Wednesday, August 8, 2007

"Postman" Exhibit at Cutter














Come to the Cutter Theatre this month to see an exhibit honoring the tenth anniversary of the filming of The Postman in Metaline Falls and its environs. The display will feature photos of the town during its "Hollywood" phase (as captured by local residents) as well as articles and reminescences on experiencing the making of the film.

And while we're on the topic of The Postman...

What are your memories and experiences during that summer of 1997? Were you an extra in the movie? Did you have a run-in with any of the stars or the movie crew?

Post your comments and share in the fun!

Green Grocery Bags in Metaline Falls

Three cheers for the Falls Market!

It recently changed its plastic grocery bags to the Hippo Sak, which uses less plastic while being stronger than traditional bags. It is also recyclable - that is, if you can find a recycler who will accept it (try Earth Works in downtown Spokane, if nothing else). Also, the green Hippo Saks that the store had when I was there a few weeks ago are made completely from 100% post-consumer recycled materials. It's great to see the store is able to promote and benefit from more eco-friendly products.

Of course, a re-usable cloth shopping bag beats a plastic one any day...

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Photos Needed!

Do you have photos taken during the filming of The Postman in Metaline Falls in 1997?

During the month of August, in recognition of the 10th anniversary of the filming of the Costner movie here, the Cutter Theatre will be running an exhibit showcasing locals' photos and recollections.

If you have any photos of the town and all the goings-on during this period, please contribute them to the gallery showing (the name of the photographer will be included with the exhibit, and of course all photos will be returned).

To submit photos, call Rosemary Daniel at (509)446-3371. The deadline for submissions is Monday, July 23.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Huckleberries!

'Tis huckleberry season once again!

Though still a little early for many locations, one can certainly find some ripe huckleberries in the mountains in northern Pend Oreille County. It's looking to be a better year than last year's disappointing dearth. (Though we still need some more rain if the current green ones are to plump up. Some ripe ones have even dried and shriveled up on the bush. Perhaps the Forest Service can spare a firefighting plane to drop water onto the huckleberry patches. No berries is tantamount to an emergency!) We went up on Huckleberry Mountain today and found a few isolated patches with modest samplings, but nothing too outstanding. My mom has attempted to look further north in the county and found mostly green ones still. So, maybe it's a bit premature to celebrate...

But I have one spot where I have found bunches of huge thumbnail-sized berries and have so far picked about three-quarters of a gallon. Time is my only hinderance.

Where is this place, you ask? Tsk-tsk, just as a fisherman does not reveal his secret spot, neither does the berry-picker. There is a clandestined level of activity in summer (mostly legit, I think), the underground huckleberry movement: a venturing of locals into the hills to fill their coffee cans and stain their hands purple. A little sampling is permitted, too.

The huckleberry is the gourmet food to emerge from our natural spaces. It is much like France with its truffles and truffle-hunters, each with his or her own "secret spot" and local lore about what makes for good growing conditions. As in France, we have had great difficulty attempting to domesticate this natural bounty and there has been great public outcry against attempts to regulate its harvest. The berries fetch high prices (if you can bear to part with them) and there is always controversy about the way they are sometimes collected (using a "rake" is not welcome in these mountains!). Can you imagine a more decadent summer treat than the sweet, tartness of huckleberry pie, each juicy berry bursting in your mouth as the light crust flakes? You can actually taste the difference between huckleberries picked in different locations - this one is more sugary, this one is very tart. All is the result of different soils, minerals, rainfall, sunlight, and temperature - such subtlety. Let me be the first to say it: Huckleberries have their own terroir. Peter Mayle, eat your heart out; give me huckleberries before truffles, I say.

Never mind what Benjamin Franklin said about beer and God. Huckleberries are proof He loves us and wants us to be happy. And the nonpresence of poison ivy in the berry patches is perhaps the guiding hand of providence.

Mmmmm, huckleberries...

I leave you with a question: Does anyone else bristle when nonlocals refer to huckleberries they've found as blueberries? They're not the same thing!

A citizen of...


What is the term for people from Metaline Falls? "Metaline Fallsians"? For that matter, would those from Ione be Ionians and those from Metaline be Metalinians? Or is it Ionites and Metalinites?

We have some unwieldy names, methinks.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Word Association

No doubt you've seen this before: Write the first word(s) that come to mind when prompted by the following words...

Metaline Falls
Metaline
Ione
Newport
Cusick
Pend Oreille
Sullivan Lake

And you can add your own for others to try, too...

Monday, July 2, 2007

Photos from Around Town

A few photos I took in town last month...








Wednesday, June 27, 2007

A Community Gathering Place?
















I've been thinking lately that Metaline Falls lacks a common gathering place. Where can youth go to hang out? There's no place that caters to them. Where can a family go? (if not invited to dinner at another's house). Where can one who doesn't partake of alcohol go?

One good solution that I see to this dilemma is a coffee shop. These have traditionally been places for the public to gather, where spontaneous conversations develop, chance meetings happen, and the community comes closer together. In fact, the founding fathers of the nation met in a coffee shop in Boston to discuss their plans for independence.

Currently, we have a number of worthwhile establishments that meet some of these needs. For instance, we have the bars, but they're certainly not for everyone (nor are they for every time of day). We also have a cafe, but it is more for dining than whiling away the hours. And we have the Cutter Theatre, but it is not a place you go to often without a specific purpose (such as checking out a book from the library, attending a play or concert, or visiting the upstairs art gallery). But the fact that these venues don't meet all of our social needs leaves us weaker as a community.

If we had some common gathering place, such as a coffee shop, where all were welcome, one could simply drop in and see what's happening. (You don't even have to like coffee, because it's not all there is to order). And you could stay for hours and no one would think you strange for it.

The chance meetings at the post office or the grocery store are not enough. I want to get to know more of my townsfolk! Right now we meet, exchange pleasantries, and shuttle away to our respective solitudes. I think we need a place where we can gather and relax, apart from the hustle and bustle of daily commerce and habits. And I think that place could be found in a coffee shop...

What do you think?

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Hometown Poetry

Here's a couple of poems that I wrote about my little Northwestern home. They're certainly not my best work, but a fun tribute to place. The first is a love poem of sorts to the town and my memories of it, written sometime in high school. The second is basically a reworking of the first, sharing many of the same images and themes. It is a bit more pensive and serious, though, and was written in a college english class.

I'd love to see any other creative works that locals have written, too! Post them in the comments...













METALINE FALLS

Rest stop for those passing through,
Blink and you'll miss it.
Home for the dilapidated cement plant
With its silos as a tombstone marking its grave.
Town of silence in winter;
And lazy breeze in summer:

I have seen your every face, worn your every attitude:
tedium, elation, awe.
I am a part of you, as you part of me; lifelong friends thus far.
I though you so mysterious when I was young and confined
to home, but as I ventured to mainstreet with my mother,
my world grew, as did you.
You were a large town then, but never intimidating.
Your winter: Deck the Falls, sledding, hot chocolate, cold
breath in my nose, a boy on his back in the snow staring
at the clouds.
Your summer: Affair on Mainstreet, biking, swimming,
lemonade, sunshine setting imagination free.
As I entered middle childhood I was even more caught up in
your mystery, wondering at the mountains which surround
you.
Your people are good and I began to memorize their names
and recognize their smiles and faces.

I even knew the dogs by name.

One summer day I sat in a chair outside the cafe, eating my
ice cream bar and pondering life, and your mysteries,
which now seemed more familiar to me.
I was comfortable there in the sun,
thinking,
wondering,
pining,
smiling,
floating, floating, free.
A generation apart from the industrial boom that created you.
Yet your trees and mountains are the same, only older, as are
your buildings, many of which are now ghosts: the school
building now a theatre and library, the cement plant, the
gas stations, the hotel on lower mainstreet.

But the people remain lively.
They are good and I know their smiles, faces and names:
the houses they live in.
I have grown older now, but sometimes I still wonder.
You and I have spent many a lazy day together,
Ore stripe cascade,
Metaline Falls.

I know your secrets,
And you know mine.














SEARCHING FOR METALINE FALLS

The run-down cement plant is like a failed socialist dream.
The mines closed years ago. Dark shafts
fill with river water. Now the old train runs for tourists.
Roofs cave under weight of northern snow.
It falls less now. The imposing shoulder of Mt. Linton
that has haunted my dreams, hidden and Tibetan.
Sometimes behind storm clouds. Or heavy and black
when the sun slips toward Seattle. Washington Rock looms
nearer. Its huge face is neither stately nor presidential.
Is granite and limestone and streaked
black like tar when rain chisels at it. And streams
precipitously into the Pend Oreille. You can see the whole town
from atop. All square mile of it. A man fell drunk
from there one night and miraculously survived.

All of the buildings are agnostic, whether church
or tavern. The followers of each are the same.
The same people on mainstreet,
exchanging greetings at the post office,
buying Coors Light at the Falls Market, where carts
holy roll themselves down undulating uneven aisles.

And there is the Cutter Theatre. Where loggers and shopkeepers
come alive: Shakespearean, Oklahoma!, cookies and punch
and gossip at intermission. It used to be the old school building
before the district was consolidated. In the basement black and white
photos of old graduates stare mutely, unknown. Some names match
cemetery stones. We watch movies at the old Clark Fork Theater
settled into darkness where ceiling tiles threaten to fall
from overhead.

The survivors of small town America are god-like.
Everyone knows everyone. Even the names of dogs.
Once a year, tragedy: a flock of crows descending, strokes,
car crashes and suicides. Life is survival.
I never needed to memorize the street names
because I never really leave. Despite the one entrance into town
across a tall steel bridge that spans
the mighty green Pend Oreille, visitors still get lost. As do I.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The Issue of Future Development


As with any small town, there must be some consideration in Metaline Falls of future development. One local blogger is already addressing this issue here.

I see two competing interests that vie for our consideration:

The first is that Metaline Falls is like any Western town needing to transform itself following the historical shifts of industry and population from rural, natural resource based economies into the present urbanized, service economy that is primarily present-day America. Many towns have turned to tourism with much success (as far as economy is concerned). Today, Metaline Falls and the Pend Oreille Valley are likewise courting tourism to bring in revenue. And what a beautiful area we have to present the world.

The second consideration concerns responsible development. While a small town needs to survive by finding new income sources while presenting an interesting life to retain residents, it must not lose its soul in the process. In my opinion, one has only to look south to the growing megalopolis that is Spokane, Post Falls and Coeur d'Alene to see what poorly regulated development can look like. Urban sprawl and strip malls are certainly an undesirable future. And while I don't think a McDonald's or a Walmart will be coming to our corner any time soon, we still need to consider our stance on growth and development nonetheless - if only to be prepared for that unlikely eventuality.

Also, there are smaller challenges that will present themselves - such as the RV subdivision proposal which is the theme of the aforementioned blog, http://pendoreille.blogspot.com/. I don't know enough about this proposal to comment at the present time, but it would be prudent and beneficial for all to apprise themselves of these developing issues.

We shouldn't fear development and change, because it is inevitable and even healthy. New faces are welcome. But we should also not hesitate to help guide that process of growth to shape the place in which we live.

It's my town and it's your town. Let's work together to make it all it can be.