Seafood Festival happens this weekend


Friday, August 20, 2004 | 3 comment(s)

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Charleston will celebrate the sea's bounty this weekend as the community hosts the 15th-annual Charleston Seafood Festival.

For nearly 30 years, this coastal fishing village has set aside the third weekend of August to enjoy the summer catch and have a party. Fifteen years ago, the Charleston Seafood Festival was formally established, and this year's event runs from 7 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday at the Charleston Marina.

Festivities kick off each morning with a Fishermen's Pancake Breakfast from 7 to 11, served by the Charleston Rural Fire Protection District volunteers. At 10 a.m. Saturday, the Charleston Merchants Association will officially open the celebration with a flag presentation, followed by the Wild Women of Charleston's "Best of the Worst" parade and a special "thank you" to a scandalous area resident.

Throughout the weekend, visitors can take boat tours of the lower bay and ocean bar, attend an open house at the U.S. Coast Guard Lifeboat Station and learn about the area at outdoor recreation and wildlife displays by Oregon State Parks, Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

There also will be a record number of regional vendors, including many Oregon artisans, offering handmade woodwork, glass art, ceramics, photography, handmade clothing and more. Kids of all ages will be entertained by the Barview Area Charleston Area Park Association's dunk tank, the Coos River Salmon-Trout Enhancement Program fishing pond, pony rides and a game center, as well as appearances by the Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission's "Louie the Crab" and the Oregon State Parks Beaver.

In addition to seafood of every type at vendor booths and lots of dessert selections, Merchants Association volunteers will serve a salmon and albacore tuna lunch from noon to 3 p.m. both days. Wine and beer will be available at the adult refreshment garden. For visitors wishing to take home some fresh seafood, local seafood markets have stocked up on salmon, tuna, crab, oysters and other selections, and commercial fishing boats plan to have fresh albacore available at the marina docks.

The Charleston Seafood Festival is sponsored by the Charleston Merchants Association, Charleston Fire Department volunteers and the Oregon International Port of Coos Bay. Community volunteers from the Visitor Center also help promote the event and coordinate activities. For more information, contact Don Yost at 888-2548, 888-6111 (fax) or e-mail donyost@charlestonmarina.com.
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OCAPA wrote on Aug 6, 2007 9:37 AM:

Although it is terrible that the tragedy in MN had to happen, it's refreshing to hear that Gov. Kulongoski is going forward with suggestions from the Oregon Concrete and Aggregate industries. The concrete and cement people have been yelling about the importance of these inspections and maintenance of bridges for years.

Pancho wrote on Jul 15, 2007 12:58 PM:

My kids are illegal, can we still get free lunch?

Just An Observer wrote on Nov 29, 2006 5:05 PM:

We need all the hydro power we can get. It's non-polluting and doesn't result in any global warming increase. If needed, rebuild the dams to be as fish friendly as possible but don't cut the flow of juice. Our nation's increasing demand for electricity means we need to keep in place all the hydro we can, otherwise we'll have to build even more polluting power stations or deal with even more nuclear waste that no state wants as we head toward building more nuclear plants. Sometimes choosing what is needed isn't easy but aquaculture can breed a lot more fish to make up for Klamath salmon runs being down much easier than we can build more power plants.


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