Portland, OR. Over 500 people gathered for the 2018 “Paint the town Red!” ALS Dinner and Gala On April 7th. KGW’s Laural Porter introduced keynote speakers Evan and Rachel Deboga. Rachel was diagnosed with ALS at 28 but finds purpose in ALS advocacy through her blog, How I Life Now: Life with ALS. At the gala, organizers thanked the generosity of sponsors, donors, and volunteers for the over $432,000 raised for crucial care services and ALS research. (Photo credit, Michael Keo Photography)
Aubrey McCauley is recognized for more than 12 years of leadership and service to the ALS community.
Bidder cards are raised at ‘Paint the Town Red’ ALS Dinner & Auction Gala
From Oregon and SW Washington Chapter of The ALS Association:
We were honored to profile and hear keynote remarks from Rachel and Evan Doboga of Vancouver, WA. The love and support form our community for this family and all families living with ALS is deeply appreciated.
The Oregon and SW Washington Chapter of The ALS Association provides support and resources for people living with ALS, their families, and caregivers living in the State of Oregon and the six counties of Southwest Washington.
Our Mission: To discover treatments and a cure for ALS, and to serve, advocate for, and empower people affected by ALS to live their lives to the fullest.
Portland, OR. It’s crunch time for cultural grant writers in Oregon; applications for FY2019 Cultural Development Grants are due by 5 p.m. on Friday, April 13th. Past recipients include programs at Lincoln Elementary in Corvallis. Students helped build an organ during an OrgelKids Encounter supported by the Benton County Cultural Coalition, part of the Oregon Cultural Trust.
The grants are designed to support cultural projects that address one of four application categories: access; preservation; creativity; and capacity. In 2017 the Cultural Trust awarded 86 grants ranging from $5,000 to $40,000, with an average grant amount of $11,050. FY2019 grants, to be announced this summer, will fund projects and activities that occur between Aug.1, 2018 and July 30, 2019.
A new mix of marketing strategies attracted 55.2 percent more new donors and 6.7 percent more total donations – a record $4.9 million – to the Oregon Cultural Trust in 2017. The funds will support fiscal year 2019 grants to cultural organizations across the state.
Cultural Development Grants represent one third of the funding the Trust provides for Oregon’s cultural organizations. Other funding includes grants to the Trust’s five statewide partners – the Oregon Arts Commission, Oregon Heritage Commission, Oregon Historical Society, Oregon Humanities and the State Historic Preservation Office – and to 45 county and tribal cultural coalitions that fund local initiatives.
Trust Manager Aili Schreiner has limited appointments remaining for scheduled application consultations between now and the April 13 application deadline. Please email [email protected] to set up a call.
Portland, OR. A local conservation biologist has confirmed what millions of Oregon Zoo visitors have already seen: Elephant Lands, the visionary new home for this community’s beloved pachyderm family, has stepped up the game when it comes to elephant welfare.
“The elephants are taking more steps, in more places, than ever before,” said Sharon Glaeser, an elephant researcher at Portland State University.
Over the past six years, the zoo’s elephants have been logging their steps by wearing motion-measuring anklets. Like human Fitbits, but much more sturdy and robust, the anklets use GPS data loggers to tally the elephants’ daily movement.
The anklets were originally part of national study measuring outdoor walking distances of 56 elephants in 30 different zoos. Conducted in 2012, and published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE, the study found that zoo elephants walked 3.2 miles per day on average, comparable to the daily distances covered by wild elephants. The Oregon Zoo’s Sung-Surin was one of the study’s participants, walking an average of 4.7 miles per day.
“At the time of that original study, the Oregon Zoo was still building Elephant Lands,” Glaeser said. “So we wanted to continue the research and find out how things might have changed with the new habitat.”
Elephant Lands, four times larger than the previous elephant area, opened in 2015, extending around most of the zoo’s eastern border — a wide, hilly swath that runs from south of the zoo’s central lawn northward almost to the veterinary medical center and Family Farm.
The new habitat was designed to promote activity and choice, with a variety of feeding methods that mimic the grazing habits of wild elephants: timed feeders, overhead feeders that prompt the elephants to stretch and sometimes climb on logs, and puzzles that require manipulation to acquire food. These snacking opportunities are spread throughout three outdoor habitats, so the elephants forage and explore for up to 16 hours a day.
The results of the latest walking study, while not surprising, were gratifying, Glaeser said. GPS mapping from the new habitat showed the elephants are walking farther than before, moving throughout the entire habitat and all around its 1.3-mile perimeter. Sung-Surin doubled her average from the previous study and now walks an average of 9.6 miles a day.
“They’re actually walking even more than that,” Glaeser said. “At Elephant Lands, they can choose to go indoors if they want, and the GPS units can only reliably measure the elephants’ movement when they’re outdoors.”
Glaeser’s Oregon Zoo work is part of a larger effort aimed at determining objective indicators of well-being for elephants both in zoos and in their native range countries.
The Oregon Zoo is recognized worldwide for its Asian elephant program, which has spanned more than 60 years. Considered highly endangered in their range countries, Asian elephants are threatened by habitat loss, conflict with humans and disease. It is estimated that just 40,000 to 50,000 elephants remain in fragmented populations from India to Borneo. The zoo supports a broad range of efforts to help wild elephants, and has established a $1 million endowment fund supporting Asian elephant conservation.
As part of the Metro family, the Oregon Zoo helps make greater Portland a great place to call home. Committed to conservation, the zoo is currently working to save endangered California condors, Oregon silverspot and Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies, western pond turtles and Oregon spotted frogs. Other projects focused on saving animals from extinction include studies on polar bears, orangutans and cheetahs.
Support from the Oregon Zoo Foundation enhances and expands the zoo’s efforts in conservation, education and animal welfare. Members, donors and corporate and foundation partners help the zoo make a difference across the region and around the world.
The zoo opens at 9:30 a.m. daily and is located five minutes from downtown Portland, just off Highway 26. The zoo is also accessible by MAX light rail line. Visitors who travel to the zoo via MAX receive $1.50 off zoo admission. Call TriMet Customer Service, 503-238-RIDE (7433), or visit trimet.org for fare and route information.
CAPTION:A recent study shows Oregon Zoo elephants are using the entirety of their new habitat and walking more than ever before. Photo by Michael Durham, courtesy of the Oregon Zoo.
Portland, OR. The annual YMCA of Columbia-Willamette Portland Good Friday Breakfast, which is in its 12th year, drew more than 1,000 supporters to the Oregon Convention Center. This is the first year the YMCA hosted this event, which was founded by Open Arms International. There was a diverse group of attendees who reported they were excited to hear the testimony of God’s redemption and forgiveness. VIPs at the gathering included Jordan Kent, Portland Trail Blazer TV Host and Portland Good Friday Breakfast Emcee; Bob Hall, CEO and President of the YMCA of Columbia-Willamette, Jeannie Pickens, YMCA of Columbia Board of Trustees; and Jim White, Portland Good Friday Breakfast Chairman.
This year the featured keynote speaker was Alana Simmons. She is the granddaughter of Rev. Daniel L. Simmons, one of nine African-Americans gunned down in 2015 by a white supremacist in Charleston, South Carolina. Alana Simmons’ grandfather was leading the Bible study that day.
In the aftermath of the tragedy Alana Simmons became the voice of her family and founded the Hate Won’t Win Movement, which is described as “a nonprofit dedicated to showing acts of love to those different from us.” Leading up to her keynote address at the Portland Good Friday Breakfast, Alana took part in several other local activities.
Alana Simmons and Mark Burris, COO of the YMCA of Columbia-Willamette at the Better Together Leadership Luncheon leading up to the Portland Good Friday Breakfast.
Alana Simmons joins Hamilton Grant from Hate Won’t Win to honor the victims of the racially motivated hate crime at the Hollywood MAX Transit Station that killed two peoplein 2015.
Alana Simmons spoke about Spiritual Warfare at a Good Friday Prayer event at the Highland Christian Center
Hamilton Grant, Hate Won’t Win; Jama Lee, Senior Executive Director of the YMCA of Columbia-Willamette; Judy Booker, Senior Program Director at the Moda YMCA Child Development Center; and Alana Simmons, Portland Good Friday Breakfast Keynote Speaker
From YMCA of Columbia-Willamette:
The Portland Good Friday Breakfast provided an opportunity for the YMCA of Columbia-Willamette to feature 150 years of service in our community, which is being celebrated in 2018. The Portland Good Friday Breakfast was the eve of the first gathering of the YMCA in 1868.
Portland, OR. Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare is building one of the nation’s most innovative community centered campuses—a place where healing, homes and hope come together. Cascadia’s new Garlington Health Center at the corner of Northeast MLK and Morris in the Eliot neighborhood will provide integrated healthcare – mental health, addiction treatment, primary care and wellness services – all in one location to support all of a person’s health needs. The new campus – due to open this summer – will also be home to Garlington Place, a 52-unit affordable housing apartment building. Advocates believe the key to fight homelessness and help people achieve improved health and well-being is to provide access to both whole health care and safe, permanent housing. To support the goal for the new campus, supporters have launched Building a Culture of Caring, Cascadia’s $3.5 million dollar community giving campaign. You can help by contributing at https://cascadiabhc.org/give/ways-to-give/give-now/.
Here’s a video about the campaign:
Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare is celebrating the success of its sold out Culture of Caring Gala on April 5th and reaching out the whole community saying, “Your support has immediate impact in the capital campaign effort to open the new Garlington Health Center.”
To learn more about the naming recognition opportunities and how a gift can be part of the growing circle of community supporters, call 503.963.7799 or email Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare at [email protected].
The Garlington Center, as it is known today, was dedicated in honor of the late Rev. Dr. John W. Garlington Jr and his wife, Yvonne Garlington, who established a compassionate voice for Portland’s African American population within the social services community. Dr. Garlington was a leader for social justice in the areas of education, employment, police-community relations and ministries to individuals and families experiencing poverty, hunger and homelessness. The Garlingtons’ died in a tragic car accident while traveling in Florida in 1986. In honor of their remarkable contributions to the people of Portland, Cascadia renamed the Center in 2006 to recognize Dr. and Mrs. John Garlington’s legacy.
From Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare:
Cascadia’s new Garlington Health & Wellness Center will be one of Oregon and the Northwest’s leading integrated mental health, addiction recovery, primary care and wellness services clinic when it opens in 2018.
Our new campus will have economic benefits to the community through investments made in workforce development and employment opportunities. Coupled with the addition of residents in the apartment building, and individuals and families visiting the Garlington Health & Wellness Center, these activities will positively impact the neighborhood, area businesses and nonprofits.
We know that mental health and addiction challenges can impact lives in many ways and we know that the benefits of integrated healthcare contributes to an individual’s ability to achieve improvements in health. We also know that placing individuals and families in homes first provide a safe, familiar environment in which to heal, recover and regain independence.
Cascadia’s plans for the new clinic innovate the delivery and model of mental healthcare and addiction recovery with the integration of primary care services to treat and provide medical care for illnesses and chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and arthritis. With the addition of wellness programs and classes, the new Center will also help promote healthy living.
Wellness programs will include community spaces such as a teaching kitchen, health education classrooms, resource library, and a community garden; and host nutrition and cooking classes, exercise lessons, parenting programs, First Aid, and more. Integrated care contributes to improved health outcomes, reduces the financial burden on area hospitals and emergency departments, and increases healthcare cost savings.
Support our campaign with your gift today. To speak with someone about making a gift, learn about naming opportunities/recognition, or to sign up for an upcoming tour of the building, please call 503.963.7799 or Email us.
Portland, OR. Portland Opera is pleased to present the company’s fifth annual Big Nightconcert on April 14, 2018 at 7:30 PM at the Keller Auditorium. Music Director George Manahan will lead soloists, orchestra, and chorus from the 2018 season in an evening of opera’s greatest hits. The program, hosted by General Director Christopher Mattaliano, will feature popular works by Verdi, Wagner, Mozart, Rossini, and Bizet, as well as a few Broadway favorites.
“We’re incredibly excited for this year’s Big Night concert as we kick off our 2018 season,” says Christopher Mattaliano. “Big Night is a celebration of opera, and also a celebration of the amazing talents that breathe life into the masterpieces of our art form. We love taking this opportunity to highlight our orchestra and chorus, and share an evening of fun with our audience.”
This year’s Big Night concert will feature 3 principal artists, as well as the four members of Portland Opera’s 2018 Resident Artist program, who will share the stage with the Portland Opera orchestra and chorus. The principal artists are baritone Stephen Powell, who will sing the title role in Verdi’s Rigoletto this season, soprano Vanessa Isiguen who returns to the Portland Opera stage after her appearance in last season’s La Bohème, and tenor Barry Banks, who makes his company debut in this concert before singing the role of the Duke in Rigoletto.
Resident Artists Helen Huang (soprano), Thomas Cilluffo (tenor), and Shi Li (bass) also make their Portland Opera debuts, with soprano Kate Farrar returning for her second year in the program. Nicholas Fox returns as Chorus Master, with Daniel Meeker as Lighting Designer.
The 2018 Big Night concert is presented by Umpqua Bank. Portland Opera appreciates the ongoing support of funders including The Collins Foundation, Meyer Memorial Trust, Oregon Arts Commission, Work for Art, the James F. and Marion L. Miller Foundation, and The Regional Arts & Culture Council, including support from the City of Portland, Multnomah County, and the Arts Education & Access Fund.
Tickets for Big Night are now available, starting at $25. Portland Opera is a proud participant in Arts for All—providing $5 tickets for Oregon Trail Card holders. A limited number of rush tickets (for seniors, students, and United States Armed Forces personnel and their families) are available for the 2018 Big Night concert. For more information, and to purchase tickets visit http://www.portlandopera.org/production/big-night-2018/ or call Patron Services at 503-241-1802. For more information, patrons may also contact the Opera Concierge at [email protected].
About Portland Opera
Portland Opera exists to inspire, challenge, and uplift its audiences by creating productions of high artistic quality and is proud to be a part of the region’s thriving artistic and business community. We celebrate the beauty and breadth of the opera repertoire with four main stage performances each season. Our 2018 main stage opera season includes Gounod’s Faust, Verdi’s Rigoletto, Rossini’s La Cenerentola, and Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice. The company is also a committed educational partner, touring fully staged operas to schools and community centers throughout Oregon and SW Washington region each year, in addition to a host of other efforts designed to make opera accessible for all.
Portland, OR. Dogs of all sizes, ages and breeds are invited to put their best paw forward to be honored as 2018 Portland Rose Festival Grand Marshal or serve on the Canine Court. In recognition of the role that the Oregon Humane Society (OHS) a has played making Oregon one of the most pet friendly states in the nation, the Rose Festival will — for the very first time — feature a Canine Grand Marshal in the Grand Floral Parade on Saturday, June 9th. The Grand Marshall could be a Corgi like one of those who helped raise money for OHS at special Corgi Beach Party.
Selected as the Portland Rose Festival‘s Official Charity for the 2018 season, OHS is joining forces with the Rose Festival to find Portland’s canine royalty and they’re asking for the public’s help. Five dogs will be honored as the official Canine Court, including one lucky dog being crowned Canine Grand Marshal. Information and applications are available on the OHS website and at all LexiDog locations. There is a $50 fee to apply which is a donation to OHS.
The Spirit Mountain Casino Grand Floral Parade is the crown jewel of the annual Rose Festival. The Brilliant Oasis float took top honors in 2017 parade.
The parade draws hundreds of thousands of cheering viewers of every age, along a 4.2 mile route that winds through city streets and across the river. It features over a dozen full-size all-floral floats, all-floral mini-floats, marching bands, and equestrian units.
“It’s wonderful to be able to partner with one of Oregon’s most tenured nonprofits, one that’s been a part to the community even longer than the Rose Festival,” says Marilyn Clint, Rose Festival Chief Operations Officer.
A panel of representatives from the Oregon Humane Society, LexiDog, Rose Festival and Heathman Hotel panel will pick 20 canine finalists to participate in the Canine Coronation Ceremony at the Heathman Hotel, 6:00 – 9:00 p.m., Wednesday, May 23. During this event, the canine court will be chosen! Winners will receive prizes worth up to $1,000. Additionally, during duration of the contest entry window, the Heathman will donate the pet fees charged to all guests who stay with their pets at the hotel to the Oregon Humane Society.
“We are honored to be named the official charity of this year’s Portland Rose Festival,” says Sharon Harmon, President and CEO, Oregon Humane Society. “Our organizations share a rich history and are part of what makes Oregon unique and special.”
“As OHS marks our 150th anniversary, it’s the perfect time to celebrate Portland’s love for pets by having a canine Grand Marshal in the Grand Floral Parade,” adds Harmon.
Here are more details about the contest:
Is your pup the perfect royalty canine-date? An Oregon Humane Society, LexiDog, Rose Festival and Heathman Hotel panel will pick 20 Canine Finalists to participate in the Canine Coronation Ceremony at the Heathman Hotel on May 23 from 6 to 9 p.m. During this event, the Canine Court will be chosen!
Event Details:Date – May 23, Time -6 p.m., Location – Heathman Hotel, Tickets -Will open May 1
Prizes: 20 finalists will receive a gift basket valued at approximately $100. The 4 Prince/Princesses of the Court will receive a gift basket valued at approximately $500. The Canine Grand Marshal will receive a gift basket valued at approximately $1,000, and of course, have bragging rights for being the only canine Grand Floral Parade Grand Marshal ever!
The fee to apply is $50. All proceeds benefit OHS. Entries must be received by May 14 at noon.
If you prefer to fill out a hard copy form, these can be picked up and turned in to any LexiDog location. Entry fee of $50 is payable when you turn it in. Please make checks payable to Oregon Humane Society. 100% of entry fees benefit OHS. Click here to download an application.
Drop off or mail your entry to any of these LexiDog locations:
Pearl District: 416 NW 10th Ave. Portland, OR 97209
On Macadam: 6100 SW Macadam Ave. Portland, OR 97239 (behind Starbucks)
Lake Oswego: 131 N State St. Lake Oswego, OR 97034
Southeast: 2929 SE Powell Blvd. Portland, OR 97202
Fine print: Male and female dogs may apply. There are no restrictions on the number of males or females on the Court. The Grand Marshal may be male or female. Canine Requirements: All dogs must be current on vaccinations, and dogs over 6 months of age must be spayed/neutered to be eligible. Canine Court Princesses and Princes will be chosen based on personality, poise, presence, platform and talent by a panel of celebrity judges. Dogs must be: Well-poised (be at ease and well-behaved in different settings, with all types of people and dogs). Well-traveled (comfortable on a leash and riding in a vehicle).
The Oregon Humane Society is the Northwest’s oldest and largest humane society, with one of the highest adoption rates in the nation. Founded in 1868, OHS receives no government funds for its adoption, education and animal cruelty investigation programs. Visit oregonhumane.org for more information or to make a donation.
The Portland Rose Festival Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit that serves families and individuals with programs and events that promote the arts, education and volunteerism. We value environmental responsibility, diversity, patriotism and our historic & floral heritage.
The 2018 Rose Festival runs from May 25 through June 10 www.rosefestival.org.
Wilsonville, OR. “When I go to our butterfly lab, I feel a sense of peace in a world of chaos,” said inmate Sarah Martin, one of the Coffee Creek butterfly technicians. “I have a rare opportunity to sustain the life of an endangered species, which gives me a unique reward of being able to give peace back into the world.”For much of the past year, the female inmates at Coffee Creek have raised and cared for Taylor’s checkerspot butterfly larvae, as part of a collaboration with the Oregon Zoo and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Butterfly keeper Julia Low (foreground) held a jar of tiny butterfly larva during a tour of Coffee Creek facility where inmates work in the Butterfly Lab. (Photo credit, Michael Durham.)
Last week, they transferred 562 of the growing caterpillars back to conservation biologists at USFWS for release on western Oregon prairies near Corvallis. It is the first attempt to re-establish Taylor’s checkerspots in Oregon, where only two known populations of this rare Northwest butterfly remain.
“This is groundbreaking,” said Oregon Zoo butterfly conservationist Ronda Naseth, who advises the program at Coffee Creek. “It adds captive rearing and release in Oregon to recovery efforts for the endangered Taylor’s checkerspot butterfly. And it brings butterfly conservation work into a medium-security housing unit for the first time.”
Checkerspot butterfly
Coffee Creek’s butterfly conservation lab launched last May, with funding from USFWS and the help of an Oregon Zoo Foundation grant. Zoo staff taught inmates how to care for butterfly eggs and raise larvae, supporting their efforts along the way.
Rearing the rare butterflies comes with many challenges. One of the most difficult tasks is feeding the ever-munching larvae, which require vast quantities of specific plants. The Institute for Applied Ecology assists the lab in supplying, propagating and harvesting plantago plants for this purpose. The level of care is crucial: The species is listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and, according to Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, is in imminent danger of extinction.
“We set a first-year goal for the facility of 500 larvae, so we were very excited to have met and exceeded that goal,” Naseth said.
The Coffee Creek–reared caterpillars will complete their development in the wild, first turning into chrysalides and then — over a span of warm, sunny days this spring — emerging as adult butterflies and unfurling for the first time their distinctive, colorful wings.
Though once abundant across the inland prairies of the Pacific Northwest, the Taylor’s checkerspot has now lost 99 percent of its grassland habitat to successional plant growth, agriculture and urban development. And while the butterflies themselves are small, the restoration of their high-quality native prairie habitat also benefits a multitude of other species associated with this ecosystem.
The Oregon Zoo has raised nearly 25,000 checkerspots for release since joining the recovery effort in 2004 — including 425 larvae transferred to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife last month for release in the south Puget Sound area, where some of the region’s best prairie habitat remains. Another 350 larvae stayed behind to complete their transformation into adult butterflies at the zoo — a “rear guard” of sorts that will breed, lay eggs and produce caterpillars for release next year. Once the work of these 350 is complete, they too will be transferred to WDFW as adult butterflies and released to field sites around the middle of May.
The Oregon Zoo is a charter member of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ Butterfly Conservation Initiative, a collaborative effort among nearly 50 zoos and aquariums. The zoo works in partnership with and receives funding from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife to rear checkerspots for release into the wild. Additional project partners include Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Xerces Society, the Institute for Applied Ecology, the Sustainability in Prisons Project, The Evergreen State College, Washington Department of Corrections, and the Oregon Department of Corrections.
To learn more about the Oregon Zoo’s effort to save Taylor’s checkerspots and other imperiled Northwest species, visit oregonzoo.org/recovery.
As part of the Metro family, the Oregon Zoo helps make greater Portland a great place to call home. Committed to conservation, the zoo is currently working to save endangered California condors, Oregon silverspot and Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies, western pond turtles and Oregon spotted frogs. Other projects focused on saving animals from extinction include studies on polar bears, orangutans and cheetahs.
Support from the Oregon Zoo Foundation enhances and expands the zoo’s efforts in conservation, education and animal welfare. Members, donors and corporate and foundation partners help the zoo make a difference across the region and around the world.
The zoo opens at 9:30 a.m. daily and is located five minutes from downtown Portland, just off Highway 26. The zoo is also accessible by MAX light rail line. Visitors who travel to the zoo via MAX receive $1.50 off zoo admission. Call TriMet Customer Service, 503-238-RIDE (7433), or visit trimet.org for fare and route information.
Portland, OR. Over 1,000 invited guests converged on the new 46,000 square foot Restoration Hardware (RH) gallery store in the Historic Alphabet District for its gala opening. This new four-story showplace, at 474 NW 23rd, features RH furnishings, artwork, and accessories in a gallery-like setting. The VIP opening was also a benefit for the Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Foundation and drew supporters like Judi Inglis, Bella Hunter, RH Chairman & CEO Gary Friedman, Maddie Andrews, and Peter Andrews.
Guests from the worlds of design and architecture, fashion, philanthropy, culinary arts, sports and business lined up to celebrate the unveiling of RH Portland on March 29th.
Laura Whittet and Jasmine Baughn (Andrea Lonas Photography)
Bella Hunter, Gary Friedman, Katrine Ehlen, and Nick Ehlen (Andrea Lonas Photography)
Guests enjoyed gourmet bites by Chef Naomi Pomeroy of Beast, fresh bellinis by Cipriani NYC, a Mojito Bar, curated wines by Ma(i)sonry Napa Valley, and rosé on the rooftop by Blackbird Vineyards.
RH Portland (Andrea Lonas Photography)
Chef Naomi Pomeroy, Beast (Andrea Lonas Photography)
Jacob Gray, Chase Renton, and Amir Shafii (Andie Petkus Photography)
Gary Friedman and Eden Dawn
Social Media Influencers, “The Gay Beards”
Steve Neville and Portland Society Page Editor, Elisa Klein
Mark and Diane Fraser
Taylor Goodman and Brandon Kudo
Erica Indira Swanson, Whitney Goodman
Ann Edlen, Mark Edlen (Andrea Lonas Photography)
RH Portland is capped by a 6,000-square-foot “rooftop park,” highlighting some of the company’s outdoor living offerings. (Andie Petkus Photography)
RH Portland (Andie Petkus Photography)
Michael Lowes, Guest, Mark Madden, Amy Lowes
Nicole Campoy Jackson
Michael Doherty, Gary Freidman
Bella Hunter, Gary Friedman, Linda Maletis, Rob Maletis (Andrea Lonas Photography)
New York DJ Chris Malinchak
Blurring the lines between residential and retail, indoors and outdoors company leaders say, RH Portland will serve as a canvas for a collection of luxury home furnishings and décor. Across four levels and over 40,000 square feet, guests will discover artistic lifestyle installations featuring RH Interiors, RH Modern and RH Outdoor collections from internationally renowned designers.
RH Portland is located at: 474 NW 23rd Avenue, Portland, OR
Committee members for the VIP opening event included:
Michael Doherty, Nike
Mark & Ann Edlen, Gerding Edlen
Rob & Linda Maletis, Maletis Beverage
Erica Indira Swanson, Tea Bar
Tommy Alberini, Apex Real Estate Partners
Whitney Goodman, WM GOODS
Jean-Pierre Veillet, Siteworks Design
Holly Freres, JHL Design
Maddie & Peter Andrews, Melvin Mark
Nick & Katrine Ehlen, Melvin Mark
About RH, Restoration Hardware
RH (NYSE: RH) is a curator of design, taste and style in the luxury lifestyle market. The Company offers collections through its retail galleries, source books and online at RH.com, RHModern.com and Waterworks.com.
Social: #RHPortland
About Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Foundation
The Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Foundation secures private philanthropic support for Doernbecher Children’s Hospital, Oregon’s premier pediatric health center. The Doernbecher Foundation supports research in finding cures for children’s diseases, educating the next generation of pediatric physicians, expanding the range of services available to children in need, as well as offering financial support to families with children undergoing treatment.
Portland, OR. Rose Festival Queen Michaela Canete helped kick off Dragon Boat racing season at the ‘The Awakening of The Dragons’ ceremony on March 31st. It’s a tradition when local and visiting dignitaries paint red dots on the eyes of the Dragon Boat figureheads to officially “wake” them up.
Buddhists from the Hui Lin Temple lead this centuries old Chinese ceremony each year.
Annual activities include drumming and Lion Dancing by the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association (CCBA).
The Royal Rosarians were asked by the Portland-Kaohsiung Sister City Association to participate once again in this annual event. Dignitaries invited include: Rose Festival CEO Jeff Curtis, Portland Rose Festival Queen Michaela Canete, Royal Rosarians Prime Minister Adam Baker, and Portland-Kaohsiung Sister City Assoc. President Mike Bostwick.
Lion Dancing by the CCBA is always popular.
The event ends with a parade of dragon boats and the Portland Fireboat spraying the traditional water cannon salute.
Here are more details:
Starting Sunday, April 1, each racing team will get three one-hour practice sessions a week with the boats to prepare for the June 9 & 10 competitions.
There are three race divisions: Mixed, Women’s and High School.
Mixed Division: Ages 14 and up – 5 trophy groups
Women’s Division: Ages 14 and up – 2 trophy groups
High School Division: Ages 14 to 18 – 1 trophy group
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