Showing posts with label Cayucos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cayucos. Show all posts

Saturday

Riding in on the waves of luck




It might be true luck comes in waves. And so might love. And seal pups to the shore here in Lincoln City, Oregon.

On the road we've stopped to day camp and eat oatmeal cooked over our single burner stove. Take in the gorgeous views. Check the surf. A swell was up yesterday. South Jetty Newport was temptuously big. Devil's Punch bowl up the road was blown out by the time we arrived but Macky and PJ took a dip anyway.




Lincoln City is an old beachy tourist town sporting Chinook Winds Casino. Our last couple of stops have shrunk our fun tickets, but we ain't complaining. Just get out there and wait for another wave, right?


Motel life feels so mundane compared to the excitment of sleeping "out". Sure our bones be aching a bit. Sure we get crabby cuz of it. Crabby? Oh, well, yeah, lets see, how about a Fresh Crab Dinner last night! GOAL!

A little bit about the Chinook name:

When the first European ship sailed into the river and anchored eight miles above the mouth, offshore from proud Qwatsamts, a three-row village, the mariners wanted to know what to call the people. One sailor asked some sort of question, in some approximation of language, pointing at the village. Something like "What are these people called?" Pointing, by the way, was dangerous and ill-mannered among these people. A headman or spokesman responded Chinoak or Tsinuk or something like that. Forever after, the white people called the people in that village, and three or four others along the riverbank nearby, Chinook or Chinooks. (The river people at first called the strangers tlohonnipts, "those who float [or drift] ashore.")

After a while, when they learned that the people upriver for a couple of hundred miles had roughly the same languages, the tlohonnipts called them Chinook too. Years later, all canoe-paddling Indians on the North Pacific Coast were sometimes referred to as Chinooks. All that, based on no more than what some person answered when strangers impolitely pointed toward the village of long cedar-plank houses, row on row along the shore, which town they called Qwatsamts.

Explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark would put down as the name of a supposed Kiksht-Chinook-speaking tribe the response "he pointed at me."

Tsinuk was what the Chehalis, who lived to the north and spoke an entirely different language, called the village or villagers, or some of the river people Chinook, or perhaps Chin people. For though it is probably only a coincidence, the suffix ooks or uks meant plural people in the Chinook language. So it is possible, though unlikely, that the people were really called the Chin, and Chinooks meant more than one Chin person. Of such shadows are names made, when strangers with no common language first meet. Personally, I favor Chin for its simplicity and the feel of it against the roof of my mouth, Tchinn.

from Rick Ruben

Finally, here's a dungeness crabber hard at work. Work is often play and play, work. It's balance, Penzy says at 85 years old, chomping at the bit for PJ to finish this, so she can go play herself!!

Wednesday

Lucky Diversions

Daa-naa-yash! (Welcome, in Tolowa...north coast tribe) Their band of 1000 tribal members have this as their mission statement: Honoring our Past, Serving our family, protecting our culture and independence, and controlling our future.

Nice.

We'll we're holding our own, with some lucky diversions....



As if seen from the seat of the Saturn, aka Micky II!

However, Coos Bay Oregon, in the rain, is about as colorful as gray on gray, you gotta look hard for contrast, but when you do it's the sublime that counts.

Did we say SUBLIME?

"Is that like stuffing a lime into my vodka tonic?" Penzy asks.

"Well you can't find much sublime in any of the EIGHT casinos we've been too, that's for sure!"

"Bah! You got lucky at Elk Valley, PJ, quit yer whining!"

"Ah, The Great Indoors!"

"Durn right. Low ceiling, smoke dense as fog. And if you buy 10 cartons of cigarettes you get $20 free play! Now that's sublime!"

"Yes, Penzy, I guess I did like that one insidious game Rockstar Olives! Guitar Slaying Olives, come on! Seriously! You win the bonus round and go on a world tour. Catch a respin with four of a kind. Four sexy sheet-music icons that is."

"Right, PJ. We dedicated that round to IYA, since you used your lucky Cher-ae Heights (Trinidad, CA) Casino money you won playing roulette. Number 20 for the age she was when she moved to Humboldt to earn that beauty B.S. in Environmental Science. Oh, she's a beauty too, a chip off the old..."

"Hey, Penzy, old is right and I got news for you..."

"Ah, go get in the water! I'm going to take a nap."



Gold Beach Oregon. "Wouldn't take my friend Hannah out here quite yet, but "getting salted" is the way to go, right, Boogie Woogies of Cayucos? Hope you're in the 4th of July Parade this year. Heard the parade will grace some foxy young ladies this year!!!! Ahoooo!"

"Whatcha talking about, this is where the action is!" Penzy says to PJ.

"Mountain Dew and Cheese-its, please." PJ can only ask, after the go-out.

"Ready!" Penzy replies, seatbelted, eyes forward. "When'll we get there?"

"We don't even know where we're going next!"

"Next Casino! The Mill in Coos Bay!"

"Oh, yeah, and maybe sleep in a bed at a motel 6? Aren't your 85 year old bones worn out car seat sleeping?"

"Only when I'm not camping in the parking lot of a casino!"





Questions for the day: Will Penzy's luck hold? Will PJ find true love, aka good waves?

Notes for the day: It's especially nice to miss the sound of anothers' voice.

Quote we're going with while cruising the 101... "Speed on speeders. Hell ain't half full yet!"
Grandpa Schaller