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Archive for the ‘Gold Beach Beat’ Category

Dave Duffy

Recovering from a data scary moment

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

A couple of days ago my family went up Pistol River to swim at Deep Creek, a local spot where the river bunches up so you can swim without freezing to death or drowning. I like a certain small sandy beach at Deep Creek, but you have to wade across the river to get to it. Unfortunately I forgot to take my BlackBerry cell phone out of my dungaree cutoffs, and I was in the middle of the river when I remembered it. When I got to the other side, the BlackBerry was flickering like it was gasping for air. I shut it off immediately and hoped it would dry out by itself.

But it didn’t. By the time we returned home a few hours later, the glass display had fogged up. Youngest son Sam came to the rescue and told me, “Put it in rice overnight, Dad. The rice will draw out the water.” I did, and by morning it worked! Thank you, thank you, thank you 15-year-old son Sam. I had a lot of data besides phone numbers on that BlackBerry.

I’ve since backed up my BlackBerry data to a hard disk storage device, then did the same for my laptop, which it turns out hadn’t been backed up for about a year. You need a data scary moment like this now and then to make you remember how much grief it can cause you to lose a lot of computer data.

Rice saved my BlackBerry.

Dave Duffy

Future of Crook Point Golf Course at stake

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Tomorrow night, Thursday, July 8, could decide the future of the Crook Point Golf Course proposed to be located in Pistol River about 10 miles south of my town of Gold Beach as the Curry County Planning Commission holds a meeting and will listen to public comments. The meeting is at 7 pm at the Curry County Fairgrounds in Gold Beach.

At stake are several hundred new jobs for this hard-pressed area and more than $8 million a year being injected into the local economy. All local businesses and their employees stand to benefit from the new economic activity. I plan to attend and lend my support. I expect there will be some opposition, mainly from hard-core fringe environmental groups who don’t want to see anything built anywhere.

The proposed golf course will be an especially important revenue producer for our local school districts, fire, and police departments, generating $400,000 in new taxes each year, which is 40 times what the property proposed for the golf course now generates.

If you are from this area, you should attend this meeting and voice your support. Too many valuable proposed projects in the past have been killed at this type of meeting because the naysayers outnumbered the supporters.

Dave Duffy

On your next visit to Gold Beach

Monday, July 5th, 2010

In the new issue of BHM you may have noticed that we’re trying to promote our town of Gold Beach by suggesting readers visit. Here are a couple of interesting scenes of the town. The first is a painting of Gold Beach as it existed in the year 2000. Very little has changed. The second is a photo taken recently of the bridge leading into Gold Beach from the north.

A painting, by former BHM artist John Dean, of Gold Beach. It hangs on the wall of the BHM bookstore. The Rogue River in the left of the painting is crossed by a bridge shown in the photo below.

This is a photo of the Patterson Bridge leading into Gold Beach from the north. The Gold Beach chamber of commerce sent it around to its members yesterday.

Dave Duffy

Clara Lynn is already two weeks old

Friday, June 25th, 2010

Dave Duffy

A Tarzan-yell in the country

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

It’s just great to be home. My own bed, sitting quietly on my deck and listening to the wind whisper in the firs.

I have work to do: already mowed the week’s-worth of grass, watered the garden, and gone in town to solve a few publishing problems for Annie. But there are structural jobs — rework a shed and build a garden hot bed. They’ll be fun.

It’s the solitude during the day I like best. I let out a Tarzan-yell and no one hears but my kids. They are good Tarzan yellers themselves. I’m ruining them for citified society. They’re going to need an occasional Tarzan-yell for the rest of their lives.

Dave Duffy

Tiger, Phil, Celtics all lose

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Well, neither Tiger nor Phil won the U.S. Open, and the Celtics let the NBA Championship slip away, but otherwise it’s been a good week. I wonder why men, in particular, invest so much of themselves in the outcomes of sporting events.

Dave Duffy

Water is free where I come from

Friday, June 18th, 2010

You learn a lot about yourself as you grow older. At age 66, I’ve discovered that attending the U.S.Open Golf Championship in person is not nearly as much fun as I thought it would be.

While my wife, Ilene, and two sons, Jake and Sam, are in Wisconsin minding the BHM booth at the Midwest Renewable Energy Fair (MREA), son Robby and I are at the U.S. Open Golf Championship in Pebble Beach a couple of hours south of San Francisco. We’re staying in a motel in Morgan Hill, an hour from the “temporary” golf course parking lot, which is another hour’s bus shuttle ride to Pebble Beach.

Unlike watching the Open on TV, in person you see very little due to the crowds. We wanted to see Phil, Vijay, Sergio, Furyk, Watson, and others, but we especially wanted to see Tiger Woods. After barely being able to catch a glimpse of Tiger on his first several holes, we found a spot eight layers of people back from the ropes four holes ahead of where Tiger was playing. We waited nearly an hour to finally see bits and pieces of his shoulders and head, but seldom saw the ball he hit.

After several hours of weaving through the chaotic crowds, we finally found a seat high up in the bleachers by the 18th green where we rested our weary legs and watched nine groups of golfers play until Tiger finally arrived. He had a nondescript bogey, finishing the day at 3 over par. But at least we saw him clearly through binoculars.

When Tiger finished the 18th, the bleachers emptied and everyone headed to the parking lot shuttle buses at once. After waiting in a very long, winding line for an agonizing three hours with approximately five to ten thousand other spectators, we were finally let on a bus that took us to the parking lot. An hour later, at 11:30 at night, we made it back to our motel totally exhausted. My back felt like somebody had stuck a knife in it.

We skipped today’s trek to the golf course, opting to watch it on the motel TV. We’ll go to a few hours of the tournament tomorrow (Saturday), then skip Sunday and drive back to Oregon a day early.

The couple of practice days leading up to the actual tournament were more fun. The crowds were big but manageable. I even got Jim Furyk to autograph my Cedar Bend (my local Gold Beach golf course) hat. Robby got five autographs, including ViJay Singh’s. This morning he says his legs are really sore from standing in line three hours for the bus. He’s ready to go home too.

Maybe I don’t have the stamina it takes to mix with the greatest in sports, and I certainly won’t try doing this sort of thing again. No wonder my older brother, Hugh, turned me down when I offered to fly him out here from Maryland to attend the US Open with me. He looks like a pretty wise older brother right now.

Aside from the long lines and big crowds, one other thing about the U.S. Open setup bothered me: The public wasn’t allowed to bring cameras or phones in, which I could understand, but you were also not allowed to bring bottles of water in so were forced to buy little bottles of water for $3 each since they had no public drinking fountains. I thought that was kind of cheap. They were already charging $10 for a lead-painted US Open souvenir coffee cup, $34 for a hat, $85 for a sweatshirt, and $125 for a lightweight jacket. Why not free water on a hot, dehydrating day!

I’m used to small town hospitality and generosity where there are no celebrities and the water is always free. I can hardly wait to get back to Oregon.

Dave Duffy

Clara Lynn Tuttle brings sun to Oregon

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Clara Lynn Tuttle arrived last night, and the sun finally came out in Oregon this morning. What a coincidence!

Erik, Annie, and Clara Lynn Tuttle

Lenie with Clara

Dave and Clara

The Oregon sun

Dave Duffy

Go Celtics! Beat L.A.!

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

I love the Boston Celtics, especially when they kick the Lakers’ butts. I’m one of those Boston Celtic fans who has hated the Lakers since I was a kid. The Celtics beat L.A. today to tie the series at one game each. Now it goes back to Boston for the next three games. I smell another NBA Championship. Aint it a wonderful world!

Dave Duffy

Still raining!

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Still raining! We got a couple of inches yesterday, and we’ll get at least three more tonight. I called my wife and told her to get home before a slide takes out the road. I always worry about her. We haven’t even had a chance to plant a garden and it’s already June. I did get some potatoes in — in trenches covered with straw. I’m sure they all drowned.

But rain can be good. Gives me time to think over a glass of wine. Lot going on: New baby any minute, big shift in the way the magazine handles ads, Jake getting set to go off to college, Robby announcing he’s dropping high school band next year (he’s the lead trumpet), and 15-year-old Sammy taking over a “computer geek” job involving online ads for the magazine.

My children are emerging into their personalities. They don’t want any suggestions from Mom and Dad, although we are often tempted to give them until we get cut short with a statement like, “I can figure this out for myself.” I like independent kids, but I just can’t help trying to guide them a little bit. I made so many bad mistakes in my younger years . . . I wish I had someone there to advise me. But maybe it has to be this way — letting youth set their own course, suffer the penalties for any mistakes, then plot a better course.

I have high hope for my kids. Annie has already fulfilled my hopes that she would one day take over my role at BHM. Maybe everything else will fall into place too.

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