Elwha Central at City Pier on Saturday

PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles waterfront will turn into “Elwha Central” as a free, public dam-removal festival spreads out on City Pier from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. Saturday.

The festival will offer broadcasts of the morning’s ceremony at the Elwha Dam, music, food, drink and displays that blend environmentalism with entertainment.

“Ranger Jeff,” aka Jeff Wolin of Florissant, Colo., is among the performers planning a family-friendly show on the pier.

Wolin will serve as master of musical ceremonies all day.

As the culmination of this week’s “Celebrate Elwha!” activities in and around town, Elwha Central will have as one of its attractions the big-screen simulcast of the invitation-only ceremony up at the Elwha Dam site.

Gov. Chris Gregoire, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, local Congressman Norm Dicks, U.S. Sens. Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray, and U.S. Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs Larry Echo Hawk are among the dignitaries invited to the 90-minute gathering on the river.

Also among the 400 luminaries are National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis, actor-environmentalist Tom Skerritt, former U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley, Lower Elwha Tribal Chairwoman Francis Charles, Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Michael Connor and Karen Gustin, Olympic National Park superintendent.

Televised at City Pier

Down on the pier, the public will have a chance to watch it all at 11 a.m. and again at 5:30 p.m.

The ceremonies will also be webcast to home computer users at http://www.dvidshub.net/webcast/1949 at 11 a.m.

The festival, sponsored by First Federal, also will be a place to buy Olympic National Park books and memorabilia and learn about local environmental organizations such as the Arthur D. Feiro Marine Life Center.

The many nonprofits setting up displays include American Whitewater, Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church and Habitat for Humanity, the Dry Creek Coalition, the Elwha Science Education Project, Lower Elwha Klallam tribe, the North Olympic Peninsula Skills Center, Streamkeepers, Olympic Peninsula Surfriders, the Story People of Clallam County, the Wild Olympics Campaign, Wolf Haven International and the Huxley College of the Environment on the Peninsula.

Festival-goers can also sign up for free outdoor activities to be hosted Sunday by the NatureBridge environmental school.

NatureBridge, formerly Olympic Park Institute, will offer tours of several locations on and around the Elwha River from 10:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Sunday.

Details about that and the rest of the weekend’s activities are at www.CelebrateElwha.com.

Music, eTown

On the City Pier stage, Ranger Jeff will welcome local bluesman Thom Davis, who has penned new songs especially for the Elwha Central event, at 10 a.m.

The music schedule also includes a set by Bessier-Morris at 12:45 p.m., Ranger Jeff’s family show at 2 p.m., jazz by Impulse at 3 p.m. and rock with Kevin Lee Magner and Bound to Happen at 4:15 p.m. Zaya Marimba will also be performing throughout the day.

Saturday night, much more live music will fill the 1,156-seat Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center.

The California alternative-rock band Cake, plus Texas Music Hall of Fame singer-songwriter Eliza Gilkyson and banjo man Danny Barnes, form the triple bill for “eTown,” a nationally syndicated radio show to be taped here at 7:30 p.m.

Tickets to the taping, a two-hour concert-and-conversation, are $20 at www.ArtsNW.org and at Port Book and News, 104 E. First St.; any remaining seats will be sold at the door.

Also on the “eTown” show agenda are an interview with National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis and the presentation of the E-chievement Award.

The recipient is a Washington state activist whose name won’t be announced until Saturday, said “eTown” co-host Nick Forster.

Saturday night’s festivities will be turned into two “eTown” episodes, to air on some 300 public and comm­ercial radio stations in late November or early December.

North Olympic Peninsula residents will be able to hear the shows on KMTT-FM 103.7 out of Tacoma, as well as online via www.eTown.org.

And KONP of Port Angeles, at 1450 AM and 102.1 FM, may also air them; manager Todd Ortloff said this week he’s trying to work out a broadcast agreement with “eTown.”

Arts Northwest

The orchestrator of all this is Karen Hanan of Arts Northwest, the Port Angeles-based promoter of musical and educational events and the founder of the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts.

The City Pier festival, the “eTown” event and other Celebrate Elwha activities of the past week were not included in the National Park Service’s multimillion-dollar Elwha River Restoration budget, Hanan said.

Instead, she raised $20,000 in private funding, principally from the Kongsgaard-Goldman Foundation.

The Seattle foundation makes grants to nonprofits involved in restoration and other environmental projects across the Pacific Northwest.

Hanan was determined to add music and other art forms to the Elwha dam-removal story.

She also coordinated the creation of 23 banners by artists across the region, plus a mural by Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Director Jake Seniuk, for Saturday’s ceremony at the dam site.

Without the arts, that event could get a little dry, Hanan believes.

She also wanted the public to be part of the whole restoration project, the largest of its kind in the nation.

So “we raised our own money for our party,” Hanan said.

“The arts are what people will remember.”

________

Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-417-3550 or at diane.urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in Life

ISSUES OF FAITH: Music for our ears and a song in our hearts

WHILE I LOVE blue skies, sunshine and summertime, I do very much… Continue reading

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith.
Speaker set at Unity in Port Townsend for weekend service

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith will present “Deep Peace Abides”… Continue reading

Rev. Dr. Clancy Blakemore
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Clancy Blakemore will present “Exploring Cause and… Continue reading

Heather Vickery
OUUF speaker slated for Sunday

Heather Vickery will present “Joy is the Secret of… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Liberalism in Judaism

“If there is among you a poor person, one of your kin,… Continue reading

Thanksgiving meals slated on Peninsula

Thanksgiving meals are being offered across the Peninsula next week. PORT ANGELES… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: Don those decorations like a pro

LAST WEEK, WE discussed how this is the ideal time of year… Continue reading

Some of the many dogs rescued by Fox-Bell Farm Humane Society. Be sure to visit its Facebook page. (Submitted photo)
HORSEPLAY: Robot repairs and Fox-Bell news

NO HORSING AROUND for me this month as I’ve undergone a successful… Continue reading

The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and RainShadow Chorale combine, with orchestra, to sing Handel’s “Messiah” Nov. 22 and 23. Both concerts are at 3 p.m. at Chimacum High School. (David Conklin)
Chorus set to perform Handel’s ‘Messiah’ at Chimacum venue

CHIMACUM —The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and… Continue reading

Julie Lobato
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Julie Lobato will present “Soaring in Sacred… Continue reading

Joseph Bednarik
Sunday program set for OUUF

Joseph Bednarik will present “The Room Quiets and Then…”… Continue reading

Holy Trinity farewells interim pastors

The Rev. Gail Wheatley and The Rev. Beth Orling,… Continue reading