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July 1, 2005
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Exhibit commemorates end of WWII TAMARA STEINER Clayton Pioneer
GREGG MANNING
MAYOR’S CORNER LANDSCAPE ELECTION SET FOR NOVEMBER In my last message, I reminded you that the current Landscape Maintenance District sunsets in 2007, and 2007 will be here before you know it. The city council has received the final report of the Blue Ribbon Landscape Maintenance Committee, which recommends a fee of a dollar a day to fund the district. Now the council must consider when and how to bring this issue to Clayton’s voters. One of the outstanding recommendations is for a Citizens’ Oversight Committee. This committee would keep the city council informed on how the Maintenance District funds are being spent and, if needed, recommend better ways to direct the limited funds to improve the landscaping. If you are interested in serving on this committee, please contact Laura Hoffmeister at 673-7300 use the city’s Web site, www.ci.clayton.ca.us/. COMMUNITY CELEBRATES BIRTH OF A NATION When residents and nonresidents speak of Clayton, they often talk of its small town charm. One of the things which gives Clayton this charm and feeling of community is its July 4th parade. This celebration of the birth of our nation goes back many years. The celebration in its current form started in 1976 to celebrate the bicentennial of the founding of the nation. It seems as if the bicentennial was just yesterday and not 29 years ago. Many towns and cities had parades that bicentennial year and while many have continued, few have continued with the enthusiasm
Tamara Steiner/Clayton Pioneer
A memory box assembled by the granddaughter of WWII veteran and Clayton resident, Ming Hanson, contains, among other items of memorabilia, Hanson’s flight goggles and hat.
Sixty years ago, the world celebrated the end of World War II with the Nazi surrender on May 8 and the Japanese surrender on Aug. 15. To commemorate these victories, the Clayton Museum opened its newest exhibit, “Red, White and Blue” on June 12 with more than 130 items from WWII. Members of the Clayton Historical Society or their relatives contributed all of the items for the exhibit. “I put out a notice last spring that we would be doing this exhibit, and I had an overwhelming response. Some people brought in one thing and others brought in a hundred,” said Curator Mary Spryer. “We didn’t have enough room for every item, but everyone who contributed has something in the display.” The exhibit includes uniforms, weapons, C-Rations, maps and other fighting memorabilia, as well as a “how to” book on cooking with limited resources, instructions for
See Exhibit, page A3
Planning Commission approves Bocce Centre JILL BEDECARRÉ Clayton Pioneer
After a few twists and tweaks to the Bocce Ball Centre proposal in Clayton, the Planning Commission recently approved the site plan review and use permit that is needed to keep the ball rolling on this controversial project on vacant land behind city hall. The Commission also rec-
ommended city council approval of the initial environmental study and declaration, the General Plan Amendment and the Specific Plan Amendment. The proposal calls for construction of eight courts, a planter seating wall, 20 picnic tables, two additional shade arbors over the seating area and a storage facility and restroom. The next step before con-
struction can begin, according to community Development Director Jeremy Graves, is for the city and the Bocce Ball Federation to negotiate a use operation and maintenance agreement. The Federation will maintain the center once built. The twists and tweaks focused on areas that are still points of contention among neighbors from Cardinet and Wallace Drives. Parking issues
and noise concerns forced several heated discussions at commission meetings, which began in March. Neighbors whose homes would be closest to the courts feared noise backlash from games and parking overflow onto their street. There was even talk among some residents that they would appeal the commission’s decision if their needs were not met. An appeal would mean that the
Bocce proposal would be brought back to the city council for further review, forcing further delays to the Bocce Ball Centre. However, the planning commission agreed to several plan amendments to help appease neighbors’ concerns. In addition to forcing the Bocce Federation to include explicit
See Bocce, page A4
Community celebrates Independence Day JULY 2, 3, 4 SINGING FLAG Join thousands of other people from around the area for the annual Singing Flag festival, July 2, 3, and 4 at the Concord Neighborhood Park, 4321 Concord Blvd, Concord. Sponsored by Calvary Temple the show starts at 7 p.m. Admission is free. You can reserve your “seat” by setting out your blanket after 6 a.m. on
See Mayor, page A4
What’s inside The Pioneer is now in two sections. See below to find your favorite feature.
the day you plan to attend the show. JULY 4 PANCAKE BREAKFAST Clayton’s July 4th festivities start with a Pancake Breakfast at Endeavor Hall from 7 to 10 a.m. The breakfast is sponsored by the Rotary Club of Clayton Valley/Concord Sunrise. KIDDIE LAND Kiddie Land is open before
and after the parade in downtown Clayton. Featured activities include the Bounce, games and activities. PARADE 4th of July Parade gets underway at 10 a.m. down Main Street. Kids, floats, horses, cars and organizations show off their patriotic pride. Emcee is KGO-TV’s News Anchor, Dan Ashley.
SECTION A Around Town . . . . . . . . . .A2 Directory of Advertisers . .A5 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A5 Letters to the Editor . . . . .A6 Police Blotter . . . . . . . . . . .A6 Book Review . . . . . . . . . . .A7 Sharing History . . . . . . . . .A8 Financial Sense . . . . . . . . .A10 Your Health . . . . . . . . . . .A11 School News . . . . . . . . . . .A12 Church News . . . . . . . . . .A13 Food For Thought . . . . . .A14 SECTION B Hiker’s Haven . . . . . . . . . . .B1 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .B2 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .B4 Dining Around . . . . . . . . . .B6 Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . .B7 Garden Girl . . . . . . . . . . . .B8
Clayton Pioneer July 4 Photo Contest Attention all you shutterbugs! Get ready, get set, GO for the Clayton Pioneer’s Third Annual July 4 Celebration Photo Contest. Each individual may submit up to three photos, but only one of those photos can win a prize. Photos must be snapshot size (3” x 5” or 4” x 6”) and must have been taken during
this year’s 4 th of July Celebration in downtown Clayton.
On the back of each photo, print your name, address, phone number and whether you are entering as an adult (over 12) or a child (12 and under.) Drop your prints off at the Clayton Pioneer office before 5 p.m. on Monday, July 11. Please do not e-mail photos. First place winners in the adult category will win a $50 gift certificate for Elysium Restaurant in downtown Clayton. Second place prize is $35 gift certificate for Pasta Primavera and third place is $25 gift certificate for La Veranda Cafe. First prize in the 12 and under category is a $50 gift certificate for Mary’s Pizza Shack, second place is a $35 gift certificate for Rocco’s Pizza and the third place winner will receive a $15 gift certificate for Mountain Mike’s Pizza. Winning photos will appear in the July 15 issue of the Clayton Pioneer.
photo by Bob Joakimson
Page A2
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Around Town Elena Nielsen wins first place in Eco-art contest Diablo View Middle School seventh grader, Elena Nielsen, 12, recently won first place in “Visuals and Voices”, a traveling eco-art show sponsored by Earth Team, a Bay Area environmental non-profit. The show included more than 80 entrants from over 26 Bay Area schools. Elena, one of the youngest students to enter, won $100 for her outstanding poetry and artwork entitled, “Insight Through Nature.” Her work is on display at the Oakland Museum throughout the month of June and will be on a yearlong tour throughout the Bay Area including a debut at the Clayton Community Library. Earth Team, (www.earth-
team.net), is an environmental network for educators and teens with a mission to create a new generation of environmental leaders by introducing into the classroom and the community active, engaging and creative educational experiences to inspire dedication to a healthy environment. Elena entered her first writing contest this past March at the Clayton Library called “California Stories Uncovered.” Since the focus of the contest was on oral histories of immigrants to California, Elena interviewed her grandparents, both Japanese Americans who were relocated to the Internment Camps during WWII, telling their story in poetry.
July 1, 2005
Returning Iraq war soldier is honored by City Council
The Clayton City Council declared June 22 “James Brandt Argo Day,” in honor of the returning Iraq war soldier. Argo, pictured above with Mayor Gregg Manning, will serve the next two years as an active reserve stationed out of Travis Air Force Base. Brandt will attend DVC where he will take specialized police courses in preparation for a homeland security position.
Sheila McCloud retires after 15 years of service photo courtesy of Arlene Kikkawa-Nielsen
Elena Nielsen with Laura Grossman, Earth Team project coordinator.
Barbosa’s bring home baby Jesse Andre Jesse Andre Barbosa moved into the Barbosa’s Morgan
JESSE ANDRE BARBOSA
Territory home on June 4. Weighing in at a hefty 9 lbs. 5 oz., the 19 inch tall tyke joined parents Peter and Kristina and brother Nicholas who will be a second grader at MDES in the fall. Jesse’s parents are the new owners of Clayton’s Cup of Jo (formerly The Clayton Livery). Stop by their downtown store and shake hands with the proud parents.
Custom Estate above Clayton Valley Highlands This beautiful 4 bedroom 2 ½ bath home sits on almost ¾ acres. Inside you will find remodeled kitchen with newer appliances, hardwood floors, 2 fireplaces and game room/in-law unit. Outside you will find RV parking lovely yards and a sparkling pool. $859,980
She’s helped thousands of young students safely cross the street at the corner of Pine Hollow Road and Mitchell Canyon for 15 years. And she’s monitored the safety and behavior of hundreds of students at Diablo View Middle School for the past five years. And now, Clayton resident Sheila McCloud turns in her vest and visor for some open space and spectacular views of Mt. Shasta, the Siskiyou and Trinity mountain range as Sheila and her husband Larry retire to Shingletown. “At times, I thought I was a police officer,” she says. And so it was fitting that the Clayton Police Department hosted one of her farewell parties. She admits her job was sometimes tense dealing with young children approaching their teenage years. With some, she says she’d be a little more up close and personal than she cared
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Sundown Area, Walnut Creek - This 3 bedroom 2 ½ tri level town-home with bonus/office room off garage is spacious with and open and airy floor plan. You will find 2 fireplaces, kitchen with granite counter tops, newer flooring and indoor laundry.
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Tamara Steiner/Clayton Pioneer
Intern Austin Pervoe, Officer Jason Russo and Sheila McCloud.
to be. But it would always be balanced by the kids that would come back and say thank you or by being handed a note that read’ dear the lady that helps me cross the street.’ She was equally touched by parents who would say thank you because it “was all about their trust and dependability.” And when she wasn’t supervising a detention class or noon lunch hour or stopping traffic to let a youngster cross the street to school, McCloud could be seen in a scout uniform leading troop and pack 262 for over 17 years. Both her sons, Andy, 23 and Peter, 26 are Eagle Scouts and McCloud was honored for her scout service with the prestigious District Merit Award. She says she’ll miss her friends in Clayton, but not the traffic. Travel to Alaska is in the future, as well as time to spend on scrapbooking and genealogy.
Stranahan, Clayton - Newer single-family home located near downtown, walking trails and schools. This 3 bedroom 2-½ bath home has laminate flooring, ceiling fans in all the bedrooms, and wood blinds throughout. Beautiful landscaped yards.
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$669,980
Easly Estates, Clayton - Looking out the front door breathtaking views of Mt. Diablo! 4 bedroom, plus office with 2-½ baths, this home sits on a large lot with park like yards with possible side access. Inside you will find updated kitchen and baths and fresh paint inside $839,980 and out.
Eagle Peak, Clayton - Sought after area 5 bedroom, 3 ½ bath home sits on private view lot overlooking the valley and Delta. One bedroom and bath located on the main floor, 3 fireplaces and granite kitchen.
$1,098,000
COMING SOON Morgan Territory 20 Acres of land $864,000 Windmill Canyon @ Oakhurst Crandall Model w/room addition, $750,000 Chappel Hills, Concord 4 bedroom/2 bth with newer roof, newer remodeled kitchen $639,980
July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Around Town CV Woman’s club celebrates 32 years Happy Birthday. The Clayton Valley Woman’s Club is 32 years old and members recently got together to celebrate with an ice cream social.
The social was held at President Shirley Boyd’s home in Clayton. Charter members that were present included Joan Reed, Dell DeCew and Alice Jordan.
Baby Cole Jordan makes four at the Pishney home
Page A3
Exhibit, from page 1
COLE JORDAN PISHNEY
Jill Bedecarré/Clayton Pioneer
From left: Dell DeCew, Joan Reed and Alice Jordan.
Eric and Gigi Pishney welcomed a new baby boy on June 17. Cole Jordan Pishny, 6 lbs. 5 oz and 19 inches tall, joins big brother, Alex, 9, in their Keller Ridge home.
Seniors meet their student pen pals Residents of Diamond Terrace and second graders at Mt. Diablo Elementary School have been pen pals for the past year and finally met up with each other at a special tea in the classroom. Second grade teacher Ms. Jo Currier has made this an annual event that the students and seniors look forward to. You could tell by the smiles and enthusiastic conversation that everyone enjoyed getting acquainted.
Jill Bedecarré/Clayton Pioneer
From left: Diamond Terrace resident Winnie Reed, teacher, Jo Currier and student, Katie Mayhew.
The Pioneer wants to know what’s happening around town. Send your news items to tamara@claytonpioneer.com.
Tamara Steiner/Clayton Pioneer
Ming Hanson smiles proudly as his grandson Thomas Stuart models Hanson’s WWII Army Air Corps uniform.
planting a Victory Garden and a pattern book for remaking coats into jumpers and children’s jackets. Clayton resident and VFW member Ming Hanson contributed a “Memory Box” assembled by his granddaughter, Andrea. Hanson served in the Army Air Corps and the
Eldora Miller Hoyer served in the US Navy from 1943 until her discharge in 1946.
box contains, among other items, Hanson’s goggles and flight hat, his dog tags and identification card and a booklet titled “Greetings to the Men Who Serve from Your Comrades from WWII.” Another Claytonian, Chuck Farren, contributed an aerial photo of Stalag Luft III, where he was held as a prisoner of war. Stalag Luft III was the Nazi POW camp where the famous mass breakout occurred in 1944 that was the subject of the movie, “The Great Escape.” Particularly touching are the extremely personal items from the era. A journal kept by a young British woman has the following entry for June 7, 1944, the day after the American invasion of Normandy: “Good news. Fortress of Europe invaded at last…RAF smashed coastal guns at night; Nazi’s shot up by day.” “It (the journal) makes me
think we should record things,” Spryer said. “Our daily lives will be interesting to someone 60 years from now.” The photo gallery on the piano contains portraits and photographs of Claytonians and their relatives who served in the war. A small poster encourages families to support the war effort with the following: “Here’s how you bring your people back to you: You find time for war work, you walk and carry packages (to conserve gasoline), you conserve everything you have and you save 10 percent in War Bonds—that’s a Victory Home.” “World War II was different,” Spryer says, musing. “World War II affected everyone everyday. It was a big effort for the whole country. We’re at war now, but unless you have a family member fighting, it real-
Chuck Evans enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1944.
ly doesn’t affect your daily life.” The Museum is open Sundays and Wednesdays from 2 to 4 p.m. and by appointment. On July 4 it will open after the parade and close at 2 p.m. The museum is located at 6101 Main St., in downtown Clayton. The WWII exhibit will remain at the museum through Nov. 16.
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Page A4
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Bocce, from page A1 directives to players in their literature as to where they should park for games and tournaments, the commission agreed to post a “no parking sign” on Cardinet Drive. Although the sign can’t be enforced by police, “it would serve as an important reminder to bocce ball players” where and where not to park, said Commissioner Ben Jay. While resident Jerry North demanded “some means of recourse” to monitor the parking situation, he added, “we’ve come a long way from the first meeting when we said forget it,” referring to the residents initial opposition to the entire project. Chairman Glenn Miller told North he does have recourse because of a clause in the agreement that calls for an evaluation of the project 60 days after the first season of league play. The
commission also agreed to a sign posting park hours on site at the Bocce Centre to deter vandalism and late night revelers. Noise concerns continued to draw opposing views. Bocce ball supporters insisted that noise at games would be minimal, but residents from Cardinet and Wallace drives told the commission that, in general, noise carries easily in that area, and they asked the commission to keep the proposed sound fence in the original plan. Howard Geller, vice president of the Bocce Ball Federation, said he feels that the reduction from 10 courts to eight eliminated the need for such a fence, especially since the fence would be ultimately be torn down when the storage and restroom structures were built. “It’s a money-saving step,” Geller said.
Mayor, from page A1 of the Clayton parade. The 4th of July Celebration starts at 7 a.m. with the Rotary Club pancake breakfast, which lasts until the parade begins. The parade begins with the fire trucks, placed at the beginning both to signal the start and to be able to get out quickly in case of an emergency. After the firetrucks comes what I consider the best part of the parade — the kids! Hundreds of them...on bicycles, skateboards, wagons or just walking. Their transportation is decorated in red, white and blue and there are lots of flags. We never know how many kids will be in the parade because there is no requirement to register. If
you’re a kid, just show up and you are in. It can take 15 or 20 minutes for all the kids to cross the starting line. You may see some of the kids more than once when a few of the early starters loop around and bring up the rear of the Kiddie Parade. The Mayor and members of the City Council and maybe a few county dignitaries will follow the kids and then come the floats and cars from the entire community. Nothing exemplifies Clayton’s sense of community as much as our 4th of July parade. While the tradition continues, the festivities have evolved over the years. When I was
Resident Julie Hart disagreed. “The Bocce Federation keeps saying, ‘We just want to make sure the neighbors are happy.’ They’ve gotten everything they wanted except for 10 courts. It can get very noisy. I hope you would stand by the original fence as a mitigating measure,” she told the commission. The original proposal called for a 6-foot-high solid wood sound fence 100 feet along the access road and 75 feet toward Mt. Diablo Creek, The fence would serve as a sound barrier until the storage and restroom buildings were constructed. Resident MaryAnn Laurence supported a “wait and see” plan to determine if noise is an issue. “To put all of that money into a wall that may or may not be practical is ridiculous,” she said. “Why not wait until after one season of play and evaluate?” she asked the commission.
After discussing the pros and cons of the noise issue, the commission unanimously agreed to 100 feet of a less costly and temporary board-onboard wood fence along the access road and a permanent solid wood sound fence that would extend approximately 50 feet toward the creek. Miller explained that the board-onboard fence and proposed shrubs should provide an effective sound buffer. After one season of league play, the commission could amend that condition during its review if noise proved to be a factor. The commission also agreed to limit the Bocce Federation to four tournaments per season. “The planning commission has really worked with us,” North said. He said he didn’t think any of the residents would appeal the commission’s approval of the site plan and use permit. At press time, no appeals were filed with the city.
Parade Chairman in the early eighties, (when there were still trees in the “grove”) we had games like the egg and balloon toss, three legged races and the infamous greased pole to climb.
I’m sure the mothers were thrilled when their kids came home covered with grease even if they did have the five or ten dollars they plucked from the top of the pole. The heart of the celebration has always been the parade and like everything else, the event does not produce itself. There will be at least ten thousand of you who attend this year’s event and I know the volunteers would appreciate hearing you thank them for their effort. They would appreciate it even more if you were to volunteer to help out. If you can’t help out this year, then what about next year? If each one of you only helped out once every ten years we would be overwhelmed with volunteers. You are truly a part of the community when you participate.
“There will be at least ten thousand of you who attend this year's event and I know the volunteers would appreciate hearing you thank them for their effort. They would appreciate it even more if you were to volunteer to help out.” Gregg Manning
July 1, 2005
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July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
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Street, Clayton 94517. For questions, call (925) 757-0208.
FOR RENT Office space, about 300 sq. ft. Other half of office has a tenant who is out of the state half the month. DSL available. 685-4523. Vacation Rental - Cabin in Blue Lake Springs (Arnold, CA). Sleeps 6, fully remodeled, quiet, use of recreation facilities. $150/night, $950/week. Call Kevin Parker @ (925) 383-9430 or http://www.vrconnection.com/ parkerpaw.
Substitute school crossing guard to fill in as needed, morning and afternoon. $11.83/hour. Must be over 18. Call Sgt. Shelly Crain at 673-7350.
LOST & FOUND
TAMARA
Lost: Cell Phone. Silver camera phone lost during 5/30 Memorial Day ceremony downtown. Please call 672-7309 if found.
AND
P.O. Box 1246 6200 Center Street, Suite F Clayton, CA 94517 Office: 925.672.0500 Fax: 925.672.6580 R OBERT S TEINER , Co-Publishers
TAMARA S TEINER , Editor J ILL B EDECARRÉ , Assistant Editor and Display Advertising J IM Z EWAN , Sports P ETE C RUZ , Graphic Design
Lost: Wrap around, polarized sunglasses with neck strap. Lost around the second week in May. Probably lost at the Dana Hills or Oakhurst garage sales. Reward. Please call Tami at 672-2223.
Vacation Rental - cozy cabin in South Lake Tahoe. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 car garage. Great for a family or two couples. Ten minutes to Lake Tahoe, Fallen Leaf Lake, casinos, skiing, and hiking. Please call Mike Risso at (925) 8904623.
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Found: Parakeet - vicinity of Eagle Peak and Keller Ridge. Call 6693-0047
Village Oaks Building, corner of Center St. and Marsh Creek Rd. in downtown Clayton. 4500 sq. ft. on the corner of the building and 1150 sq. ft. on the parking lot. Both spaces are on the ground floor. Will consider dividing the larger space. Good possibilities would be a coffee shop/bakery, dry cleaners drop off or bank. Call Stephen Coates, Coates and Sowards, 408-3718770.
@ 925-429-1918 or e-mail tiffany@gensburger.com
SERVICES The Watering Can. Will hand water and care for your plant containers, flowers and shrubs, front and back during your vacation. Clayton residents preferred. (925) 672-3807. ClatonBrit@AOL.com.
Dog sitting, your house or mine. 8x14 deluxe kennel exclusively yours. Home environment. Your dog will be the only boarder. Boarding fee will be donated to Lab Rescue. 925 672-8122. Perennial Garden Design by Nicole Hackett AKA The Garden Girl. Personal consultations regarding plant choices, placement, identification, fertilizing and maintenance. Spring is just around the corner. Call or email for information and pricing. 925-673-1746 (leave message)
Swimming Lessons. Private and semiprivate. All ages. $10 for ½ hr. lesson Ask for Pat or JoAnne Spada, (925) 672-4004
FOR SALE Steinway B (6'8") Grand Piano. Signed by John H. Steinway. Give yourself or your child a fine instrument that will last a lifetime. Excellent Condition. $39,900. Located in Clayton. Call 925524-0719. Email: claridgem1@aol.com
HELP WANTED Childcare job openings - Oakhurst Country Club. Looking for honest, responsible workers with flexible schedule. Please contact Christy at (925) 6729737 ext. 211 Oakhurst Country Club. Full time landscaper/maintenance worker (1), part time morning and evening restaurant servers (2), morning and evening banquet servers (2), morning fitness employee (1). Flexible hours and golf privileges. Fax resume to (925) 6720148, or e-mail gm@oakhurstcc.com; or apply in person at 1001 Peacock Creek Drive, Clayton. Part time retail sales for Winner's Circle western wear and tack store opening soon in Clayton. The store will be open 7 days a week. Flexible schedules available. Pick up application at the Clayton Pioneer office, 6200 F Center
Two credentialed teachers starting an after school program in August. Pick up from school, snack, homework help/tutoring/enrichment. Call Tiffany
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Page A5
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HOW TO PLACE AN AD Go to our Web site, claytonpioneer.com. Click on the Classified Advertising tab on the left side of the page. Complete the form to submit your ad. Mail a check for the number of insertions to P.O. Box 1246, Clayton, CA 94517. Or, call the Clayton Pioneer, 925-672-0500 to place your ad over the phone. Or, come by the office at 6200 Center Street, Suite F, Clayton between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Rates are $12 for 30 words and 20 cents for each additional word. Classified deadline dates are printed above. The Clayton Pioneer will not accept any ad that discriminates on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, nationality, family status or disability. We reserve the right to reject any advertising we believe is unsuitable. All classified ads must be paid for in advance. LET US KNOW Weddings, engagements, anniversaries, births and deaths all weave together as part of the fabric of our community. Please let us know of these important events. We ask only that the announcement be for a Clayton resident. You will find the appropriate form for your announcement on our Web site. Also on our Web site are forms for submitting Community Calendar items and press releases for your organization. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Clayton Pioneer welcomes letters from our readers. As a general rule, letters should be less than two double spaced pages and submitted at least one week prior to publication date. Letters concerning current issues will have priority. We may edit letters for length and clarity. All letters will be published at the editor’s discretion. Please include your name, address and daytime telephone number. We will not print letters from “anonymous.” E-mail your letter to tamara@claytonpioneer.com
Abbey Carpets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .686-9901 A Clayton Window Washer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .914-1049 Aircloud Wireless Internet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .260-4119 Alise Interior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-7701 All Loving Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-0752 American Home Mortgage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .939-4800 Asemi, Hamid - State Farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-6622 Benton, Mureleen - American Express . . . . . . . .685-4523 Burkin Electric . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-1519 Café Sante . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .429-3320 CCR Insurance and Financial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-6324 CD Federal Credit Union . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .825-0900 Clarissa Bridal Salon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .930-0214 Clark Pest Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .757-5890 Clayton Fitness and Tanning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-2010 Clayton Flowers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .682-4664 Clayton Home Inspection Services . . . . . . . . . . .672-9405 Clayton Mind & Body Connections . . . . . . . . . . .673-0686 Clayton Valley Bowl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .689-4631 Clip n' Clean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .676-9355 College Funding Advisors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .933-8100 Computers USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-9989 ComUnity Lending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-5363 Concord Feed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .825-9530 Crocker Insurance Agency - Sam Totah . . . . . . .941-1536 Cruise Adventures Unlimited . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .935-7447 Diamond Terrace Senior Retirement Living . . . . .524-5100 Dryclean USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-5653 Eagles Peak Realty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .465-0435 Elysium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-1333 Englund's Tea Cottage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-8327 ESI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .969-1477 Flannery, Patty - Diablo Realty . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-0541 French, Lynne - Coldwell Banker Real Estate . . .672-8787 Golden Light Candles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .689-3461 Gregory, Cynthia - Permanent Solution . . . . . . . .286-5162 Help You Sell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .680-4950 Hot Basil Café . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288-0000 Hudak, Jim - Pianist and Composer . . . . . . . . . .673-7293 Instant Imprints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .825-9815 Integrity Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .877-493-5437x402 Ken Ewing Painting and Decorating . . . . . . . . . .586-1882 La Veranda Restaurant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .524-0011 Landman Consulting Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .673-8817 Laurence, Pete - Better Homes Realty . . . . . . . .939-7920 Law Office of Richard Littorno . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-6463 Lerner Eye Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .685-1130 Mary's Pizza Shack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .938-4800 Maverick's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .602-5600 Maximum Carpet Cleaning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .429-3800 Mazzei Auto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .757-5600 Mike's Auto Body . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .689-1739 Monte Vista Veterinary Hospital . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-1100 Dr. Steven Moon, Chiropractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .682-8400 Morningside Horse Farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-3632 Morucci, Kim - Intero Real Estate Services . . . . .280-8563 Mountain Mike's Pizza . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .689-4965 Neptune Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .944-5100 Northgate Gardening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .944-8711 Northshore Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .439-3333 Oakhurst County Club . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .672-9737 Ouimet Funeral Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .682-4242 Pasos de Mt. 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Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Letter to the Editor
Clayton woman fed up with speeding Boy did I get a dose of reality today! I was driving along Clayton Road to pick up my son from the day care at Diablo View Middle School at 5:30 in the afternoon. To my chagrin, the cars on their way to Marsh Creek (Antioch, Brentwood?) were just FLYING past me. My guess is that they were easily
Police Blotter WEEK ENDING JUNE 23 The dates and times shown indicate when the incident was reported to the Police Department. ARRESTS 6/17, 8:32 p.m. Alexander Place. After responding to a call regarding juveniles drinking, officers arrested a sixteen year old Concord male and released him to the custody of his father. 6/18, 1:11 a.m. Clayton Road and Tara Drive. Police stopped a fifty-year-old Concord male for driving too slowly. After failing a field sobriety test, the man was arrested and transported to Concord Police Department for booking. 6/22. 1:10 a.m. Clayton Road. Officers responded to a call regarding a vehicle stopped in the middle of the road. A thirty six year old woman failed a field sobriety test and was arrested and transported to Martinez Detention Facility for booking. 6/22. 7:03 p.m. Yosemite Circle. A forty-six year old Clayton male, known to have an outstanding warrant, was arrested at his residence. He was transported to Concord Police Department for booking. 6/22, 7:23 p.m. Atchinson Stage Road and Clayton Road. An eighteen-year-old Clayton male and an eighteen-year-old Concord male were arrested after being observed racing. They were issued citations for Illegal Speed Contest and released with their signed promise to appear. 6/23, 1:55 a.m. Clayton Road and Washington Blvd. A twenty-five year old Concord female was stopped for expired registration and found to be driving with a suspended license. She was issued a citation and released with her signed promise to appear. BURGLARIES AND THEFTS 6/21, 6:33 p.m. Fleming Drive. Petty Theft.
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driving 60 in a 40-mph zone. I understand this is one of the few options to travel, with Highway 4 a nightmare and Kirker Pass just as busy. The growth out there has left these people little choice in their commute to and from work. (However,) I am galled at the lack of respect these
Glassbergen Chuckles
people would have respect for our town and slow down! The other option is to increase our revenue and cite these drivers to make a statement that speeding is unacceptable in Clayton! Jennifer Giantvalley We couldn't agree more. Ed.
Please recycle
Why advertise in the Pioneer? HERE’S WHAT ONE READER SAYS: Yes, it really IS the 2nd year isn’t it! Time does go by so very fast. All I know is that the paper has changed SO MUCH since you became the new editor/owner and I hear that comment all the time throughout the community. I don’t think anyone in town ever believed it could be what it is today. You and your crew have so very thoroughly truly captured the spirit of this community in so many ways. Congratulations again! Arlene Kikkawa-Nielsen
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people have for our little town that they feel they can disregard the posted speed limits in Clayton. I am concerned for the children, pets, and general public who enjoy our bike lanes and environment here. We moved to this town to enjoy the small town and family atmosphere that is so prevalent here. I wish these
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July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Review: Above The Thunder
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In “Above the Thunder,” Renee Manfredi’s achingly beautiful first novel, Anna Brinkman comes to terms with a life she doesn’t want, a life not of her choosing. As she reviews her circumstances, “Anna supposed that she had more than her fair share of what made for a wonderful life. . . .” She does not complain and she is not maudlin, but she has closed down, put up a No Vacancy sign on her heart, and is not about to admit any newcomers at this stage in the game. It is her birthday, which she doesn’t feel like celebrating, and she is in the lab at the college where she teaches, reading medical slides, which she prefers to study rather than going home to a townhouse full of unfamiliar things, the relics of a previous owner. Although she is stalwart and as reliable as a monument in her work, Anna feels emotionally adrift and is still becoming accustomed to the role of being a widow. Her husband of many decades, Hugh, had been
the center of her life, and without him, she doesn’t quite know who she is. In “Above the Thunder,” Anna not only discovers who she is, but finds that she is larger and deeper and more heroic than she ever dreamed possible. Out of a sense of emotional self-protection, Anna narrows her life to her work and playing her cello. These are two things that are ordered and finite and predictable; things that make sense. But she receives a call from Poppy, her estranged daughter, saying that she wants to visit. Poppy left seven years
“There are questions that occur while exploring this book, like: Is there such a thing as a second chance? Can redemption exist without the sin that provoked it?” Cynthia Gregory
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Page A7
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before, chasing and being pursued by her own inexorable ghosts, traveling like a Bohemian, becoming lost and never quite found. Anna bears a deep grudge against the daughter who abandoned the husband she adored, the father who died wishing for reconciliation. In a stark moment, Anna relents to Poppy’s visit, but the girl never appears, having wandered away from her halfrealized plans yet again. Instead, Poppy’s freespirit husband, Marvin, and her angelic daughter, Flynn, arrive on Anna’s doorstep. Against her better logical judgment, Anna opens the door to her home, and incidentally, to her heart. To her utter astonishment, Anna falls in love with her granddaughter in a way that she somehow was unable to with her own child. Flynn is a strange girl, a magical child, a deep pool of pure love who in her innocence and weird wisdom offers Anna a renewed passion for life. While Anna’s hard heart is cracking open and making room for love again, she forms a modern family out of illogical parts. Her next door neighbor, Greta, who is determined to adopt a deaf child even while her marriage is coming apart at
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the seams, is her best friend, confidant, and sometimes babysitter to Flynn. Asked by her department head at the lab to facilitate an AIDS support group, Anna encounters the acerbic Jack and supremely patient Stuart, befriends the couple, and invites them into her widening circle of relations. Every family needs a dog, and when Marvin gives a Newfoundland puppy to Flynn one Christmas, the girl unblinkingly names the dog Baby Jesus because the crèche she has found in the attic is missing the baby in the manger, and Flynn believes that the lolling, lovable puppy fits the bill. There are questions that occur while exploring this book, like: Is there such a thing as a second chance? Can redemption exist without the sin that provoked it? Where does the ghost of love reside, if not the heart? “Above the Thunder” is not a fluff-and-buff summer romance, nor is it the latest episode in what the publishing world refers to as “chick lit,” but it is a book about what is true and honest and good in life; and it is irrevocably worth exploring. “Above the Thunder” contains the ingredients of a blockbuster summer movie, without glare of a Hollywood ending, though when the ending comes, it does so as a good piece of Anna’s music: on a high note. The novel is filled with love and tragedy, betrayal and redemption. What more can we expect from a good summer read?
Clayton resident
Declan Woods Noel O’ Meara 925. 216-2679 925. 518-0821 fax:672-7055
Cynthia Gregory is a freelance writer who has received national awards for her short stories. Her work has appeared in the Writer’s Digest, the Sun, Santa Barbara, and the Chicago Tribune. She is currently at work on a novel.
Mike Williams
Your local Realtor Serving Clayton has been a family tradition for more than 33 years!
Helping Families purchase and sell homes has been my career for more than 14 years. Krisstyy Willliamss (Clayton Hygienist), Carmen & Don Willliamss (previous owners of the Village Market) and Mike Willliamss , Clayton Real Estate Pro
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Page A8
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Trailblazing Clayton woman taught WWII pilots how to fly at night
AFTER
Photo courtesy of Cathryn Van Scoy
HER GRADUATION from college, Cathryn Van Scoy went to
work for United Airlines where she became a pilot instructor.
Cathryn “Kay” Van Scoy, now 85, was a trailblazer during World War II. With so many men having gone to war, she and another female friend became two of the first women instructors in the United States to ever train male pilots precise night flying without using any lights. “I worked in the United Airlines Denver Center, where we trained pilots for the China, Burma and India (CBI) Division. The pilots came to us thoroughly trained in flying on the East Coast before arriving in Denver,” Van Scoy recalls. “We instructors watched tracings of the pilots’ ground flights in mock cockpits and their correction of errors until they were perfect. They were then flight trained and sent off to war.” Van Scoy explains further that the mock cockpits the pilots were in on the ground had a lid over them so that they could not see outside at all. “They used a procedure where they had to learn to stay precisely on course and straight on a beam inside their cockpit. It was divided into two quadrants, and each quadrant had its own signal of either ‘dit-da’ or ‘da-dit.’ If they veered off of the beam at all, they would hear one of those signals that they had strayed to the left or right accordingly and would need to find their way back on exact course again. It was an extremely detailed procedure that we had to teach them for
several months.” For the pilots, this procedure allowed them to fly at night without lights to a landing field in the war zones. “They would sneak in there at night and be all ready. Then the next day they
would go out and bomb areas. Of course we felt very guilty that we were teaching them how to kill people,” Van Scoy says, her voice quieting. “But we knew that those pilots were going to war either way, and we had better train them well so that they could survive.” Van Scoy, her friend and one other man who had a physical ailment that did not allow him to participate directly in the war, were the instructors who trained hundreds of pilots to fly this way for several years. When asked what her training had been to do this, she explained, “My friend and I had graduated from college in Boulder and then had gone to radio school in Kansas City. One day I saw an advertisement in the paper to work for United Airlines. We applied and they took us.” Thinking that they would just be working with the airlines because most young men had gone to service, Van Scoy and her friend became pilot instructors almost immediately. “They didn’t give us much time to train at all because the war came on so suddenly. They put us to work right away, and United trained us in the procedures through book training only,” says Van Scoy, sighing with relief. “These poor guys, I would pray all the time for them. We thought it was a real miracle when we had been advised that of all the pilots we trained, we only lost one the whole time. We felt victorious then.” Following the end of the war, Van Scoy stayed on with
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SHARING HISTORY United Airlines and worked for them in various stations west of Colorado. During that time, unbeknownst to her, a fellow whom she had dated in college, had been searching for her. After trailing her to Oregon and then Idaho, the fellow’s persistence finally paid off. But Van Scoy was cautious for a few years before finally marrying him in San Francisco in 1948. She and her husband Bob were married for 42 years before he passed away. Van Scoy shares a close bond with both her son and daughter, who live in the Bay Area. In reflecting back on her experiences during World War II, Van Scoy says, “I was the third of four children, and my parents were very proud of me for the work I did during the war. It was a very interesting and unusual job, and women had never been used as instructors for that procedure before.” And smiling proudly she adds, “It was quite an honor for me, too.”
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1170 Burnett Ave. Ste. E Concord
(925) 686-9901
One stop for all your electrical needs
BURKIN ELECTRIC
CATHRYN “KAY” VAN SCOY
Residential Commercial Industrial
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What do you look for in choosing a home inspector? Knowledge. A true professional like CHIS will
Legitimacy. A true professional like CHIS will
belong to the California Real Estate Inspection Association (CREIA) or other reputable industry association, keep current on all building code changes and follows a strict code of ethics.
NOT offer to do home repairs. We carry Errors and Omissions and General Liability Insurance.
Satisfied customers. CHIS accurately reports the general condition of a home and its deficiencies. CHIS has more than 14 years experience.
Lori Hilts-Galvin & Roger Galvin
Family owned and operated for over 14 years with two locations to serve you
Clayton office 925-672-9405; Antioch office 925-755-HOME (4663) Email: chisinspector@hotmail.com
Please visit our Website at www.ClaytonHomeInspection.net
Sole proprietorship all work done by owner
BURK
Burkin Electric
SPECI AL FO CLAYT R ON RE S Mentio n this aIDENTS:
10% di ad for a on all scount service s.
ne o Ph
Expire s 7/15 /05
ELECT R IC
An inspector can find the little problems before they become BIG problems.
IN
professional home inspections before buying or selling
change you with a “checklist” report but will provide you with an easy to read report THE DAY AFTER YOUR INSPECTION.
How to calculate how much extra interest you’re paying on your mortgage every month. z Exactly where to find lower interest rates that could save you money. z Where to find loans that can both lower your monthly mortgage payments and give you cash back. z How to refinance your mortgage with no out of pocket costs to you.
Remodeling or buying new?
The best real estate agents and the smartest homeowners are demanding
Skill. A true professional like CHIS will not short-
z
(925) 672-1 1519
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(925) 212-3 3339ates
James J. Burkin, Owner
License: C10-631523
Fre
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July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
100 years ago in the Contra Costa Gazette
Patty Flannery Realtor
Clayton Resident since 1979
serving all your
Real Estate needs Call me
voicemail: 925.975.5255 residence: 925.672.0541 email: granyflany@hotmail.com
Happy 4th of July!
THINK OF ME AS A PERSONAL TRAINER FOR YOUR FINANCIAL PLAN A lot of people think reaching your financial goals is simply a matter of hard work. While it does take personal commitment, it also helps to have someone working with you every step of the way. I work with you to design a financial plan with the goal of making your money work harder for you, rather than the other way around. From retirement planning to smarter investing to reducing income taxes, I can help you explore your options and help you decide what’s best for you. Call me for a complimentary initial financial consultation and see why more than two million people come to American Express Financial Advisors for their financial fitness.
Mureleen Benton, CFP Financial Advisor CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER
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The following entry was taken from the Contra Costa Gazette society pages of April 29, 1905. Mrs. Douglas is at present visiting her daughter, Mrs. James Frazer of Alameda. Paul Samuel of San Francisco went the fore part of this week to the Mt. Diablo Vineyard. Born-to the wife of Joseph Frank, a baby boy and a baby girl. The twins tip the scale at fourteen pounds. The event took place on Good Friday. The May Day picnic will take place in Mitchell Canyon on Friday, May the 5th. Mrs. Brown of Hayward is visiting her grand-daughter, Miss Ethel Brown. Those who attended the social dance last Saturday evening in the Morgan Territory schoolhouse was well pleased with the enjoyable time spent there and have all agreed to attend any and all other socials or dances in the future at that place. Mrs. Russelmann has
returned from a week's visiting in San Francisco and Vallejo. T. K. Duncan was a visitor to the county seat last Saturday. Social services were held in the Congregational church Saturday morning and evening. The attendance was large at both services. H O. Wetmore was round visiting every family in the school district here as census marshal. Mrs. Norford returned to her home in Vallejo Sunday after a visit here as the guest of her sister Mrs. P. Olofson. The young people of Clayton who took part in the play of the "Deestrick Skule", which was successfully presented to the public in the Clayton hall, met at the home of Capt. And Mrs. Fred Russelmann Wednesday evening, April 19th, to celebrate with Mrs. Henry Frank the second anniversary of their wedding. Music and various games supplied the evening's entertainment, after which refreshments were served. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frank, Capt. and Mrs. F. Russelmann, Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Wetmore, Mrs. J. G. Miller, Mrs. J. B. McKenzie of San Francisco,
Misses Georgia Wilkie of Oakland, Laura Olofson, Palmer, May Stockfleth, Edna Wetmore, Ethel Brown, Metta Stockfleth, May Wetmore, Mary McGrew, and Messrs. Frank McGuire, Charles Bigelow, Dave and Joe Stockfleth, Percy Douglas, Ben Jones, Matthew Ward, Owen Jones and Alvin Schwenensen. P. J. Borgan of Concord and Rube Curry of Martinez were visitors in Clayton Tuesday and their numerous friends were pleased to meet them. Miller and Higgins, the Clayton merchants, are moving
Bloching House
“Happy Hammer” Free estimates Appliance replacements General maintenance Pressure washing
American Express Financial Advisors Inc. IDS Life Insurance Company 5356 Clayton Road., Suite 211 Concord, CA 94521 Bus: 925.685.4523 Fax: 925.685.3520
(925) 673-9433 Skip England
Lic: CA 0692378
The two million figure includes over one million clients who have purchased financial planning throughout our history. © 2001-2005 American Express Financial Corporation, All rights reserved
their merchandise in the new store building, which has been built and fitted up for them by Anton Napolitano. The building is quite an addition to the town. The Davis dwelling is now about completed, as is also the addition to the Schwennsen cottage. J. S. Cardoza of the Summit school district, passed through Clayton Wednesday on his way to Martinez, on real estate business. John Denkinger of Concord was in Clayton Sunday on a visit to his friend George Bloching.
Handyman Service
no job too small
Photo courtesy of Janet Easton
The Bloching House was one of Clayton’s earliest homes.
Mary Nunez Bloching is pictured on the porch of a home that stood on Main Street in the approximate location of what is now the Frontier Beauty Salon. The house burned to the ground in 1928 as a result of faulty wiring. Its occupants, Manuel and Mary Nunez, Bill and Mary Bloching, and the three small Bloching children moved temporarily into the Eagle Saloon while a “new” house was built. The current structure faces north; the home pictured faced west. Visit the Clayton Historical Society Museum, open Wednesdays and Sundays from 2– 4 p.m. to discover more about the Bloching family.
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Licensed by the Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act.
925-941-1536
The Home Buyers Scouting Report® (HBSR) is a free home finding service of Home Buyers Marketing II, Inc. (HBM II) a licensed real estate company. HBM II provides the Report directly to homebuyers through a secure, password-protected online service. Information and display restrictions may apply in some markets because of local rules and regulations. The Real Estate Agent and Home Buyers Marketing II, Inc. (HBM II) are cooperating licensed real estate professionals. The Real Estate Agent is neither an agent nor a broker for HBM II, but works cooperatively with HBM II to assist in your home scouting efforts. The Preferred Loan Officer's role is to assist in determining a comfortable monthly payment and price range for Home Buyers Marketing II, Inc. (HBM II) to use when it is searching for properties within your search criteria. The Preferred Loan Officer is neither an employee of HBM II, nor the provider of the Home Buyers Scouting Report® (HBSR). ©Copyright 2004 Home Buyers Marketing, II, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 05052071-AHMLR
Kristine Thinger
Sherrie Fico
Clayton resident for 6 years
Clayton resident for 14 years
925-939-4800 510-816-8638 (cell)
925-939-4800 925-980-4046 (cell)
kristine.thinger@americanhm.com
sherrie.fico@americanhm.com
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Winner’s Circle opens in Clayton
now open in Clayton. She and her husband Fred were looking to open a second store in the
A R EFERRAL AGENCY z Caregivers/CNA’s z Catering servers
SPEND A LITTLE, SAVE A LITTLE www.Bondrewards.com lets you shop online at 150 popular retailers like Target, Barnes & Noble, Mikasa, Orbitz and PETsMART and then recoup a small percentage of the purchase price in the form of U.S. savings bonds. Every time you buy something, a percentage of the total (between two percent and 10 percent depending on the retailer) gets applied to an account, and when you have enough saved for a bond, starting at $50, it’s yours. You can also shop at www.NestEggz.com, which funnels rebated money into a mutual fund, individual retirement account or money market. Other sites have been created specifically to address saving for your child’s college education. At www.Upromise.com you get cash back into a 529 Plan by registering credit, debit and grocery-club cards and then spending both online and at brick and mortar stores. Another college savings site is www.BabyMint.com that lists about 200 retailers that rebate money into either a Coverdell Educations Savings account or a state 529 plan.
IS IT WORTH IT? Remember that the amounts of money returned to your savings or donations can be so small that if you’re spending for things you otherwise wouldn’t buy, it can easily negate the benefit. Furthermore, if you use credit cards and don’t pay your balance in full every month, your savings and donations could be costing you more. However, if you are shopping for essentials and paying off your bills monthly, you can “have your cake and eat it too” with savings and donations that add up over time and provide a significant boost to your other savings and charitable giving programs.
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call for a free assessment 925.672.0752 fax: 925.672.2694 mobile: 9 25.457.0954 web: alllovingcare.com P.O. Box 688, Clayton, CA
La z a r o , p r e s
ide
Consumer Awareness Hotline Helps Local Residents Buy Executive Homes for Zero Down Payment Clayton - A free, 24-hour Consumer Awareness Hotline is now available to help families and singles buy lovely homes in Clayton and other suburban communities for zero down payment.
Another option is other sites, like www.butterflymall.com where you can redeem your earnings for cash. You can shop at more than 600 stores, including Old Navy, Officemax and Target, and pay the listed price when you shop. Butterflymall will pay you up to 40 percent in Butterfly dollars that are later redeemable for cash. SPEND A LITTLE, GIVE A LITTLE In addition to saving while you shop, throughout the season of giving and the entire year, you can also give to charities while you shop. At www.igive.com, you can shop at over 500 diverse online retailers, including www.Gap.com, w w w. J C P e n n y. c o m , www.EddieBauer.com and www.Dell.com, and give back up to 26 percent to charity. You can list and support your favorite cause and have a say where the money actually goes. Another choice is www.shopforchange.com where up to 5 percent of your purchase is donated specifically to progressive causes whenever you shop online from one of the popular retailers, including Barnes & Noble, Lands’ End, Patagonia and others.
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embra c
We can help with personal care, respite care, light housekeeping, transportation, meal preparation & catering personnel.
Earn or donate while you shop The ultimate in multitasking may be the opportunity to spend money and save it at the same time. The only thing that may be even more gratifying is to spend money and donate dollars at the same time. Both options are not only possible but they are growing in popularity as numerous companies and Web sites aim to help you achieve these dual goals. However, if you are considering using these tools to save or give while you shop this holiday season or throughout the year, beware of the potential downsides and be sure to make these offers work to your financial advantage.
z House cleaners z Party/kitchen helpers
ind of m
“ I love this town,” says Sue Pedersen, co-owner of the Winner’s Circle Western Wear
stretching, hat cleaning, blocking and shaping, alterations and wide variety of merchandise. “We look forward to meeting our customers to find out what they need and how we can help them,” Sue says. “If they want something we don’t have, we will get it for them.” “We’ve always been very visible in the community we serve and we hope to continue that relationship in Clayton.” Fred and Sue are planning a grand opening celebration at the store in August. Until then, the Pedersens invite residents to stop in and say hello. Winner’s Circle is open seven days a week.
A
SUE AND FRED PEDERSEN
Concord/Clayton area. When Sue drove by and saw the empty space in the Village Oaks building on Marsh Creek Road, she knew it would be a “perfect location.” Fred and Sue purchased Winner’s Circle in Antioch six years ago. They brought in all new merchandise and built up the store from there. People travel from all parts of the Bay Area to visit their store. “We hope to do the same in Clayton,” Sue says. In addition to the apparel, jewelry, hats and boots, the Clayton store also carries tack, English and Western. “We have new merchandise arriving daily,” she says. The Pedersens are known throughout the Bay Area for their customer service. “We’re unique in that we offer one-stop shopping that includes boot
Adora Lazaro, and her "All Loving Care" services, have enabled us to take a "timeout" and find some time for ourselves. She and her providers have given specialized and caring attention to our disabled son. Adora does indeed, provide "loving care." - Bud and Kim Modersbach Alamo, C A
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1-877-493-5437 ext. 402 www.zerodownclaytonhomeloans.com Sponsored by Integrity Home Loan Group CA DRE 001247055
Upcoming Events
MURELEEN BENTON FINANCIAL SENSE Keep in mind that many of the rebate and donation sites try to make money by selling their own credit cards and enticing the shopper with a little extra earning power. However, another credit card in your wallet is not always the key to greater savings. In fact, it could lead to overspending and can have a negative impact on your overall credit rating. Finally, remember that these savings plans do not take the place of a comprehensive financial plan or the personalized advice of a qualified financial advisor.
6115 Morgan Territory Road
6001 Morgan Territory Road
home of
Royal Connemara’s
CLINICS
CLAYTON CANYON PONY CLUB
JUMPING CLINIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULY 10TH David Adamo, PC "A" Graduate, USEA Level III Certification Candidate
4TH OF JULY PARADE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULY 4TH DISMOUNTED MEETING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULY 10TH RATINGS PREP - Instructor - Suzanne Thompson, PC Graduate RATINGS WEEKEND . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULY 16 AND 17 SATURDAY - FINAL PREP - Suzanne Thompson and Carrie Brown SATURDAY AFTERNOON - HORSE & RIDER SAFETY - Carrie Brown MD, FACP SUNDAY - RATINGS TESTING - Examiner - Carrie Brown PC “A” Graduate
KIDS SUMMER PONY CAMP (Limited space available) . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULY 26 -30 Great way to get to know horses, other kids and learn about Pony Club
672-3132 - PONY CLUB 672-3632 - BOARDING 672-2874 - CLINICS/CAMP/INSTRUCTION
Mureleen Benton is a Certified Financial Planner. Call her with questions at 685-4523.
DOES YOUR COMPANY HAVE A CREDIT UNION?
Ask us how you can join CD Federal Credit Union through your employer, association or group by calling (925)825-0900.
We are a full service financial institution waiting to serve you!
1855 Second St., Concord CA www.cdfcu.org
ALL brand new merchandise
Winner’s Circle SECOnd location Y O T L A N C N I N E P MERCHANDISE SERVICES O W O N NEW ARRIVALS EV
6200 Center St. Clayton 673-5305 505 W. 2nd St., Antioch 757-0202
Wranglers Apparel Boots Hats Jewelry & Accessories Belts Saddles Tack English/Western
ERY D AY
#1 Customer Service Hat cleaning, shaping, blocking Layaways Special Orders Open Seven Days
July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Is your child’s asthma under control
Purchase or Refinance contact
Ted Sudderth
PART 1 OF 2
ComUnity Lending
Established 1980
W
hat is asthma? Essentially, it is an inability to breathe properly. Air passes through the lungs and flows through progressively smaller airways called bronchioles. The lungs contain millions of these structures. The terminal part of airway is called alveoli, where the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide occurs. Asthma is a chronic condition in which these airways undergo changes when stimulated by allergens or other environmental triggers. There are two specific responses – the hyperactive response – causing smooth muscles to constrict, and the inflammatory response – causing swelling and mucus production. Both processes lead to narrowing of the airways. These changes in the
Your local loan expert offering more than 25 years of excellent service and LOW, COMPETITIVE RATES.
Contact Ted
for a free loan evaluation
(925) 672-5363
6200 Center St., #230, Clayton DOC# 415-0005
Licensed by the Department of Corporations under the California Residential Mortgage Lending Act.
airway cause a sufferer to cough, wheeze and experience shortness of breath – the classic triad of asthma. hat causes Asthma in children? Asthma occurs in about 5 million American children, and each year about 200,000 are hospitalized. It is the most common childhood chronic illness. About half of all cases of asthma develop before the age of 10, and about 80 percent of those develop before the age 5. In general, mechanisms of asthma are complex and vary among population groups and even individuals. For example, asthma in children is highly associated with allergies. However, not all cases of asthma can be explained by allergic response. Other factors, such as genetics or environmental conditions, are likely to be involved in the development
SIGN OF A PROFESSIONA L
Let our team be your team
Bill and Pam Walcutt Office: (925) 686-3800
Bill’s direct: (925) 437-5535 Pam’s direct: (925) 437-5570 bill.walcutt@prurealty.com
prurealty.com/billwalcutt
Keep revenues local. Bill and Pam have a Clayton Business License.
Don’t wait Tender, l oving c are f or s eniors i n t wo b eautiful l ocations
Petar Guest Home
Diablo Senior Homes
(925) 672-2 2841
(925) 855-0 0959
Lic 071441200
Lic 075600230
in Danville
In our 10 years of providing AFFORDABLE care, our facilities have NEVER had a deficiency or a complaint filed with the licensing agency. Trust your senior care to us. Ray Keyhantaj
(Cell) 925-360-2936
JANA TOMSKY
YOUR HEALTH environmental triggers; not only to allergens, but also to infections, dietary patterns or air pollution. A physical factor particular to children is smaller lungs. Over the last two decades, asthma incidence increased rapidly, especially in American children under 4. Among the suspected factors are: z More time spent indoors – more exposure to household’s allergens (dust mites, animal z Dander, molds, and cockroaches) z Survival rates of low-birth weight babies who are more susceptible to asthma z Decline in breastfeeding (breast milk is a protective anti-inflammatory agent). Anther contributing medical condition is GERD – gastroesophageal reflux disease. At least half of asthma patients also have GERD, the cause of heartburn. It is not entirely clear which condition causes the other, or if both conditions are due to common factors. Exercise-induced asthma is a limited form of asthma in which exercise triggers coughing, wheezing or short-
Call an expert Custom remodeling you can trust & new construction
Window change outs, Cabinetry, Bathroom and Kitchen remodels
925.439.3333 Shawn Maldonado Fifth generation general contractor Family business for over 100 years Clayton resident, building for 27 years Lic. 701821
W
H
Jana Tomsky, MD, can be reached at the Clayton Valley Medical Group, (925) 672-6744
STRAIGHT LINE IMPORTS
Richard A. Littorno Littorno & Morrison, Attorneys At Law “The planning solutions are here.”
ness of breath. Aspirin and ibuprofenlike medications are responsible for about 10 percent of asthma cases in adults and some fewer in children. Such patients have frequent nasal polyps. ow serious is Asthma in children? Asthma is the third major cause of hospitalization in children under age 15. The condition may be particularly serious in children younger than 5 because airways are very narrow. Degrees of severity are divided into four categories based on frequency and severity of symptoms – mild intermittent, mild persistent, moderate persistent and severe persistent. hat symptoms may indicate a lifethreatening attack? As the chest labors to bring enough air into lungs, breathing often becomes shallow. Lacking sufficient oxygen, the skin becomes bluish. The flesh around the ribs of the chest appears to be sucked in. The person becomes lethargic or loses consciousness. You never want to let it go that far. The smart approach is to keep asthma under the best control possible. In children with asthmatic symptoms, it is particularly important to first consider as the possible cause – inhaled foreign objects, viral infections such as croup, and bacterial infections accompanied by high fever. Any child who has frequent coughing or respiratory infections should be checked for asthma. ow is Asthma diagn o s e d ? The history and physical exam is the first step. If there is doubt, other studies may be appropriate, including pulmonary function tests, chest X-rays, allergy testing and others. In already known asthma, there is a very useful tool called a “PEEK flow meter,” which can help to estimate a severity of current asthma condition. It may be used at home as well as in the doctor’s office. Next time, we’ll look at some of the treatment options for asthma.
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Northshore Construction
to make that important decision for yourself or your loved ones.
Licensed for dementia and Alzheimer’s Three meals a day Care and services 24/7 Private and semi-private rooms Quiet, residential neighborhood Hospice Licensed
of asthma. Most likely, several genes are involved in making a child susceptible to
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Fabrication a nd I nstallation o f: Countertops z Bar/Vanity Tops Bath/ Shower Enclosures z Fireplace
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984 Howe Road, Martinez Locally Owned & Operated! “Specializing in Servicing Clayton”
Lic # 789325
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Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
The Clayton Pioneer congratulates the 8th grade graduating class of Diablo View Middle School Sarah Agronow Victoria Aguilar Timothy Allen Jessica Anderson Miguel Luis Angeles Allison Anton Ruby Arceta George Arth Anum Asghar Elizabeth Balke Kirstie Barber Antonio Bendana Sarah Bethel Lauren Bishop Tyler Bollinger Connor Boyle Lance Brandt Jessica Brook Timothy Brown Sara Budare Robert Burton Jessie Byers Kelsey Carrigan Jessilynn Chaudoir Kelsi Childs Michael Chiok Kevin Chirco Melissa Christensen Tom Christensen Evan Coleman Danielle Connor Allison Coppage Kyle Coverdale Cassandra Cox Alaina Currier Laura Dauer Korrine Daw Michael De Leon Donald Dewitt Navi Dhillon Tony Diaz Moriah Doman Devin Dubovsky Alejandro Duenas Patrick Dwyer Jack Elikofer Liza Elikofer Tara Etterlein
CVHS Class of ‘95 plans 10-year
reunion
Join friends from the class of 1995 Sat. July 23 at Oakhurst Country Club for a 10 year reunion, 7 p.m. - 12 a.m. $77 per person. No tickets will be sold at the door. Checks can be sent to Reunion Makers, 213 W. Foley Avenue, Eufaula, OK 74432 or register online at www.reunionmakers.com.
Advertise with the
Pioneer 672-0500
THESE EIGHT DVMS EIGHTH GRADERS HAVE MAINTAINED A 4.0 (STRAIGHT A) GRADE POINT AVERAGE for all three years of middle school. Kneeling, Robert Burton. Middle row, Shannon Pfeiffer, Casey Leedom, Claire Minorsky; Back row, Amanda West, Sarah Shaw, Jessica Figlioli, Mary Raymond.
Omaira Faizyar Jessica Figlioli William Forbes Andrew Francis Desirae Francisco Kayla Freeman Parin Gallagher Diana Galvan Kurosh Ghassem Katie Gill Marlynn Gomez Cassandra Grove Jared Gualtieri Roger Haase Jessica Hammer Blake Hanestad Diamandis Hantziantonakis Sharon Hart Jason Hartnell Zachary Hatcher
Kevin Haworth Tyler Hill Brittany Hobbs Amber Hughes Tyler Hutchings Meghan Isaacs Kenny Iyoya Michael James Hailey Johnson Decia Josefino Rishad Kadir Patrick Keane Alexander Kearsley Paris Kim Devin King Andrew Kliene Tyler Klock Jayson Knight Kara Kohler Kyle Krause
James Kullman Russell La Brie Justin La Pierre Alyssa Lahti Kiley Larmour Amanda Larson John Larwood Samuel Lawler Casey Leedom Joseph Levine Caitlin Looney Yanaki Lopez Megan Lotter Chloe Luczynski Kristin Machusic James Magas Alejandra Magdaleno Benjamin Maguire Aaron Mahlman Kaitlyn Markiewith
Eighth grade honor roll GOLD AWARDS 3.80 TO 3.99 GPA Sarah Agronow Jessica Anderson Lauren Bishop Jessilynn Chaudoir Donald Dewitt Parin Gallagher Jason Hartnell Kevin Haworth Kenny Iyoya Patrick Keane Alexander Kearsley Tyler Klock Russell La Brie Alyssa Lahti John Larwood Benjamin Maguire Marisa Marr Kimberly Nunn Lauren Osborn Stephanie Pho Matthew Piccolotti Cheng Tian Michelle Trosclair Christine VanVaerenbergh Samantha Walker SILVER AWARDS 3.5 TO 3.79 GPA Allison Anton Jessie Byers Kelsi Childs Michael Chiok Tara Etterlein
William Forbes Blake Hanestad Sharon Hart Paris Kim Kara Kohler Kiley Larmour Caitlin Looney Kristin Machusic James Magas Tristin Mc Hugh Simona Paulauskas Stephen Pedersen Kali Pollard Rachel Reeder Thomas Ricks Emily Roberts Cory Skillman Mikaila Snyder Asya Tabdili-azar Krissy Teicheira Tanya Trowbridge Christine Underwood Katelyn VanVaerenbergh Jade Wheaton BRONZE AWARDS 3.0 TO 3.49 GPA Elizabeth Balke Kirstie Barber Connor Boyle Jessica Brook Kevin Chirco Evan Coleman Kyle Coverdale Cassandra Cox
Alaina Currier Laura Dauer Navi Dhillon Moriah Doman Omaira Faizyar Andrew Francis Jared Gualtieri Jessica Hammer Tyler Hill Tyler Hutchings Amanda Larson Megan Lotter Chloe Luczynski Victoria Maurino Michael Mc Cann Amanda Moore Michael Moore Brittany Napper Kevin O’Connell Kalle Pascal Kingsley Pascal Adam Perez Kyle Peterson Kelsey Purser Eric Roberson Nicholas Rogers Lizania Romero Mason Rush John Rydel Samantha Sindicich Tayler Stafford Stephen Stallone Michael Stelzner Christopher Ward Wesley Young
Marisa Marr Chelsea Martin Darrel Matthews Victoria Maurino Michael Mc Cann Tristin Mc Hugh Ryan Metz Colton Meyerhoff Jessica Mikkelson Claire Minorsky Claude Mitts Amanda Moore Michael Moore Victoria Mueller Jonathan Murphy Brittany Napper Nathan Nejad Kimberly Nunn Sean Oakes Kevin O’Connell Lauren Osborn Kalle Pascal Kingsley Pascal Katie Patterson Simona Paulauskas Stephen Pedersen Adam Perez Alexandria Perez Steven Perrone Kyle Peterson Shannon Pfeiffer Stephanie Pho Matthew Piccolotti Kali Pollard Kelsey Purser Shasta Rath Mary Raymond Rachel Reeder Erik Remoy Ariel Richards Thomas Ricks Eric Roberson Emily Roberts Nicholas Rogers Lizania Romero Charles Rowe Mason Rush John Rydel
Why advertise in the Pioneer? Here’s one reason: “I was sure when I placed my ad originally that I would get results and indeed I did. I have honestly gotten 20 jobs as a direct result of my ad placement with your paper so far. That is a lot of revenue! One client actually told me that the only reason he called me was because I advertise in your paper, as did he. His name is Declan and he owns and operates Tipperary Construction Company. I was displaced in a job that originally moved my family and me out to the Bay Area. When I discovered I was going to be reorganized out of a job I called a family meeting. I asked them what they wanted me to do since I moved them threequarters of the way across the country to take a now non-existence job. They told me they wanted to stay in Clayton, which they enjoyed and loved. My decision was final. We would do whatever it took to keep the family whole in what we call 'another day in paradise' (every day) in Clayton. Hence I started my window washing business. I walked to virtually every house in Clayton spreading fliers advertising my services. I walked last summer with the heat and sun in temperatures some days over 100 passing out fliers trying to keep my family whole during this transition process. I have obtained as many jobs from your advertisement as I did by spreading flyers all last summer. The leads that I received from my ad in the Pioneer, along with repeat clients from my efforts last year have made my business profitable after just one year. I thank God and every client each night for the opportunity to work for them. I thank you for the forum to advertise my wares and can see that it is a very cost-effective way of advertising my services. Thank you!”
A CLAYTON
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Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
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Page A13
Church News
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CLAYTON COMMUNITY CHURCH
for information. Clayton Valley Presbyterian Church, 1578 Kirker Pass Road, Clayton.
Hot Summer Nights are back. Join us every Friday in July for the return of our Hot Summer Movie Nights at Clayton Community Church parking lot at 6055 Main St., Clayton. Events begin at 7:30 p.m. Movie starts at 9 p.m. July 1-Ice Cream Social and “The Incredibles;” July 8-BBQ and “National Treasure;” July 15Sno-Cones and “Polar Express,” (in 3D); July 22-Tentative Concert and “Finding Neverland;” July 29-Rootbeer Floats and “Racing Stripes.” Bring your blankets and beach chairs. Donations accepted. Summer Challenge Seminars: Take a personal growth opportunity this summer. Discover who you are and how you can experience relationships at their very best. All seminars are held Saturdays from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. at our downtown office. Summer Camps for Kids: July 11-15 (9 –noon) and July 10-14, (6-8:45 p.m.), Adventure Camp for ages 3 (diaper-free) – grade 5. Cost $30. July 25-29 (5:30–8 p.m.), Basketball camp for grades K-3, cost $65; August 8-12 (8:30 a.m.- 1p.m.) - Basketball Camp for grades 4-8 at Clayton Valley High School. Cost $75. For more information, call 673-9060.
CROSSROADS COVENANT CHURCH We have a free movie night every third Saturday of the month at 6 p.m. Movies are shown on the big screen with a cartoon before the feature. Everyone is welcome. Bring a blanket if you want to sit on the floor. Bring a snack to share. Crossroads Church Annual summer day camp will be July 18 – 22. Call Alma Rodriguez at 798-5905 for information or stop by our booth in the children’s area at the Clayton Fourth of July parade. ETERNAL LIFE LUTHERAN CHURCH Eternal Life Lutheran Church is holding Wednesday evening Bible Study in Concord’s Newhall Park this summer. The community is invited to join members of the congregation for “Summer Walks with Jesus.” The study is held 7:15–8 p.m. and covers a variety of topics and teachings. On Wednesday, July 20, a children’s program will be offered that will include Bible story time, crafts, activities and songs. Eternal Life’s new Sunday schedule will begin July 3. Sunday school and Bible study will begin at 10 a.m. The Worship service will begin at 11:15 a.m. Eternal Life Lutheran Church is located at 5554 Clayton Rd., Suite 1B, in Concord. Eternal Life is a member congregation of the WELS. Please call 524-0295, or email to EternalLife@wels.net for more information.
CLAYTON VALLEY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Vacation Bible School is coming soon to Clayton Valley Presbyterian Church. The theme is “The Earth, the Sky, the Sea and Me.” Registration is open to those who will be in kindergarten through sixth grade in the fall. Cost is $20 for one child, plus $5 for each sibling. We will be exploring our wonderful world and our place in it, ending with a field trip on Friday to Mitchell Canyon, part of Mt. Diablo State Park. Call 672-4848 or Peggy Lyon, 689-3849
Campaign, and now invite the community to join us. ONE represents the one billion people who would gain relief if the governments of the world forgave the debts of the poorest nations. St. John¹s will be represented at the Clayton 4th of July Parade with a vendor booth selling cool drinks and white ONE Campaign bracelets. What’s for supper?” Saint John’s Episcopal Church’s community outreach efforts this summer will include preparing and serving a week’s worth of evening meals for homeless families at a Concord shelter the week of July 18-22. Sign-ups to help with this rewarding experience are now underway and members of the wider community are invited to participate. This is a real opportunity for a family activity that can be fun for kids, while children learn the importance of caring for neighbors in need. For more information how you can participate, just contact the church: info@saintjohnsparish.org, or call 6728855. WOMEN’S CONNECTION OF CONTRA COSTA An affiliate of Stonecroft Ministries, Inc., Women’s Connection of Contra Costa is an organization for women to connect to find friendship and inspiration. The vision of Stonecroft Ministries is to provide global leadership in reaching women for Jesus Christ. On June 9 at 11:30 a.m. the organization is having a luncheon at Oakhurst Country Club ($16). Audrey Porter and Whitney Beard from “Room With a Past” of Walnut Creek will speak about antiques. Bring something you own to be evaluated for its antique value. Featured speaker, business owner Mary Middleton tells her story of success. For reservations call Rose at 798-6778 by June 3.
ST. JOHN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH With the hope Saint John¹s will always have a vision greater than ourselves, the Vestry leadership unanimously agreed at it¹s June meeting to endorse the ONE
Send church news of general interest to www.churchnews@claytonpioneer.com.
Talking to children in troubled times Why Episcopal? Reason #8: You don’t have to check your brains at the door. SAINT JOHN’S PARISH T HE E PISCOPAL C HURCH
IN
C LAYTON
Sunday Worship: 8 & 10 a.m. (July-Aug. 9 a.m.) 5555 C LAYTON R OAD Q C LAYTON
Call anytime: 672-8855 or check us out online: www.saintjohnsparish.org
You’ve done the very best you can to shield your toddler from terrible TV and newspaper images of disasters such as last December’s tsunami, or the latest freeway carnage. But have you done enough? Even infants and toddlers can sense changes in adult behavior as adults react to the latest crisis. Parents the
world over struggle to talk to their children about the tragedies in today’s news or a crisis that looms in the family. INFANTS AND TODDLERS (0-3 years of age) cannot understand how a disaster has changed their environment. But they can recognize and respond to changes in adult behavior. The Clayton Pioneer’s “Music Notes” columnist
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“What they need most from parents after a disaster is their usual loving care,” says Dr. Lewis Leavitt, professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine. “Continuing familiar routines is important - the games you played and the stories you read before the crisis are still right afterwards.” PRESCHOOLERS (3-5 years of age) need strong reassurance from parents and family members about their care and safety - even though they may not talk about their feelings directly. Talking while playing games may help children open up and express their thoughts. Leavitt advises parents to respond directly to their questions. For example, if your child asks, “Do people wake up after they die?” You could answer, “People do not wake up after they die, but it’s nice to think about people we like even when they are not with us anymore.” Also, it is important to limit television
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viewing. Young children may think a disaster is happening again and again if they see repeated images. SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN (5-12 years of age) have more interest and understanding of how and why things happen. Parents can help by talking, listening and answering their questions. Honest, direct responses coupled with reassurance are best. For instance, if your child asks, “Mom, are you sad?” You could say, “I’m sad about what happened, but I’m happy we are together. Again, it is best to limit television viewing or watch together and discuss what has happened. School-aged children benefit by returning to their normal activities and routines. AND ADOLESCENTS TEENAGERS (12-17 years of age) are able to understand the causes and effects of disaster, but most have not developed experience or confidence about how they can or should respond. Their reactions can range from sadness to anger. Parents, friends and teachers can help by letting them know their views and opinions are respected. Teens still need reassurance that parents are there to help and protect them. They may find it rewarding to help others who have suffered harm by working with their families, schools or communities. CHANGES IN BEHAVIOR: Changes in your child’s behavior may signal anxiety. Contact your pediatrician if problems such as these persist more thana month: Preschoolers: bedwetting, thumb sucking or increased clinginess School-aged children: sleep disturbances, nightmares, poor concentration, aches and pains Teenagers: expressions of anger or sadness, problems with eating and sleeping, loss of interest in activities, new difficulties at school. Source: Metro Creative
Page A14
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
¡Salud! La Margarita Magnifica Nearly 1 billion margaritas are served in the U.S. each year. Having oohed and aaahed over a delectable ginger margarita at B. Smith’s on New York City’s Restaurant Row recently, I don’t doubt that number, but I wanted to know more about this familiar drink.
LINDA WYNER
FOOD
FOR
THOUGHT
The Cointreau family, French makers of a clear orange liqueur, celebrated the 50th anniversary of the margarita in 1998. They subscribe to the legend that Margarita Samas (alt. Sames) created the famous drink during a party at her Acapulco home. Other folktales speak of a lovelorn bartender in Virginia City who named the concoction after his woman, and a Tijuana restaurant owner who named the drink after an American actress. After learning a basic recipe for margaritas, the innovative host and hostess can be very creative in pouring their own masterpiece. But no margarita will be successful without a proper tequila. Some mixologists swear by unaged blanco (white) tequila because of its hearty flavor. For me, I much prefer aged tequila. Tequila is hard liquor made exclusively in Mexico from the blue agave plant. (Mescal is liquor distilled from any of the 100 other types of agave plants native to North and Central America.) The fermented juice of the plant was used in religious ceremonies by native Indian populations in Mexico. (The plant also yielded spines that were used as sewing needles, leaves that were made into paper and juices for medicinal preparations.) When the Spanish conquistadors arrived some 500 years ago, they wasted little time in setting up their own fermentation facilities. The process today is similar to that used over the centuries. After the plants mature — about 10 years or so — the leaves are removed and the pineappleshaped body, called a piña, weighing from 40 to more than 150 pounds, is cooked and pressed to extract juice for distillation. About 15 pounds of
piña is enough to distill one liter of tequila. In the 17th century, Jose Cuervo (yes, there really was someone by that name) obtained the right from the Spanish government to sell tequila commercially. There are now dozens of distillers, all specially licensed by the Mexican government to produce and distribute their product. There are three kinds of tequila, all of which are dictated by their age — blanco, reposado and añejo. Gold tequila or “oro” is blanco mellowed by color and flavor ingredients such as caramel. Mexican law requires that oak casks be used for aging tequila — at least two months for reposado and a year for añejo. Not unlike wine appellations, the liquor is identified by the
Guanajuato, Michoacan, Nayarit or Tamaulipas). When ready for market, tequila must be 100 percent natural and no less than 51 percent derived from the blue agave plant. It must be no less than 38 percent alcohol by volume. Pricier tequilas are 100 percent blue agave and aged for more than a year. Since a margarita is made from tequila with added ingredients, usually a citrus liqueur and juice, let’s look at some of the choices. Cointreau is favored by most, but Grand Marnier is a bit more distinctive. Blue Curacao (a citrus liqueur made on the island of Curacao in the Caribbean) will provide an exotic color. Clear Triple Sec is called for in many recipes, but it is inferior to the above liqueurs. Sweet-and-
so abundant in our local markets. THE PERFECT MARGARITA (Serves 2) 3 oz gold or reposado tequila 2 oz Cointreau Juice of one lime Juice of one-half lemon Shake with ice, strain and serve in a salt-rimmed glass. Fruit margaritas are popular, particularly if served frozen. During the summer months in my house, an overripe peach will go into the blender with a few ice cubes (about 1 cup of ice per serving), a healthy splash of tequila and a few dashes of Rose’s lime juice. Virtually any fruit can be used — blueberries, mangoes, pomegranates, strawberries. To improve the flavor of fruit margaritas, try and substitute the citrus liqueur that matches the fruit — i.e., banana liqueur with bananas or raspberry liqueur with raspberries. B. SMITH’S GINGER MARGARITA Bartender Monique quickly rattled off the ingredients in this delicious drink. I hope I captured all of them and in the right amounts here. 1 oz ginger syrup 1 oz orange juice 1 oz sour mix 1 oz Triple Sec 2 oz gold tequila Shake with ice, strain and serve in a sugar-rimmed glass. ¡Salud! To your health!
MEXICAN MARGARITA
region or area where the source agave plant is grown. There are only a few officiallyrecognized locales (Jalisco,
sour mix (“margarita mix”) is also a distant second to the flavors of fresh-squeezed limes and lemons, which are
Linda Wyner is an attorney in Walnut Creek by day, and an accomplished chef and “foodie” by choice. Direct your suggestions or questions to lwyner@claytonpioneer.com
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July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer .com
Page A15
Grants bring environmental education to Clayton ARLENE KIKKAWA-NIELSEN Special to the Clayton Pioneer
When Friends of Mt. Diablo Creek (FoMDC) recently received two grants through the The Watershed Project, it set the wheels in motion for a collaborative effort between FoMDC, Clayton Community Library and Diablo View Middle School
and Lisa Anich came together to foster environmental education programs in Clayton. The first grant for $1,500 is a TAG (Teacher Action Grant) and provides for a science-based curriculum that fulfills the California State Standards required by the school district. Monies enabled Chatagnier to bring 150 of her science students on a field study
FoMDC founder Lisa Anich teaches the chemistry and velocity of water to DVMS science students. (DVMS). Library Community Events Coordinator, Arlene Kikkawa-Nielsen, DVMS Science teacher Sylvia Chatagnier, and FoMDC founders Mary Maiko
to the creek at the library to study the chemistry and velocity of the water. Students collected and identified small organisms called “benthic macroinvertebrates”.
DVMS Special Education teacher, Kim Lewis, also brought 20 of her students to the creek to view creatures through a magnifying glass, something they had never done before. FoMDC’s Anich taught one of the chemistry sessions and library volunteer and retired plant biologist, Ted Holmsen with help from library volunteers Rosemary Harwood and Christine Grant guided students through chemistry lessons. The students had fun exploring the creek while at the same time learning chemistry and science. When they returned to their classroom, Chatagnier had them relay their experience through poetry and art, some of which is currently on display in the Clayton Library. Several students helped name locations along the creek near their homes where a specific 6inch fish has been sighted that FoMDC was trying to identify. Student Tristan McHugh also found a pottery shard that was later identified to be from circa 1940 and will be turned over to the Clayton Museum. The second grant, a RPAS
(Regional Project Assistance Service) is for technical assistance and will help to establish a California native plant demonstration garden in the Interpretive Area of the library’s habitat. A few years ago, the library successfully used the habitat area to teach 160 nature programs to 1,200 preschooler’s through a previous grant received through Contra Costa’s FIRST
FIVE Children & Family Commission. This recent grant for the California native plant demonstration garden will include over 100 different varieties of local native plants and will be used to teach additional environmental science programs to the entire community. The native plants, which are currently being cared for by Clayton Valley Garden
Club member, Elaine Billeter, will be planted this fall. If you are interested in volunteering in any aspect of this program call Lisa Anich at (925) 689-2642 or Arlene Nielsen at (925) 673-0659. FoMDC and the library would like to hear from any local teachers or other individuals that might also be interested in field studies at the library habitat.
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26 Mt. Wilson Way
Clayton
$549,950
3101 Coyote Circle
Clayton
$530,000
650! d $39,6 aved Sold Selllerr S
1830 Yolanda Circle
Clayton
$784,950
3 Bedrooms plus loft, 3 Baths, approx 2894 sq.ft. Large private lot, Gourmet kitchen w/upgraded tile counters and marble floor & newly painted in/out. Spacious living and family room each with it's own custom fireplace & professionally landscaped yards with covered patio in back. A must see to believe!
3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, approx 1378 sq.ft. Separate 2 story unit with updated kitchen & baths! New water heater, dual pane windows throughout, freshly painted & new carpet in most rooms. Large finished garage w/workbench, storage & sports bar, large deck for entertaining & private, quiet, park like setting! Close to shopping & downtown.
3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, approx 1595 sq.ft. Beautiful and unique with designer touches throughout! Large eat-in kitchen with maple cabinets, custom built in china cabinet, spacious family room with 2 sided fireplace, formal living & dining room & master suite w/private bathroom.
3 Bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, approx 2,133 sq.ft. of living space. Spectacular home ready for any family! Entertainers delight backyard with gorgeous pool! Fully landscaped front and backyard with flagstone. Updated kitchen and baths, spacious living room, family room & dining room. An absolute must see to believe!
d $38,150 aved Sold! Selllerr S
450 d $32,4 aved Sold! Selllerr S
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30 Fleming Ct.
Clayton
$785,000
25 Atchinson Stage Rd.
Clayton
$699,000
5830 Del Trigo Lane
Clayton
$565,000
5418 Paso Del Rio Ct.
Concord
$612,000
4 bedrooms, plus den, 2.5 baths, approx 2368 sq.ft. hardwood flrs, marble entry, gorgeous kitchen w/granite tile counters & gas stove & large master suite w/walkin closet & marble bathroom. Spectacular tropical backyard with pool/spa & waterfall, extended BBQ island w/slate counter, sink, eating area and tile patio. This home is an absolute must see to believe! An entertainers Dream!
Awake to Views of Mt. Diablo! 4 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms, Approx 2,549 sq. ft., Custom additions w/permits, new roof, pergo flrs, spacious family room w/brick fireplace & formal living & dining room w/bay windows, 3 sets of French doors, private landscaped backyard w/deck & RV parking too! Light & bright throughout!
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, approx 1,659 sq.ft. Large .26 acre lot! Original hardwood flrs throughout, formal living rm w/fireplace, light & bright family rm & eat-in kitchen w/double oven. Central heat, vaulted ceilings, shutters/blinds throughout & large backyard with sparkling pool
4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, approx 2135 sq.ft. Spacious formal living & dining room, large family room w/brick fireplace, wilsonart hardwood flrs, ceiling fan, wet bar & Anderson slider! Updated eat-in kitchen w/tile counters, oak cabinets, built in microwave/convection oven, dishwasher, garden window & built in desk. Tile entry, central heat/air, gorgeous landscaped backyard w/redwood deck.
d $32,150! aved Sold! Selllerr S
ys!! Sold in 4 Da6,110 3 $ d ed v a S r er l Sell
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522 Mt. Davidson Court
Clayton
$685,000
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182 Mt. Wilson Way
Clayton
$751,000
5 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms, approx 2,692 sq.ft. Lovely kitchen with new stainless steel appliances, gas stove, tile counters and garden window! Gas fireplace in family room, oak hardwood flr in entry, kitchen & eating area, wet bar & large laundry room with storage. Master Bedroom features views & private deck, lovely backyard with spa & gorgeous views!
1816 Yolanda Circle
Clayton
$610,000
3 Large Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, approx 1,780 sq.ft. Gorgeous home inside & out! Spacious family room w/woodburning fireplace, dining room w/wood floors, new heat/air & new roof. Master Bedroom with French doors to private Trex patio deck, fruit trees & generous side & backyard with RV parking. Great Clayton Neighborhood!
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Clayton
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Page A16
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
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Clayton Market Update Provided by George Vujnovich of Better Homes Realty ADDRESS
PRICE
SALE DATE
SF
200 Tumbleweed Court 4104 Coyote Circle 1851 Eagle Peak Avenue 1118 Peacock Creek Dr 7006 Molluk Way 1 El Portal Drive 1500 Haviland Court 988 Oak Street 355 Mt. Washington Way 238 Mountaire Circle 105 La Encinal Court
$1,045,000 $482,000 $780,000 $1,350,000 $873,000 $775,000 $550,000 $788,500 $770,000 $925,000 $830,000
6/16/05 6/15/05 6/8/05 6/3/05 6/2/05 6/1/05 6/1/05 6/1/05 5/31/05 5/31/05 5/31/05
2,306 1,026 2,053 4,100 2,743 2,424 1,256 2,131 1,919 2,489 2,390
BED/BATH
4/2 2/2 4/2 5/3 5/3 4/2 2/2 4/3 4/2 5/2 4/2
ADDRESS
PRICE
SALE DATE
SF
1142 Peacock Creek Dr. 8034 Kelok Way 122 Regency Drive 8735 Marsh Creek Road 617 Myrick W Court 5206 Keller Ridge Drive 50 La Honda Court 1498 N Mitchell Cyn. Rd. 417 Chupcan Place 1016 Pebble Beach Drive 10 Goethals Court
$1,350,000 $969,000 $786,000 $990,000 $725,000 $899,000 $900,000 $735,000 $685,000 $1,125,000 $845,000
5/27/05 5/27/05 5/27/05 5/26/05 5/26/05 5/26/05 5/25/05 5/20/05 5/20/05 5/20/05 5/20/05
4,100 2,843 2,010 2,300 1,813 2,237 2,390 1,948 1,749 3,030 1,854
BED/BATH
5/3 4/3 4/2 3/1 3/2 4/2 4/2 4/2 3/2 4/3 4/2
Each Office Is Independently Owned & Operated.
ADDRESS
PRICE
SALE DATE
SF
165 Silverado Court 102 La Encinal Court 7 Nottingham Place 1264 Shell Circle 204 Mountaire Circle 1331 Shell Lane 402 Wright Court 8 El Portal Court 422 Meadow View Lane 1782 Indian Wells Way 208 Fleming Drive
$1,400,000 $819,000 $849,000 $590,000 $800,000 $575,000 $819,000 $652,000 $1,675,000 $625,000 $792,250
5/19/05 5/19/05 5/18/05 5/18/05 5/12/05 5/12/05 5/12/05 5/11/05 05/06/05 05/05/05 05/04/05
3,599 2,401 2,210 1,355 2,619 1,355 2,033 1,648 5,450 1,235 1,976
BED/BATH
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EAGLE PEAK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
EAGLE PEAK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
EAGLE PEAK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
PEACOCK CREEK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
Dramatic former model ("Whitney") on a prime golf course view lot! 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, approx. 3,606sf, 3 fireplaces & 3 car garage. Elaborate custom window coverings & light fixtures. Upgraded marble tile floors throughout main level. Downstairs bedroom or office with bath. Gourmet Corian kitchen. Family room with custom marble fireplace. Lavish master suite. Private lot with deck & extensive waterfall/pond feature & endless views of hills, golf course, valley & city. $1,195,000
Absolutely fabulous "Lassen" model! 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, approx. 2,981sf, 2 fireplaces & 3 car garage. Completely redesigned & upgraded Chef's kitchen featuring Caesar Stone counters & center island, new cabinetry & professional grade stainless steel appliances! Upgrades & exquisite attention to detail throughout are too numerous to list - a MUST see! Luxurious master suite boasts spectacular views of city to Delta! Private lot features a flagstone patio, pergola & vibrant professional landscape. $1,135,000
Lovely former model ("Shasta") on a prime golf course view lot! 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, approx. 3,373sf, 3 fireplaces & 3 car garage. Neutral décor throughout! Downstairs bedroom with full private bath. Gourmet kitchen. Family room with brick fireplace & custom cabinetry. Spacious master with jet tub. Private lot offers a relaxing spa & magnificent views of golf course, hills, valley & city. $1,150,000
Fantastic "Nantucket " model backing to open space! 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, approx. 3,599sf, rare 4 car garage & inside laundry. Gourmet kitchen features upgraded tile floors, counters, island, upgraded cabinets & pantry. Extended family room features a fireplace & recess for TV. Neutral carpet & décor throughout! Spacious master suite overlooks views of open space. Private lot backs to open space & features a sparkling inground pool with built-in elevated spa. $1,250,000
PEACOCK CREEK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
PEACOCK CREEK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
PEACOCK CREEK AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
IRONWOOD/WINDMILL CANYON AT OAKHURST COUNTRY CLUB
D SOL
Spectacular "Belvedere" model! backs to open space. 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, approx. 3,911sf, inside laundry & rare 4 car garage with extensive custom built-in storage. Upgraded gleaming hardwood floors in entry, hall, living & dining rooms & kitchen. Downstairs bedroom or home office w/ private bath. Gourmet kitchen features granite counters, center island & pantry. Enormous great room with granite tile fireplace, full bar & custom built-in entertainment center. Master suite with jetted tub overlooks open space. Huge private level lot features a mini orchard, lush lawn, a spectacular array of flowers, paver patio & huge paved side yard with double gate! $1,250,000
Stunning "Nantucket" model in a quiet court setting! 4 bedrooms, den, 2.5 baths, approx. 3,820sf, 3 car garage & inside laundry. Neutral carpet, designer paint, plantation shutters & wood blinds throughout! Gourmet kitchen features tile counters, island & recipe desk with accent tile back splash, upgraded diagonal laid tile floors, upgraded "mocha" cabinets & pantry. Expanded family room offers a wood burning fireplace & TV recess. Spacious master suite with retreat/nursery/workout room. Large lot features colorful flowers, ornamentals, large lawn area & a trellis covered salt washed patio. $1,195,000
Immaculate "Nantucket" model facing open space! with views of hills, ridge & canyons. 5 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, approx. 3,599sf, 3 car garage & inside laundry. Neutral carpet, décor & wood blinds throughout! Entry features upgraded double beveled glass front doors & upgraded tile floors. Gourmet kitchen features upgraded tile floors, counters, island, maple cabinets & pantry with frosted door. Expanded family room features fireplace with ceramic log insert & recess for TV. Spacious master suite. Rear yard offers a trellis covered random stone patio large lawn & play area. $1,150,000
Sought after single story " Augusta" model! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, approx. 1,816sf, inside laundry & 2 car garage. Neutral décor through-out! Upgraded tile entry extends into the hall, family room & kitchen. Gourmet kitchen features tile counters, center island, eating nook & spacious pantry. Living & dining room with neutral carpet & semi-vault ceiling. Family room with tile fireplace & recess for TV. Spacious master. Level lot backs to open space w/redwood deck, nice lawn area & huge paved side yard with double gate. $730,000
4/2 4/2 4/2 3/2 4/3 3/2 4/2 3/2 7/5 2/2 4/2
CLAYTON PIONEER July 1, 2005
Section B
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Page B1
Hike of the Week
Donner Canyon/Hetherrington/ Meridian/Back Creek Loop KEVIN PARKER
HIKER’S HAVEN There is a first time for everything, but having spent the last two years hiking trails all over the greater Contra Costa Area, I have prided myself on two things. Rule #1: I have never submitted a column without actually hiking the trails myself. Rule #2: I have never written about the same hike in different issues of this paper.
A
Well, I realized last Friday that it was high time I broke Rule #2. The series of trails for this installment of Hiker’s Haven are some of the best on Mount Diablo in my opinion. Not only because of the jaw dropping scenery along every inch of trail, but also the many microclimates and landscapes of Mount Diablo found on this loop. So if only one article can get you out on the trail and out of excuses, make this be the one. A late afternoon and a light breeze accompanied me as I
headed up Donner Canyon Road from the Regency Gate Trailhead. Although the Mount Diablo State Park Map does not correctly depict the turnoff for Hetherrington Trail, I can assure you that it is located just past the “Site of the Donner Cabin.” You’ll know you are on the right trail if you cross a small wooden bridge passing directly over Donner Creek. Hetherrington Trail is actually not the quickest way up the mountain, but a roundabout cut off that reconnects back to
photos by Kevin Parker
SMALL WOODEN BRIDGE CROSSES
Donner Creek on the Hetherrington Trail.
Donner Canyon Road. Is the side-trip worth the effort you might ask? Absolutely and the proof lies in a single-track trail, which travels through an overgrown canopy of shade mixed with intermittent sun. Get your feet wet as you cross Donner Creek (wet feet not required) and snake your way back up into a cool and breezy tunnel of green foliage and manzanita once again reaching Donner Canyon Road. Continue on Donner Canyon for a short jaunt until the Meridian Ridge Trail junction. This fire-road is unlike many sun-scorched trails within the park boundaries, because it is cleverly cut into Meridian Ridge itself, resulting in shady sections of trail. A slow and steady ascent will eventually put you atop Meridian Point (elev. 1289). A deep breath, a gulp of water and panoramic gaze in all directions solidifies the effort expended and I can confirm it is all downhill from here. Follow Meridian Point Trail on a healthy decline as you dive down into Back Creek Canyon. You are able to see almost the entire way down the canyon with golden fields at the perimeter of the park far in the distance. Rocky sections, creek crossings, switchbacks, foliage, fauna, wildlife and pure solitude make Back Creek Trail my favorite among all others in this park. Back Creek itself is almost dry this time of year, but with the recent rains, water can still be found flowing as the
Back Creek Canyon.
trail and creek cooperatively twist alongside one and another at the base of the canyon. The sunshine fades early in this deep and luscious canyon but the narrow trails, expanding canyon sides, rock formations and wildflowers are all reasons to make this hike “numero uno” on your to do list. Back Creek Trail eventually becomes Back Creek Road and points you in the direction of the trailhead. So as you descend out of the canyon and make your way across the open hillsides, soak up some sun and let the breezes of Mount Diablo help you remember why we call this place home. Enjoy. For more information, refer to the “Trail Map of Mount Diablo State Park, Fifth Edition” or (www.mdia.org). For more information on this hike or other outdoor experiences, contact me at hikershaven@comcast.net.
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Page B2
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Clayton Sports CVHS Eagle’s baseball team boasts 21-5 record JIM ZEWAN Clayton Pioneer
Clayton Valley High School’s baseball team had a very successful season this year with an overall 21-5 record. They came
in third place in the Bay Valley Athletic League during the regular season, and they made it into the North Coast Sectional playoffs, being the sixth seed. In the playoffs, they beat Livermore in the first round by a
score of 4-2, beating the tough Livermore team for the second time this season. The Eagles made it to the second round of NCS before being eliminated by a very strong Cal High team that beat them 2-1. It was the second
Photo courtesy of Chris and Sue Gorgen
time Cal beat Clayton Valley this year, and it was the second time the Eagles had lost to them by a single run. The two teams met earlier in the year during the Easter break Gordie Classic Tournament, when the Cal Grizzlies beat the Eagles 3-2. What seemed to enable the Eagles to compete so well – and how they would probably best be characterized this year - was their strong pitching and defense. The team also excelled in the classroom, receiving the Scholastic Team Award with a combined 3.0 GPA. During the season, the Eagles never gave up more than four runs in any game and only allowed four runs once during their entire season, and that was in a 4-2 loss to powerhouse De La Salle. Furthermore, the Eagles’ pitching staff ’s ERA this season was an eye-popping under 1.00. They lost their five games by a total of just seven runs. They lost three of those games by a single run and lost two others by a mere two runs. Two of those losses were against De La Salle and two others against Cal. “We were in every game we played this year,” said Eagles’ Head Coach Bob Ralston. “We had a chance to win every game, so it was exciting, and we were really competitive this season. We had some outstanding kids this year; they were really competitive and wanted to win.” Nine Eagles players (six of them from Clayton and the surrounding area) received BVAL All League awards this season.
Brothers Scott and Matt Gorgen both received BVAL First Team All League honors, and Scott was selected as League MVP. Scott batted .280 this season and had an amazing 0.41 ERA pitching. He struck out 35 batters in 34 innings and only walked four for a fantastic strike out to baseon-balls ratio. Scott was also his brother’s and the other pitchers’ battery mate as he played catcher when he wasn’t on the mound this season. Matt had a .310 batting average and a 1.97 Earned Run Average as a pitcher. Both pitched against the toughest teams. Matt is headed to UC Berkeley in the fall, and Scott to UC Irvine. Both plan to continue to play baseball in college. Randy Wells, who played shortstop for the Eagles, also was selected as 1st Team BVAL All – League. Corey Miller, who played center field, batted .380 this season and was named to the second Team All League BVAL
team. He has also been invited as a walk-on at St. Mary’s. Aaron Laux, who batted .330 and played right field this year, received All League Honorable Mention. Laux intends to attend Diablo Valley College, where he will also play baseball. Shane Carrigan will likely join Laux at DVC this fall. Carrigan also received All League Honorable Mention. Joining them with All League Honorable Mention was Vinnie Levine. Levine was the Eagle’s designated hitter and batted .400 this season. Trevor Barrow, a junior, who had a 0.61 ERA this season and who gave up only three earned runs in 34 innings, made the BVAL Second Team honors. Other Clayton area Eagle players this season include junior, Sean Burns (also a pitcher, who had a 0.22 ERA in 31 innings this season) along with Bill Burmiester, Ryan Nist and Alex Stoiber.
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July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Page B3
Clayton Sports Marlins win CV Little League Majors Division JIM ZEWAN Clayton Pioneer
The Clayton Valley Little League Marlins won the mostly 11 and 12 year old Majors Division this season with a 164 record beating out six other very good teams. The Marlins then moved into the Tournament of Champions. This annual tournament consists of teams from the other leagues in District 4 of Little
League Baseball competing against each other. The Marlins played their first TOC game against Albany. Unfortunately, our local heroes fell in extra innings to Albany by the score of 3 to 2. Excellent pitching by Kevin Adams and Jordan Burger and the hot bat of Brian Hutfliess, however, was not enough for the Marlins to prevail even though they took the closely contested game
into the extra inning columns. Pictured Front row, Ben Hardy, Jonathan Kim, Brian Hutfliess; Middle row, Assistant Coach Dean Adams, Clayton Boam, Michael Houseman, Kevin Adams, Jordan Burger, Justin Rackcliffe; Back row, Manager Ron Burger, Austin Freitas, Drew Riordan, Mateo Gomez, Jonathan McIntyre, Head coach Mark Hutfliess.
Proper weight shift on the down swing is like a dance Photo courtesy of The Marlins
CVLL MARLINS made it all the way to the District 4 Tournament of Champions
Sports Shorts OAKHURST SUMMER JUNIOR GOLF CAMPS Let your children get introduced to this enjoyable lifelong sport early in life. Oakhurst Country Club plans to offer junior golf camps for youth 7 or 8 and older again this summer. The professional staff at Oakhurst will teach the rules of golf as
well as golf etiquette, grip, alignment, stance, posture and basic swing mechanics with instruction and practice each day. Each camp is open to the public and runs four days – Tuesday through Friday from 8:00 – 10:00 a.m. with the participants having an opportunity to play in a short scramble on the course
at the end of instruction on the Friday of each camp. Cost of each camp is $100 for members and $125 for non-members. Dates of the individual camps are July 1215, July 26-29, August 9-12 and August 23-26. Call the Oakhurst Proshop at 673-2813 for more information. Registration applications are available in the Proshop to reserve your son or daughter a spot.
Our golf swing is much like a dance step. In the back swing, we move our weight to the right foot, and when we start the down swing, we move the weight back to the left foot. In my years of teaching, I have seen everything from the fox
“In my years of teaching, I have seen everything from the fox trot to the jitterbug. But this dance step is much more like the two-step.” Dave Gray
trot to the jitterbug. But this dance step is much more like the two-step. Sounds simple, right? Why then do we find it so troubling to make this move correctly? First, we have to be in a balanced position at address. Second, try flexing your right knee a little towards your left knee. Third, start your takeaway to the top of your back swing, where you will find your weight directly over your right knee and foot. Getting the weight back to the left foot is simple; just fire your right knee towards the golf ball and swing to a full balance finish on your left foot and leg. It has been said, that the golf swing, with our lower body, is no more than a shift and a turn.
DAVE GRAY GRAY ON GOLF With this move, you can be assured of longer and straighter shots.
Dave Gray is a teaching professional at Diablo Creek Golf Course in Concord. E-mail your questions or comments to him at sports@claytonpioneer.com
Clayton Bocce League play underway MIKE ROSE’S AUTO BODY Clayton resident, Mike Rose, has been in business for over 31 years and has always provided quality repair with excellent customer service!
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The Clayton Division of the Concord Bocce League currently plays at Newhall Park on Sunday evenings. The League hopes in the future to play at new courts that will be in Clayton. As of June 19 the teams had met three times and had played nine games each. Teams “I Vincitori” and “On A Roll” are currently tied for the best won-lost record at 72 but I Vincitori leads with more points. Four other teams are close behind. On Sunday June 19 three teams, Bada Bing, Bocce Amici and Springwood Rollers, all scored 36 points during their three game match. The top eight teams make the end-ofseason playoffs. Tiebreakers are wins, points for, and points against in that order.
2005 CLAYTON DIVISION OF THE CONCORD BOCCE LEAGUE - STANDINGS No. Team Won Lost Pts For Pts Against 8 I Vincitori . . . . . . . . . . .7 . . . . . . .2 . . . . . .103 . . . . . . . . .67 7 On A Roll . . . . . . . . . . .7 . . . . . . .2 . . . . . .61 . . . . . . . . .55 10 Bada Bing . . . . . . . . . .6 . . . . . . .3 . . . . . .100 . . . . . . . . .64 12 Bocce Bolas . . . . . . . . .6 . . . . . . .3 . . . . . .99 . . . . . . . . .87 2 Members Only . . . . . .6 . . . . . . .3 . . . . . .94 . . . . . . . . .59 1 Italian Delights . . . . . .6 . . . . . . .3 . . . . . .91 . . . . . . . . .72 4 Bocce Amici . . . . . . . . .5 . . . . . . .4 . . . . . .83 . . . . . . . . .88 14 Bada-Bang . . . . . . . . . .5 . . . . . . .4 . . . . . .76 . . . . . . . . .83 3 Empty Nesters . . . . . .4 . . . . . . .5 . . . . . .85 . . . . . . . . .79 16 Downtown Bocce . . . .4 . . . . . . .5 . . . . . .77 . . . . . . . . .84 5 Meadow Maulers . . . .4 . . . . . . .5 . . . . . .77 . . . . . . . . .83 6 Sunshine Squad . . . . . .4 . . . . . . .5 . . . . . .75 . . . . . . . . .92 9 Springwood Rollers . .4 . . . . . . .5 . . . . . .72 . . . . . . . . .89 15 Bocce Buzzards . . . . .2 . . . . . . .7 . . . . . .59 . . . . . . . . .102 13 Bocce Warriors . . . . . .2 . . . . . . .7 . . . . . .57 . . . . . . . . .58 11 Bocce Rollers . . . . . . . .0 . . . . . . .9 . . . . . .61 . . . . . . . . .108
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The Pioneer -- It’s your paper!
Page B4
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Clayton Community Calendar PLEASE SUBMIT YOUR CLAYTON COMMUNITY CALENDAR EVENTS BY 5 P.M., JULY 5 FOR THE JULY 15 ISSUE. FAX TO 672-6580 OR E-MAIL calendar@claytonpioneer.com EVENTS & ENTERTAINMENT ONGOING Art at the YMCA @ Clayton Community Gym Art program starts at the YMCA - sculpture, painting, drawing for beginners, advanced drawing.and Children's books, writing illustrating and publishing. For information contact instructor Seth Ahonen at 889-1612 or 889-1600. Clayton Community Gym, 300 Diablo View Lane, Clayton. ONGOING THROUGH SUMMER Summer Programs from Civic Arts Education (CAE) in Walnut Creek CAE offers a wide variety of classes for adults and children. Why not sign up for a music, dance, theater, jewelry or art class for you or your children? It's the perfect time to try something new or brush up on old skills. Theme birthday parties available too. Classes are offered in two Walnut Creek locations: the Shadelands campus at 111 N. Wiget Lane (at Ygnacio Valley) and Civic Park at 1313 Civic Drive. For information on any of CAE's classes, call (925) 9435846 or go on-line to www.arts-ed.org. JUNE 11 - AUGUST 20 Reading Program @ Clayton Community Library Dragons Dreams and Daring Deeds. Read and win exciting prizes. See librarian for details. 673-0659, 6125 Clayton Road, Clayton, CA 94517. JUNE 27 - JULY 15 Center for Adaptive Learning (CAL) Art Show @ Civic Arts, Shadelands Gallery hours Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 9 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. CAL is holding an art show of its clients’ artwork. CAL is a program for adults with neurodevelopmental disabilities. CAL client artwork and jewelry on exhibition will be for sale to support the Center’s art department. All donations will go toward the purchase of art supplies and equipment needed to further art instruction at CAL. A closing reception will be held July 14 at 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. All are welcome. For more information contact the Center for Adaptive Learning art department at 8273863 x27, or swijts@centerforadaptivelearning.org. Civic Arts Shadelands, 111 N. Wiget Lane, Walnut Creek. JULY 7 Mrs. L’s Crafts @ Clayton Community Library 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. Fun for children three to five years. Registration required. 673-0659, 6125 Clayton Road, Clayton, CA 94517. JULY 8 - JULY 30 Act Now! production of Accomplice @ Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts 8:15 p.m. Fri. and Sat., and Sun. at 2:15 p.m. More than a mystery, Accomplice is a rollercoaster ride filled with twists and turns, leaving the audience breathless with laughter one minute and gasping in shock the next. Just when you think you know who did it there is another twist of character or plot that leaves your breathlessly awaiting what will
happen next. Tickets are $25 general admission, $22 for seniors, and $12.50 for youth and can be purchased through Center Tickets at 943-SHOW. Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts, 1601 Civic Drive, Walnut Creek. JULY 13 Healthy Aging Fair: Positive Aging @Cal State East Bay 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Scholar-Olli is hosting a "Healthy Aging Fair: Positive Aging." Presenters include George Fulmore, who will speak about "The Art of Retirement." The event is free, and refreshments will be served. Call (925) 602-6776 if you have questions. Cal State East Bay, 4700 Ygnacio Valley Rd., Concord. 602-6772. JULY 15 Arts and Crafts @ Diamond Terrace 10-11:30 a.m. Bring a friend and make your own summer tote bag. Supplies provided. Refreshments. Call today to reserve space-524-5100. JULY 16 Caring for the Caregiver @ Sunrise Bistro 11:15 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Support group for women and men who are caregivers of an ill spouse or parent(s). $20 per person includes lunch. For reservations call 925-597-0011. Sunrise Bistro, 1559 Botelho Drive, Walnut Creek. ONGOING THROUGH NOV. 16 WWII Memorabilia @ Clayton Historical Society Museum The newest special exhibit at the Clayton Historical Society Museum is WWII, Red, White Blue. Artifacts and memorabilia from all walks of life during the war years will be displayed. Local veterans are well represented in this exhibit which honors the men and women who served and the families who joined in the war effort on the home front. Clayton Historical Society Museum, 6101 Main Street, Clayton. The Museum is open Sunday and Wednesday, 2-4 p.m.
CLUBS & ORGANIZATIONS JULY 5, 12, 19, 26
Kiwanis Club of Walnut Creek 12 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Meetings every Tues. All are invited to check us out and be our guest for lunch. Massimo’s Ristorante, 1604 Locust St., Walnut Creek. for more information call Sam Totah, 941-1536. JULY 7, 14, 21, 28 Rotary Club of Clayton Valley Concord Sunrise @ Oakhurst 7 a.m. Meets every Thursday for breakfast meeting that usually features a speaker.www. claytonvalleyrotary.org Chuck Graham 689-7640. Oakhurst Country Club, 1001 Peacock Creek Drive, Clayton. JULY 7, 14, 21, 28 Weights Watchers Weekly Meeting @ Contra Costa Farm Bureau 10 a.m., 5 & 6:30 p.m. Weekly Weight Watchers weigh-in &
meeting on Thursday. 800/326-8450 x 2023.Contra Costa Farm Bureau, 5554 Clayton Rd., Concord. JULY 8 AARP Mt. Diablo Chapter 524 @ Pleasant Hill Senior Center 1:30 p.m. A.C. Hollister, MD, A member of our AARP chapter, will talk on Health Insurance in California, cost too much, covers too few, provides too little, not reliable…. A discussion of Senate Bill (SB - 840.) A.C. spent 40 years as a medical epidemiologist for the State Health Department, specializing in infectious disease control." Come listen to this informative talk!! Refreshments provided. Pleasant Hill Senior Center, 233 Gregory Lane, Pleasant Hill. JULY 12, 26 Clayton Valley Woman’s Club @ Holy Cross Lutheran Church 9:30 a.m. Regular monthly meets held the second and fourth Tues. of the month. Anyone interested in joining the woman’s club please contact Shirley Boyd, President at 672-1163. Holy Cross Lutheran Church, 1092 Alberta Way, Concord. JULY 13, 20, 27 Concord Soroptimist Meeting Women at their best working to help other women. Business, professional people or people interested in providing service to the community are invited to luncheon meetings at Marie Calender’s the second and fourth Wednesday of each month and at The Left Bank the third Wednesday of the month. Call Gloria Utley at 672-0508, email at gloutley@aol.com. or Jo Harlow, 827-9676. for information. JULY 20 Blue Star Mom Meeting 6:30 p.m. Small group Blue Star Mom meetings held the third Wednesday of each month. Blue Star Moms is a support and service group for those serving in all branches of the Armed Forces. 1792 Elmhurst Lane, Concord. Call 676-3654 for information.
BUSINESS & GOVERNMENT JULY 5, 12, 19, 26 Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors Meeting @ County Administration Building 9 a.m. County Board of Supervisors holds regular weekly meetings Tuesday mornings. Open to the public. www.co.contra-costa.ca.us 335-1900. County Administration Building, 651 Pine Street, Room 107, Martinez. JULY 12, 26 Planning Commission Meeting @ Clayton Library 7p.m. City of Clayton Planning Commission meets 2nd & 4th Tuesday of month. Open to the public. www.ci.clayton.ca.us 673-7304, Clayton Library Community Room, 6125 Clayton Road, Clayton. JULY 5, 19 Clayton City Council Meeting @ Clayton Community Library 6 p.m. City Council meets on the first and third Tuesday of the month. Open to the public. Agendas posted at the following locations: City Hall, 6000 Heritage Trail, Clayton, Ohm's Bulletin Board, 1028 Diablo St., Clayton, Clayton Community Library, 6125 Clayton Rd., Clayton. JULY 14 Clayton Community Services Commission Meeting @ City Hall 7 p.m. City of Clayton Community Services Commission meets 2nd Thursday of month. Open to the public. www.ci.clayton.ca.us 673-7304, Clayton City Hall Conference Room, 6000 HeritageTrail, Clayton.
The Community Calendar is sponsored by
T H E VA N F L E E T- B R O N S O N T E A M Personal Service Makes The Difference 1536 Kirker Pass Rd., Suite D, Clayton 94517; Phone (925) 672-4333 www.CallTheVanFleetTeam
We are proud to support the Children's Miracle Network, an alliance of premier hospitals in North America. The Children's Miracle Network treats over 17 million children each year for cancer, pediatric AIDS, muscular dystrophy, heart disease, leukemia, sickle cell anemia, asthma and accident trauma.
IN SUPPORT OF THIS COMPASSIONATE CAUSE, THE VAN FLEET-BRONSON TEAM WILL MAKE A DONATION on behalf of our client for EVERY TRANSACTION CLOSED BY OUR OFFICE.
July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Page B5
Steve is ARF’s It’s rattlesnake season in Clayton Adoption Star
“Steve” is a 3-year-old Tibetan Terrier mix. He is a friendly, athletic dog who will thrive in a lively home where he can be the center of attention. Steve enjoys activities such as hiking in the hills or playing fetch, but he also loves to snuggle in a warm lap. Steve is recommended for families with children ages 8 and above. Bring everyone who will live with Steve – including any canine family members – to meet him at Tony La Russa’s Animal Rescue
Foundation, 2890 Mitchell Drive, Walnut Creek, during adoption hours: 2 to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday, noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Would you like to be part of the heroic team that saves the lives of rescued dogs and cats? Can you share your talents to connect people and animals? ARF volunteers are making a difference. For more information see our Web site, www.art.net, or call (925) 256-1ARF.
Correction
In our June 17 issue, the Paws and Claws column on page B9, “Some tips for finding a lost pet” was written by Brenda Barnette, CEO of Tony La Russa’s Animal Rescue Foundation, not by Julie Bond. We apologize for the error and are sincerely grateful for Ms. Barnette’s welcome contributions to the Pioneer .
Due to our wetter, colder spring, rattlesnake season started late this year. Rattlesnakes usually come out of hibernation in Northern California in March or April, but they emerged in May and June this year. The local species of rattlesnake is the Northern Pacific Rattlesnake, Crotalus viridis oreganus. Bites received during spring are the most dangerous because the newborn snakes have yet to learn the fine-tuning of envenomation. A mature snake has learned to control the amount of venom it injects with a bite, depending on the size of potential prey, often not using any venom at all. However, a young snake has not developed this control and tends to inject large amounts of venom. Dogs are usually bitten around the head and legs. The Western Diamondback’s hemotoxic venom disrupts blood vessels, creating dramatic swelling of the bite area. Red blood cells are destroyed, and the clotting system breaks down, leading to internal bleeding, shock and death. Head and neck bites are more lethal since the swelling can block breathing. A frantic yipping from a dog, whether on a hike or playing in the back yard, usually alerts owners. Look for two small fang marks on your pet’s skin. Attempt to verify if there is a snake in the area, but don’t spend too much time looking, especially if swelling has started. Seek immediate veterinary care. Do not cut the bite area, attempt to suck out venom or apply a tourniquet. Try to keep the dog calm, and if there is time, grab an ice pack and gently hold it over the bite area. Once at your veterinarian’s office, pain medication will be
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given, along with intravenous fluids for blood pressure support. Injectable antihistamines
“Do not cut the bite area, attempt to suck out venom or apply a tourniquet. Try to keep the dog calm, and if there is time, grab an ice pack and gently hold it over the bite area.” Marybeth Rymer DVM, Monte Vista Vet Hospital
are used to control inflammation. Corticosteroids are rarely used since higher mortality has been associated with their use. Antibiotics will prevent secondary infections. Blood transfusions may or may not be needed. Complete blood cell counts and blood chemistries will monitor internal responses. Of most importance is Antivenin. This is not “antivenom” or antidote, but a solution of horse antibodies produced by exposing horses to several types of rattlesnake venoms. This is given slowly through an IV to counteract the effects of the venom. Some larger dogs may need several bottles. One bottle of Antivenin costs around $400, but use of Antivenin will dramatically decrease recovery time and risk of tissue sloughing. Occasionally, there can be allergic reactions. Recently, a vaccine has been developed by Red Rock Biologics. It is primarily developed for the Western
Diamondback but will also cross-react to five other California rattlesnake species, including the Northern Pacific. Dogs that have high exposure to rattlesnakes should be considered for the vaccine. It is a series of two shots at four-week intervals, followed by yearly boosters. But vaccination does not mean your dog is protected. It may buy time by possibly slowing the dog’s reaction or reducing the dog’s response. Therefore, even a vaccinated dog should still be treated as an emergency. Once bitten, most dogs learn to be cautious around snakes. Some dog organizations provide rattlesnake aversion training. The dog is exposed to a defanged snake, and then either given an electrical shock via a collar, or the dog is made to vomit with a chemical, apomorphine. You can help prevent snakes in your yard by avoiding wood, rock and litter piles where they can hide. Since our snakes do not climb or jump, place a close fitting fence at least 3 feet high
MARYBETH RYMER,
PAWS
AND
DVM
CLAWS
around your yard that is buried a couple inches deep. Also, try to keep your rodent population down with a pet cat or other natural means. Cats are very rarely bitten. Both Monte Vista Animal Hospital and the Contra Costa Veterinary Emergency Center are prepared to treat rattlesnake bites with Antivenin.
Marybeth Rymer, DVM, can be reached at Monte Vista Veterinary Hospital, Concord. 672-1100.
Photo: PhilCA
The Northern Pacific Rattlesnake emerged from hibernation late this year after an especially rainy spring.
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Page B6
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Dining Around If you're hungry and want healthy food, CAFÉ SANTE is the perfect place to be. Ideally located in Maverick's Sports Club on Clayton Road where parking is plentiful, Café Sante offers an inviting menu with delicious items made fresh while you wait. For breakfast try the breakfast burrito or grab a bagel or muffin before you head to work. And for lunch or dinner, Café Sante has some interesting menu items like the "Wrap it Up" caesar, veggie or deli style. There's salads and daily grill selections like chicken, ball-tip or salmon served as a sandwich or Caesar salad. If you're in the mood for something hot, try the home-made turkey chili, spinach lasagne or soups and stews. Café Sante has a coffee bar, kids menu and a successful catering business The casual ambiance makes this an inviting place to dine any time. And you will enjoy meeting owner Susan O'Toole who greets everyone with a smile and great service. Coming soon is Café Sante's Frozen Yogurt bar. Don’t be mislead by the name of this delightful family restaurant just over the hill in in the Citrus Marketplace. MARY’S PIZZA SHACK is definitely NOT a shack, and you can find a lot more on the menu than just pizza--although the pizza is a fine choice, indeed. Mary’s Pizza Shack serves up a delicious array of pizza and Italian dishes with both a luncheon and dinner menu. For lunch, try the Bucatini with a small Caesar. perfectly al dente pasta lightly sauteed in butter with garlic, fresh tomatoes and basil. And if you like Caesar Salad, Mary’s is exceptional-ice cold and crisp. And the pizza ---ahhh. Melt-in-your-mouth crust and only the freshest ingredients go into this legendary pizza. Mary’s loves families so
bring the kids. Pizzas range from $7 for a small Napoletana to $20.50 for the large Mary’s Combination. A pasta lunch will run you $7.25-$9.25; dinner $10.75-$13.25. Both include soup or salad, warm sourdough bread and beverage. See Mary’s Pizza Shack ad this page. Linguini’s is now the PAVILION BAR AND GRILL. New owner, Hamid Shahrodizadh has added specialty items from the grill to Linguini’s traditional Italian fettuccine, spaghetti, penne, gnocchi, tortellini and vongole. Grilled items include steaks, fish and veggies and range from $5.95 for an appetizer of cheese sticks to $19.95 for the New York strip topped with sauteed mushrooms. Pizza lovers will all be happy with the new selections. Vegetarians can choose from three selections including the Mediterranean, topped with mozzarella, spinach, sun dried tomatoes, olives, garlic, Feta cheese and drizzled with a light olive oil. The Meat Lover’s Pizza is topped with enough pepperoni, sausage, beef and salami to put every meat lover in paradise. Pizzas come in small, medium, large and extra large sizes and range from $9.95 for a small classic cheese pizza to $22.95 for an extra large Super Combo. See ad this page for hours. ELYSIUM also has a brand new menu with more choices and lower prices. Dishes range from “small plates,” featuring appetizers, soups and salads from $5 for Organic Field Greens with toasted hazelnuts, beets and champagne vinegar, to a Half Dozen Oysters on the Half Shell for $12. “Medium plates-good for tasting,” (try the Cornmeal Crusted Calamari Salad with spicy aioli for $7.50) are great for a light meal, or you can combine them with a smaller plate for a complete
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meal. “Large plates, good for an entree” include Halibut and a Five Spice Dusted Duck Breast for $15; or Flank Steak and Frites (simple as that) for $14 among other choices. Owner Greg Severn has also added a “Little Ones Only” menu and heartily welcomes families with children. See Elysium’s ad this page for hours. Are you ready for a relaxing afternoon with friends, enjoying a pot of tea and delectable treats in a beautiful full service tea room? ENGLUND'S TEA COTTAGE offers these amenities and more at their lovely tea room in the Clayton Station. Proprietors Sally Englund and Pamela Barnett want the tea cottage to be a place "where good friends gather." After you browse the gift shop and collectibles, enjoy lunch or high tea with tea sandwiches, freshly baked scones, fresh fruit and dip and dessert. There's a beautiful muraled room perfect for bridal and baby showers, staff meetings and club gatherings. To book your party, call 672-8327. Lunch reservations are a must. Do you have a hunger for Thai food but your dining partner is holding out for Indian? Not a problem. The new HOT BASIL CAFÉ in Concord can meet both your culinary desires for lunch or dinner. The menu has separate Thai and Indian pages but is a melding of the two cuisines. All lunches are under $10 and dinners are in the $9.95-$13.95 range. See ad this page for hours. If you have a hearty appetite and a slim budget, you'll want to head on over to MOUNTAIN MIKE'S for the "All you can eat lunch buffet" Mondays through Fridays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. With two locations to serve you, the popular pizza restaurant has all the pizza, garlic sticks and salad bar you can eat for lunch. Price is only $4.99, kids 6 & under, $1.15 and kids 712, $2.99. There's also an "All you can eat" pizza and
ON G SO ch N I M n CO e Lu
un. bequ Bar at. & S tio a S on P
New Lunch Menu from $6.95 Kids Menu, $3.95 Hours: Mon. – Fri. 11:30 a.m. – 9:30 p.m. 1508 Kirker Pass Rd. Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m. – 9:30 p.m. behind Shell Station Banquet facilities available
Dinner Tue - Sat, 5 p.m. closed Monday
July 1, 2005
672-6868
salad bar every Wednesday from 5 to 8 p.m. for $5.99 for adults; kids 6 and under is only $1.15 and kids 712, $3.45. For fine dining and lovely atmosphere, downtown Clayton has two very fine dining establishments. At the corner of Center and Marsh Creek Road is LA VERANDA, serving a Northern Italian menu of pasta, pizza, chicken, veal and fish, starting at $8.50 for Bruchetta with olive oil, fresh tomatoes, garlic and basil. Pasta dishes range from $9 for Penne All’arrabiata to $11.75 for Spaghettini Frutti di Mare. A popular choice, La Veranda is open daily for lunch and dinner and on Sunday for brunch. For view and atmosphere you can’t do better than ZANDONELLA’S situated on the lovely Delta View Golf Course in Pittsburg. Zandonella’s is open Tue.Sun for lunch and dinner. This family friendly restaurant offers an extensive menu that covers every craving. From that perfect bowl of Spaghetti and Meatballs all the way to a succulent and perfectly roasted rack of lamb, you are sure to find your favorite. All entrees include soup or salad, pasta and bread. The view is free. Call for reservations, 432-1700. Just down Clayton Road at the corner of Clayton Road and Treat Blvd., is PASTA PRIMAVERA. This lovely little trattoria offers a delectable linguini with garlic and mushrooms in a virgin olive oil for $8.95...my personal favorite. Other pasta dishes include Chicken Pesto Gorgonzola, a rigatoni dish with chicken breast and tomatoes in a creamy pesto Gorgonzola
See Dining, page B7
La Veranda Café
Northern Italian Cuisine in downtown Clayton Fresh soups, salads, antipasti, pizza and pasta Dinner and lunch daily Brunch on Sunday Children’s menu and take out service available
For reservations call (925) 524-0011 6201 CENTER ST. CLAYTON
It’s always the right time for tea at
Englund's Tea Cottage “Where good friends gather...”
A beautiful full service tea room featuring… High tea. Delectable lunches. Fresh salads. Fresh baked scones and desserts. Special events. and Come our e brows and p o gift sh tibles c e l l o c
672-TEAS (8327) www.EnglundsTeaCottage.com 5433 L Clayton Road in Clayton Station
Why wait? Why fight traffic and wait hours for a table when a short, 15 minute drive over the hill will bring you to your new favorite restaurant? Fine Italian dining on the beautiful Delta View Golf Course 2222 Golf Club Road, Pittsburg (925) 432-1700 From Clayton, take Kirker Pass over the hill Turn left on Leland to Golf Club Road
• Banquet Rooms • Off-site Catering
Lunch: t ues. - f ri. Dinner: t ues. - s un.
July 1, 2005
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
Dining, from page B6 sauce ($13.95.) For an intimate atmosphere and a good wine list, Pasta Primavera can’t be beat. A little more on the casual side and a great place to take the kids is ROCCO’S RISTORANTE at 2909 Ygnacio Valley Road in Walnut Creek. Voted the best pizza in the Bay Area by a Contra Costa Times Reader Poll, Rocco’s serves up a killer house specialty. The Dominator, piled high with pepperoni, salami, mushrooms, ham, linguica,
joy An Italian En Fe
sausage and onions, is not for the faint of heart. At $19.97, this large pizza will feed a small army. Rocco’s also has several choices of classic Italian pasta, homemade minestrone and several salads. All pasta dishes are served with fresh bread. Top your pasta dinner off with a glass of wine and you’re well fed and satisfied for well under $20 (tax and tip included.) Rocco’s opens every day at 11 a.m.
ast at Ou r
Mon. – Thurs. Co zy P fé 11:30 a.m. – 9 p.m. asta Pr avera Ca im Fri. 11:30 a.m. – 10 p.m. Sat. 12 noon – 10 p.m. / Sun. 4 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Fine Italian dining with an extensive menu • Weekend Special - grilled steaks • Gourmet desserts and fine wines Very reasonable prices
4425-F Treat Blvd. Concord, CA 94521
687-5 5300
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Thai cuisine
Indian cuisine curries, tandooris freshly baked breads
fresh soup and salads pad thai, pad kemo chicken sate
Hot Basil Café
Enjoy both Indian and Thai Cuisine
Could my home generate income? Increasing home prices have priced many first-time buyers out of the market. One way to improve affordability is to buy a property to live in that also generates income. Recently, first-time buyers from San Francisco bought a two-unit building in Walnut Creek. They plan to occupy one unit of the duplex and rent out the other. The individual flats are spacious, with approximately 1350 square feet of living area. Each unit has a fireplace in the living room, a formal dining room with a built-in buffet, a breakfast room that can double as a home office, two large bedrooms, one bathroom and a laundry room. They had all the amenities of a single-family home. The duplex sold for over $900,000-hardly a bargain price. But small single family homes in the area sell for $600,000 to $700,000. The duplex will generate income from the second unit. This will significantly lower the buyer’s mortgage payment, making the duplex far more affordable than a singlefamily home in the neighborhood.
There are tax benefits to owning residential income property. For example, the rental portion of the property can be depreciated over time, and the depreciation can be used to offset the rental income. This lowers the amount of tax you’ll owe on the rental income. But be sure to consult with a financial advisor before you buy or sell an income-producing property that you also claim as your primary residence. The IRS will treat the two units of the duplex differently for tax-purposes. Not only does rental income decrease your cost of ownership, the rental income is taken into account when the lender qualifies you for the mortgage. This enables you to qualify for a larger mortgage than might otherwise be possible. Lenders extend owner-occupy interest rates to buyers of residential income property as long as the building is four units or less and the buyer/borrower will be occupying one of the units. The interest rate on owner-occupy mortgages is about a half percent less than it is on non-owner-occupy
Club News ROTARY CLUB OF CONCORD The Rotary Club of Concord completed a U.S. Map Stencil project at Cambridge Elementary School in May. Through the leadership of Bill Bobetsky, Community Service Committee Chairman, the Rotary Club of Concord, and Joel
Open 7 days a week Lunch: Dinner:
Mon. - Sat. 11:30 a.m. - 3 p.m. Sun. - Thu. 5-9 p.m., Fri. - Sat. 5-9:30 p.m.
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S E R IO U S L Y E IN W E K A T E W HAVE TO 'T N O D U O Y O S so d affordable
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ing for wine tast your friends.
But shhh . . .
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Edelmann, Map Project Coordinator, a number of Rotarians assembled at Cambridge Elementary in Concord to paint the U.S. Map on the playground. This continuing project helps elementary students learn geography and the development of the United States of America.
n at Opea.m., week 11 ays a 7d
to sport watch s!
672-4003
LYNNE FRENCH
REAL ESTATE
investor mortgages. Be aware that lenders will require that you actually take occupancy—that means move in and live there — within 30 to 60 days after closing. This could pose a problem if you buy an apartment building where the tenants have leases that run longer than 60 days after closing. One solution would be to delay the closing, if the sellers are agreeable, to within 30 or 60 days of the expiration of one tenant’s lease. Be sure to fully investigate any local ordinances regarding tenants rights before buying a residential income property. Some municipalities have rent control, which restricts a land-
lord’s right to increase rents. We don’t have rent control here. It is common to find that rents are below the market rate, particularly if the seller has owned the property for years. Also check the legal status of the units with the local planning or zoning department. If you’re paying market value for a four-unit building, make sure that you’re buying four legal units. A seller should disclose if units were added without the benefit of a city building permit. But don’t count on getting accurate disclosure. A seller in Antioch disclosed that a unit had been added with a building permit. At least this is what the previous seller had disclosed to him. But, when the buyer investigated with the city planning department, no one could find a record of the permit. The risk of buying a building with an illegal unit is that the city could prohibit you from renting it, which would be problematic if you were counting on the income. For any real estate needs or questions contact Lynne at: Phone (925) 672-8787 or E-mail: Lynne@LynneFrench.com
Marilyn McClaskey, Memory Woodard, Chris Basman, William Chan, Rich Ernst, John Miller, were ably assisted by two students from Cambridge Elementary, Gonsolvo and Jose. The Rotary Club of Concord will be painting maps at other elementary schools in the Concord area in July and September. Cambridge Elementary is the first school this year.
DIAMOND TERRACE MEN’S CLUB The Diamond Terrace’s Men’s Club went on one of their first outings on the afternoon of Monday June 13. The men toured the rock quarry on Mitchell Canyon Road where they were presented with hard hats and two framed photographs to commemorate the event.
SOROPTIMIST
OF
CONCORD
Soroptimist means “Best for Women,” women at their best, working to help other women to be their best. The Soroptimist mission is to improve the lives of women and girls. The Concord club has adopted needy families at Christmas, provided the start up funds for the homeless program, gand Loc provided funds to purRoc ally chase books for the o co wn Bia ed Clayton Library. The by le Concord club meets the second and fourth Wednesday of each month d. at Marie Calender’s and the ley R l a V io c third Wednesday at the a n E n j o y a s m a l l o n e i t e m p i z z a 2909 Yg ove Rd. Left Bank. For more inforr ek ak G mation on joining us for a at O nut Cre al meeting, call Jo Harlow at in W with purchase of any large pizza 827-9676.
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Page B7
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Page B8
Clayton Pioneer • www.claytonpioneer.com
July 1, 2005
Dazzling dahlias are gardener’s delight NICOLE HACKETT
GARDEN GIRL
Dahlias are a summer garden’s darlings. Their stunning shows begin in June and last through most of August. Finely toothed foliage of crisp green or the unusual red support sturdy stems topped with the most diverse and striking flowers. They’re sun loving and thrive easily in our climate. This perennial grown from tuberous roots and has been hybridized to provide the home gardener with the same fabulous flowers that were once considered so hard to achieve. First, let’s get something clear about dahlias: You do not have to dig them up every fall in our climate. Where winter temperatures stay above 20 degrees, you need do nothing more than mulch with 4 inches of straw around Thanksgiving. The timing could not be better. What else does one do with that bail of straw that you decorated the porch with in October? Dahlias also require great drainage in their planting region. Pooling water will encourage the tubers to rot. The variety of flower shapes and sizes makes this family of plants pleasing to every eye. One of the more simple forms of dahlia is the Anemone form, with its single or multiple layers of rays surrounding tubular disk florets that seem to form a pincushion center. Lambada has flowers 3 inches across and light violet outer rays with a 2-inch doubled center of yellow cream petals that are fringed at the tips and tipped with violet. The innermost petals are tipped dark
violet for a wonderful tricolor effect, reaching 4 feet tall and wide. Collarette describes the flower style where one layer of long petals and a second inner layer of shorter ones form a collar around the center of the flower. Ace of Hearts is a collarette dahlia, clear pink tipped with white on both layers of rays, a golden yellow center tightly holding the petals in place. Orchid dahlias have a single layer of rays with in-rolled margins for two-thirds or more of their length, giving the flower a pinwheel appearance. Peony dahlias have central disk florets surrounded by two or more rows of rays, innermost rays being curled or twisted. Tasagore has three layers of petals, deep red edged with a hint of white making a naturally perfect highlight.
PURPLE DAHLIA
“W
hen you live in a place as exciting and beautiful as the Clayton Valley area, it’s hard not to be excited for each new day,” Lynne French says. “From the energy of the city to the natural setting of the country, there’s always something to keep me on the go.” Lynne brings this positive energy and love for the Clayton Valley to her long-running career as a real estate professional.
(925) 672-8787 www.LynneFrench.com Lynne@LynneFrench.com
Single-form dahlias have one layer of petals arranged in a plane around a central cluster of disk florets. Often bi-colored and always a great find, keep your eyes open for one called Dizzy. The ball form of dahlia has a flower that looks spherical, though it’s flattish in profile. Rays have inrolled margins for at least half their length. Nijinski is one of those perfect ball-shaped flower varieties, with glowing purple blossoms to 4 inches across. This dahlia can reach 4 feet tall and wide. The Cactus form of dahlia has ray margins rolling downward and pointed tops. Kenora Frills is a 5-inchwide cactus-shaped flower of dark purple. Straight cactus rays radiate in all directions from center. It may be straight or curved
downward, with margins rolled for over half their length. Incurved cactus rays are similar, but they curve upward. Wild Cactus flowers have broad-based rays with margins rolled along the outer half; these rays may be straight or curve upward or downward. Juanita is a wild cactus form of dahlia with a 6-inchwide flower. This velvety, ruby red blossom is a consistent prizewinner and very popular variety. Use Juanita as a cut flower; her longevity in a vase will thrill you. Decorative forms of dahlia are full flowers of two types. Formal decorative dahlias have many overlapping layers of symmetrically arranged and fairly flat rays that tend to curve downward. Informal decorative dahlias are just as full, but rays are curved, curled or twisted, giving the flower a fringed appearance. Blue Bell is a formal decorative to 5 inches across; medium lavender pink streaked and shaded darker rosy lavender pink. Karma Thalia has rich, deep magenta flowers to 4 to 5 inches across on uniform; strong stems makes this selection a great cut flower to plant. Gingeroo is another formal decorative form of Dahlia that has 3-inch orangey bronze flowers that won’t fade even under hot, bright conditions. Sherwood’s Peach is a 60-year-old variety that bears 12inch informal decorative flowers that are wild and kind of shaggy, with occasional pink breaks in the petals. A compact spreading grower to just 3 feet tall and wide, the Sherwoods’s Peach is an oldie, but a goody. You may need to stake the blooms of this informal decorative – 12 inches of flower is a lot to support. Waterlily dahlias have broad rays, curving slightly upward; flower profile is flat to saucer shaped, resembling a waterliliy.
Always focused on your needs throughout your home purchase or sale, she does whatever it takes to help you make the most of your opportunities. With Lynne and her team as your guides, you can Discover the Possibilities in Clayton Valley real estate. Her intimate knowledge of the area and dedication to your goals ensure your success when buying or selling a home. Give her a call today!
6200-E Center St. 1801 N. California Blvd.
Clayton, CA 94517 Walnut Creek, CA 94596
SUN
LOVING DAHLIAS
thrive in Clayton’s climate.
Swan Lake is a white waterlilyshaped flower to 4 inches across; the bush grows up to 5 feet tall and wide, so remember to plant in the back row of the garden. Bokay is a light, lilac waterlily dahlia with flowers 4 inches across on a compact, free blooming plant that reaches only 3 feet tall and wide. Wonderfully long flower stems make this dahlia a great cut flower. Dinner Plate dahlias are hybrid garden stunners. Their name describes the size of their blooms. Cheerleader is a 10- to 12-foot dinner plate semicactus, with broad petal bases and nicely pointed tips in bright neon magenta violet. They’re loud and a little overwhelming, just like a dinner plate should be. Lavender Ruffles is a luscious, luxurious light lavender dinnerplate with flowers to 12 inches across, making this a premier feature plant and cut flower. All dahlias need is to be planted in good soil. They grow best in well-drained soil that has been enriched with organic matter, such as earthworm casting, bone meal and peat moss. Dig holes wider than deep, and space out the varieties depending on their
mature growth, usually 4 to 5 feet from each other. Dahlias like low-nitrogen fertilizers, so look for a product like a 0-10-10. Keep your miracle grow away from this tuberous perennial as the high nitrogen will burn the foliage. Have some bamboo or other type of garden stakes around to support your garden dahlias. These prolific bloomers may need some support to hold their heads high. Dahlias like to have deep, regular watering. The dahlia plants are highly susceptible to disease, so cut flower bouquets with clean garden shears, wipe them down with alcohol and let them dry before use. This will help protect the dahlia. Plant dahlias with your other cutting garden favorites, such as alstroemeria (Peruvian Lily), Echinacea purpurea (Purple Coneflower) and, of course, your roses. Read about the selection before installation. Some of these plants become whoppers, so they need room to grow. Nicole is the Garden Girl at R&M Pool, Patio and Garden Contact her with questions, comments or suggestions at GardenGirl94517@aol.com