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Northern California Living
September June 2018 2018
STRONGER TO G E T H E R
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contents S E PT E M B E R 2 01 8 // I S S U E # 1 4 4
Northern California Living
22
pg
HAR D-TO-FIND PIK AS IN LASSEN PAR K
FA SHION TR ENDS
41 Tips for Adding Style with Accessories
GOOD FINDS
27 Historic Hawes Farms in Anderson 51 Five Marys Burgers in Fort Jones 55 Author Colson Whitehead to Speak at Shasta College GOOD TI M ES 35 ‘The River’s Depths’ at the Siskiyou Art Museum
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www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
Photo by Frank Kratofil
63 The Art and Skill of Fencing in the North State
IN T ER EST 19 The Avalos Foundation is More Than a Scholarship 67 Navigating Teenage Driving
NAT U R E HIK E
22 Monitoring Pikas in Lassen Park
SHOW TI M E 31 The 2018 North Country Music Festival in Anderson 45 The Redding Civic Redd Sun Festival
59 A Historical Documentary of the Cascade Theatre 71 Graham Nash to Play in Redding
IN EV ERY ISSU E
17 My Town—Mary Forbes 74 Enjoy the View—Eric Caldwell 77 Billy and Patrick—Did you Know These Things About September? 78 What’s Cookin’—Donna’s Frozen Strawberry Dessert 82 Calendar of Events 91 Heroes Among Us
Enjoy magazine is not affiliated with JOY magazine or Bauer German Premium GmbH.
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#strongerthancarr
editor’s note september 2018
THE CARR FIRE tried to knock the North State to its knees, but a community’s renewed spirit is rising from the ashes. Who are we now? We are strong. Our first responders faced danger head on, putting their own lives on the line to save others. While they worked through the night for weeks on end, we summoned the strength to set our own fear aside to help and comfort those around us. We are generous. We donated money, goods and time to help those who suffered losses. Some dug deep into their pocketbooks, others offered a bed to someone who was displaced, many volunteered to make supportive signs or prepare meals for the heroes from all over the world who came here to save our beautiful community from the flames.
We are resilient. It will take time to recover. Many of us, our loved ones, our neighbors and our readers have lost worldly possessions – and even those who were safe from the firestorm have lost the spectacular landscapes that made us fall in love with this area. We lost the majority of our summer to a relentless cloak of smoke. But adversity builds strength, and our community will continue to rise, stronger than ever. We are proud to be part of this strong, generous, resilient community. It’s our honor to tell your stories, and together, we will continue to Enjoy Northern California Living.
SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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Advocate Lifelong
My family has been in Redding for multiple generations so growing up I was eager to escape. When I graduated from Enterprise High School most of my friends moved away, but I stayed in Redding to attend Shasta College and get my general education out of the way before I transferred. Even though I wasn’t leaving as soon as I had hoped, I still planned to enjoy my time at Shasta College. I became Vice President of the Student Senate and was active in numerous clubs–all while working at a local business and helping at my family’s business. My time at Shasta College became one of the most memorable experiences of my life. In a place where I did not expect to make new friends, I met my best friend and I found a personal passion and career direction. Within two years, I transferred and eventually graduated from CSU, Northridge with a BA in Deaf Studies with an emphasis in ASL Literature with Honors. I was then accepted into a Master of Social Work (MSW) program at CSU, Northridge where I graduated with my MSW with Distinction. Now, I hope to move back to northern California one day and give back to the community that gave me so much. Shasta College gave me a stable foundation for the rest of my schooling, a passion and career direction, and lifelong friendships. Shasta College changed my life, and it was one of the greatest decisions I ever made. Jessica Shasta College Knight, 2013
The Shasta College Promise Program provides one year of FREE Tuition for first-time, full-time students to Shasta College even if you’ve taken college classes somewhere else!
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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA LIVING
YVONNE MAZZOTTA publisher MICHELLE ADAMS publisher RONDA ALVEY editor in chief KERRI REGAN copy editor EMILY MIRANDA marketing and sales assistant CATHERINE HUNT event calendar/website AMY HOLTZEN CIERRA GOLDSTEIN CATHERINE HUNT contributing graphic designers
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on the cover Ryan Hoberg
JAMES MAZZOTTA store manager KIMBERLY BONÉY LANA GRANFORS KESTIN HURLEY CATHERINE HUNT store www.enjoymagazine.net 1475 Placer Street, Suites C & D Redding, CA 96001 530.246.4687 office 530.246.2434 fax Email General/ Sales and Advertising information: info@enjoymagazine.net ©2018 by Enjoy Magazine. All rights reserved. Reproductions without permission are strictly prohibited. Articles and advertisements in Enjoy Magazine do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the management, employees, or freelance writers. Every effort is made to avoid errors, misspellings and omissions. If an error is found, please accept our sincere apologies and notify us of the mistake. The businesses, locations and people mentioned in our articles are solely determined by the editorial staff and are not influenced by advertising.
Gift certificate for $100 in Lavender Ranch products
Photo by Kara Stewart
Enjoy and Enjoy the Store are trademarks of Enjoy, Inc.
SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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Enjoy Expert Individualized Care From A Board Certified OB/GYN At Every Appointment SAM VAN KIRK MD OBGYN, FACOG 2139 Airpark Dr Redding, CA 96001 530-247-0270
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g n i d Red trong S
AS I REFLECT ON THE TRAGEDY OF THE CARR FIRE, I AM OVERWHELMED BY THE SELFLESSNESS OF OUR COMMUNITY, AND REALLY, THE WORLD BEYOND. THIS IS DAVE FROM THE CHICO FIRE DEPARTMENT. HE’S BEEN WORKING ON “THE WORST FIRE HE HAS SEEN IN 30 YEARS OF FIGHTING FIRES.” MARIELE & MAURENE WORKED AT THE WORLD CENTRAL KITCHEN WHO ARE FEEDING FIRST RESPONDERS & EVACUEES AND I TOOK DONUTS TO THE PG&E COMMAND CENTER. DURING THIS TIME, I AM CONTEMPLATING ALL I AM THANKFUL FOR WHILE FEELING THE LOVE OF COMMUNITY#REDDINGSTRONG.
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my town MARY FORBES, RETIRED TEACHER
HOW DO I SEE MY TOWN: WELCOMING‌ Redding has been my home for the better part of my adult life and I love it. I was welcomed here in 1963 by the Redding Newcomers and Friends Club, which is still going strong and welcoming any and all who live here. I have left the area a couple of times only to return and feel welcomed again. How fortunate we are to live in this beautiful place full of mountains and streams and lakes. I am grateful that my children and grandchildren were able to learn to snow ski and water ski so close to home and attend good schools and college classes. There is a wealth of talent in the Redding area. We have theater groups that provide outstanding productions for the entire community to enjoy. I have been involved with Riverfront Playhouse for many years and have watched many aspiring actors develop their skills and learn the many aspects of live theater. I am a strong proponent of the importance of music education and it makes my heart happy that our high schools all have strong music programs. Redding’s residents should be commended for making sure those programs retain their importance. I feel blessed to live in such a giving community. The local businesses are exceptional in their willingness to help with the various fundraising events held by the many nonprofit organizations in the Redding area, all of which are working to improve our community in some way. I have the utmost respect for the many outstanding people I have met while working with these groups. My life has been enhanced by the generous people in our community. I have been nurtured through various traumas in my life by the caring people who make up our town. When my daughter was killed in 1985, I established a memorial scholarship in her memory. When that word went out, the checks flowed in and we were then able to award scholarships to 40 deserving Shasta High School students over a 20-year period. I will forever be grateful to this town and the wonderful people who live here.
Photo by Melinda Hunter
SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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BY MELISSA MENDONCA
OPENING DOORS T H E AVA LO S F O U N DAT I O N IS MORE THAN A SCHOLARSHIP
IN 2014, Ramiro Castellón was a senior at Los Molinos High School treating scholarship attainment as a part-time job. He kept a binder for this project adorned with the logo of UC Davis, hoping his Aggie spirit and work ethic would be enough to meet the financial obligations of his dream campus. Heeding the call of his school counselor, Castellón took note of a scholarship announcement from the Avalos Foundation, the passion project of Arnoldo and Alma-Ruth Avalos, graduates of high schools in Gridley and Chico, who went on to receive undergraduate degrees from UC Berkeley and advanced degrees from Harvard and Cal State East Bay. “Initially when I applied to it, all I saw was money. I saw $1,000 a year to go to school,” says Castellón. “I soon came to realize it was so much more.”
This past June, Castellón walked across the commencement stage at UC Davis with his bachelor of science degree in international agriculture development. “Here I am four years later, a college graduate with no debt,” he says, his voice layered with pride, awe and gratitude. Now settled into a well-paying job at Driscoll in Watsonville, Castellón speaks reverently of the impact the Avalos Foundation has had on his life. “Arnoldo is quite literally a role model that we can all aspire to be someday,” says Castellón. “He opened doors that I never would have been able to access on my own.” Indeed, opening doors is what the Avalos Foundation is all about. “It started as a scholarship program, but it has transitioned to a life program,” says Arnoldo. “For us, the money is just a small part of what we’re trying to help students with. Ultimately, it’s about guiding them through college.”4 continued on page 20
Ramiro Castellón, UC Davis, Class of 2018 SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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Lily Fryer, UCLA, Class of 2018
“We’re creating a cycle of change,” says Arnoldo. “We look at our efforts as a way to empower a region by focusing on education.” Both Arnoldo and Alma-Ruth are from immigrant families, with Arnoldo growing up in a migrant farmworking household in Gridley and Alma-Ruth receiving most of her early education in Mexico, arriving for her junior year of high school in Chico as an English language learner. They both see education as a great equalizer, and have committed to supporting the educational goals of other young people from small North State communities through their foundation. “We’re creating a cycle of change,” says Arnoldo, noting that the foundation seeks first-generation college students from a select region of Northern California bound for University of California schools with a family income of $90,000 or less. Students must exhibit a desire to give back to their home communities. “We look at our efforts as a way to empower a region by focusing on education,” he adds. “When you grow up in a small town you can limit yourself.” For both Arnoldo and Alma-Ruth, education allowed for upward social mobility. Arnoldo’s degrees landed him jobs at Cisco Systems, Google and ultimately Facebook, where he came on board when the company had fewer than 500 employees. He is now retired. AlmaRuth continues her career in education. Lily Fryer, 21, of Dairyville is another recipient of the Avalos Foundation scholarship, and notes that the networking offered through the foundation set in motion a series of fellowships that have sent her to Washington, DC, as a Rangel Fellow with the U.S. State Department and Princeton University on a public policy and international affairs fellowship. This fall, she will start a masters program in development practice at UC Berkeley. A career in the foreign service is her ultimate goal. She graduated this year from 20
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
UCLA with degrees in international development studies and geography and environmental studies, and she was a 2014 graduate of Red Bluff High School. “If anyone’s interested in a field, he really tries to reach out and find someone he knows,” says Fryer, noting that she learned of both fellowships from Avalos. Not only that, he wrote her letters of recommendation. She says she worried about overburdening him with requests for letters since she applied to 14 graduate programs. “He just messaged me and said, ‘Bring it. Of course!’” she laughs. While Arnoldo is clearly proud of both Castellón and Fryer, they are two of 75 ushered through the Foundation since its inception in 2012. His goal is to support around 20 students a year and ultimately reach 100 fellows. He stresses that his opportunity is available to all, regardless of ethnicity. “People that helped me didn’t look like me – my teachers, my athletic coaches. That’s just how it was,” he says. It’s no surprise, then, that Lily Fryer mentions another lesson imparted by Avalos throughout her four years: “He stresses that it’s important to give back and acknowledge where you came from.” • Avalos Foundation www.avalosfoundation.org Melissa Mendonca is a graduate of San Francisco State and Tulane universities. She’s a lover of airports and road trips and believes in mentoring and service to create communities everyone can enjoy. Her favorite words are rebar, wanderlust and change.
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NATURE HIKE
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BY LAURA CHRISTMAN
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
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PHOTOS: FRANK KRATOFIL
PIKA-BOO M O N I TO R I N G P I K A S I N L A S S E N PA R K PIKAS ARE TOUGH, clever, industrious. And adorable. “They are really cute, cool little animals,” says Mike Magnuson, wildlife biologist at Lassen Volcanic National Park. Lassen Park has been monitoring American pikas (Ochotona princeps) for almost 20 years. The hamstersize, high-altitude mammals are an indicator species for impacts of warming climate. “The pikas are kind of like the canary in the coal mine for climate change. They can’t handle high temperatures – not much more than 81 degrees,” Magnuson says. Because they already live at high elevation, there aren’t many options for moving to cooler locations. In 1999, Lassen Park, Crater Lake National Park and Craters of the Moon and Lava Beds national monuments joined forces to develop protocols for pika monitoring and to begin surveys. Those units later became part of Pikas in Peril, a monitoring program including Great Sand Dunes, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain and Yellowstone national parks. A new five-year project for monitoring at the four original national park units got underway last year. So far, pikas seem to be holding their own at Lassen Park, according to Magnuson. “I think we are fairly stable.” Although they look a bit mousey, pikas are connected to the rabbit family. A pika typically weighs 4 to 6 ounces and is 6 to 9 inches long. It has curved claws, padded toes and a high-pitched warning squeak: “Eee eee eeeee!” Pikas don’t hibernate. They live in dens under rocks insulated by deep snowpack, munching on stockpiled vegetation to make it through the cold months. Snipping and gathering the stash of wildflowers, stems and grasses keeps pikas busy in summer. To prevent fresh vegetation from getting moldy, pikas pile clippings and allow the vegetation to dry in the sun. “They know they need to dry it before they store it under the rocks,” Magnuson says. 4 continued on page 24
SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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Pika sleuthing is challenging. Pikas live in out-of-the-way places and are difficult to spot. Their grayish-brown fur blends with the surroundings. Plus they are shy and cautious (foxes, pine martens, hawks and others consider them snacks). Surveys focus less on actual sightings of pikas than on finding evidence of pikas — scat resembling peppercorns and piles of snipped plants. Lassen Park gets help with its August and September surveys from seasonal interns and two park volunteers: Jay and Terri Thesken of Redding. Now in their sixth year, Terri recalls thinking at first: “How hard can it be? You take your lawn chair up there and sit and watch for pikas.” The reality was scrambling up steep talus slopes with car-size rocks and shining flashlights into dark, hidden spaces in search of pika poop and haystacks. “The hardest part was climbing over the boulders,” she says. The Theskens monitor 18 sites. It takes eight to 10 hours a day over five days. The effort has rewards. “For me, it is just being out in Lassen Park away from all the people and doing something worthwhile — being citizen scientists,” Jay says. “It’s a cool thing to do. It’s fun,” Terri says. She’s become very fond of pikas. Public attention often goes to large mammals, she notes. “The little guys are overlooked.”
Lassen Park and Lassen Association launched Adopt a Pika in May 2017 to raise awareness of pikas and support the park’s pika monitoring. For $25, adopters get a pika fact sheet, adoption certificate and toy pika. “The response was larger than the supply,” Lassen Park Ranger Amanda Sweeney says of the initial batch of fuzzy pika toys. In the first year, some 350 were adopted. Pikas, with their furry oval bodies, rounded ears and hardworking habits, have lots of appeal. “It’s such a small animal and it cares for itself so well in such a harsh environment,” Sweeney notes. Lassen Park has a newer hands-on activity at Kohm Yah-mah-nee Visitor Center called Pika Private Investigator, which helps children learn about pikas and climate. The cooler days of fall are prime time to try to spot a pika at Lassen Park. Sweeney says good places to look are the Chaos Crags pullout about a mile east of Manzanita Lake on the main park road, along Cinder Cone Trail near Butte Lake and just below the Bumpass Hell Trail parking lot. • www.nps.gov/lavo/learn/nature/pika.htm
Laura Christman is a freelance writer in Redding with a degree from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and a long career in newspaper journalism. Contact her at laurachristman14@gmail.com.
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GOOD FINDS
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BY KAYLA ANDERSON
DOWN ON THE
FARM
Photo by Kayla Anderson
H I S TO R I C H AW E S FA R M S I N A N D E R S O N
DURING SPRINGTIME at Historic Hawes Farm in Anderson, baby chicks peep away in the farm store as the Hawes family takes calls, drives tractors and tries to get everything ready for the expected rains. Out on the property, owner Greg Hawes points out pieces of large equipment, wheat fields, orchards, and the house where his ancestors used to live. It all started in 1863 when William Hawes ventured out west to Northern California to pursue gold mining and ended up managing the Anderson Hotel. During that time, he started accumulating land and having kids (he had a total of six children from three marriages). Before William passed away, his son Jake took over the ranch and had five kids himself. The ranch eventually trickled down to his four remaining children to manage. One of them was Greg’s grandfather, and a century and a half later, Greg is now operating it. He hopes the farm will stay this way for years to come as his seven children grow up and start taking a bigger role in the family business. However, agriculture is a tough industry, especially for a family-run farm. Years ago, there was a surge of life insurance companies buying up acres of ranches and hiring managers to farm them, changing the dynamic of what farming once was. However, for the Hawes family, there was never any other option for what they would do. “I got indoctrinated when I was little. My dad loves growing vegetables and it was important for us to keep the legacy alive,” Greg says. After studying agriculture at Chico State University, Greg moved to Sacramento and became an accountant, but couldn’t stay away from the farm for too long. “It just became a part of me. It’s hard to take the farm out of the boy,” he says. Greg’s children help out with the farm often. For instance, his 14-year-old daughter Lily is raising a steer and several horses (and later joins her mother in the store) while older son Garrett is outside tending to the equipment. In October, the Historic Hawes Farm comes to life as its 10 acres of cornfields transform into a giant maze that has taken on the features of Scooby Doo, Johnny Cash, Wounded Warriors and Greg’s parents, best visible by an aerial view. The farm soon became the place to be in October when the couple learned about agritourism and built features to support it.4 continued on page 28 SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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“I grew pumpkins for all of the WinCo stores from Redding to San Diego, so for that whole month I was gone from my family,” Greg says. To remain close to home, in 2005 Greg built a pirate ship, the farm’s first corn maze, and invited all of Shasta County to come check it out. More than 5,000 people showed up, so the Hawes slowly started putting in more infrastructure and expanded its offerings. Now in the fall, Hawes Historic Farm transforms into a mini theme park of fun, with zombie paintball, zip lines, bumper cars, train rides and more. “Kids from 5 years old to grandparents can enjoy everything here,” Greg says. “Kids really love participating in these activities with mom and dad,” he adds. During October, Hawes accommodates kids on field trips, families, and people who want to get scared in the haunted corn maze. Other features include a jumping pillow, a roller coaster, a playground, a wooden John Deere tractor set and a pizza farm (featuring everything in its purest form that it takes to make a pie, including where wheat and tomatoes come from to the chicken and dairy cows for cheese). Hawes hosts a gemstone mining trough, old Horsetown complete with a stagecoach, and a mini corn maze for the kids. Greg loves to weld and build, constantly involved in little projects here and there to help improve the farm. In the last couple of years, he added in a go-kart track and gas-operated bumper cars. “That was my favorite ride as a kid. And it’s unlimited – you can get back in line and do it until you fall asleep,” he says. While the Hawes Farm fires up its entertainment in October, it is busy year-round growing 1,600 acres of wheat, walnuts, vegetables, alfalfa and more to support Northern California’s agriculture needs. Like its autumn activities, the fields require constant maintenance and to be successful you have to watch the weather at all times. “Farming and agritainment are both so dependent on weather. In farming, it’s all about timing. We have to work around the rain,” Greg says. Although it’s all a lot of work, members of the Hawes family wouldn’t have it any other way. “Being a farmer’s wife, there’s never a dull moment, there’s always something going on,” says Greg’s significant other, Nikola. “But I love being part of this community and what the Hawes family does for it. Every year we try to support something different, give in the way of money and entertaining.” “One hundred years ago, everyone was in agriculture; 98 percent of the people were farmers,” says Greg. “Nowadays the population is so far removed from agriculture, I just love to show what it’s like. I think it’s neat to keep it alive. We’re hard workers, we love to take care of the land and keep it for future generations.” “Whether I’m building something for the farm or creating a new field, it’s pretty rewarding to see all of the little kids having fun with it. I love to see everyone having a great time,” Greg says. • Historic Hawes Farm • 21923 Dersch Road, Anderson Tickets, $13 to $25 • www.historichawesfarms.com
Kayla Anderson is a freelance writer, marketer and action sports enthusiast who grew up wakeboarding on Lake Shasta and learning to ski at Mt. Lassen. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Chico State University and loves to visit her parents in Redding.
Photos by Al LaVelle 28
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BY RICHARD DUPERTUIS
T H E 2 0 1 8 N O R T H C O U N T R Y M U S I C F E S T I VA L I N A N D E R S O N THIS MONTH, country music fans will gather in Anderson River Park for a day of festive fun. There’ll be fishing instruction, face painting, food trucks, and organizer Mike Brown says to expect formations of folks flinging foodsacks at holes cut in flat boards, a sport known as cornholing. Finishing the festivities, a couple of fine country bands will play the crowd into a foot-stomping frenzy. Best part: admission is free. The food, beer and games will cost you little, but it’s for a good cause. The 2018 North Country Music Festival is a fundraiser for firefighters. All proceeds go to the Bella Vista Volunteer Fire Company, a nonprofit that ensures that its crew members have everything they need to battle wildfire blazes in Northern California. Fire Chief Ron Smith says the fire company incorporated just a couple of years ago. “Our corporation is constantly raising monies to cover costs of fighting fires, logistical support and emergency services,”
he says. “Used to be we’d have to host a dinner every week to pay for everything. With the corporation, we’ve been able to cut back on that.” Brown is president of the corporation. “He’s been a member since its inception,” Smith says. “He does what needs to be done and he does a great job of it.” Brown has been doing what needs to be done to raise funds for nearly 25 years, and not just for firefighters. A Crescent City musician, he settled in the Redding area in the mid-1990s, and began to teach himself fundraising skills for what he calls his new obsession of that time, a radio-controlled airplane flying club. “When I get into something, I really get into it. Head over heels,” Brown says. “I wrote articles for flying club magazines; they asked me to review new radio-controlled models. I raised funds for flying events here, for kids. For some of them, it was the first time they ever flew a plane. That look on their face was priceless."4 continued on page 32
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His love for music led him to The Jefferson State Blues Society, a nonprofit for which he has organized an annual blues festival for the last five years. Between this and the flying club, he has learned much about raising money in this region. “First, you have to find like-minded people who believe in what you are trying to do. And they have to have the time to do it,” he says. “Next, utilize resources like community calendars; all the media have them. And watch the costs, like for the park, insurance, security and a motel for the bands.” “The biggest thing is time. You have to have enough,” he stresses. “If it’s a big event like this music festival, it’s got to be planned a year ahead. There’ll be good days and bad days. You have to pace yourself.” The North Country Music Festival opens at noon Sept. 15, featuring all the games and food. The music kicks off at 4 pm with Fogline, an up-and-coming band known for their high-energy performances laced with humor. Between the main acts, Brown’s own band, California Country, takes the stage. Then comes The Jessie Leigh Band, led by the Oregon-born country rocker celebrated for her hit single “Pink Umbrella Drink.” Leigh will command the stage for a full two-hour set, closing the festival at 9 pm. • North Country Music Festival • Anderson River Park Sept. 15 • Festival opens at noon, music at 4 pm
Richard DuPertuis is a born writer and a new resident of Redding. During his 12 years in Dunsmuir, his stories and photographs appeared in Shasta and Siskiyou County newspapers. He strives for immortality through fitness and diet, and dreams of writing his first novel, any day now.
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‘ T H E R I V E R ’ S D E P T H S’ AT T H E S I S K I YO U A R T M U S E U M “PEOPLE IN THIS TOWN are going to be surprised when they see my new art show,” says Fred Gordon, whose colorful ceramic fish have graced the walls of shops and restaurants in Dunsmuir for decades. With “The River’s Depths,” opening at the Siskiyou Arts Museum in Dunsmuir on Sept. 8, Gordon plunges into the world of abstract art, which allows him to make personal statements about nature and man’s relationship to it. “This show has a lot more of me in it, what I see and what I feel,” he says. “The River’s Depths” also features John Rickard’s haunting blackand-white photos of the McCloud River, where Rickard works as a fishing guide. (His company, Wild Waters Fly Fishing, employs Gordon during part of the fishing season.) Rickard's book of photos, “The McCloud River,” will be available at the show.
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BY TIM HOLT
FRED GORDO N He got an early start on his dual careers as artist and fishing guide. His father was an avid fly fisherman and a noted watercolor artist in Gordon’s hometown of Sacramento. Taking his cue from his father, Gordon started painting as a child, and at an early age was accompanying his dad on fishing trips to the Upper Sacramento River. That’s where he began his career as a fly fishing guide. By the 1970s, he already had a second home in Dunsmuir. By the early 1990s, he had settled in the town permanently. Gordon describes his show at Siskiyou Arts Museum as a study in contrasts, the “organic versus the mechanical.” The artist’s medium is still ceramic, with a glaze and a surface quality that, in Gordon’s view, evokes the color and texture of shimmering water and river rock.4 continued on page 36
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But the simple, decorative artwork Gordon’s followers have grown used to has been replaced with a bewildering array of images: Fish with electric motors instead of tails, an artillery gun mounted on a fish head, a funky floating vessel that’s half fish and half boat, captained by a duck. Gordon is clearly having fun with all of this, but he also wants to stimulate viewers’ thoughts and their imagination, to get them thinking about a “hybrid” world, one in which man interacts with and alters nature, in which machines and technology play an increasingly dominant role in both human and natural environments. In addition to his other pursuits, Gordon is also an avid skin diver. Many of his ceramic fish are actually molds of real fish, fish he’s captured off the West Coast, in Caribbean waters, and off the coast of New Zealand, where he fishes and skin dives in the wintertime. Rickard, who began getting into serious photography as a teenager, describes his current work on the McCloud as “little conversations I have with the river.” He uses his photography to put the river in its larger context, shows it framed by snowbanks in the winter or with mist-shrouded forests on its banks in the early morning light. “I try not to get seduced by the river’s beauty,” he says. “I want to go deeper than that, to look at all the river’s aspects: physical, spiritual and emotional.” •
Tim Holt is a longtime journalist, the editor of the quarterly North State Review, and the author of “On Higher Ground,” a futuristic novel set in the Mount Shasta region. He lives in Dunsmuir, and is an avid cyclist and hiker.
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FASHION TRENDS
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BY KIMBERLY BONÉY
BE BOLD TIPS FOR ADDING STYLE W I T H AC C E S S O R I E S IF A WELL-COORDINATED OUTFIT is the ice cream, the right accessories are the whipped cream, drizzled chocolate and the cherry on top. Accessories have a way of adding style, refinement and a subtle (or not-so-much) dynamic to an ensemble. They can change the vibe of an outfit, elevating the basic to fashion icon status – or taking what looks to be fancy or overdone and mellowing it out to a cool, effortless win for the wearer. In 2018, accessories utterly refuse to ask permission. They walk boldly, and carry a big (and we mean BIG) bag. Follow along to see how to infuse some of this season’s best into your life. SCARVES Oversized, chunky knit isn’t reserved just for sweaters anymore. The cozy hug of a fabric is making its grand entrance in the form of scarves this season. Some designers have used what looks like one long sweater sleeve, complete with a tapered bottom, to adorn their ensembles. With styles this comfy, we are looking forward to the cooler months with even more enthusiasm than normal. The infinity style scarf still tops 2018’s hot accessory list, making it universally desirable for its style, function and convenience. Its wrap-it-and-forget-it way makes effortless style a snap. Consider an infinity scarf in a wide, unexpected fabric, like plaid or denim. Boldly colored, oversized vintage scarves tied at the neck are a classic yet still fresh nod to the past. If you find one long enough, tie it in a bold bow and pair it with something simple, like a little black dress, to infuse an air of sophistication when you want it.
HATS Classic berets, newsboy caps, fedoras and widebrimmed hats have taken the runway by storm this season, working with everything from suits to jeans to dresses. This season, these stand-the-test-of-time styles come bearing a bit of extra fun via interesting textures and patterns, like faux fur, leather, plaid and houndstooth. They are bold and certainly command the attention of the room, while still being just as timeless as they’ve always been. Keep your ears warm and your hat game fierce with a blinged-out beanie. We’ve seen ones with your favorite sports teams – in all of their shining glory – adorn the runway in ways unexpected. A nod to the ‘90s with a twist, this style looks great with your favorite jeans, t-shirt and leather moto jacket, but could also pair with a floral dress and riding boots for something funky and fresh. If you just can’t wrap your head around wearing a traditional hat this season, it’s perfectly OK to step out of the box. With this season’s bold approach to style comes a melding of accessories, a distinct invitation to re-purpose a piece of fashion in a way that stands outside of its original use. That scarf we talked about wearing at your neck could easily double as a headscarf, a quick way to add a flair for the dramatic to your look. The longer the scarf, the more options you have to tie it in innovative ways.4 continued on page 42 SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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BELTS We still love our slim belts, the ones that cinch our dresses and cardigans perfectly, but all hail the wide corset-inspired belts that are all the rage in 2018. This beautiful Victorian/Western hybrid is a detail you’ll be praised for. It can create a sweet silhouette but is also unapologetic in its sultriness. Opt for one that has some space where the buckle resides so it creates contrast with the fabric underneath. That way it doesn’t inadvertently widen your middle. Consider an asymmetrical belt against a basic jumpsuit for a night out. It doubles as work-wear when you pair it with a blazer and pumps. We love ones with bold flowers, bows or extensions of the leather for added texture and playfulness. Go bright or go back to the drawing board. A belt in a vibrant hue gives you the option to create an interesting contrast with your outfit. We love belts with pattern too, as plaids, color-blocking and logo-embellished styles are a simple way to add plenty of personality to your look.
BAGS The biggest and baddest of them all is the oversized tote – likely large enough to carry the kitchen sink, in addition to all of your accoutrements. Consider this style an extension of your clothing, an added flourish in a stand-out color or pattern. From leather carry-alls to bags designed to look like fashion-forward market bags, the only rule with this style is “the bigger, the better.” Oddly shaped bags add texture and flavor to your look. Consider one in a circular or cylindrical shape, or a dimensional bag in a square, rectangle or other abstract configuration for a noticeable style upgrade. Even the ever-fabulous backpack can be made better when it has an unexpected structure. Skip the sleek clutch bag and opt for one that is larger than life, itself. This is one of those pieces that can transform a ho-hum basic into something runway-worthy. One with a chain does double duty as a cross body. If you don’t need much to keep you comfortable on the go, consider a belt bag – a stylish, hands-free upgrade to the fanny pack. The belt portion is functional in and of itself, but it boasts a spot big enough to carry your MILK (a convenient acronym for your money, identification, lipstick and keys) and your phone. •
Kimberly N. Bonéy, proud wife and mom, is a freelance writer, designer, up-cycler and owner of Herstory Vintage. When she’s not working, she is joyfully wielding jewelrymaking tools and paintbrushes in her studio. Antique shops, vintage boutiques, craft stores and bead shops are her happy place.
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SHOWTIME
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BY JORDAN VENEMA
REDD SUN RISING T H E R E D D I N G C I V I C R E D D S U N F E S T I VA L ACCORDING TO Advance Redding’s Nathan Parmelee, the Redding Civic Auditorium had its largest concentration of shows in the history of the venue between February and June, which makes it all the more surprising the city considered closing the auditorium as recently as 2010. But thanks to a contract with nonprofit Advance Redding, which took over management of the facility from the city in early 2012, the venue has found new life. Now they’re planning to build on that momentum by hosting Redding’s first large-scale music festival, the Redd Sun Festival, on Sept. 29 and 30. “In our management of the venue, our perspective is about maximizing the opportunity of the venue and serving the needs of our community, even outside of Redding,” says Parmelee, the marketing director and talent buyer for the auditorium. Since Advance Redding partnered with the city, more than $1 million has been invested into improving the venue, with bigger bands playing its stage. The approximate 2,000-seat auditorium has sold out multiple shows, with diverse headliners including Korn, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Bonnie Raitt and Modest Mouse. “In the midst of that (success),” says Parmelee, “we decided to kick off this music festival, which we’ve been talking about doing for years.” But it wasn’t easy to set the stage for such a large festival, continues Parmelee. “We’ve had some acts that people are surprised we’ve been able to attract to a community like Redding, because from an industry perspective, Redding is considered a tertiary market – the lowest priority on the scale.” Due to its location, most musicians touring from cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco to Seattle or Portland drive through 4 continued on page 46
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Redding on their rest day. But by building relationships with band management, Parmelee has been able to attract bands to what has previously been something of a musical island. Now the Redding Civic Auditorium is poised to host a two-day festival that will more than double its usual capacity. While the auditorium can seat 2,200 people, the Redd Sun Festival expects to daily host 5,000 attendees in the outdoor space in front of the venue. “We are coming to terms with our own capacity to do something large, and realizing that we are able to execute on that well,” says Parmelee.
to do.” By attracting an outside audience, the Redd Sun Festival should have economic incentives for the city, including sales at local businesses, restaurants and hotels. Based off former ticket sales at the auditorium, Parmelee expects the Redd Sun Festival to do just that. “When we book larger acts, our patrons are actually coming from a three- to fourhour radius,” he says. “We had Modest Mouse here in May, and they sold out the venue,” with 60 percent of those tickets coming from outside Redding and as far as the south Bay Area. But more than just economic benefit to the city, Parmelee hopes the festival will be a way for the community to come together in the wake of the Carr Fire. “We would love to be able to give back to the community in this very hard time, and it can be a time for the community to come together and rally and celebrate what makes Redding great,” says Parmelee. “I’ve been moved and astounded at the generosity of this community, and how neighbors are serving one another, and how friends and colleagues are serving one another, and donating their time and resources. And I know that spirit will be alive at the festival and celebrated at the festival, and we will be looking for ways to facilitate that.” •
The festival’s lineup will represent two genres, with rock performances on Sept. 29, including bands Floater, Lit, Candlebox and headliner AWOL Nation, and country performances on Sept. 30, including bands David Luning, Carly Pearce, Frankie Ballard and headliner Eli Young Band. An additional band will be announced for each lineup. Gates open at 1 pm with music starting at 3 pm. Oneday passes start at $85, though ticket options include a VIP section and two-day passes. The festival will include vendors, activities, drinks and food. “We’re also working on a large art installation,” says Parmelee. The decision to create a festival that features two genres was simple, he continues. “As a marketing director, I focus on the taste of our community, and what kind of acts our community wants to see. But we’re also wanting to bring more visitors, and one of the ways to do that is to create more diversity in the market and give people more things
Redd Sun Festival • September 29, 30 Redding Civic Auditorium 700 Auditorium Drive Box Office: (530) 229-0022 ReddSunfestival.com
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
Jordan Venema is a freelance writer and California native. He’s a fan of wild stories, impetuous traveling, live music, and all the food. But mostly, he’s a fan of his seven-year-old son, Cassian. He can be contacted by email at jordan. venema@gmail.com.
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GOOD FINDS
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BY JASON BURKELO | PHOTOS: TARYN BURKLEO
FIVE MARYS BURGERS IN FORT JONES BRIAN LOVES FIVE MARYS. He loves his wife Mary, and he loves his four daughters, who are also each named Mary. Together, they are the Heffernan family, and in 2013 they left their busy urban life in search of a place that their drifting hearts could call home. It didn’t take them long to realize that Fort Jones was that place. This small Northern California ranching community, nestled against the backdrop of the Marble Mountains, is the perfect place for the Heffernans to cultivate their two great passions: family and good food. Five Marys Farms is the fruit of these passions and its success is proof that many people share their values. Five Marys Farms is a family owned and operated ranch that raises premium healthy meat. As far as Mary and Brian were concerned, that is all they ever thought it would be. Mary had owned and managed multiple restaurants in the Bay Area, and while she did enjoy that season of her life, she had decided she was done with the restaurant business. Instead, the Heffernans envisioned a place for customers to get quality meat directly from their ranch. So they found a small building in town to use as a shipment facility. Always the entrepreneurs, however,
they couldn’t help but notice the old local bar down the street. They looked into buying the building to use for processing meat. It wasn’t what they needed, but Mary said to herself, “It would be great if someone would fix this place up as a restaurant.” A few months later, the Heffernan family found themselves renovating an old bar and beginning yet another extension of the ranch. The Five Marys Burger House opened on the evening of December 31, 2017. What was supposed to be a “soft opening” turned into a packed house with more than 200 customers, and things are not slowing down. Mary says their vision for the Burger House is simple: “We want to share our meat.” From the meat in their burgers to the blackberries in the jam, almost all the food they serve comes from the ranch. They have even started producing their own small-batch whiskey. Most staff are Siskiyou County residents but some have traveled from as far as Arizona to be a part of the Five Marys family. From the family playroom to the couch by the wood stove every aspect of the restaurant echoes Mary’s words: “We love 4 continued on page 52
BURGERS & BEYOND
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this community. We love being here.” Everything they sell is what they use personally. The spice rub they sell is what they put on their own steak. The clothing they sell is what they like to wear. The Burger House isn’t just an extension of the ranch, but an extension of the Heffernan family. When they first moved to the ranch, they planned on living in the 800-square-foot ranch house only until they could build a new home. Five years later, they are still in the ranch house and have no desire to change. They love the intimacy that comes from the close quarters, however there does seem to be one very large problem – they can’t invite everyone in the community over for dinner because their house and their table are just too small. Good thing they opened a restaurant. • Jason Burkleo is a husband, father, former Marine Corps Infantryman and self proclaimed adventurer. His personal motto is, “If you’re going to be a bear, be a Grizzly.” He has a bachelor’s degree and enjoys freelance writing about the places he’s been and the people he meets.
Five Marys Burger House www.fivemarysburgerhouse.com 11825 Main Street, Fort Jones (530) 468-4555
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GOOD FINDS
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BY LAURA CHRISTMAN
A PRIZED G
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A U T H O R C O L S O N W H I T E H E A D TO S P E A K AT S H A S TA C O L L E G E PULITZER PRIZE, National Book Award, Oprah’s Book Club selection, Carnegie Medal for Fiction, Arthur C. Clarke Award, New York Times Bestseller. “The Underground Railroad” has received multiple awards and much attention. The novel by Colson Whitehead published in 2016 by Doubleday tells the story of strongwilled Cora, an enslaved teen fleeing the brutality of a Georgia cotton plantation in the mid-1800s. The book imagines the Underground Railroad – the secret network of safe houses to help African Americans in the South escape slavery – as an actual subterranean train. It transports Cora to states that become stages of her journey where different forms of racism from different times converge. A mix of surreal and real, the book centers on the cruelty of slavery and Cora’s fierceness for freedom. It is an invitation to introspection on how the darkness of our shared past reaches into our present. Whitehead has been on a book tour that’s taken him to cities throughout the United States and to other countries,
including Norway, Italy, Poland, France, China and Australia. In October, he comes to Redding. Whitehead will speak at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 in the Shasta College Theatre. The free event is part of The Community Speaker Series, a project of Shasta College Foundation and The McConnell Foundation. The visit is a special opportunity for both students and the community, says Shasta College Foundation Executive Director Scott Thompson. Shasta College English instructor Kathryn Calkins, a member of The Community Speaker Series Committee, says Colson’s novel “fits into American literature – not as African American literature – but as a story that needs to be told.” “The Underground Railroad” shows “how damaging slavery was to every part of the community. We’ve been shattered in many unmendable ways,” she says. Calkins and Thompson went to work to bring Whitehead to Shasta College after reading the book. It seemed a great fit for the speaker series, which aims to offer fresh ideas and perspectives to the campus and the community.4 continued on page 56
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“Sometimes a useful delusion is better than a useless truth.”
~Colson Whitehead, The Underground Railroad
“New information – I hope that is what we are bringing to the front,” Thompson said. Among those who have shared insights and ideas since the speaker series launched in 2015 are United States Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, environmental activist Rick Bass, author Terry Tempest Williams and University of California President Janet Napolitano. The series is a revitalization of the popular lecture series retired Associate Dean Bill Fitzgerald started in 1967. It ran until 1972, bringing photographer Ansel Adams, Olympic track and field gold medalist Jesse Owens, author Truman Capote, lawyer Melvin Belli, television producer Rod Serling and other influential people to Redding. Thompson was a student at Shasta College then and says his world was widened by the speakers he heard. “Exposing people to new information and new ideas is part of a college’s mission,” he says. Shasta College Foundation found a willing and supportive partner for reviving the series in the philanthropic McConnell Foundation. The two foundations split expenses. Redding public television station KIXE helps with promotion. The price tag to bring a speaker to Redding – typically $15,000 or more – is much higher than the $400 to $1,000 fee charged when the original series was in play. Informing, inspiring and encouraging meaningful conversations about important topics are the core of the speaker series. Shasta College teachers tie the speaker visits to the classroom. Students are “reading the works of the speaker, understanding the context and writing about it,” Calkins says. The free lecture series also is a valuable way for the college to connect with the community and bring people to campus, Thompson says. A lecture series might seem a bit old school. It’s so easy to access video talks and presentations by well-known people online. But Thompson says it’s a much different experience to hear someone in person – to be in the same room, listen to readings, hear a different perspective and have a chance to ask questions face-to-face. “Hearing someone speak is like hearing live music. It’s human being to human being,” he says. • Laura Christman is a freelance writer in Redding with a degree from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and a long career in newspaper journalism. Contact her at laurachristman14@gmail.com.
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Photo by Madeline Whitehead
Talk and readings by author Colson Whitehead 7 pm October 16, free admission Shasta College Theatre, 11555 Old Oregon Trail, Redding Presented by The Community Speaker Series
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SHOWTIME
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BY AARON WILLIAMS
A DIAMOND RESTORED A H I STO R I CA L D O C U M E N TA R Y O F T H E C A S C A D E T H E AT R E THE CASCADE THEATRE’S neon marquee paints a gorgeous picture in downtown Redding’s heart. All lit up, the beautifully restored gem is a beacon for concert and theater-goers and example of how a civic-minded campaign saved the historic landmark that had fallen into disrepair. “Curtain Up, The Life and Rebirth of the Cascade Theatre,” a new documentary premiering in September, tells the riches-to-rags-to-riches tale of how the 1930s Art Deco palace fell into disrepair, was ultimately saved and how it serves as an example for other communities looking to salvage their history. Written by Jessica Weichman and directed by Charley Williams, “Curtain Up” focuses on the Jefferson Public Radio’s painstaking restoration of the Cascade, but also dives back into the opening of the magnificent theater and its descent to becoming a four-screen movie theater. The roughly hour-long film is timed to coincide with the 15th anniversary of the Cascade’s 2004 restoration. The free showing is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 22 at 6 pm. 4 continued on page 60
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Photos courtesy of Shasta Historical Society
“It’s really informative for anyone in the community,” says Jana Pulcini-Leard, producer and artistic director for Jefferson Live! “It’s quite an eye-opener to see how huge of a project it was. It’s also sweet and delivers emotional testimonials.” Williams, the video producer and Shasta Historical Society board member, says these projects are important for preserving a piece of the area’s history. “This is one of those historical stories we want to tell,” Williams says, adding that much of the archival footage was at a point where digitizing it was also necessary to save the older mediums. “This is also a way to keep much of that history alive.” Screenwriter Weichman, who wrote the previous four “A Cascade Christmas” scripts, says the heart of the story is how the community stepped up to save its theater. “Without their support, the Cascade never would’ve been revamped and restored,” she says. “Redding has a lot of things to be proud of, and the Cascade certainly is one of those.” The documentary begins at the Cascade’s low point and turns from what Weichman called an “inciting incident” of how JPR wanted to expand and ultimately help restore the iconic theater. “They were brought together by circumstance,” she says. Sifting through all the film, interviews and even pictures brought in through a community outreach over the past year proved daunting at
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Native American Day - September 28, 2018
In 1968, Governor Ronald Reagan signed a resolution calling for a holiday called American Indian Day, to be held the Fourth Friday in September. In 1998, the California Assembly passed AB 1953, which made Native American Day an official state holiday, observed annually on the fourth Friday in September. Native Americans are the descendants of the aboriginal, indigenous, native people who were the original inhabitants of the United States. Native American Day aims to highlight the relationship between the United States government and the Native American governments, as well as honor the achievements and contributions of Native Americans to the US. Native Americans have made distinct and significant contributions to the United States and the rest of the world in many fields, including agriculture, medicine, music, language, and art. Throughout history, Native Americans have distinguished themselves as inventors, entrepreneurs, spiritual leaders, as well as scholars. For thousands of years, dozens of Native American tribes settled throughout the Sacramento region and lived off the abundant resources
of Northern California. Long before the Gold Rush, tribes such as the Miwok, Yahi, Patwin and Maidu prospered along the rivers and in the lush mountains of the Sierra Nevada. These California Elders are the original founding fathers of our region. Honor the rich history of Northern California’s Native Americans by observing September 28t, 2018. The Nisenan Maidu tribe inhabited the Sierra Nevada along the Feather and American Rivers for 3,000 years. An ancient tribal village has been preserved in Roseville and is now the Maidu Museum and Historic Site. Visitors can view petroglyphs, bedrock mortars, wetlands and indigenous wildlife. The Maidu Indian Museum features interactive exhibits, tools, toys and baskets. The museum is currently showcasing artwork depicting Maidu legends and history by Frank Day and Jeremy Peconom, of the lives and culture of the people that came before us. The Sacramento area offers a variety of ways to learn about Native American Tribes. If you are in Sacramento Area stop by and check out the Maidu Museum & Historic Site, you won’t be disappointed.
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times, but both Williams and Weichman say it showed how invested the community was in the Cascade Theatre. “If you have a downtown block and business is going well,” Weichman says, “it’s likely a historic building is contributing to the excitement of the area.” Williams said they had difficulty finding footage of the restoration, but still photos of the work, combined with interviews from people like architect James Theimer and Ray Kassis—whose father worked at the theater when it first opened—were used as sources. “I’ve been in Redding since 1952 and there was a lot about the Cascade that I learned,” Williams says. • “Curtain Up, The Life and Rebirth of the Cascade Theatre” Saturday, Sept. 22, 6 pm • Free Cascade Theatre, 1731 Market St., Redding
Aaron Williams is the former sports editor at the Record Searchlight. He has coached youth and high school sports for the past decade and coaches freshman football at Shasta High School. He enjoys spending time golfing or hiking with his girlfriend Michelle and their mastiff, Maui.
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GOOD TIMES
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BY JON LEWIS
En Garde T H E A R T A N D S K I L L O F F E N C I N G I N T H E N O R T H S TAT E MILES MINER was drawn to the sport of fencing after reading “The Count of Monte Cristo” and watching “Pirates of the Caribbean” and “Star Wars” movies. The University Preparatory School sophomore quickly learned there is less Hollywood flair and much more concentration involved in sword fighting. “It’s much more of a mind game … trying to predict your opponent’s mind and anticipate their moves,” the 15-year-old says. “It’s a real engaging sport.” So much of fencing involves the brain that veteran instructor John Martin Streeby likens it to “physical chess.” It’s a thinking man’s game, agrees fellow fencer Michel Small, but it takes considerable effort, too. “There’s a fair amount of athletic talent involved. It’s a very quick sport with fine movements. It’s very demanding physically if you’re fencing somebody who is good. It’s pretty intense. I remember losing 12 pounds in a day,” says Small, a parttime English instructor at Shasta College. Small, 73, picked up the sport as a teen, encouraged by his father, who was trained in fencing in his native France. Small started training in San Francisco, under an instructor
who coached the Hungarian Olympic sabre team, and went on to excel at University of California, Berkeley. After teaching at Pennsylvania State College for 10 years, Small moved to Redding to take a teaching position at Shasta College and resumed fencing when he connected with Streeby, who has been leading a fencing class through Redding Parks and Recreation for the past 10 years. Streeby, 67, says one of the benefits of fencing is its enduring nature. “It’s something you can do long-term. It’s a thinking sport. You have to think on your feet. It improves balance and speed. A lot of fencing is kind of a mind game in the way you present your attack. You can make your opponent do what you want him to do without him knowing it. It’s a skill well worth developing.” Streeby, a metal sculptor by trade, started fencing in 1973 while attending Iowa State University and returned to the sport in the late 1980s when he moved to Albuquerque, N.M. The fencing club was run by noted fencer John Helmick and later by Andy Shaw, an alternate on the United States’ fencing team in the 1968 Olympics.4 continued on page 64
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“When he took over, fencers “You want to set it up so you’re started coming out of the opponent is off-guard while woodwork… guys from Princeton, making your touch. It’s all about Yale. There was always one big distance, timing and deception. tournament a year that drew The foil and sabre are more Photo courtesy of John Martin Streeby fencers from Colorado, Utah, dependent on speed and Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. athleticism; the epee is based We’d all fence at their tournaments, more on strategy and athleticism,” too. It wasn’t unusual to have Streeby says. 100 fencers at a tournament,” Claire Rogers, a senior at U Streeby says. Prep, has been studying fencing Fencing evolved from the with Streeby since spring 2017 period in the Middle Ages when and she feels she’s evenly matched, gunpowder was invented and even though a majority of the knights, wielding broadswords, students are male. “Some of the began to realize their heavy armor people I’ve fenced are physically was not doing them much good. stronger than me, but it doesn’t Streeby says knights began wearing come down to strength that often. less armor and by the 14th century It’s more strategy and knowing had started using rapiers, a faster what you’re doing, the routine Photo by TA Schmidt and lighter weapon. and the move you need to do. New weapons meant new “I feel there’s enough strategy instruction, and schools were and brainwork to make it really established with the bulk of interesting. I find it really enjoyable. formal training centered in France It’s a challenge to think in a after starts in Spain and Italy. The different way than I usually do.” foil, the lightest of the three Rogers, 16, hopes to continue fencing weapons, was the primary fencing in college and notes that teaching sword. her first choice, UC Davis, has a In matches using the foil, fencing club. scoring “touches” are recorded “It’s great fun,” Streeby says. when the tip of the foil strikes an “Everybody has seen some fencing opponent on the torso or back. in a movie somewhere and With the epee, a slower and larger everybody likes to get in there weapon, the entire body is fair and start swinging. I think they game for touches. The third like the action and they like the Photo courtesy of John Martin Streeby weapon, the sabre, is modeled movements because they are after the cavalry weapon and is the fastest of the three. graceful and athletic. And they like the history behind the Touches can be scored anywhere above the waist; cutting or sport, the heroics and the Napoleonic stuff.” • slashing touches with the side of the blade are legal. Streeby fences with an epee, but primarily teaches with the For information on fencing classes, visit foil. “The epee is a little heavy for kids and you can learn all www.cityofredding.org/departments/parks-and-recreation the footwork from foil,” he says. “We work on the footwork or call (530) 225-4095. and bladework and over time you become proficient at those and it becomes second nature.” Beginners start with non-electric weapons and bouts are Jon Lewis is a Redding-based writer with 37 years of experience. A longtime San Francisco Giants fan, his interests include golf, judged by a floor referee. In tournaments, touches are scored fishing and sharing stories about people, places and things. He electronically using a system of cords, a metal mesh vest and can be reached at jonpaullewis@gmail.com. sensors on the tip of the weapon.
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INTEREST
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BY CHRISTY MILAN
N AV I G AT I N G T E E N AG E D R I V I N G PUTTING THE CAR in park, the air released from my lungs like a deflated balloon. We had made it safely back to the spot where we began our training session. I was teaching my teenager to drive and our nerves were a little frayed. It made me wonder how other parents dealt with this situation. After all, driving is a coming of age – or as I was often reminded by my mother, “Driving is a privilege.” It is both. After years of experience behind the wheel and encountering all kinds of drivers, I have come to a conclusion: We all could be better drivers. Whether you are experienced or a new driver, the act can be daunting. The misuse (or non-use) of a turn signal makes you wonder if the driver knows a flashy light lets others know what his/her plans are. Mix this in with the statistics of cell phone use among drivers and it becomes a hard road to travel. The National Safety Council reports that one in four accidents in the United States is caused by texting and driving. So how do you make sure your teen is not the bad driver on the road? How do you both overcome the anxiety? Chances are your teen and you are nervous, anxious and a little fearful. Drivers’ education can take some pressure off you and your teenager. Jon Pecaut, president of Shasta Driving School, offered these tips: “The best drivers use their eyes effectively. Look ahead, check mirrors frequently, always keep eyes moving and scanning for potential hazards.” His advice for parents? “Be familiar with the area you’re going to practice in. Speak calmly – your anxiety will rub off on your teen. When an issue occurs, pull over and park to discuss what just happened. “Driving safely requires 100 percent of your attention 100 percent of the time,” Pecaut continues. Even a conversation with a passenger can be a distraction.4 continued on page 68
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“The one thing that unites all human beings, regardless of age, gender, religion, economic status, or ethnic background, is that, deep down inside, we all believe that we are above-average drivers.” ~ Dave Barry
TEENAGE DRIVERS AHEAD
CAUTION Here are some other helpful tips when your teen is learning to drive: • Thoroughly read the Department of Motor Vehicles handbook, keep a copy in the glove box and refer back to it when needed. • Wear proper fitting shoes. Many drivers, new and experienced, have accidentally hit the gas instead of the brake. • Slow for the cone zone. Construction and highway maintenance requires workers to be in harm’s way. Slow down for these areas and allow proper time for your travels. • Set an example of good driving. Be sure to pull over in a safe place if you have to text or call. Be aware of your own time limits and leave early. This experience with your teen can be exciting and fun with the proper planning and communication. •
Christy Milan, with a passion for storytelling and a love of words, has been pursuing her dream that encompass adventure and community connections. She grew up in the North State and loves her home. She adores the outdoors which brings her inspiration and recharges her batteries. She is avid about holistic health. She has written on a variety of topics. You can connect with her at christyswordcraft@gmail.com.
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SHOWTIME
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BY PHIL RESER
IT ALWAYS COMES DOWN TO THE
Music
G R A H A M N A S H TO P L AY I N R E D D I N G
Life is not perfect. It never will be. You just have to make the very best of it, and you have to open your heart to what the world can show you; and sometimes it's terrifying, and sometimes it's incredibly beautiful, and I'll take both.” - Graham Nash IN A CAREER that spans more than 50 years, musician Graham Nash helped shape the foundation of modern rock. It started with his early inventive efforts with the Hollies, which found him composing melodies inspired by Buddy Holly with the harmonies of the Everly Brothers, and basically redefining the term “folk rock” via Crosby, Stills, Nash and (sometimes) Young. Nash can claim several distinctive honors attained as a result of individual efforts. In 2010, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in recognition of his services to music and charity. He also holds four honorary degrees,4 continued on page 72
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Photos by Amy Grantham
including music honors from the University of Salford in Manchester, England, and a doctorate in fine arts from Lesley University in Cambridge, Mass. In 2013, Nash released his autobiography “Wild Tales,” a look back at his remarkable career and the music that defined a generation. He writes about his lower-class childhood in post-war England, and his early days in the British Invasion group The Hollies; becoming the lover and muse of Joni Mitchell; reaching superstardom with Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young; and his enduring career as a solo musician and political activist. Nash has valuable insights into a world and time he experienced at its epicenter, along with anecdotes from sharing time with the Beatles, the Stones, Hendrix, Case Elliot, Dylan and other rock luminaries. Towering above virtually everything that Nash has accomplished stands the litany of songs that he has written and introduced to the soundtrack of the past half-century. He’s written more than 200 songs, including hits “Carrie Anne,” “On A Carousel,” “Simple Man,” “Our House,” “Marrakesh Express” and “Teach Your Children.” “I was trained in my time with the Hollies to write two-and-a-halfminute songs to play right before the news. We knew how to make hit records; we knew how to create music you couldn’t forget after you heard it twice. But the lyrics were a little juvenile, a little teenager. But when I came to America and started hanging out with David Crosby and Stephen Stills and Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, my songwriting changed. I realized that if I took the melodic ideas that I’d learned with the Hollies and brought more decent lyrics to those changes, we had a better song.” 72
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Nash’s first solo album in 14 years, “This Path Tonight,” was released in 2016. Leading up to that, he produced 16 CDs and played 400 shows, “but ‘This Path Tonight’ came out of chaos in my personal life.” On the album, he explores his emotional journey in a set of songs co-written with Shane Fontayne, former guitarist for CSN, who also served as producer. On the gently fingerpicked “Myself at Last,” one of the album’s most poignant tracks, Nash ponders the question, “Is my future just my past?” In the closing “Encore,” he wonders, “What are you gonna do when the applause is all over / And you can’t turn your back on what you face?” Nash is also an internationally renowned photographer and visual artist. His honors include the New York Institute of Technology’s Arts & Technology Medal and Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters and the Hollywood Film Festival’s inaugural Hollywood Visionary Cyber Award. His work is collected in the book “Eye to Eye: Photographs.” “I work feverishly in all forms of media: acrylics, stone, linoleum cuts, lithography, collage, a variety of printmaking, and of course, inkjet art. To this day, a camera is never far from my reach. I get such a unique perspective looking at the world through a lens, an outlook that has captivated me all of my life. An enormous gift, being able to look at things in a different way, simply, imaginatively, magically, with open eyes. It taught me to become more aware of my surroundings, and to see the beauty that exists around us all the time.” • Graham Nash Trio, October 3 Cascade Theatre, Redding
Phil Reser has written stories on major American rock and music acts for newspapers, magazines and radio stations since receiving his journalism degree from San Francisco State University. His media contributions include the New York Times, San Francisco Examiner, Chico Enterprise-Record, KCHO & KFPR Public Radio, Blues Revue and Rolling Stone magazines.
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BY ERIC CALDWELL
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
LASSEN PEAK AND MANZANITA LAKE
Eric Caldwell was born and raised in the Redding area and is passionate about capturing the natural beauty that surrounds us. He is self-taught and takes great pride in the details. Eric loves the challenges that photography presents, and the opportunity to show off our beautiful neck of the woods. View more of his work at www.facebook.com/Caldwell.Photography.530.
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Congratulations to the first graduating class of Phoenix Charter Academy Phoenix Charter Academy is a no tuition, WASC accredited leading provider in K-12 education. We facilitate a blended independent study model based on a personalized learning platform. Now enrolling for 2018-19
Phoenix Charter Academy Let us partner with YOU to personalize YOUR child’s education. • Quality Independent Study Program • Enriching Blended Model • Tutoring, Including Reading, Writing & Math • Shasta College Courses • A-G Courses Available • Computer-Based Instruction & Tutorials • Vendor Course Electives Available
• Robotics • LEGO® Creative Design • Environmental Education • Turtle Bay Docent Programs • A Personalized Learning K-12 Charter School
(530) 222-9275 • www.ourpca.org 2195 Larkspur Ln., Ste. 100, Redding
KARASTEWARTPHOTOGRAPHY.COM 530.917.0222
BILLY AND PATRICK
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BY PATRICK JOHN
See You in September D I D YO U K N O W T H E S E T H I N G S A B O U T S E P T E M B E R ? SEPTEMBER IS HERE, and we’re going to have some fun with it! The kids are back in school, daylight hours are diminishing, it’s getting cooler, and we’re ready for a Full Corn Moon. All 12 months have something special, but September is filled with interesting bits and pieces.
-Aurora Borealis on your bucket list? Late September is a peak travel time to areas famous for viewing the Northern Lights. The Aurora Borealis season officially kicks off with the Autumnal Equinox. Best places for an amazing sky show. Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Western Canada.
-The Full Corn Moon arrives Saturday, September 24 and this year, it’s also a Harvest Moon. The corn naming reference comes from Native American tribes and the time that corn was ready to be picked. As for the Harvest Moon, it is the full moon closest to the September 22 Autumnal Equinox. Sometimes that full moon is in October, but this year the two are forced to share a name and date.
-Reset your sundial on the Autumnal Equinox, for on this day the sun rises at true due east and sets due west. It’s just a little bit off the rest of the year. -See if you can find anything in the British history books between September 3 and September 13 in the year 1752. You won’t be able to, because those days didn’t exist. Britain decided to switch from the Julian calendar to the Gregorian calendar, and that resulted in a total loss of 11 days. The calendar jumped from September 3 directly to the 14th of the month! -Stonehenge is hopping. The Druids gather around the circle at Stonehenge to watch the equinox sunrise. Even more spectators gather to watch the Druids celebrate harvest and prepare for the impending weather change.
-Raise your hand if you’ve ever had a mooncake. No, not a Moonpie, a mooncake. The Chinese and other Asian cultures celebrate the Moon Festival on the day of the Harvest Moon. Tradition includes ample amounts of mooncakes, small round decorative pastries often filled with egg or fruits. Children also watch the moon closely, as the fairy living inside should be coming out to dance on the surface of the moon. -If you’re in Chichen Itza, Mexico, look toward the main Mayan pyramid. You’ll see the sun create a giant sun snake slithering down the front of the pyramid. •
Patrick John has been working the radio airwaves in Redding for 22 years as co-host of Billy & Patrick Mornings. He is a huge animal lover, and has two beautiful rescue dogs. You can hear him weekdays from 6-10am on Q97.
“We knowwe withllatwander in Sept e mber, t h rough thWe e warm wiwillndswelcome of summer’summer’ s wreckage. s ghos t . ” Henry Rollins SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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WHAT’S COOKIN’
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BY LANA GRANFORS | PHOTOS: KARA STEWART
recipe SEPTEMBER AUGUST 2018 2018
SUMMER DONNA’S STRAWBERRY FROZEN STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE DESSERT SERVES SERVES 8 -810 Last month, With the availability we featured of fresh, fresh juicy strawberries. strawberries, This month, this recipe it’s is a great frozen. Insummer this recipe, dessert. frozenThe strawberries shortcakesleave havelittle a dry chunks texture in anddessert. the are perfect Thisfor is soaking so yummy upand the topping. tastes really Delicious light! with just theOur strawberry contributor topping, thisadding montha big andscoop my dear of vanilla friend,iceDonna cream takes this dessert tohas Sullivan-Patterson, a whole had this new recipe level.forWhichever more than way 40 years you choose, – she can’t these remember will be awhere hit! Make she found extra shortcakes it but her family and freeze still themfor asks foritlater. whenEnjoy! they visit. I’m sure yours will, too. Enjoy!
CRUST INGREDIENTS: STRAWBERRY FILLING/TOPPING INGREDIENTS: 1⁄22 cup pintsbutter, ripe strawberries, melted well-rinsed, hulled and 1⁄4 cut cupin packed half orbrown quarters, sugar depending on size 1⁄32 cup chopped sugar walnuts 21 cup T lemon flourjuice SWEET WHIPPED CREAM INGREDIENTS: 1 1⁄2 cups FILLING INGREDIENTS: heavy whipping cream 2 egg T sugar whites 1 large tsp. vanilla package (12- to 15-oz.) frozen strawberries, or about 3 cups of fresh frozen whole large berries SHORTCAKE 1 T lemonINGREDIENTS: juice 2 tsp. cupsvanilla all purpose flour 1⁄41 cup white use a little less if you want) sugar, sugar plus 4(you tsp, can divided 21 pint 1⁄ tsp. baking of heavy powder whipping cream, whipped to firm peaks 1⁄2 (shortcut tsp. baking– 1soda small container of frozen whipped cream) 1⁄4 tsp. salt 1⁄2 cup cold unsalted butter, cubed 1 cup sour cream 1⁄4 cup milk 1 T orange zest
ARE YOU THE NEXT JULIA CHILD? Want your recipe made by our own “What’s Cookin’” Lana Granfors and featured in Enjoy ARE YOU THE NEXT JULIA CHILD? Magazine? We’ll be choosing one recipe from Want recipe made by our own “What’s theseyour categories for Lana to make. Submit Cookin’” Lanato Granfors and featured in Enjoy your recipes lana@enjoymagazine.net. Magazine? We’ll be choosing one recipe from these categories forfavorites Lana to- make, so submit1 NOV: Thanksgiving Due September your DEC:recipes Holidaynow! Favorites - Due October 1 NOV: Thanksgiving favorites - Due September 1 DEC: Holiday Favorites - Due October 1 78
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER AUGUST 20182018
CRUST DIRECTIONS: STEP 1: Mix all ingredients together and spread on a cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally until golden brown. Put two-thirds of this mixture in the bottom of a lightly greased 9x12-inch baking dish. Keep the remaining one-third for the top of the dessert.
FILLING DIRECTIONS: STEP 1: Put the egg whites, frozen strawberries, lemon juice, vanilla and sugar in a large mixer bowl and mix at medium speed until the mixture rises to the top of the bowl (almost overflowing) for 15-20 minutes, depending on your mixer. DO NOT cut beating time. Fold in whipped cream and pour over the crust. Sprinkle with the remaining nut mixture and cover with plastic wrap and then foil, and freeze until firm, for at least 6 hours or overnight. Remove when ready to cut and serve.
Lana Granfors has resided in Redding since moving here from Texas in 1975. She devotes time to her passions: family, travel, gardening and cooking. A self-taught cook, her recipes are created with an emphasis on fresh ingredients, ease of preparation and of course, flavor.
PREP TIME: 15 - 20 minutes BAKE TIME: 20 minutes TOTAL TIME: 35 - 40 minutes plus freezing time
Photo by Kara Stewart
SEPTEMBER 2018 www.EnjoyMagazine.net
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Lake Shasta Dinner Cruises
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CALENDAR
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SEPTEMBER 2018
calendar S E PT E M B E R 2 0 1 8
FROM FOOD TO FUN, SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE TO ENJOY
anderson
September 3, 13, 20, 27 • Anderson Storytime, Anderson Library, 3200 W. Center St., 3:30-4:30pm, www.shastalibraries.org September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Summer River Jam, Anderson River Park Amphitheater, 2800 Rupert Road, 5pm, www.andersonchamberofcommerce.com September 6, 13, 20, 27 • Anderson Farmers Market, Shasta Outlets, 1699 Hwy. 273, 7:30am-noon, www.healthyshasta.org September 8 • Trivia Game Night to benefit the Cottonwood Community Library, Sacred Heart Parish Hall, 3141 St. Stephen’s Drive, 5-10pm, (530) 347-4818, www.redbluffchamber.com September 8-9 • Shasta Renaissance and Fantasy Faire 2018, Shasta District Fairgrounds, 1890 Briggs St., 10am-6pm, www.visitredding.com September 15 • Shasta County Mini Maker Faire, Shasta District Fairgrounds, 1890 Briggs St., 10am-5pm, (530) 638-5468, www.shastacounty.makerfaire.com
15 The Mini Maker Faire celebrates the creativity of Shasta County’s local makers. It is a gathering of fascinating, curious people who enjoy learning and who love sharing what they can do. The faire give these makers a place to showcase their work, while the public comes to enjoy interactive experiences, and connect with like-minded people. Be inspired by the many hobbies, experiments and projects that the makers happily share with you. September 29 • Mister Rogers “It’s You I Like” Cardigan Walk/ Run, Anderson River Park, 2800 Rupert Road, 8:30am-noon, (530) 243-5493 82
www.EnjoyMagazine.net SEPTEMBER 2018
burney
September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Burney Farmers Market, Burney Sporting Goods parking lot, 37427 Hwy. 299 E., 3-6pm, www.healthyshasta.org • Preschool Storytime, Burney Library, 37038 Siskiyou St., 11am-noon, www.shastalibraries.org September 22 • Fall Fling “Burney Under the Big Top,” Burney Veterans Hall, 37392 Hwy. 299, 6-10pm, www.burneychamber.com
chico
September 15 • CASA Superhero Run, Lower Bidwell Park, East 5th Street and Woodland Ave., 7:45am, www.chicochamber.com • Chico Area Recreation and Park District 70th Anniversary Celebration, DeGarmo Park, 199 Leora Ct., 10am-2pm, www.chicochamber.com • 31st Annual Bidwell Park and Chico Creeks Cleanup, check in at Hooker Oak Park or Annie K. Bidwell Parlor, 1928 Manzanita Ave., 9am, www.becnet.org/bidwell-park-clean-up September 22 • 40th Anniversary Stansbury Home Ice Cream Social and Garden Party, Stansbury Home, 307 West 5th St., 4-8pm, www.stansburyhome.org/events • Butte Humane Society 107th Anniversary Gala “Believe - Unleash the Future!,” Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., 1075 East 20th St., 5:30-10pm, www.buttehumane.org/gala
chester
September 8 • 32nd Annual Street Rod Extravaganza, Chester Park, 100 Meadowbrook Loop, 7am-5pm, (530) 258-2562, www.yourarpd.org
cottonwood
September 8 • Cottonwood Hot Rods & Hogs Show ‘n’ Shine, Historic Front St., 9am-2pm, (530) 347-6800, www.facebook.com/groups/hotrodsandhogs
dunsmuir
September 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 • The Lone Ranger, Dunsmuir Brewery Works, 5701 Dunsmuir Ave., 1pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 6, 13, 20, 27 • Dunsmuir Farmers Market, Spruce Street across from the Children’s Park, 4pm-7pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 8 • State of Jefferson Brewfest, Dunsmuir City Park, 4841 Dunsmuir Ave., 1-8pm, www.jeffersonbrewfest.com September 27-30 • Dunsmuir’s 7th Annual Jazz in the Canyon, Multiple Venues Town Wide, Various Times, www.jazzinthecanyon.com
fall river mills
September 15 • Pioneer Day & Craft Fair, Fort Crook Museum, 43030 Fort Crook Ave., 10am-3pm, (530) 336-5110, www.burneychamber.com
hat creek
September 8 • 3rd Annual Hat Creek Beer, Food and Wine Fest, Hat Creek Hereford Ranch RV Park & Campground, 17855 Doty Road, noon-8pm, www.facebook.com/hatcreekfest
lassen volcanic national park
September 8 • Art and Wine of Lassen, Lassen Volcanic National Park, 21820 Lassen National Park Hwy., 11am-5pm, www.nps.gov/lavo/ planyourvisit/special-events September 29 • National Public Lands Day, Lassen Volcanic National Park, 21820 Lassen National Park Hwy., all day free, www.nps.gov/lavo/ planyourvisit/special-events
mad river
September 1-2 • 23rd Annual Ruth Lake Summer Festival, Ruth Rec Campground, 12200 Mad River Road, 9am-5pm, www.visittrinity.com
Featuring an Open House for the City Featuring Tours of the New City Plaza fromNew 1pm-4pm
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 · 7:00 PM 333 Oak Street, Red Bluff, California | 530.529.ARTS | www.statetheatreredbluff.com
GRAPHICS / Nichols, Melburg & Rossetto Architects & Engineers
Then 3pm to 10pm - Clair Engle Park $5 Brisket/Chicken BBQ•Beer & Wine Kids Activities•And More, Including...
Free Live Concert
Featuring Smooth Jazz and Classic Rock with the
CRAIG CHAQUICO
BAND GRAMMY Award® Nominated Smooth Jazz Artist and the Original and Former Lead Guitarist for Jefferson Starship (1974-1985) and Starship (1985-1991) “Find Your Way Back” • “Jane” • “Layin’ It On The Line” Opening: Jonathan Foster (“Reclamation Town”)
Featuring F eaturin rriinwww.cityofshastalake.org ga an nO Open pen H House ouse ffor or tthe New
Sponsored by Downtown Red Bluff Business Association & Tehama County CattleWomen
CONTESTS · ENTERTAINMENT · DANCING · FOOD
BEEF APPETIZERS & BREW TASTING 5–8pm: Tasting at participating Downtown businesses 7–10pm: Tri-tip wraps & beverages available at Cone-Kimball Plaza 7–10pm: Heavy Dose of Blues at Cone-Kimball Plaza
$25 ADVANCE • $30 DAY OF EVENT
Advance tickets available August 13–September 14 at the following businesses:
The Loft • Plum Crazy • Suburban Propane • The Gold Exchange, Red Bluff Red Bluff Chamber • Online at www.redbluffbeefnbrew.com or via PayPal
TICKET PRICE ALSO INCLUDES TRI-TIP WRAP & BEVERAGE
For more information, please call 530-833-9961 or visit www.redbluffbeefnbrew.com
mcarthur
September 1-3 • Inter-Mountain Fair, 44218 A St., noon-10pm, www.inter-mountainfair.com
mccloud
September 14-16 • McCloud Mountain Bluegrass, Hoo Hoo Park, 405 E. Colombero Drive, 10am-10pm, (530) 964-3113, www.mccloudchamber.com
mt. shasta
September 1, 2 • Quilting Around the Mountain, Mount Shasta High School, 710 Everitt Memorial Hwy., 10am-5pm, www.shastalilly.org September 2 • Blackberry Music Festival, Mount Shasta City Park, 1315 Nixon Road, noon-6pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 • Saturday Morning Tea and Clay, Shasta Clayworks, 612 S. Mt. Shasta Blvd., 11am, (530) 925-3792, www.mtshastachamber.com September 2 • Mt. Shasta Tinman Triathlon, Lake Siskiyou, 4239 W A Barr Road, 8:30am-2pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 • Sunday Spinner Potter’s Wheel Class, Shasta Clayworks, 612 South Mt. Shasta Blvd., 11am, (530) 925-3792, www.mtshastachamber.com September 3, 10, 17, 24 • Farmers Market, Downtown Mt. Shasta, 400 block of North Mt. Shasta Blvd., 3:30-6pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 3, 5, 6, 10, 12, 13, 17, 19, 20, 24, 26, 27 • Line Dancing, Mountain Fitness, The Wellness Center Classroom, 633 Lassen Lane, 4pm, (530) 926-3310, www.mtshastachamber.com September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Open Heart Mic, Silk Road Chai Shop, 105 E. Alma St., 7pm, (530) 926-3300, www.mtshastachamber.com September 6, 13, 20, 27 • Ecstatic Dance, Mt. Shasta City Park, Dance Hall, 1315 Nixon Road, 7:30pm, www.mtshastachamber.com September 7, 14, 21, 28 • Pottery and Wine Friday Happy Hour, Shasta Clayworks, 612 S. Mt. Shasta Blvd., 5:30pm, (530) 925-3792, www.mtshastachamber.com
oroville
September 22 • Oroville Salmon Festival, Historic Downtown Oroville, the Salmon Court on the Downtown Levee and the Fish Hatchery, 7am-4pm, www.orovillechamber.com/salmon-festival
palo cedro
September 6, 13, 20, 27 • Palo Cedro 50 Mile Market, Palo Cedro Community Guild, 22037 Old 44 Drive, 3-6pm, www.healthyshasta.org September 8-9 • Palo Cedro Honey Bee Festival, Bishop Quinn Community Center, 21893 Old 44 Drive, 8am, www.palocedrohoneybeefestival.com September 16 • Free Old Time Fiddle Jams, Palo Cedro Community Hall, 22037 Old 44 Drive, 1-4pm, www.northstatefiddlers.com
paradise
September 4, 11, 18, 25 • Line dancing classes, Paradise Elks Lodge, 1100 Elk Lane, 10am and 6:30pm, (530) 872-4563, www.paradisechamber.com September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Open Mikefull, Norton Buffalo Hall, 5704 Chapel Drive, 7pm, (530) 877-4995, www.nortonbuffalohall.com September 6-23 • Theatre on the Ridge presents “Women in Jeopardy!”, 3735 Neal Road, 7:30pm Thursday-Saturday, 2pm Sunday, (530) 877-5760, www.totr.org September 8 • Wheels and Wings, on the runway at Paradise Airport, 4405 Airport Road, 6-10pm, Afternoon Family Fun noon-3pm, www.paradiserotary.com September 8-9 • 25th Annual Days of Living History, Gold Nugget Museum, 502 Pearson Road, 11am-4pm, www.goldnuggetmuseum.com September 11 • Patriot’s Day Car Show, Atria Paradise, 1007 Buschmann Road, 6-8pm, (530) 872-3344, www.paradisechamber.com September 21 • Sojourner’s House on the Ridge sixth annual fundraising dinner, CMA Church, 6491 Clark Road, 5:30-8pm, (530) 872-1162, www.paradisechamber.com September 22 • 9th Annual Dutch Oven Cook-Off, Gold Nugget Museum, 502 Pearson Road, 10am, www.goldnuggetmuseum.com September 28 • A Taste of History, An Evening of Wine, Chocolate, and Music, Gold Nugget Museum, 502 Pearson Road, 6:30-9:30pm, www.goldnuggetmuseum.com September 29 • Day in the Pines, Paradise Elks Lodge, 1100 Elk Lane, 10am-4pm, wwww.paradisechamber.com
Home of 49ers Football
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red bluff
September 1, 2, 7 • Sparrow’s Landing open to the public, 24095 Alden Drive, 9am-4pm, (530) 276-8248 September 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 • Red Bluff Farmers Market, 100 Main St., 8am-12:30pm, www.redbluffchamber.com September 12 • 103rd Annual Chamber Awards Dinner, “South of the Border,” Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 South Jackson St., 5-8pm, www.redbluffchamber.com September 15 • Adobe Day, William B. Ide Adobe State Historic Park, 21659 Adobe Road, 11am-3pm, www.visitredding.com
redding
September 1 • Out of Our Father’s House, Center for Spiritual Living, 1905 Hartnell Ave., 7pm, (530) 221-4849 September 1, 8, 15 • Redding Farmers Market, Redding City Hall, 777 Cypress Ave., 7:30am-noon, www.healthyshasta.org • Gather Marketplace, 1043 State St., 9am-1pm, www.healthyshasta.org • Brewhouse Tour, Wildcard Brewing Company, 9565 Crossroads Drive, 4:30pm, (530) 722-9239 September 2 • Free Old Time Fiddle Jam, Concert and Open Mic, St. James Lutheran Church, 2500 Shasta View Blvd., 1-4pm, www.northstatefiddlers.com September 3 • End of the Summer Carnival, Redding Aquatic Center, 44 Quartz Hill Road, 1-4:30pm, www.visitredding.com September 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 • Turtle Bay Market, Sundial Bridge Parking Lot, 8am-noon, www.healthyshasta.org September 4, 11, 18, 25 • Marilyn Miller Market, Shasta Center, 1700 Churn Creek Road, 7:30am-noon, www.healthyshasta.org September 4-October 6 • North Valley Art League’s 33rd Annual Juried National Show, 48 Quartz Hill Road, 11am-4pm Tuesday-Saturday, www.nval.org September 6, 13 • Redding Chess Club, Matrix Cards and Games, 1185 Hilltop Drive, 6-9pm, www.visitredding.com September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Ultimate Frisbee, Caldwell Park Soccer Field, 58 Quartz Hill Road, 7:30pm, (530) 227-9265 • Midweek Madness, Wildcard Brewing Company, 9565 Crossroads Drive, 2-8pm, (530) 722-9239 September 7 • North Valley Art League’s 33rd Annual Juried National Show - Artist Reception, 48 Quartz Hill Road, 6pm, www.nval.org
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September 7, 14, 21, 28 • Artists on Market, Old City Hall, 1313 Market St., 10am-2pm, www.visitredding.com • Foodie Friday, Wildcard Brewing Co. Tied House, 1321 Butte St., 5-8pm, (530) 722-9239 September 13 • College Quest 2018 College Fair, Simpson University, Grant Student Life Center, 2211 College View Drive, 5-7:30pm September 14 • Fall Fundraising Golf Tournament, Gold Hills Golf Club, 1950 Gold Hills Drive, 8am, (530) 515-3155 • Walk on the Wild Side of Fall, American Cancer Society Discovery Shop, 2961 Churn Creek Road, 10am-6pm, (530) 221-3970 September 15 • Redding Holistic, Psychic and Art and Crafts Fair, Win River Resort and Casino, 2100 Redding Rancheria Road, 10am-4pm, (530) 227-6605 • Wings of Angels, Delaney Valles Memorial 5K Run/Walk, Sundial Bridge, North Plaza, 844 Sundial Bridge Drive, 8:30am, (707) 845-3416, www.aawoa.com September 16 • Princess Tea Party, Mercy Oaks, 100 Mercy Oaks Drive, 10am-noon and 2-4pm, www.princessteapartyredding.com September 17 • Redding Fashion Week Launch Party, Armando’s Gallery House, 1350 Butte St., 7-11pm, (530) 768-1241, www.reddingfashionalliance.org September 18 • Rock the Runway: Model/Designer Workshop, Redding Fashion Alliance, 1698 Market St., (530) 276-0458 September 19 • Redding Fashion Week: Downtown Shopping, A Retail Tour, Redding Fashion Alliance, 1698 Market St., (530) 276-0458 September 20 • Fashion on the Big Screen, Redding Library, 1100 Parkview Ave., 5:30-8pm, (530) 276-0458 September 21 • Redding Fashion Week: Iconic Vintage and Fashion Exhibit, The Atrium at Market Street Promenade, 1670 Market St., 6-9pm, (530) 276-0458 • Haven Art Studio free open house, Cottage Shoppe & Gardens, 1580 Victor Ave., 5-8pm, (530) 953-7997, www.havenartstudio.com September 21, 22 • Paesano Days, Friday, 5-10 pm, Saturday, 10 am -9 pm, South City Park, www.sonsofitaly.com September 22 • Theatrical Performance “April of ‘45,” David Marr Theater, 2200 Eureka Way, 5:30-8pm, (530) 347-9902, www.dlbranch.org
• Fashion Show Gala, The Atrium at Market Street Promenade, 1670 Market St., 5-10pm, (530) 276-0458 • First Day of Fall, American Cancer Society Discovery Shop, 2961 Churn Creek Road, 10am-5pm, (530) 221-3970 • 8th Annual Walk to End Alzheimer’s, Redding Civic Auditorium, 700 Auditorium Drive, 8am, (530) 605-2280, www.redbluffchamber.com • 22nd Annual Redding Beer & Wine Festival, 3-7 pm, Market Street Demonstration Block, www.reddingbeerandwinefestival.com September 29 • Redding Mud Mash Mud Run, Nash Ranch, 10925 Old Oregon Trail, 2-5pm, www.nashranchmudmash.com • Missing in America Project Prime Rib Fundraising Banquet, Senior Citizens Hall, 2290 Benton Drive, doors open at 3pm, dinner at 5pm, (530) 356-3651 • The Shasta Trinity Fly Fishers Club annual banquet, Win-River Casino Event Center, doors open at 4, dinner at 6:30 pm, Call (909) 973-1972 for tickets
shasta lake
September 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 • Shasta Lake Farmers Market, Heritage Roasting Co., 4302 Shasta Dam Blvd., 8am-noon September 29 • A Royal Tea Party, City of Shasta Lake Community Center, 4499 Main St., 11am-4pm, (530) 605-5445
shingletown
September 15 • Stage 44 Players 4th Annual Fundraiser, Stage 44 Players, 33068 Hwy. 44, 2-7pm, (530) 474-4226
weaverville
September 1 • Monthly Art Cruise, historic downtown Weaverville, Main Street., 5-8pm, www.visittrinity.com September 5, 12, 19, 26 • Weaverville Farmers Market, Lowden Park, 230 Washington St., 4-7pm, www.visittrinity.com
weed
September 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 • Distance to the Sun, Mt. Shasta Brewing Co., 360 College Ave., 2pm, www.mtshastachamber.com/events September 4, 11 • Certified Farmers Market, Friendly RV Park, 1800 Black Butte Drive, 4-7pm, www.mtshastachamber.com/events September 4 • Siskiyou County Democrats Meeting, Hi-Lo Cafe, 88 South Weed Blvd., 5:30pm, www.mtshastachamber.com/events
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September 7, 14, 21, 28 • Kevin McDowell, soft acoustic guitar, Mt. Shasta Brewing Co., 360 College Ave., 4:30pm, www.mtshastachamber.com/events
whitmore
September 9 • Community Center Monthly Breakfast, Whitmore Community Center, 30555 Whitmore Road, 8-11am, www.facebook.com /WhitmoreCommunityCenter
yreka
September 1 • Family Fun Carnival and Carousel, Franco American Hotel Museum, 310 West Miner St., 1-5pm, (541) 210-1234 September 15-16 • Sizzlin’ September Car and Motorcycle Show, Siskiyou Golden Fairgrounds, 1712 Fairlane Road, 9am-2pm, www.yrekachamber.com
axiom repertory theatre
www.axreptheatre.com September 20-23, 27-30 • “A Doll’s House, Part 2,” 7:30pm Thursday-Saturday, 2pm Sunday
cascade theatre
www.cascadetheatre.org September 9 • Mat Franco, 7:30pm September 18 • Boz Scaggs, 7:30pm September 28 • Manhattan Short Film Festival, 7:30pm September 29 • The Kingston Trio, 7:30pm
chico state university
www.csuchico.edu/upe/ performance www.csuchico.edu/soa
September 7 • Disney’s “Mulan Jr.,” Laxson Auditorium, 9:30 and 11:30am
September 8 • Chico Voices: Mamuse, Harlen Adams Theatre, 7:30pm September 9 • Mid-Century Modern, Vol. 1, Zingg Recital Hall, 2pm September 15 • Heroic Music for Trumpet and Organ, Harlen Adams Theatre Stage, 7:30pm September 16 • Fei Fei Dong, Zingg Recital Hall, 2pm September 21 • Paula Poundstone, Laxson Auditorium, 7:30pm September 22 • Fall Opera Gala, Candide by Leonard Bernstein, Harlen Adams Theatre, 7:30pm September 25 • Remembering 1968: The 50th Anniversary of a Tumultuous Year, Rowland-Taylor Recital Hall, 7:30pm September 27 • Constitution Day Lecture: Free Speech on Campus, Laxson Auditorium, 6pm
fun run series
www.midniteracing.net September 4 • Sunset Through the Trees, 2.5 mile and 4 mile, Lema Ranch, 800 Shasta View Drive, 7pm September 11 • Sunset Through the Trees, 2 mile and 4.3 mile, Lake Redding Park Pavilion, 2225 Benton Drive, 7pm
redding library
www.shastalibraries.org September 7, 14, 21, 28 • Read and Discover Story Time, Children’s Story Room, 10:30am September 10, 17, 24 • Babies, Books, and Play, Children’s Story Room, 10:30am • Game Night, Children’s Story Room, 4pm September 12 • The Library Book Group, Foundation Meeting Room, 11am
September 15 • Read with Me & Ruff Readers, Children’s Library, 1pm
redding civic auditorium www.reddingcivic.com September 13 • Anjelah Johnson “More of Me,” 8pm September 23 • Benise “Fuego,” 6:30pm September 29-30 • Redd Sun Festival, 4pm
turtle bay
www.turtlebay.org September 1-31 • Parrot Playhouse, 9:30am-5pm MondayFriday, 10:30am-5pm Saturday-Sunday • Aquatic Adventures, 2:30pm September 1-9 • The World’s Largest Dinosaurs, 9am-5pm Monday-Friday, 10am-5pm Saturday-Sunday September 4-9 • Walk on the Wild Side Animal Show, 11am and noon Tuesday-Sunday
riverfront playhouse
www.riverfrontplayhouse.net September 21-23, 28-30 • “Somewhere in Between,” 7:30pm FridaySaturday, 2pm Sunday
schreder planetarium www.shastacoe.org/ planetarium
September 7 • Space Exploration Night: New Horizons; Wonders of the Universe, 7pm September 14 • Ancient Worlds Night: Seven Wonders; Stars of the Pharaohs, 7pm September 28 • Amazing Stars Night: Black Holes; Secrets of the Sun, 7pm
September 22, 2018
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3:00 PM - 7:00 PM at the Market Street Demonstration Block Tickets Available at reddingbeerandwinefestival.com Presented by Viva Downtown and Results Radio
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Our children have witnessed a horrific end to their summer vacation. The Carr Fire caused an overwhelming disruption in our students’ lives due to evacuation, housing evacuees, damage or loss of a home. In addition to the changes in their “home life,” children observed a presence of military uniforms and vehicles from the National Guard, fire engines galore, a dramatic increase in police and highway patrol, airplanes dropping retardant from the sky, and helicopters circling as they filled their snorkels from the Sacramento River. Our youth undoubtedly have questions, fears, and lots of stories to share. Parents, guardians, teachers, and caregivers are encouraged to listen to these stories and answer their questions while encouraging our youth to talk openly about their feelings. As caring adults we also have the responsibility to be vigilant in monitoring the behaviors and demeanor of our children. According to the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, National Association of School Psychologists, and the American School Counselors Association, the following behaviors are likely to be exhibited from school age children following a natural disaster: Preschoolers: thumb sucking, bedwetting, increased clinginess, sleep disturbances, loss of appetite, fear of the dark, a need for reassurance, and developmental regression. Elementary: irritability, aggressiveness, clinginess, nightmares, school avoidance, poor concentration, and withdrawal from friends and activities. Adolescents: sleeping and eating disturbances, agitation, conflicts, physical complaints, poor concentration, withdrawal from friends and activities, increased chance of risky behaviors such as drinking, substance abuse, and self harm. School counselors are trained to teach coping skills, provide crisis counseling, identify students that need more intense counseling, and to make referrals to resources within and outside of the school setting. The partnership between parents/guardians and the school counselor is essential during this difficult time as our community assists our children in their recovery from this tragic and devastating event. If you have questions or concerns about your child, please reach out to your child’s school counselor. If your child’s school doesn’t employ a school counselor, please reach out to the school administrator for an appropriate referral.
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THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO HAS HELPED FIGHT THE CARR FIRE. YOU ARE APPRECIATED BEYOND WORDS. WE WILL WORK TOGETHER ON THE PATH TO REBUILDING.
GIVING BACK
|
BY KIMBERLY BONÉY AND EMILY MIRANDA
THANK YOU! HEROES AMONG US
GRATEFUL. Relieved. Appreciative. Inspired. Those words roll off the tongue with ease in the wake of the devastating Carr Fire that tried, with all its might, to destroy our city. We are infinitely grateful for all of the heroism, hospitality, kindness, compassion and outreach we’ve witnessed in this community during a time of such devastation and loss. We are relieved that the lives of our family members and friends were spared, and that there are homes that stand, solitary yet strong, when many others perished in the fire. We are inspired by the immense kindness and sense of community that shines abundantly in this little jewel we call home. Despite the trauma, the pain, the emptiness and the utter helplessness we experienced, we are thankful. We are especially thankful for the first responders, who faced the danger head on. While they ushered residents safely away from the fire, these superheroes without capes rushed back into it. When they weren’t fighting the burning monster, they were recharging for the next battle. As tired, drained and frustrated as we imagine they were, they still
found it in themselves to smile, engage us all in conversation, acknowledge the devastating losses many of us felt in the wake of the fire, shed tears with us, and put our pieces back together with a hug. What does someone have to be made of to do such a thing? If we had to guess, we’d say it’s equal parts love, courage, selflessness, determination and a deeply rooted desire to protect. To all the nearby and state officials who stepped up at a moment’s notice: your dedication to this community and its safety was a blessing to witness and a sincere comfort to all of us. To know we are in secure, caring, capable hands when crisis hits is a true encouragement. Those who had lived through such horrific circumstances came to the North State to help us navigate the rugged road ahead, offering wisdom, guidance and support along the way. That’s the true definition of a loyal friend. When the dust settled, many local, state and national organizations did their part to restore the affected areas into safe, returnable environments. They repaired downed power lines and cables, risking their own safety to help4 continued on page 92
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safely through their shifts. They watch displaced people to be able to return to for updates on the fire, they mobilize their homes. They secured evacuated and their friends and family, and find ways to fire-ravaged neighborhoods left vulnerable extend a helping hand to those who to crime. Thank you for helping us to regain need it, even through the insurmountable a sense of normalcy after such chaos. worry they feel for the safety of their Local and national journalists, loved ones. photographers and videographers alike Local volunteers gave of their time worked around the clock, often in the Emergency Operations Team Members to cross into danger zones to provide direct line of fire, to help the world see assistance, supplies and restoration to what was happening here. We salute you. WE ARE INSPIRED BY THE IMMENSE families who were desperately struggling Thank you for all you do to keep us safe KINDNESS AND SENSE OF COMMUNITY to cope with loss. How can we ever and well-informed, for being our eyes thank you for giving of yourself in the and our ears and for your dedication to THAT SHINES ABUNDANTLY IN THIS way you did? helping families gain clarity and closure LITTLE JEWEL WE CALL HOME. Not every hero in this story ran when they needed it most. toward the burning monster to save us. As a fire raged within striking distance of Mercy Medical Center Redding, area doctors, nurses and hundreds Some are everyday citizens who fought back by loving those in need of hospital staff at several facilities worked to prepare for a possible fiercely. They scoured their own homes for things they knew their evacuation. They took every measure to keep patients calm, friends, neighbors and complete strangers would need more. They comfortable and well cared for. Through it all, they helped to heal the shopped for clothing, shoes and supplies for people they would never meet. They donated money to those whose homes were destroyed. sick and injured, often ignoring their own fear to protect others. The families of the first responders aren’t on the front lines, but they They cooked meals for weary evacuees who just needed a bit of are heroes just the same. They sacrifice precious time with their loved normalcy. They offered to wash loads of laundry for displaced friends. ones to preserve life and property. Summer vacations, birthdays and They made calls to help those who needed shelter find a home away family functions are only part of what they give up to keep us all from home. They opened their homes to friends and strangers4 continued on page 94 safe from harm. They lose sleep wondering if their heroes made it
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alike. They offered to babysit children and pets as people struggled to put their lives back in order. They stuffed backpacks full of school supplies. Some of them rode into soon-to-be-evacuated areas in empty trucks and trailers to provide safe passage for displaced pets and vulnerable wildlife. Others loaded trucks and trailers filled with clothing, supplies, love and well wishes from friends we’ve never met in counties across the state. Some heroes simply showed up to work on days when everyone else couldn’t be there. They secured their families safely away from the fire, clocked in, and made it their business to show love to each and every person who walked through the door. Knowing that all of us were feeling the levity of the situation, these brave souls went above and beyond to show genuine care and concern for everyone they met. They shared hugs, tears, and heartfelt words with us – ones we will never forget. A myriad of local businesses, schools and churches opened their doors to welcome those displaced with a free hot meal, a discounted or gratis service, financial support and shelter when people were left without a home to go to. The have committed to providing ongoing care for those who need it. What a blessing to have so many step up to show love to this community. Sometimes it’s easy to lose faith in humanity. And then, there are those hard moments that encourage us all to dig deeper, push harder and love more. It’s in those moments that we realize just what we are made of. Love, kindness, compassion and generosity bloom in the darkest moments. Amidst the rubble left in the fire’s wake, there is hope. Not a small sliver or a tiny ray, but a full spectrum of color that not only appeared after the worst of the fire, but in the midst of it. The Carr Fire threatened to destroy this beautiful area and the peace within it. As angry and powerful as it was, it simply didn’t have the strength. It was no match for all of the heroes in uniforms and plain clothes who looked that monster in the eye and said, “Not today.” • Kimberly N. Bonéy, proud wife and mom, is a freelance writer, designer, up-cycler and owner of Herstory Vintage. When she’s not working, she is joyfully wielding jewelry-making tools and paintbrushes in her studio. Antique shops, vintage boutiques, craft stores and bead shops are her happy place. Emily J. Miranda is a freelance writer, designer, and self taught artist. She is a graduate of Simpson University where she earned a bachelor’s degree in communication with an emphasis on business and marketing. In her free time she enjoys writing, painting, sewing, and any projects involving creative insight.
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MORE THAN JUST
ADVERTISING As an advertiser in Enjoy, you’re part of a community of like-minded businesses intent on sharing all that is good about our region. You’re part of a group who has hope for the future of our cities. You believe that you can make a positive impact on the world around you.
Join with us… and help shine a light on the good things! Contact an Enjoy Sales Representative to join the community: 530.246.4687
www.enjoymagazine.net 1475 Placer St. Suite C Downtown Redding