Aside from beach walks, kite flying and eating there was a lot of sitting around reading and chatting on our trip. Also parsing the definitions of words using the huge dictionary. At one point we were discussing how could the Oregon Coast is most of the year and how the water is positively frigid. Matt suddenly disappeared into the bedroom, then reappeared a moment later in his swimsuit and carrying a towel. He ran out the door and all the way down to the water. The tide was out, so it was a long, long way. Stephen followed suit. (heh!) Into the water they plunged, while we--snug, dry and warm in the cottage groaned aloud.
Join Matt and Patricia as they settle into their first house, affectionately known as The Orange Door
Showing posts with label Spindrift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spindrift. Show all posts
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Spindrift: Porch Views
Spindrift: early morning walk
I woke up early--no surprise there--and set out for a morning walk. I took the stairs down to the beach. It was a gray morning. The weather over the weekend was typical Oregon Coast spring weather: sun! clouds! rain! more rain! less rain! sun! and the cycle would repeat itself.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Spindrift: Food
Spindrift: Kites
Spindrift: quirks
There is a volunteer board that runs Spindrift. They are librarians, or employees of the library and thus, any cottage they run would show some of the librarian quirks. Here are a couple.

Stephen was lounging in the main room, staring up at the ceiling when he gasped. "Oh my gosh, only librarians would find the leak and then label it." We all rushed over to look. Indeed, the ceiling showed water damage and had a handy label: leak.
Just in case you need a pencil, this can't be mistake for anything but a pencil box.

Stephen was lounging in the main room, staring up at the ceiling when he gasped. "Oh my gosh, only librarians would find the leak and then label it." We all rushed over to look. Indeed, the ceiling showed water damage and had a handy label: leak.

Spindrift: Views

This is the main room, where we all spent a lot of time. Various naps were taken on various couches throughout our lazy day.

Spindrift: What is it?
Some of you may know that I'm a library groupie. I love the library and probably would have my ashes interred there if someone would let me. I happen to have a librarian friend, which as a library groupie is pretty cool as we all know that librarians are perhaps the coolest hippest people on the planet, especially in relation to their entirely inaccurate "Shhhhh!" image in popular culture.
So when my librarian friend Deborah said, "I've got the library cottage for three days in May, do you want to come?" I immediately squealed my affirmation without even having any idea what the librarian's cottage was. What library groupie wouldn't?
The library cottage, as I learned from Deborah, is also known as Spindrift Cottage and it is in Manzanita, Oregon, right on the beach. Mary Frances Isom commissioned A.E. Doyle to build it in 1912 (the same year my grandmother was born.) A.E. Doyle is also the man who designed the gorgeous Central Library.
When Mary Francis Isom died, she left her cottage to the library employees. Not the Foundation, or the Board or the library proper, but its employees. And today, that's who gets to use it. If you are a half-time or more employee of the Multnomah County Library, you can enter a lottery to have a stay at Spindrift. Drawings are held three times per year and stays are short, to accommodate as many people as possible. The cottage sleeps twelve, has a kitchen, bathroom and an incredible view of the ocean, as you will see.
Matt and I had an incredible time at Spindrift and we are grateful to Deborah for inviting us.
If you want to read a short column that was in the Oregonian in April about Mary Frances Isom, you can go here or find it in the April 10, 2010 edition of the Oregonian. "Talented women opens Portland library to public, serves readers across Multnomah County" by John Terry.
So when my librarian friend Deborah said, "I've got the library cottage for three days in May, do you want to come?" I immediately squealed my affirmation without even having any idea what the librarian's cottage was. What library groupie wouldn't?
The library cottage, as I learned from Deborah, is also known as Spindrift Cottage and it is in Manzanita, Oregon, right on the beach. Mary Frances Isom commissioned A.E. Doyle to build it in 1912 (the same year my grandmother was born.) A.E. Doyle is also the man who designed the gorgeous Central Library.


If you want to read a short column that was in the Oregonian in April about Mary Frances Isom, you can go here or find it in the April 10, 2010 edition of the Oregonian. "Talented women opens Portland library to public, serves readers across Multnomah County" by John Terry.
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