might turn her listeners off. Pauline turned away from that woman and would not talk to her again. To this day, Pauline speaks little english and never deviated from her traditional clothing other than boarding school in the ’30’s and in jail once for defending the Sundance grounds at Big Mountain in 2002. She has never boarded a plane and her first step onto a boat was the Tahlequah ferry when i brought her out to Vashon in ‘86. Her ways are of the high desert Black Mesa of northeastern Arizona, where she remains one of the few resisters to corporate driven forced relocation.
All too often, conformity is not the path of conscience, peace and justice. I feel it is an issue deserving of our close examination due to how easily one can slip into the rut of exclusion.
So that brings me to the words spoken to those of us preparing for the blockade by the lawyer. The phone was put on speaker while propped on the floor while he told us the importance of being well groomed, “no piercings, no beards”, not looking like dirty hippies when appearing in court. I found his spiel insulting and addressed it after wards, but few agreed. Most felt his words of value. Many feel the need to fit in order to be heard. Again, if success is attained, such moves are seen as what worked. What does that say for the struggles that are unceasing where people cannot possibly appear any other way than how they always are? Privilege is at play….
I have never taken a lawyer in doing civil disobedience, even when facing felony charges for blocking a bulldozer threatening a burial site at Big Mountain in 1989. I represent myself and will continue to do so. It is the Gandhian way. Tho i do not necessarily adhere to all of Gandhi’s ways, i certainly do to much of his philosophy. Look at his attire when doing civil disobedience. Tho trained as a lawyer himself, his clothing reflected his Hindu roots. There is no shame in claiming one’s culture.
I wish to honor those who do take on the legislators, Representatives and other bureaucrats in the tireless efforts to educate those who have power. I do not judge those who strive to be as effective as they can according to their own hearts. I plea that those of us who are not called to groom ourselves in a certain way are also honored. It is the elevation of one approach over another that must be examined.
All my life i have taken a stand for my own unique way of being in the face of family disregard and social bigotry. I do claim my culture as Hippie and have been living the principles of simplicity, creativity, nonviolence, organic planet for 40 years. It is precisely this way of life that made me useful to the traditional Dine and Hopi people i have known for so many years. Working with those whose way of life is the ongoing struggle to demand an end to genocidal policies has been my greatest inspiration.
As i became closer to the struggle of Pauline and her relatives, i also became aware of how totally silenced such traditional people are all over the Americas. It is a lifetime commitment to be of service to their ongoing stands for sacred lands.
Early drive around the back lanes hugging the hills above the west facing island the other morning brought many scattered realizations into a bouquet of reality; each critical experience a separate flower. So i assess relationships and what is silenced in a setting such as this treasure of the Puget Sound. Each human has hidden gems of wisdom and inspiration to contribute to solution in these potentially terminal times. What unfolds as trust is nurtured defies the control of agendas. We must find the time to deeply hear each other. This is critical to success. We now have everything to lose. The old growth is dying; dead zones spread in the seas; genocide has infected humanity, unkindness eats away in small, yet deadly ways and we seem blinded by reality’s toll upon fragile portals for the future.
Several Native American friends were visiting the other night, including my best friend, LisaNa. She was picking her dog up i cared for the preceding week while she had installed her art at the WSU gallery in Pullman and gave a lecture about her philosophy and work.
LisaNa’s good friend is a Nisqually man, who has told me about the operation Glacier has in the Nisqually Delta and in the town of Dupont. He also told me about the connection of the Muckleshoot people, then Nisquallys, to the Chinook of Vashon and the area where Glacier is doing it’s damage. He said what Glacier has already destroyed and plans to destroy can never be replicated.
He told me how the fish hatchery on the Nisqually reservation carefully places the salmon eggs in boxes with water from a particular stream that is used all along as the hatchlings grow big enough to be released into the stream itself. He said that hardly any of those fish return, becoming lost because what has happened to them is not natural. It just is not working.
My friend calls himself a “renegade” Indian. He knows all about his people, the fish, the corruption of the allowed voices, the Tribal Council. He knows few care to hear what he has to say about the destruction of land, life, water and the fish. He gave the name to me of a man who is “qualified” to speak of these things. I called that man, but he has yet to return my call, tho i will try again and again.
I wonder if in calling to the Indians of these waters who care deeply about the Chinook, we could form a critical, unprecedented alliance in defending this fragile region. The people i feel will be most supportive will not fit into any neat category. They will fully be themselves. We need them as much as we need the Orcas, the herring, the smelt, the sand lance, and the Chinook salmon.
In peaceful struggle,
swaneagle harijan
A Common Mother and Grandmother
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Add comment February 13, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Mercedes Nicole at the Blue Heron
Mercedes Nicoleperforms her smooth jazz stylings at the Blue Heron Art Center with her romantic set and jazz quintet. The evening will include favorites by Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald, Bette Midler and Nancy Wilson.
Nicole’s contralto voice has been compared to Nina Simone and Nancy Wilson. She has performed at the Triple Door, Crown Plaza, Columbia City Theater, Tacoma Art Museum, and elsewhere.
“Mercedes Nicole has a very winsome way with a song, and she quickly brings your listeners into the message she has for them.”
(Concerning Jazz Vespers) “Mercedes, you had them with your very first tune, and you couldn’t do anything wrong from that moment on… Your voice is so rich and warm, so warm I want to wrap myself in it over and over again.”
Harvey Siders—Jazz Times, 2008
Nicole has released four albums.
Tickets are $13/$15 and include champagne, appetizers and chocolate. To reserve, call 463-5151.
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Add comment February 13, 2009
Vashon Island College: Artful Vashon Course
Vashon College presents its “Artful Vashon” course on Sunday afternoons from 3 – 6 PM at Courthouse Square, from March 1 through April 5. The course “explores the meaning and expression of artfulness on Vashon Island and develop ideas to increase Island artfulness.”
Each session features experiences, discussions, and speakers that have established unique possibilities within Vashon’s vibrant art scene.
Registration is $150. A materials fee of $40 will also be collected. Partial scholarships are available and continuing education credits may be available as well.
Applications are available at Vashon College and the class limit is 30 students. Contact Pamn Aspiri for details at 408-8022 or email her at pamn.aspiri@vashoncollege.org. For information on content, contact helenmeeker@centurytel.net.
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Add comment February 13, 2009
Vashon Island Event at Cafe Luna: Open Mic, Halloween in February, Ben Gilmer
Thursday, February 5th, 7 PM
Open Mic With David Ray
featuring Poets & Musicians from the Wilds of Bainbridge
Don’t miss this special evening when your talented friends and neighbors share their passion for music with the rest of us. And, this month, a group of poets who take their words to music will be there as well, performing at 8 PM. Wow!
Friday, February 6th, beginning at 6 PM
Halloween on Vashon!
An Artist Reception for Rebecca Douglas Join us for an evening of fun and Halloween 2008 nostalgia, as we remember and enjoy, as we peruse the fabulous photos taken of Island ghosts, ghouls, and imps taken by popular Islander photographer , Rebecca Douglas. This is going to be fun!
Saturday, February 7th, 7:30 PM — One of Go Vashon’s Favorites!!!
Ben Gilmer Back because folks keep asking us to bring him back!
Ben Gilmer will play Luna for the third time because none of us can get enough of him. Check out his website for some musical samples and see why everyone is clamoring for more!
“Juxtaposed, in one word, Phenomenal! Hailing from a region full of musical and family heritage, Ben Gilmer has tapped into the soul of Appalachia. Southwest Virginia is the birthplace of country music and of course, the resurgence of Americana flows through the veins of these hills without abandonment. When listening to Juxtaposed the spirit of these hills and the hardship and struggles that accompany life in Appalachia are brilliantly composed into an album that will enlighten your senses and provide a deeper understanding of those that choose to live in this beautiful mountain region. Juxtaposed is full of intelligent country, folk, and blues as if Ben tapped into the spirit of Robert Johnson and substituted the cotton fields of the south for the mining region of Appalachia. For fans of Darrell Scott, Guy Clark & Townes Van Zandt, you will find the same story-telling excellence & musical composition with Ben Gilmer’s Juxtaposed.”
-Bill Wright, WUVT Americana Director
Add comment February 5, 2009
Vashon Island Event at Red Bicycle Bistro: Mary Win and Anna Coogan, Kingbees, Baby Gramps
Friday, February 6 at 7:30. All ages show – free cover.
MARY WIN & ANNA COOGAN (Acoustic/Folk) — All Ages show. Free cover.Mary Win was born in Bangkok, Thailand to Burmese political refugees fleeing the military dictatorship in neighboring Myanmar (formerly Burma) but the family soon settled in Seattle, Washington when she was ten months old. We’ve been lucky enough to have Mary perform on the Island before in other venues, as well as at one of the Backbone Campaign Benefit shows at the Bike, so it will be a pleasure to have her return.
Anna Coogan’s unexpected journey through music has taken her a long way from opera school in Salzburg, Austria. Driven by homesickness and a rush of post-9/11 patriotism, Anna left school in 2002 and dedicated her life to the pursuit of American roots music. Six years, 2.5 albums, countless shows and many long drives throughout the US later, Anna is renewing her commitment to writing and performing original Americana.
Chance encounters in Seattle’s vibrant music scene introduced Anna to banjo player Travis Beard, and within a year, Anna Coogan and north19 was formed with Kevin Burkett on bass and Eric Hastings on drums. At first playing small venues and open stages, Anna Coogan and north19 soon began selling out premier venues in the region. Their debut album, Glory, caught the ear of KEXP program director Don Yates, and earned 10 weeks on KEXP’s top 100 charts and an in-studio on Swinging Doors. Their sophomore album, Sleepwalker, was released in 2007 to critical acclaim and a sold-out crowd at the Tractor Tavern.
Now officially beginning her career as a solo artist, Anna is refining her sound. Her debut album, tentatively titled So Long, Summertime, will be tracked in winter 2009, and released in late Spring 2009.
Saturday February 7 at 9:30 PM. 21+ FREE COVER!
BILL BROWN & THE KINGBEES (Rock/Blues)
Bill Brown will be bringing his Kingbees to Vashon for their debut at the Red Bicycle. Many folks in the Northwest are familiar with Bill’s high energy ‘rockin’ blues show. Bill Brown and The Kingbees have been performing in the Northwest since 1986. Many of you on Vashon Island know Bill from his performances at the Beer Garden at the Strawberry Festival.
Bill has been likened to Paul Butterfield in his use of the Harmonica and his vocals have garnered many of a discussion concerning his cultural background. Bill grew up in a farming area outside of Columbus Ohio, listening to his Mothers Lionel Hampton records. Later on his tastes went to Paul Butterfield’s Blues Band. He actually learned how to play harmonica from a guitar player, Gary Watson, hitchhiking from San Diego to Seattle in 1969, which went on to tour the east coast extensively. Bill was also heavily influenced by Muddy Waters, Little Walter, and Sonny Boy Williamson.
His love of this genre is evident in the players he surrounds himself with. John Gaborit toured nationally with a band called Krome Circus. Mike Stango toured Asia with a band called Cece Rider. Tony Handy toured with Rose Royce from Los Angeles; many know them from their #1 hit Car Wash. From time to time they are joined by Dave Cashin on Keyboards who’s list of people he’s played with reads like a Rolling Stone.
All of these road veterans of the music business are sure to entertain you! They have most recently been working on their number 2 album, which they hope to debut by the end of the year.
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Add comment February 5, 2009
Letter from Vashon Island: Community Service in Troubled Times
On Sunday, February 1, more than 50 Vashon Islanders convened at the Vashon Presbyterian Church for a Stone Soup discussion of meeting the needs of our neighbors during these difficult economic times. The gathering was organized by Vision for Vashon as part of their continuing efforts to organize and create resources for the community.
Inspired by the story of Stone Soup, Vashon Islanders each brought a contribution to the evening’s meal. The organizers then created two delicious pots of soup to enjoy while we discussed the ways in which the “Deep Recession” has affected us, what our fears for the future might be, and what we might do as a community to buffer the ill winds that blow over the Island.
As the organizers emphasized, the economic crisis is like a wildfire on a windy day . . . there is no way to know which way the wind will carry the fire. Therefore, those impacted by the economic crisis should avoid feelings of guilt about their situation. In view of the non-responsiveness of the economy to the Federal Bailout up to this point, the wildfire analogy is particularly apt.
The community forum was extremely successful in creating a venue that allowed neighbors to overcome traditional cultural inhibitions about discussing their financial situations. Perhaps this is the most important step in creating an opportunity for the community to pull together to find local solutions to the global problem. Neighbors related their experiences with humor, honesty and integrity. There appeared to be a commonly shared deep appreciation for the opportunity to tell individual stories.
This writer found the discussion among neighbors fascinating. There appears to be a consciousness that a fundamental change is afoot in our consumer-based economy. One member at our table, who lost his home to a medical crisis several years ago, offered that he had learned “just how little” he needs to get by. Others in our discussion group shared their real fears that they may lose their homes to missed mortgage payments, or the lack of health insurance, or increasing difficulties finding work in the area due to a more stringent ferry schedule.
Despite the vivid description of shared hardships, there was a strong sense of optismism arising from the shared commitment to community solutions to the problems people were facing. Perhaps the most important contribution made Sunday was the willingness of people to offer information to their neighbors on resources that are available. Vision for Vashon is working to publicize those resources.
While we at Go Vashon have established links on this site to several of the resources that exist to provide food and shelter, we have decided to take another step and use the power of this website to link people with specific needs to people who have the resources or knowledge to contribute. For example, if a person needs to have some work done on their car, we will publish that need under our Living Green category and search for a contributor on that topic. Think of it as a Good Samaritan’s Craig’s List. Eventually we hope to develop a deep reservoir of resources for our community which will sustain our lives independently of the faltering economy.
As always, remember that subscriptions to Go Vashon are free. We encourage our readers to write in with skills, knowledge or other resources they might offer or to describe specific needs they may have. And tell your friends about this service!
Chip Lamason, February 2, 2009
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Add comment February 5, 2009
Vashon Island Events: Yoga Goes to the Dogs and Riverbend
Sam Scherer of Smiling Yoga is hosting a benefit for the Vashon Maury Island Food Bank on Sunday, February 8 from 1 – 3:15 PM at Ober Park. The first half of the program involves vigorous yoga for pets and their owners and the second half of the program offers restoirative yoga for pets and owners. Admission is by a contribution of pet food for the food bank.
On Friday, February 6, the Back Bay Inn and Quartermaster Pub hosts Riverbend from 6 – 9 PM.
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Add comment February 5, 2009
Vashon Island Event: Blue Heron Art Center — Orchid Ensemble
Saturday, February 7 at 7:30, a Chinese New Year Celebration at the Blue Heron Art Center:
The Orchid Ensemble blends ancient musical instruments and traditions from China and beyond, creating a beautiful new sound that is both creative and distinct. The ensemble has embraced a variety of musical styles to its repertoire, ranging from the traditional and contemporary music of China, World Music, New Music to Jazz and Creative Improvisation. The energetic yet endearing performance style of the ensemble consistently intrigues and delights its audiences, consistently receiving standing ovations. Acclaimed as ‘One of the brightest blossoms on the world music scene’ (Georgia Straight), the Orchid Ensemble has been tirelessly developing an innovative musical genre based on the cultural exchange between Western and Asian musicians.
The Orchid Ensemble regularly collaborates with musicians from a wide variety of world cultures and actively commissions new works by Canadian and US composers for its unique instrumentation. The ensemble performs regularly in concerts across North America, and at prominent World, Jazz and Folk Music festivals. Recent appearances include The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.; Canada Day Celebrations and the National Gallery in Ottawa; Vancouver International Jazz Festival; and at Toronto’s Harbourfront Centre.
Tickets are $10 for ages 12 and under, $14 for VAA members and students and $16 general admission. Fortune cookies are included.
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Add comment February 5, 2009
Vashon Island Events: School Bond Public Debate
On Wednesday, February 11, from 7 – 9 PM, there will be a public debate of the proposed $7.5 million school bond at Courthouse Square. Proposed uses for the money include construction of a new building, the renovation of existing buildings, a new track and synthetic turf playing field,a secondary gymnasium, upgrading of ventilation and other technical equipment, and other capital improvements. The debate will feature school board chair Bob Hennessey speaking in favor of the measure and Hillary Emmer, community activist, arguing against it.
Organizers expect a large crowd and request that only those Islanders undecided or uncertain about the proposal to attend. The event will be aired by Voice of Vashon.
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Add comment February 5, 2009








