Enjoy Magazine Oct. 2009

Page 1

Northern California Living

www.enjoymagazine.net

October 2009

Enjoy the magazine It’s on the house


Find your balance in nature.

Mobile banking from Tri Counties Bank gives you the freedom to access your accounts from across the street or across the country, right from your mobile device. Stay on the go and on top of your finances. Find online enrollment and more at tricountiesbank.com


Is this you? “I got so tired of making mistakes in my home. Poor choice of paint colors. Poor choice of window treatments. Spending too much for furniture. Then, I discovered Tina’s Interior Design Resources. They told me what color to paint, found the contractors at a reasonable price, and they were reliable! (Now that’s hard to find on your own!) They picked out furniture, carpet and window coverings for me that I know I’ll love for years. I was quite skeptical and untrusting after several bad dealings with other home furnishing stores. When I compared Tina’s prices to the rest, they did have the best prices… just like they said! Buying from Tina’s Interior Design was like buying insurance—insurance that my home would be done right the first time!”

Let’s shake up what you’ve got! A $75.00 one (1) hour consultation in your home which includes a design layout of ways to give your home a Fresh Look. Redding • ShingLetown • Red BLUFF • ChiCo

530.223.1195 | www.interiordesignresources.com B License# 747206 CCIDC Certified Interior Designer


BEAUTIfUL HoME, NICE LoCATIoN Custom 2800+- sq. ft., 4/3 home, ponds Cul-de-sac, large backyard, Rv parking Contact dominic 949-0419 $459,000

SPACIoUS HoME oN GREENBELT 3/2.5, 2157+- sq. ft., wood floors, full length deck Pool, private back yard, Rv parking Contact Lynda 945-7352 $256,500

PALo CEdRo HoME oN 3.21 ACRES 3/2, 1850+- sq. ft., fenced for animals 2-car attached & 1 car detached garage Contact debbie 227-6539 $325,000

vINTAGE CRAfTSMAN BUNGALoW 2/2 full baths, electric, plumbing upgrades Near river, garage, insulated ,www.CalifSt.com Contact dianne 604-2516 $170 ,000

GREAT HoRSE PRoPERTy 3/2, 1769+- sq. ft., open floor plan, vaulted ceilings Level land, tons of privacy, perfect mini ranch Contact Barbara 515-7929 $299,000

10 ACRE RANCHETTE 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 2244+- sq. ft., great room Enormous shop, Shasta & Lassen views Contact Tracey 227-9822 $375,000

“o’BRIEN MoUNTAIN ESTATES” HoMES & LANd Gated community overlooking gorgeous Lake Shasta desirable inventory of custom homes & building sites Contact Alysia 526-3421 $119,500–$780,000

GREAT CENTRAL LoCATIoN 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1867+- sq. ft., crown moulding, Living & family rooms, finished garage, Rv parking Contact Camille 953-6000 $349,000

PRIvATE ENd of THE RoAd SETTING 3/2, 1432+- sq. ft, large open living area w/fireplace Covered patio, detached shop and fenced yard Contact Stephanie 524-6111 $119,900

STUNNING TIERRA oAkS ESTATES 4/3, 3650+- sq. ft., Guiton Pebble Tec pool virtual tour @ www.tirerraoaksestates.info Contact Ron 949-0872 $931,000

2 ACRES IN PALo CEdRo Custom 3/4, 2331+- sq. ft., split floor, granite Large master with large walk-in closet Contact kylie 953-9553 $439,000

Tom Miceli 226.3150

Suyen Leak 941.6869

Stephanie Coley Barbara Crooker 524.6111 515.7929

Ron White 949.0872

dustin foster 515.7186

Laura Baldwin 209.4363

dianne Turney Cassie Gibson-Gyves 604.2516 945.9777

950 Mission de oro drive • Redding, CA 96003 • 530.222.5522 • 888.334.5522


STRENGTH With the real estate market showing strength and momentum, now is the time to seek a great investment. What is a great investment? There are many variables including demand, scarcity and future market conditions. It takes Realtors with vision, experience and patience to help identify and close great opportunities. Contact The Real Estate Group today, to help identify the right opportunity for you.

RANCH STyLE HoME 10+ acres fully fenced for animals Two 24x40 shops, oversized 2 car garage Contact dustin 515-7186 $449,000

NICE REd BLUff LoCATIoN Spacious 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 2585+- sq. ft. home open living area with split floor plan, circular drive Contact Mark 262-5579 $229,000

BEAUTIfUL PALo CEdRo WINERy 3150+- sq. ft., 5/3 bath, 7 acres,3 ponds 1200 sf shop w/winemaking supplies Contact Laura 209-4363 $884,000

BEAUTIfUL HIddEN HILLS SUBdIvISIoN 3/2, 1876+- sq. ft., nice central location dining room, living and family room Contact Brian 515-7899 $299,000

CLovER CREEk vILLAGE 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2268+- sq. ft. Gated, walking trails, views and park Contact kylie 953-9553 $399,000

LARGE SHAdEd LoT 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1728+- sq. ft., privacy Rv pkg, landscaped, www.dustinfoster.com Contact dustin 515-7186 $222,000

Too MANy AMENITIES To LIST! 3 bed + office, 1544+-sq.ft., cozy gazebo area Custom play structure, 8x12 storage building Contact Suyen 941-6869 $228,000

TURNkEy RAvENWood HoME 4/2, 1676+/- sq.ft. home built in 2002 Great cul-de-sac location and Rv parking Contact Robert 351-2751 $269,900

ALMoST 5 ACRES, oNLy 3 yEARS 3/2, 2460+- sq. ft., den, large covered patio double ovens, eating bar, master suite, 3 car gar Contact dominic 949-0619 $369,000

THIS HoME SCREAMS CHARM Custom build 3/2 bath, New backyard landscaping Newer paint & floors, Rv parking Contact Cassie 945-9777 $214,000

CUSToM HoME oN RIvERBENd GoLf CoURSE 2701 +- sq.ft., 3/3, Rv parking, in-ground pool Huge master suite with fireplace Contact Connie 945-4297 $495,000

CLASSy NoRTH REddING HoME 3/2, 1725+- sq. ft., covered patio End of cul-de-sac, split floor plan Contact Cassie 945-9777 $242,000

Mark violetti 262.5579

Robert Elmer 351.2751

Alysia Jantzer 526.3421

Lynda Martz 945.7352

debbie Rullman 227.6539

Tracey Berry 227.9822

dominic diNino kylie dagg-Covington Connie Metcalf 953.9553 945.4297 949.0619

Camille Coulter 953.6000

www.tregonline.com CoMMERCIAL • RESIdENTIAL • CoNdoS • BANk-oWNEd • LANd

Brian Salado 515.7899

5 3 0 . 2 2 2 . 5 5 2 2


no

fitness training redefined

tomorrow You’re at the gym three times a week because that’s what it takes. As Rocky’s trainer said, “There is… NO TOMORROW You give every rep of every set your very best effort because there is…. Owner and Personal trainer, age 48

NO TOMORROW Others use age as an excuse. You use it as an asset. NO TOMORROW You don’t have time for workout socializing, senseless injuries, or ill-conceived routines. Neither do we. At Adamson’s we have the tools, tenacity and experienced trainers to deliver results…TODAY.

Christmas… in OCtOber?!

221-8006 3266 Bechelli Lane (next to Yaks)

Turn heads this holiday season by giving yourself the gift of a lean, toned body with our 10 week, 30 personal training sessions special Offer!

www.adaMsONspeAkpeRfORMaNce.cOm


Complete Medical and Surgical Eye Care Cataract Surgery Premium Lens Options Crystalens HD ReSTOR ReZoom Tecnis Multifocal Astigmatism correction included Resume normal activities in 1-2 days On-site surgery center

Macular Degeneration Avastin Lucentis Kenalog

Diabetes & Glaucoma Latest diagnostic testing Laser treatment

Refractive Surgery LASlK

distance or monovision correction

Medicare assignment accepted

CK

No referral needed

Lens Replacement

near (reading) vision correction near, intermediate & distance correction

Michael A. Sumsion, M.D. Board Certified Ophthalmologist Mayo Clinic Internship & Residency Redding office since 1990

Here’s what our patients have to say “I’ve never been treated so well” E. Lichtman “Dr. Sumsion is compassionate and understanding” J. Sator “I appreciated all of the information given to me” J. Kirkpatrick “If you had a school on how to treat patients, you would make a fortune“ Y. Borlo “The staff is very well trained and concerned with the patient’s comfort” N. Livingston “I am continuously impressed with the professional attitude and responsibility people on the staff display” R. Haggard

Michael A. Sumsion, M.D.

530-244-2273

2801 Park Marina Drive Redding, CA 96001



50

76

contents

OCTOBER ARTS

63 | Historical Homestead

Bruno Tomaino Turns One Man’s Junk into Beautiful Art

The Regans’ Weaverville Victorian Home

27 | THE SKINNY ON SKINCARE Easy Steps for Gorgeous Skin

BUSINESS 45 | GOLDEN TOUCH

Photo By Kara Stewart Special thanks to EMS Home Furnishings

LIVING ROOM

15 | ONE MAN’S TREASURES

BEAUTY

On the Cover

15

45

NATURE HIKE 23 | FALL MIGRANTS Birding the Sacramento River Bend Area

PROFILE 22 | CHEF De CUISINE Ché Stedman, Executive Chef of Moonstone Bistro

Tehama County’s Pacific Sun Gourmet

38 | CREAM OF THE CROP

COMMUNITY

The Fitzpatricks and How They Helped Build Redding

32 | HIP HOP Shop Hop for the Holidays

SPOTLIGHT

EVENTS

50 | STEEL IN BUSINESS

17 | RIDE ON

80 Years of Gerlinger Steel

Big Bike Weekend Rolls into the Redding Convention Center

IN EVERY ISSUE

33 | FIDDLE FABULOUS

GOTCHA’ - Top 10 Enjoy Magazine Covers

55 | Top 10

Western Open Fiddle Championships

57 | 5 for $25

FEATURED ART HOP ARTIST

5 Things to Do in the North State for $25 or Less

41 | Pangia Power Pangia Performs at Everyday Fitness

HEALTH 25 | Cutting-Edge & Caring

60 | DINING GUIDE Great Places To Eat In The North State

61 | WHAT’S COOKIN’ Cookin’ Texas Style

71 | Calendar of Events

Redding’s North Valley Breast Clinic

What’s Happening in the North State

INTEREST

76 | Giving Back

29 | STAR STRUCK

DREAM A LITTLE DREAM - Marquis Shasta Health Care

The Stars are Out at the Schreder Planetarium

53 | GIANT’S PALACE Symbol Rocks at Castle Crags

October 2009 Enjoy 8


A F O E R E PREMI TACULAR C E P S R E M SUM

LAWN SIMPSON UNIVERSITY DUSK WITH A CAUSE! D MOVIE STARTS AT T EL AN RR UI PM SQ 00 R 7: OU AT ” S CK N CIPIEN ING BEGI FEATURING “FLI TIME OPEN SEAT MONTHLY CHARITY RE 25 , R 18 OU , T 11 OR 4, PP SU R BE TO ED OD EATS DATES SEPTEM TIONS ARE ENCOURAG CONCESSIONS FOR GO NA DO BE L IL … W EE E FR ER E TH AR ET N’T FORG COST MOVIES AIRS & BLANKETS DO CH , KS AC SN , OD FO G PICNIC R LOCATION MONTH OF SEPTEMBE

BRIN


Yvonne Mazzotta publisher Sweet treats, bountiful harvests and birthday candles are some of the things that make October so special to us. It’s been three years since we introduced ourselves to you, and we are so humbled by how you have welcomed us into your lives. We’ve had the privilege of introducing you to some of the North State’s most delightful places, inspirational people and hidden treasures, and in return, you have embraced us like we could have never imagined three years ago. We’re so proud of our writers, photographers and designers who sprinkle their magic onto these pages, and to the advertisers who invest their hard-earned dollars with us (the testimonials on the back cover are proof positive that they believe in us). Most of all, we’re grateful to you – our loyal readers – without whom our dream could have never left our computer screens. If you’ve become engrossed in our pages, chatted with us at a community event, voted in a Top 10 contest or shopped at one of our advertisers’ businesses, you have been part of Enjoy Magazine’s success during these first three years. We can’t thank you enough.

Michelle Adams publisher Ronda Ball managing editor Matt Briner art director Amy Holtzen graphic designer Kerri Regan copy editor James Mazzotta advertising sales representative/ photography/new business developer Michael O’Brien advertising sales representative Casey Beck advertising sales representative Debe Hopkins advertising sales representative Britanie Stratton agency account manager 1905 Park Marina Dr. Redding, CA 96001

Kerri Regan not pictured

And do we have a treat for you! If you fancy yourself a photographer, you could win the opportunity to have your art showcased on 20,000 copies of our favorite magazine. Our first-ever cover contest challenges you to enter your finest work for the chance to win some amazing prizes, including a $250 Gift Certificate from Crown Camera and a oneof-a-kind etching of your photograph, donated by our friends at Infinite Designs. And the winning shot will grace the cover of Enjoy sometime in 2010. We’ll also present our four runners up with some impressive prizes. Check our website www.enjoymagazine.net for the fine print, and then go out and get creative! But before you do, we invite you to sit back, relax and enjoy what is the highlight of our month – flipping through these pages and getting to know our North State a little bit better. On our birthday and always, it’s on the house!

Phone 530.246.4687 Fax 530.246.2434 Email General/Sales and Advertising Info info@enjoymagazine.net

www.enjoymagazine.net

© 2009 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 sincerest 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 * Correction: The Weed Bakery is co-owned by Mike and Margie Michelon and Marlena and Kevin Shaffer. The baker, Calvin Hocker, uses the 100 year old machinery and the process is done by hand.

influenced by advertising.

October 2009 Enjoy 10


ADVERTISEMENT

“Last Year over 350,000 people died from the same cause…” Dear Friend It’s hard to believe, I know, but it’ true. Last year, more Americans were killed by prescription drugs than by guns, AIDS, suicides and terrorists combined… But we will get to that in a minute. Ten years ago something happened to me that changed my life forever. A long time family friend called and told me she had terrible pain shooting down her leg, not to mention headaches so bad she had to take eight Advil a day just to make it through work and she was beginning to have digestive trouble (probably due to all the Advil). After I did an examination and took some films, I adjusted her spine and put her on a corrective care plan. Immediately things began to happen. The pain in her leg was gone and within a few weeks she wasn’t having the headaches. And since Advil was a thing of the past, Mexican food was back. But even more amazing was her cat allergies that had bothered her since childhood seemed to vanish and she hadn’t used an inhaler for symptoms of asthma in years! She could now live her life without the limits of pain and sickness. I say this experienced changed my life because this wonderful friend became my wife and mother of my children. Seeing the difference those simple, specific adjustments made in her life has made me confident and passionate in my profession which is chiropractic. Now as for my children, Kennedy, Madison, and Patrick, they were adjusted within the first hour of birth. They obviously didn’t complain about neck pain or back pain, I adjusted them to keep them healthy…as with all the hundreds of children I care for in my office. You see, it’s not normal for kids to get ear infections, asthma, allergies or a number of other illnesses we see clear up in my office everyday. When the nervous system is working correctly, your internal resistance and healing powers are enhanced. A healthy family does not rely on medication to make them well. My family does not take medication to seek health and we don’t have a “medicine chest” in our home. Due to years of advertising saturation from the pharmaceutical companies, most Americans seek health from outside-in and most families have a “medicine chest” filled with an average of 16 different medications. In an average year, the World Health Organization (WHO) reports over 2.2 million US hospital patients experienced adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to prescribed medications. Approximately 7.5 million unnecessary medical and surgical procedures are performed annually in the US, while approximately 8.9 million Americans are hospitalized unnecessarily. Last year, the WHO reported 783,936 deaths due to medications people took… and 160,000 were when the drugs were prescribed correctly. More people died last year from medication than at Pearl Harbor and Vietnam. Amazing, huh? If drugs make people well, then those who take the most should be the healthiest, but this simply isn’t the case.

Kremer Family Chiropractic Scott S. Kremer * Jason Gonzales, D.C. Stephen Edwards, D.C. 1615 Main Street Red Bluff, CA 96080 530-527-0220

Se Habla Espanol!!!

Many people are beginning to understand that health comes from within. This is why chiropractic helps so many people. You see, GOD created a body that can heal itself. Your body doesn’t need any help: it just can’t have any interference. With Chiropractic, we don’t add anything to the body, or take anything from it. We find interference in the nervous system and remove it, thus enhancing the healing capabilities of the body. We get tremendous

results…it really is as simple as that. Here’s what some of our patients have to say: “I originally came in because of back problems. I told Dr. Kremer of my seizures-grandmal and petitemal. I have had seizures for over 40 years. I had seen many physicians and neurologists with no results in 40 years. The medications only covered symptoms and made things unpredictable. In seeing Dr. Kremer, I have had only 3 seizures, very, very mild ones, in 3 years and have found I have a normal life, to be able to do ordinary things without fear. I can ride a horse again and take long walks.” (S. Cook) “I had back and neck pains. In the early 1990’s it was caused by hard work and old age. It was severe enough I couldn’t sleep at times. My results with Dr. Kremer have been great! Dr. Kremer’s treatments have kept me from having back surgery. It’s great not to have so much pain.” (K. Bennett) “I had back and hip problems for about four to five years after I slipped on some cooking grease and have had problems with my back going out disabling

me from walking or even moving at all at times. I also had allergies and asthma that was making me prone to ear infections and severe colds. I had never been treated by another physician or chiropractor. My mother-in-law referred me to Dr. Kremer. Over time, I have had an increase in mobility, my ear infections have stopped, and less intense allergies.” (D. Retzalf) Being a chiropractor can be tough because there’s a host of so called experts out there. They tell people a lot of things that are just plain ridiculous about our profession…usually it’s “My neighbor’s sister’s friend said…” Let me ask you, do you make your health care decisions based on honest facts or biased opinions? Interesting question, isn’t it? NOW… Find out for yourself and benefit from our AMAZING OFFER. Look, it shouldn’t cost an arm and a leg to correct your health. You are going to write a check to someone for your health care expenses, you might as well write one for a lesser amount for chiropractic. When you mention this article within 2 weeks of receiving this offer, you’ll receive our entire new patient exam for $17. That’s our full exam, with x-rays… the whole ball of wax. This exam would cost you $239 any other time. Further care is very affordable and you’ll be happy to know, that I have affordable family plans. You see I’m not trying to seduce you to come and see me with the low startup fees, only to make it up with high fees after that. Further care is very important to consider when making your choice of doctors. Hight costs can add up very quickly. By federal law, this offer excludes Medicare and Medi-cal beneficiaries. Great care at a great fee. Please, I hope there is no misunderstanding about the quality of care just because I am offering a lower exam fee. I utilize several different adjusting techniques in my office to better serve you. If you prefer manual techniques or Activator, it makes no difference to me. I’m here to serve you and to make a difference in your life. I’ve been entrusted to take care of tiny babies to 98 year olds for over 10 years now. I’m just offering this low fee to help more people. Our assistants are great and absolutely full of love. Our offices are both friendly and warm and we try our best to make you feel at home. We have a wonderful service offered at an exceptional fee with three different locations to serve you. We are open six days each week. Call today for an appointment! We can help you.

We Listen, We Care, We Get Results. Thank You. Dr. Scott Kremer Chiropractor for Children and Adults P.S. When accompanied by the first, I am offering the second family member this same examination for only $10.

Redding Family Chiropractic Bradley Pike, D.C. 3609 Bechelli Lane, Ste A Redding, CA 96002 530-222-1777

We Listen... We Care... We Get Results...

Family Chiropractic Jim Roles, D.C. 2636A Churn Creek Road Redding, CA 96002 530-244-1088


Hop, Skip and Jump into the

H O L I D AY SHOPHOP

Where you can put your life on Auto…

:

9am-6pm

Pick up your map at any Shop Hop shop!

Special offers and Holiday Appetizers

prestige

1510 Market St., Redding • (530) 241-3400

1189 Hilltop Dr., Redding • (530) 242-6100

stomers!

ige 1177 Way,Prestige ReddingWay, • 530.246.2658 Redding • (530) 246-2658 tation at North Market and Caterpillar)

1734 Churn Creek Rd., Redding • (530) 221-5573

1419 Yuba St., Redding • (530) 229-9301

come back to quality.

HOME & GIFTS

• Free Gifts • Refreshments • Special Holiday Recipes • Find Amazing Gifts For Friends & Family Visit each Shop & you’ll be entered to win a Fabulous Grand Prize with surprise gifts from each Shop!

Saturday Nov. 7th

Busy people need a place where they can do more than one task… Award-winning CARS auto repair will get your domestic or foreign car in tip top condition while shopping at Prestige, you can choose from exquisite jewelry, essential oil lotions THE KIMBERLY NICOLE BOUTIQUE and gourmet For The treats. Mind, Body & Soul Clothing

At Each Shop Enjoy...

ntiqueCottage Garden

and

930 Hilltop Dr., Redding • (530) 226-8086 3270 Cascade Blvd., Shasta Lake • (530) 275-4451

1272 Oregon St., Redding, • (530) 247-0320

1738 Churn Creek Rd., Redding • (530) 221-1000

ntiqueCottage Garden

and 1590 California St., Redding • (530) 244-4272

1714 Churn Creek Rd., Redding • (530) 222-8750

1556 Hartnell Ave. # E, Redding • (530) 223-0270

www.shophopredding.com • 242-6100 • see story on page 32


momenT when CommiTmenT is life saving. There’s ThaT

PATIENT: Ron Helton – DEPARTMENT: Emergency Room “My husband Ron Helton, entered your facility on April 8, 2009 via the Emergency Room, following a cardiac arrest. He was given CPR by a citizen and repeatedly resuscitated and treated… eventually transferred to Cardiac ICU. He later underwent bypass surgery. The doctors and staff at SRMC very kindly and compassionately kept me well-informed and provided very skillful, expert care to my husband. He was discharged April 17, 2009, able to walk and talk and to begin resuming his life, which was almost taken from him by his cardiac disease.” – Rhoda Helton (wife).

This community, unlike any other, came to my rescue and saved my life – Ron Helton

Total Commitment. Total Care.

1100 Butte St

|

Redding, CA 96001

|

(530) 244-5400

|

w w w. s h a s t a r e g i o n a l . c o m


contributors

OCTOBER

Kerri Regan: Kerri grew up in the North State and earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism from San Francisco State University. A freelance writer and editor, Kerri enjoys exploring the North State with her husband and three young children.

Gary VanDeWalker: Gary grew up in Mt. Shasta, 12 years ago returning from the San Diego area with his wife Monica. Together they raise their three boys and manage the Narnia Study Center. A Ph.D. in philosophy, Gary is also an adjunct professor for Simpson University.

Sandie Tillery: A country girl recently transplanted into city life, Sandie Tillery writes about the North State from 35 years of personal experience exploring it from corner to corner with husband John, their three grown children and four grandsons. She loves interviewing the amazing people who live here and telling their stories.

Michael O’Brien: A 15-year resident of Shasta County, Michael is a Humboldt State University graduate and sales and marketing professional. Frequent travel has allowed him to realize there is no place like the North State, where he enjoys spending time with his wife and kids, and the great people of our beautiful area.

Melissa Gulden: Melissa earned her B.A. in journalism and M.A. in English from CSU, Chico. She spent time in Las Vegas, working as a college English instructor and magazine editor. She is also a certified MAC makeup artist and worked in the fashion industry. Melissa now teaches at University Preparatory School in Redding.

Lana Granfors: Lana enjoys traveling, gardening, cooking and spending time with her friends and family– especially her granddaughter, Jillian. Currently working part time at the City of Redding’s Visitor Bureau, she enjoys promoting attractions, points of interest and cultural aspects of our community.

Beth K. Maxey: A grateful recipient of second chances and new beginnings, Beth appreciates working under kitty supervision from her Red Bluff home office. She’s worked in marketing and communications for non-profit, public sector, and corporate entities. A native Midwesterner, she and husband Tony enjoy exploring the North State.

Jon Lewis: Jon spent 23 years in journalism and worked at newspapers in Woodland, Davis, Vacaville and Redding. He now works in marketing and development for public television station KIXE and continues to write on a freelance basis.

Wyatt Olson: A Mount Shasta native, Wyatt has called Redding his home for the last 6 years. He is now a sophomore at the University of Portland majoring in Chemistry and Environmental Science. An avid photographer, he was awarded the North American Nature Photographer’s Association High School Scholarship, an honor that he shared with only nine other students from across the country.

Jim Dyar: Jim is a contributing writer for Food For Thought: A News Cafe (www.anewscafe.com) and a former arts and entertainment editor at the Record Searchlight. He’s also a musician and a fan of vehicles with two wheels.

Jamie Weil: A Cottonwood native, Jamie earned a B.A. in English Literature from UCLA and M.A. in teaching from Occidental College. She is thrilled to have returned to Cottonwood with her family after a 26-year sabbatical. She currently works as a freelance writer and is rewriting her first novel, First Break.

Gwen Lawler Tough: Gwen has loved to write ever since she was a girl growing up in the Midwest. She has a B.A. in English Literature, and has worked in television journalism. A Shasta County resident for seven years, she is married and the proud mom of two sons.

October 2009 Enjoy 14


ARTS | story: Jim Dyar

15 Enjoy October 2009


BRUNO TOMAINO TURNS ONE MAN’S JUNK INTO BEAUTIFUL ART Bruno Tomaino stares at a photo of a burned-out building with no roof and fresh snow lining the base. He raises his eyes. “That’s how my heart felt … cold and empty,” Tomaino explains. The photo is from the small town of Roosevelt, Utah. It was what remained of his successful auto repair shop, which burned up on Feb. 10, 1986. The fire started from a lighting fixture. It was a defining moment for Tomaino, 55, who has run Bruno’s Automotive Specialist at 1618 Sacramento St. in Redding for the past 19 years. He was 33 at the time and had lost everything. Then he kept losing. The guy he’d been paying insurance to turned out to be a fraud. He owed money on the eight cars that had burned in the shop. Then, to top it all, his wife divorced him and took the couple’s four children with her. Tomaino fantasized about putting his head underwater in a nearby stream (“where it’s quiet”) and triggering a heavy rock to pin himself down. But then one day an angel blew into town from the other side of the Wasatch Mountains (Orem, near Provo). Her name was Joyce. A love story began. They met on May 29, 1987, and were married 14 days later. Tomaino, who had never been creative up to that point, suddenly started acting like some kind of Michelangelo. He cut out a giant heart from the hood of a Chevy. He made engagement rings from cotter pins. “I didn’t know I inspired him,” says Joyce Tomaino, now his wife of 22 years. “I didn’t know he’d never been making art.” Tomaino hasn’t stopped creating art from found objects. He uses scrap metal and old parts and welds them into all sorts of things – roses, a wedding cake, seahorses, a mailbox surrounded by flowers. From an old band saw, he envisioned the wings of a peacock. From a file cabinet, he knew how he could craft a miniature piano. “I try to do something every morning,” Tomaino says. “It’s so relaxing to me. I find myself humming when I’m burning metal. If I can spend an hour every morning, my days are good.” After doing art, Tomaino gets down to the business of fixing cars. It’s what he’s done since age 16 when he propped a ’59 Rambler on a picnic table in Granada Hills and started tightening transmission bolts. The drive shaft of the car started moving and the picnic table broke. A friend yanked Tomaino from underneath the vehicle, which hit the ground and plowed

through the back wall of the family’s garage. “But I fixed the transmission,” he says, smiling. Tomaino has always enjoyed repairing cars because of the satisfaction of completing a job, and the riddle of solving what went wrong. “It’s complicated,” he says. “You get into a car and it could be any one of 800 things.” Back when he first met Joyce, something else was complicated. He didn’t know how to read or write. Tomaino always had a knack for looking at a picture or a machine and knowing what was wrong with it. But words didn’t make much sense. After meeting Joyce, he told her about his illiteracy. She told him, “No problem. I’ll teach you.” “I had him read a Bible scripture to me every morning and that helped,” Joyce says. “Later on, he had a tutor and then I got him Hooked on Phonics. It was a lot of hard work for him, but he was determined. Now he reads pretty darn good. “I’ve always admired him for being humble enough as a grown man to admit that he couldn’t read, and then wanting to learn how.” Today, Tomaino still reads to his wife every morning. He occasionally reads scriptures at church. Sometimes he feels like one of his own art pieces - a discarded guy shaped into something special by a lovely woman. “She’s just been so good,” he says. “She’s everything to me. We’ve been married for 22 years and it feels like we’ve only been married a couple of months. I don’t do anything without talking to her.” Joyce Tomaino describes it this way: “I just thought he was one of the nicest men I ever met in my life,” she says. “He’s still just as nice a person as he was when I first met him. I kept waiting for the other half to show up, but it never did. He just kept being that nice man.” And Tomaino will never forget the fire from ’86. He still looks at pictures of it and, once a year, plays a video that someone shot while the large building was engulfed in flames. A visitor asks him why. “I don’t know,” he says. “All I wanted to do was die after that fire. Maybe I do it to remind me to not go into debt. Maybe to remind me that your life can change so quickly.” With Joyce’s help, Bruno Tomaino rose from the ashes of that fire. Today, it’s their love that continues to burn brightly. • October 2009 Enjoy 16


EVENTS | story: Jon Lewis | photos: DevenCarter.com

rideon

B I G B I K E WEEK END RO L L S I NTO T H E R ED D I NG CO NV ENT I O N C ENT ER Kool April Nites has staked out its spring territory, but when the leaves start to turn brown, it’s time for the two-wheeled vehicles to roll into town. And rumble into town they will when Big Bike Weekend, celebrating its 10th year, sets up shop Oct. 9-11 at the Redding Convention Center. While the weekend is intended as a celebration of all things big and two-wheeled, people who are more comfortable with four wheels, or even their own two feet, should feel right at home. Kids in particular will find plenty to do, according to Connie Grinols, chair of the nonprofit Big Bike Weekend board of directors. Children, who are admitted free if 12 or younger, can enter a bicycle decorating contest, play in a jump house or go on a scavenger hunt. There’s also plenty of family-friendly entertainment, including live music by local bands, and derring-do demonstrations by the aerial artists 

17 Enjoy October 2009


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known as HiRiSeFMX and some nifty precision riding by the Seattle Cossacks on their vintage ‘30s Harley-Davidsons. Rest assured, though: the weekend is about bikes, and not just the big ones. “We have included more activities to embrace all riders, whether they’re on a 50-cc scooter or a big V-twin and everything in between,” says Grinols. To prove her point, Scooterville, a Redding-based group of scooter enthusiasts, will be back for the third year in a row. “We go down and share pictures of our club outings and host a regular scooter ride, and a few of the motorcycle folks go on it too. It’s kind of a strange mix, like two worlds colliding,” says Stacy DeMar, the Scooterville president. “We like to mingle around and try and educate them with what we’re about with the scooter scene and they’ve been great.” Also on the lineup for the weekend are Segway demonstration rides, Cadillac CTS test drives, police motor unit competition, poker runs, guided dual-sport rides to show off popular North State sights and a Friday night police-escorted Remembrance Ride to honor public safety personnel who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001. Inside the Convention Center will be motorcycle classroom instruction, vendor displays, a Pro Builder Challenge and a workshop on how to customize riding apparel by adding some bling. “We’re committed to making this a fun, affordable event for riders and non-riders,” says Grinols, noting that registration and gate fees have not been increased. Registration is $35 and general admission to the event is $5 for Friday or Saturday, or $8 for both days. Admission is free on Sunday, with events scheduled from 9 am to 2 pm. Proceeds from Big Bike Weekend benefit North State charities. Daniel Grayson, a retired physician who moved to Redding five years ago, says he enjoys Big Bike Weekend for the exhibits, group rides and demonstrations by police motor officers. “Those are the kinds of things I go for, and just the camaraderie of being around others with similar interests,” says Grayson, who has been riding

motorcycles for the past 30 years. He particularly enjoys the North State’s riding opportunities. “There are a lot of wonderful roads for motorcycles that you won’t find elsewhere. Highway 36 to the coast is an example. You don’t have to put up with much traffic, so consequently it’s much safer.” Gary Otremba, another motorcycle enthusiast and one of Big Bike Weekend’s newest board members, also likes the esprit de corps evident at the event. “It’s a common bond, like everything else. A bunch of bikers get together and hang out for awhile and trade war stories. It doesn’t matter what you ride, just as long as you’re out there doing it.” This year, Big Bike Weekend is directing some of the two-wheeled excitement toward downtown Redding, starting with a Show & Shine from 11 am to 2 pm Oct. 3 in the Market Street Promenade, sponsored by Need 2 Speed. Viva Downtown Redding follows up with a Big Bike Kickoff mixer from 5:30 to 7:30 pm Oct. 8. In addition to food samples and no-host wine and beer, the mixer will feature a painted helmet and tank competition with the entries displayed inside the Shasta College Health Science and University Center rotunda. Organized by Hawkman Studios, the competition offers cash prize for the best tank, best helmet and best of show. “Some of them are pretty crazy,” says Kellie Jokela, the assistant to the dean of the college’s Economic and Workforce Development Department, who is helping with the contest. Tickets to the mixer are $7 in advance and $10 at the door. • On the web: www.bigbikeweekend.com More info: (530) 245-7185

October 2009 Enjoy 20


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PROFILE | story: Jon Lewis

The closer you are to your food source, the better the quality will be.

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CHE STEDMAN, EXECUTIVE CHEF OF MOONSTONE BISTRO Surprise guests and unexpected dietary restrictions are not uncommon hiccups when hosting a dinner party, but for a professional caterer working out of a rustic kitchen 200 miles from home, they can take on the aspects of a daunting curveball. For Che Stedman, proprietor and executive chef of Moonstone Bistro in Redding, it was just a matter of adjusting his stance at the plate and swinging for the fences. Although Stedman devotes the bulk of his time to his 2-year-old restaurant, where his wife, Tanya, serves as general manager, he still ventures out for select high-end catering assignments where gourmet meals are prepared on site in a much more intimate setting. “It’s a great opportunity to really show off your talent and creativity,” says Stedman. “I can’t do that kind of food on a regular basis at my restaurant, so it’s fun to show off.” The couple often donates a catered meal to benefit nonprofit organizations like the American Cancer Society and Shasta Women’s Refuge. A recent contribution to the latter group found the Stedmans at the Prather Ranch near Macdoel in central Siskiyou County. The gourmet meal for a party of six, featuring Prather Ranch’s famous organic, dry-aged beef, was up for auction at the Women’s Refuge’s annual Crab Feed and was snapped up by Judy Salter, former chief executive officer at Turtle Bay Exploration Park, and her husband, Lee Salter, president and CEO of the McConnell Foundation. Stedman does not cook food in advance or rely on chafing dishes, so the on-site facilities are an important part of the catering equation. “You’re always kind of a victim of circumstance as to what you will run into when you get there,” Stedman says. At Prather Ranch, he had the use of a large barbecue grill and a small 1930s-vintage kitchen tucked into a rustic but comfortable ranch house. “I always build for a ‘push.’ We want to feed the staff and plan for a couple of walk-ins. In this case, we ran into a whole lot of people we were going to be building food for,” recalls Stedman. To add to the challenge, two of the unanticipated guests were vegetarians. To alter from a beef-oriented menu and fashion two five-course vegetarian

meals called for some “pantry raiding,” Stedman says. To accommodate the crowd, Stedman carefully reduced portion sizes, “but it’s tricky to do things like that and still come out looking like a hero,” Stedman says. “Fortunately, we like Prather Ranch (Stedman features their beef at his restaurant) and they have such beautiful grounds up there. This one went off without a hitch.” With his wife handling the wine pairings, Stedman started the meal with a beef carpaccio highlighted with pounded-thin beef tenderloin accented with a peach and mint salad with pumpkin seeds and cayenne. A thinly sliced marinated flank steak with fresh beets and a salad of butterhead lettuce, cucumbers, onions and sweet sour cream dressing was next, followed by a pan-seared filet mignon served with sweet corn grits, grilled artichoke hearts, garden tomato relish and chipotle pico de gallo. The fourth course featured a savory “cowboy paella” of shortribs, sausage, chicken, onions, peppers and green beans in a paprika broth with cornbread dumplings. “Moonstone S’Mores” with homemade, fire-toasted marshmallows, warm ganache and a chewy graham cookie completed the evening’s fare. Cooking with Prather Ranch beef ties in with Stedman’s emphasis on regional cuisine that uses ingredients that are as fresh and local as possible. By raising cattle free on pesticide-free forage and without adding any growth hormones, “they have found a way to make a profit on a small, closed herd that doesn’t contain anything your body wouldn’t recognize,” Stedman says. “I feel the same with vegetables. The closer you are to your food source, the better the quality will be. The more conscientious the food is, the better for your body it’s going to be. You are what you eat.” • Moonstone Bistro 3425 Placer St. Redding (530) 241- 3663 www.moonstonebistro.com October 2009 Enjoy 22


NATURE HIKE | story: Michael O’Brien | photo: Frank Kratofil

fall B irding T he S acramento R iver B end A rea The Sacramento River Bend Area is a system of hiking trails, river access and natural beauty that embraces the Native American and pioneer past of Tehama County. The U.S. Department of the Interior – Bureau of Land Management manages and maintains this area northeast of Red Bluff accessible via Jellys Ferry Road between Interstate 5 and Ash Creek Road. A rich Native American, pioneer, trapper and explorer history permeates this region. The Yana and Nomlaki American Indian tribes intersected here and have left traces of villages, tools and camps that indicate thousands of years of residence. 19th Century settlers logged and herded sheep here, constructing v-flumes to transport logs from the high country and building lava rock walls that remain today. Designed to highlight this history and to maximize wildlife along the Sacramento River and surrounding rolling hills and oak forest, the Sacramento River Bend Area lends itself to some wonderful birding. Start your trip by exiting I-5 at Jellys Ferry Road and drive north two miles, turning right onto Bend Ferry Road. Cross over the bridge spanning the Sacramento River and follow this road until you arrive at Paynes Creek Wetlands. The entire Sacramento River area rests in a major corridor within the Pacific Flyway used by migrating birds, and Paynes Creek provides a perfect stop for avian travelers. Created in response to increasing concerns of declining of neotropical migratory birds, this 3,700-acre area contains bird magnets such as streams, wetlands, marshes and ponds, plus grassland and oak woodland. A series of trails creates access to these features. October signals the arrival of fall migrants. Look for waterfowl and shore birds, including whistling swan, Canada goose, snow goose, ringnecked duck, wood duck, lesser yellowlegs and great blue heron along the river and in Rocky Pond. Bald eagle and greater sandhill crane are also possible. Look for American bittern, common moorhen, belted kingfisher, horned lark, oak titmouse, acorn woodpecker and Lewis’s woodpecker year round. After exploring Paynes Creek Wetlands, return to Jellys Ferry Road and drive north. Cross over the one-lane bridge and pull into the Jellys Ferry River Access parking lot to your left. Park and walk to the river. This is a good place to spot bank swallow in the spring and early summer. Scan the trees along the river and riverbank for egrets, herons and osprey. California quail and acorn woodpecker are ever present at this place. From here, continue your drive north through oak chaparral. Scan for western meadowlark, various sparrows and American kestrel. Sheepherder-built lava rock walls are visible to the west at about the 23 Enjoy October 2009

five-mile mark from the I-5 entrance point. Watch the wire fence lines along the roadway for savannah sparrow. As the Sacramento River comes into view, look for a turnout on the west side of the road. An access point here between two fence posts provides a trail and a short hike down to the river. Huge oaks line the banks. Listen for white-breasted nuthatch. In the evenings, scan the sky for common nighthawk. This is a magical spot for observing birds and for quiet reflection. Battle Creek Ranch lies just down the road from this point. Pastureland and farm ponds provide marsh reeds and wide open spaces ideal for birding. See if you can spot great horned owl at dusk patrolling the green landscape in search of prey. Wilson’s snipe hide in these fields in the winter and spring months. Many creeks cross over this little valley. Stop at each one and look for watering birds. Check out the massive dead snag to the north of the valley on the east side of the road for roosting turkey vultures. They create quite a display in the mornings as they spread their massive wings to gather in heat before launching for a day of soaring. Jellys Ferry Road turns west at the north end of the ranch and becomes Gover Road. Drive from here to Battle Creek or Coleman Fish Hatchery, both of which offer more rich birding opportunities. •


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HEALTH | story: Jamie Weil

cutting-edge&caring R E D D I N G ’ S N O RT H VA L L E Y B R E A ST C L I N I C

In 1994, Dr. Ian Grady opened Redding’s North Valley Breast Clinic after he noticed local patients were being given full mastectomies when they could be treated with less invasive methods, such as lumpectomies and radiation. Grady wanted to offer more conservative options to patients while giving them streamlined breast therapy options, flavored with cutting-edge technology and surgeons on site. “Our vision is to offer patients from outlying rural areas streamlined services. Patients can come into town in the morning and have a problem resolved by the day’s end,” says Grady. “This process limits the anxiety patients often feel.” To accomplish goals of moving quickly and noninvasively, Grady has invested in top technology. The Somo-Vu machine is one of only 100 worldwide. Julie Bey, a “breast health navigator,” performs a relaxing procedure known as sonographic tomography with this machine. Immediately following the 3-D sonogram exam, patients meet with the doctor to read the films. The immediacy cuts down on the uncomfortable two-week waiting game that normally follows a procedure. Suspicious areas are pulled up on a screen and rotated, allowing doctor and patient to look at them from all angles. If there is a problem, the doctor and patient immediately make a game plan on how to move forward. The clinic is the first breast surgery practice in the United States that the American College of Radiology has granted Stereotactic Biopsy Recertification, an office-based procedure that allows doctors to diagnose very small breast cancers without surgery. In about 10 minutes, and under local anesthetic, doctors can biopsy patients without leaving any visible scars. This is significant progress considering that historically, women have had great portions of their breasts removed only to discover they did not have a cancerous tumor. 25 Enjoy October 2009

Lauren Strickland, D.O., who joined Grady in 2006, emphasizes an initial mammogram is paramount and that North Valley is not meant to replace the imaging centers in town that provide patients with primary screening. Instead, it is meant to work in concert with an initial mammogram, giving the patient the best of both technologies. Secondary screening like those that the clinic offers is the center of much research, because 10 to 15 percent of breast cancers are invisible on primary mammograms. Different technologies pick up different details; in the past two years, the clinic has found cancer in 19 cases where an initial mammogram failed to pick it up. Patients arrive at the clinic in different ways. Most are sent over from imaging centers because of a suspicious mammogram or one that’s hard to read because of issues like dense breast tissue. Other patients simply hear about the clinic and come in. Some are sent by their primary care doctors. About half of North Valley’s clients come not because they have breast cancer, but rather because they are considered “high risk” and are attempting to prevent it. With all the focus on technology and surgical talent, one may expect a clinical feeling. Nothing could be further from accurate. The warmth of the staff and doctors at the clinic is tangible. They like and respect each other. Patients are family. Doctors and staff alike talk about developing relationships with individuals and with the community and about their joint mission as a comprehensive breast clinic, the only one in the North State. Patients feel the same. When Redding resident Laura Carrier discovered she had breast cancer, she was devastated. “North Valley called me within 10 minutes of my gynecologist’s call to them and got me in that day,” says Carrier, a 39-year-old mother of three. “They told me to bring my kids because I didn’t have a sitter. They treated me like family.” At the end of that day, Dr. Grady gave Carrier his cell number so she could contact him at any time, which dropped her anxiety level tremendously. Insurance companies typically pay for the screenings. “We have our insurance problems like the rest of the medical community, but I am pleased to say nobody has ever been turned away because of inability to pay,” says Grady. Future goals for the clinic include better imaging techniques and better prevention. “I believe, as we speak, somebody is working on the biochemical pathway which is going to prove to be the cure for breast cancer. I think we are going to see it in our lifetime,” Grady says optimistically. And when they do, North Valley will be ready to arm its patients with the cure. • North Valley Breast Clinic • 1335 Buenaventura Boulevard, Suite 204, Redding • (530) 243-5551


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BEAUTY | story: Melissa Gulden

the

skinny on

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EASY STEPS FOR GORGEOUS SKIN Think only celebrities get to have perfect skin? Guess again. Radiant skin doesn’t have to come from pricey treatments and lots of lotions. Stick to a consistent routine and you, too, can have an A-list complexion! • Deep clean. Unclog pores with an acid-based cleanser. Ingredients with salicylic acid and fruit acids will degunk surface skin gently and quickly (try Neutrogena Deep Clean Relaxing Nightly Cleanser with lavender to calm skin while cleansing, $8). • Speed slough. Exfoliate for a smoother, more even surface. An at-home microdermabrasion scrub gets rid of dead skin cells and plumps up skin. If you have sensitive skin, try a chemical treatment instead; glycolic pads can be less irritating (Bioré Skin Preservation Even Smoother Microderm Exfoliater, $14, or Patricia Wexler MD two-step Exfoliating Glyco Peel System, $60, Bath and Body Works). However, be sure to exfoliate gently. Use an exfoliating mask made with fruit enzymes, like citric acid (from lemons) or malic acid (from apples). They work below the skin’s surface without scratching, like scrubs sometimes can. Use Yon-Ka Paris Grommage 303 (Complexions Face and Body, Park Marina Drive) three to four times a week (for 10-20 minutes, morning or evening) to dissolve dry, dead cells and unclog oily skin. • Moisturize and treat. Vitamin C is the “superstar” antioxidant, helping to fight free radicals. Add a few drops of vitamin C serum to your daytime moisturizer to reduce fine lines, smooth uneven texture and prolong the sunscreen’s effectiveness. Serums also help maximize your moisturizer’s effectiveness. At night, choose an amino-acid serum to control oil and tighten larger pores. It ups the collagen production, which helps skin cells remain bouncy, tight and younger looking. Be sure your daytime moisturizer has an SPF of at least 15 to help protect against UV damage. • Use a multitasking eye cream. If you spend a lot of time outdoors, choose one with sunscreen to prevent sun damage later on (Neutrogena Healthy Defense Daily Eye Cream, $12). If you’re over 25, your eye cream should troubleshoot: For wrinkles, peptides (tiny proteins that plump lines and signal skin to stop breaking down 27 Enjoy October 2009

collagen) are most effective. For dark circles, vitamin K-based creams work best to flush out iron and other minerals that leak from broken capillaries. Gently dab around the eye area with your ring finger twice a day for maximum results. Skin around the eye is delicate and needs to be treated separately from the rest of the face. • Smooth fine lines. Before applying any makeup, use a foundation primer to even out the surface and prevent foundation from settling into creases. Try MAC Prep + Prime Skin, $25. • Hide under-eye circles. Use a highlighting cream instead of a concealer; it gives more of a boost. Bring your blush closer to your eye, to where the circles end. It brightens the whole face. • Choose the right foundation. This really isn’t as difficult as you may think. Stick to this rule of thumb: if you’re dry, try a moisturizing formula. Oily? Make sure if says “oil-free” on the label. Find a perfect shade by ignoring color names—is anyone really “beige”? Test foundation on the skin on your jaw, not your hand. Do stripes of different shades, check in natural light and choose the one that disappears. If you can’t try before you buy, many drugstores will let you exchange opened makeup. When applying foundation, it’s all about the brush. For powders, use a brush and go in little circles from your nose to the rest of your face. For creams and liquids, use fingertips; their warmth makes it easier to apply a thin layer. (If you tend to break out, however, use a brush, as fingers transfer oil.) Blend with a sponge for a perfect finish. Sponges soak up makeup, so don’t use to apply, only to blend. To even out skin tone, try Benefit Hello Flawless! Custom Powder Cover-Up with SPF 15. It comes with both a brush and a sponge ($34). Clinique Even Better Makeup SPF 15 has vitamins C and E to fade dark spots ($25). To add polish for work, try a matte formula, such as Maybelline New York Dream Liquid Mousse Foundation ($10). Just a few daily steps can make the difference between dull and dazzling skin. Treat your skin the way it deserves and you’ll be glowing in no time! •


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530.243.4500 530.243.4500 2135 Pine Pine St. St. Redding Redding 2135

“The Redding Podiatry Center is... Dr. T.J. Song, a four year resident and fellow of Podiatric Medicine and Surgery in metropolitan New York’s Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, affiliated with Weil Medical College, Cornell University. Dr. O. Dale Bagley, in private podiatric practice in Redding for 33 years and board certified foot and ankle surgery”

The Redding Podiatry Center provides excellent foot care for its patients: • Everyday foot and ankle care • Cosmetically appealing, less painful bunion and toe surgery • Minimally invasive arthroscopic and endoscopic foot and ankle surgery • Complex and revisional foot and ankle reconstruction surgery • Non-surgical treatment of foot and ankle disorders • Custom made orthotics, braces and special shoes

Dr. Song is now accepting new patients Call 530 244 0674 for an appointment 1310 Continental Street, Redding, 96001


starstruck

INTEREST | story: Jon Lewis

T H E S T A R S A R E O U T AT T H E S C H R E D E R P L A N E T A R I U M Who doesn’t get a thrill seeing a shooting star streaking across the nighttime sky? That same thrill is available during the day, thanks to some digital technology housed at the North State’s only astronomy public education center. Students can revel in the excitement of a fiery meteorite or asteroid at 10 am on a school day. David Ewart, director of the Schreder Planetarium, watches it happen on a regular basis. “Kids can come out in the middle of the day and see the stars. I’ve had to stop the show because kids get so jacked up at seeing a shooting star,” Ewart says. “If you can get kids hooting and hollering from looking at the galaxy, that’s big,” adds Richard Glass, a planetarium staff member who taught at Black Butte Elementary for 25 years. Founded in 1979 and operated by the Shasta County of Education, Schreder Planetarium is big. And it needs to be, considering it’s a place to reflect on our place in the universe, study heavenly bodies and explore galaxies millions of light-years from Earth. The planetarium seats 65 in comfortable reclining chairs that allow observers to take in vivid three-dimensional digital displays

projected onto a 30-foot, 360-degree domed ceiling and accompanied by a surround sound stereo system. It’s an exhilarating encounter enjoyed each year by between 7,000 and 10,000 students from schools in nine North State counties. Adults have been enjoying planetarium shows for years, too. Schreder Planetarium is open to the public two to four evenings a month for professionally produced 90-minute shows with titles like “Secrets of the Sun,” “Stars of the Pharaohs” and “Wonders of the Universe.” For Ewart, who has worked closely with NASA, the planetarium’s chief role is as a science education center where kids in kindergarten through high school can be immersed in an environment that borders on sensory overload as science, space and history come alive. “It’s not like looking at a flat piece of paper,” Ewart says. “It gets them to understand time and space. It’s way big, the universe.” Astronomy “is the glue that holds all the sciences together, yet it’s kind of forgotten,” says Ewart, who doubles as the coordinator of science programs through the Shasta County Office of Education. By bringing the lights down and bringing up images from the state-of-the-art Evans & Sutherland Digistar 3 projection system, Ewart takes students across the veil of the night sky to reveal the solar system,

constellations and distant galaxies. There’s plenty to teach the young stargazers. “Kids think the sun is moving and not the Earth. It’s an egocentric thing: we are the Earth, everything revolves around us,” Ewart says with a chuckle. Ewart points out the Earth is 93 million miles from the sun, placing the blue planet in the “happy zone” between boiling and freezing. He also explains how the Earth’s moon is bigger than Pluto and could be considered a planet in its own right. In addition to developing summer astronomy and robotics camps, Ewart has worked hard to turn the planetarium into a valuable resource for teachers as well by helping to secure grant funding for the Science Model Academy for Reflective Teaching (SMART) program. The SMART program provides teachers in the third through eighth grades an opportunity to bolster their science teaching skills by participating in a model academy incorporating resources at the planetarium and Shasta College in partnership with Chico State University. As a discretionary program of the Shasta County Office of Education, the future of Schreder Planetarium is uncertain, Ewart says. To help ensure continued operation, a fund has been established at the Shasta Regional Community Foundation. For additional ways to help the planetarium, visit www.schrederplanetarium.com. • 1644 Magnolia Ave., Redding (530) 225-0295 www.shastacoe.org/planetarium

29 Enjoy October 2009


Determined to overcome

Redding 1477 Lincoln St. (530) 246-3333

Red Bluff 645 Antelope Blvd. #14 (530) 528-1795

Yreka 180 Rose Lane (530) 842-3436

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Cosh Chiropractic Care and Wellness Center

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Sept 25th thru Oct 31st Limited quanties

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2007 Pine St. Redding www.CoshChiro.com

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Qualified Medical Examiner

1332 Market Street • Redding • 530.247.1292


LASH OUT. GET REAL. Make your own natural lashes… add up to 25% more length & 106% fuller and 18% darker lashes with Latisse. DANIEL B. LENSINK, M.D. OPHTHALMIC PLASTIC SURGEON

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Lauren P. Strickland, DO

1335 Buenaventura Blvd. Suite 204 • Redding, CA. 96001 • 2526 Sr. Mary Columba Dr. • Red Bluff, CA 96001 • 530.243.5551 www.breastpractice.com


COMMUNITY | story: Kerri Regan

Holiday ShopHop Saturday, Nov. 7 9 am to 6 p.m. Maps and further information are at participating businesses, www.shophopredding.com and ShopHop’s Facebook page 12 participating businesses (all in Redding unless otherwise noted):

Antique Cottage and Garden in Shasta Lake, California Décor Store, Collector’s Choice, Déjà Vu, Fabrics, Etc., Infinite Designs, Kimberly Nicole Boutique, Prestige Home and Gifts, Sweet Spot, Sweet Treats, Sugarplum Cottage, Wild Thyme Gifts and Gardens

SHOP HOP

hop

F O R T H E H O L I DAYS

Imagine a holiday shopping experience that didn’t involve elbowing your way through jam-packed aisles and going toeto-toe with harried fellow shoppers who are typically nice people, but under these circumstances look like they might unleash some serious cart-rage if you dare to grab that last Wii Fit box off the shelf. Fellow shoppers, Santa has heard your wish, and a local team of retail elves wants to help free you from this yuletide nightmare. The 3rd annual Holiday ShopHop from 9 am to 6 pm Nov. 7 is an opportunity to explore local businesses, meet their shopkeepers and start (dare we suggest, finish?) your holiday shopping in a fun, festive, friendly environment. Bonus: Your dollars stay right here in the North State’s economy. “We want people to know that you can find cool, unique gifts that aren’t from a big-box store,” says Jeanette Ernst, owner of Infinite Designs in Redding and a member of ShopHop. “It’s the local businesses that

really care about the community.” Participating businesses will feature snacks, drawings and special offers throughout the day. This year, each will serve up a party dish – appetizer, dessert, you name it – to give you ideas for holiday parties. Love the dish? Take home the recipe. Those who visit all 12 stores will be entered into a grand prize drawing – a gift certificate from every one of the stores. At your first stop, you’ll get a map of all locations and a “passport bag” with stickers from each shop. As you visit the shops, your bag will be filled with gifts and recipes. Participating shops offer a diverse selection of gift items for everyone on your list. Home décor, locally made jewelry, children’s toys, garden items, edible delights and more are sold in ShopHop stores. You’ll also find the friendly faces and truly invested employees – often the owners themselves – who want you to be so delighted with your shopping experience that you’ll become a regular customer.

“This is our store,” Ernst says. “We want a person to find something they’re going to like so they come back again. Kimberly Nicole (from Kimberly Nicole Boutique) knows everything she’s bought, so she’ll say, ‘That shirt will go good with this belt buckle over here.’ We love to help people with ideas.” And if you’re a “wait ‘til Christmas Eve” type of shopper, come on out anyway, Ernst says. “It’s early enough that you can go out and get some ideas rolling.” ShopHop is not just an event – it’s an association of local small, non-franchised businesses that each bring in less than $1 million in annual gross revenue. They participate in monthly meetings and help with cooperative marketing efforts. They also created and sponsor events such as the Cottage Tour, which benefited the Shasta Women’s Refuge. “If we don’t carry what the customer is looking for, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve looked up a phone number and Googlemapped directions to another store for a customer,” Ernst says. “I want them to find what they’re looking for, not just sell them something.” ShopHop meetings often end up functioning like a support group, as participants help each other come up with creative ways to woo customers, save money or overcome other challenges posed when running a small business. Working together gives each shopkeeper greater reach with limited marketing and advertising budgets, Ernst says. “You can get a bigger bang for your buck when you work as a group,” she says. For instance, many have started running in-store special events to make the shopping experience more special – like California Décor Store’s Aloha Fridays, Kimberly Nicole Boutique’s Fashionista Fridays, tea parties at Antique Cottage and mimosa gardening parties at Wild Thyme. “It’s like going to a party,” she says. And their true competitors aren’t other locally owned small businesses, she says – it’s the corporate giants that siphon local dollars out of the area. More information is available at shophopredding.com, on ShopHop’s Facebook page and at participating businesses. • October 2009 Enjoy 32


EVENTS | story: Beth K. Maxey | photo: Brent Van Auken

fiddle fabulous

WESTERN OPEN FIDDLE CHAMPIONSHIPS

Red Bluff residents always know when the third week in October hits, even without looking at the calendar. Fiddlers stroll the streets playing lively old-time tunes and show up at shopping centers and meetings to entertain and entice listeners. It’s Western Open time. Fiddlers from across the country have gathered in the North State for the Western Open Fiddle Championships since 1982 when it began in Redding under the sponsorship of the California State Old Time Fiddle Association District 6. The competition moved to Red Bluff in 1996 after a District 6 committee member suggested that Red Bluff residents Tex Ash and Sharon Barrett might want to cochair the event. “‘Move it to Red Bluff and we’ll think about it,’ I said,” says Barrett, “and they said ‘OK.’ We’ve been doing it ever since. It was a highly successful contest in Redding, but it found a home in the community here that it never had there.”  33 Enjoy October 2009


Make Space for the holidays

MoreSpacePlace We make space for living

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Š 2009 Holiday RetiRement 2142


Ash, a bass player, has emceed the Western Open since it began; Barrett organizes and coordinates it. The event committee includes 26 others – some who have been with the event since it began 27 years ago – who oversee food, judges, sales, publicity, sponsors and other tasks essential to the smooth running of a three-day contest involving tight scheduling and some 120 performers. The event opens Thursday, Oct. 22, at the Tehama County District Fairgrounds with a concert featuring John Marshall with Billy and the Hillbillies, a featured group at Disneyland’s Frontierland for many years. “The show is filled with humor that is fit for little kids and adults alike,” says Ash. Tickets are $10. Two ‘Hillbillies’ will serve as Western Open contest judges; another will emcee the popular jukebox events on Friday and Saturday evening, Oct. 23 and 24. Competition gets underway at 8 am Friday, with contestants allotted just four minutes each to demonstrate their skill. “The evening schedule runs on time,” says Ash, “but the daily schedule can be bizarre. It’s completely contestant-driven.” Contestants can compete in more than one event within age categories, such as individual playing, picking, twin fiddles and jukebox. The contest is open to the public; a complete schedule is on the organization’s Web site, www.westernopenfiddle.com. It’s not uncommon to see whole families onstage during competition – adults accompanying contestants as young as 5 years old in the PeeWee events, or parents and children together in the jukebox events or twin fiddles competition. “Fiddlers are more family-oriented,” says Ash. “I’ve never been in an organization that has such camaraderie between little kids and adults.” Most competitions are like big family reunions, he says, since fiddling families enjoy traveling to contests or fiddling schools. Fiddlers also love to share their tunes with each other. Pat Scott, a Red Bluff resident and Western Open committee member, started fiddling in 1981 and says one of the best ways to learn new tunes is “me to me.” “They play a few notes, you play a few notes, they add more. You watch their fingers, watch the bowing. You learn by ear and by building muscle memory (where to put your fingers on the strings),” she says. “You build a relationship with your musical partner.” Scott’s daughter Melissa (Copenhaver) Lincoln began playing by ear when she was 6 years old and went on to win numerous contests; Scott began to teach fiddle to her granddaughters when they were 2. They all compete in the Western Open. Barrett adds, “There is a complete acceptance and willingness to learn from anybody – a lack of ego.” Fiddlers don’t have to read music to play tunes; most use tablature diagrams, or fiddle tab: a picture of the fiddle strings with the top line indicating the highest-sounding string. Numbers on the appropriate lines show the string and finger placement for any note. So what’s the difference between bluegrass and fiddling? Bluegrass has more vocals and ensembles almost always include mandolin or banjo leads. Fiddling may include banjos or mandolins, but not in a

“The fiddle dances – it should make you want to dance...”

27th Western Open Fiddle Championships Tehama District Fairground, 650 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff Oct. 22, 23, 24, 2009 www.westernopenfiddle.com More information: (530) 527-6127 or e-mail texshar@pacbell.net

predominant role, says Ash. Fiddlers also try to preserve and perpetuate old-time square dance, polka, schottische, waltzes and jigs that people have danced to for decades. Bluegrass came out of the Appalachian sound – think Alison Krauss or Ricky Skaggs. What about the difference between fiddle and violin? Ash, Barrett and Scott laugh. One definition: a violin is carried in a case; a fiddle in a gunnysack. Another definition is freedom: when you play violin, you play the composer’s music, but on a fiddle, you have the freedom to put your own feelings into the music. “The fiddle dances – it should make you want to dance. The violin sings,” says Ash, with a smile. •

October 2009 Enjoy 36


It’s never too late for a Wachovia Securities is now second opinion

Wells Fargo Advisors

SM

hovia Securities is now s Fargo Advisors FA Name

Title

SM

Phone Number

©2009 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. Member SIPC. All rights reserved. 0409-4013 [74346-v1]

FA Name The financial advice you’ll receive comes with:Susan

Eastman Financial Advisor FA Name

Compliance-Approved 2705 Park Marina Drive Address and Suite Num Redding, CA 96001 City Name, State Zip City Name, StatetheZiptime to listen and understand 530-243-7561 • A financial Advisor who takes SM Using our Envision process, we start with your xxx-xxx-xxxx • 8XXxxx-xxx-xxxx • 8XX-XXX-XXXX your individual needs susan.eastman@wfadvisors.com LIFE and plan your MONEY around it. Call me for a Web or E-mail Address Web appointment. or E-mail Address •no Support a talented force of market analysts, investment CA Insurance Lic # 0F72180 charge from or obligation Compliance-Approved • Personalized financial strategies with aTitle broad range of Address and Suite Number investment choices

planning specialists and portfolio managers Investment and Insurance Products: u NOT FDIC Insured

u NO Bank Guarantee

u MAY Lose Value

Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC, is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. 0309-1598[74020-v1] {73121-v1A1437 ©2009 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. 0509-2293 A1286 3/09

Title

Phone Number

Member SIPC. All rights reserved. 0409-4013 [74346-v1]

FA Name Compliance-Approved Title Address and Suite Number City Name, State Zip xxx-xxx-xxxx • 8XX-XXX-XXXX Web or E-mail Address

FA Name Compliance-Approved Title Address and Suite Number City Name, State Zip xxx-xxx-xxxx • 8XX-XXX-XXXX Web or E-mail Address Investment and Insurance Products: u NOT FDIC Insured

u NO Bank Guarantee

u MAY Lose Value

Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC, is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. ©2009 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. All rights reserved. 0509-2293 [74020-v1] A1286

GettinG on a plane is so overrated! every tuesday and Wednesday from october 6th to november 18th, we’ll be featuring dinner entrées from various countries around the world.

2300 HILLtOP DR. REDDING (530) 221-2335 | cRGIBBS.cOM

Oct. 6 & 7 – cuba Oct. 13 & 14 – Brazil Oct. 20 & 21 – Italy Oct. 27 & 28 – Morocco NOv. 3 & 4 – thailand NOv. 10 & 11 – New Zealand NOv. 17 & 18 – U.S.A.


PROFILE | story: Gwen Lawler-Tough | photo: KaraStewartPhotography.com

creamofthecrop

T he F it z patricks and how they H elped build redding John C. Fitzpatrick’s family story sounds like a history of Redding. Tales told around the kitchen table revolve around the larger-than-life people whose risk-taking, sweat and hard work helped make Redding the community what it is today. Foremost among these characters is Fitzpatrick’s late father, also named John Fitzpatrick. Born in 1909, the elder Fitzpatrick was the oldest of five children living in their parents’ 16-by-24-foot homestead in the Malibu Hills. When his dad decided to get out of the “crowded” Los Angeles area in 1922, he sold the homestead and bought a 1913 Cadillac. This vehicle, stuffed to the running boards, carried the Fitzpatricks and all their worldly possessions to Redding. Fitzpatrick grew up milking cows. At age 24, he went into business with State Senator John McColl, now known as the “father” of Shasta Dam. McColl owned a soda fountain downtown, but was spending most of his time in Sacramento. Fitzpatrick had taken a refrigeration course in the days of iceboxes, and was just the man to run the operation. Fitzpatrick experimented with all kinds of ice cream flavors in an alley garage behind the store, and Depression or not, McColl’s ice cream became the hit of the town. Fitzpatrick hired kids to take ice cream wagons packed with salted ice all over town. He then took the business to a new level by building a large-scale dairy company with McColl as his partner. McColl tragically died in a car accident in 1938, and Fitzpatrick continued to run the business for McColl’s widow. In 1958, Fitzpatrick bought out the McColls’ share in the business to become the sole owner of McColl’s Dairy products. Their product line included milk and cottage cheese, but their best seller was ice cream. Gary Rogers of Dreyers Ice Cream once told John C. Fitzpatrick, “Yours was the only spot in California where we weren’t the dominant brand.” The young John C. Fitzpatrick told friends, “I would never work for my Dad…. I had things all figured out.” He graduated from Santa Clara University with a degree in mechanical engineering and went on to get an MBA from Northwestern University in Chicago. He worked for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission in New Mexico for three years, and learned that “the drafting table was not for me.”

What was for him was a girl in Los Angeles. While he was on a work-related trip to Los Angeles, his college friends fixed him up with a blind date to a prom that they were all attending. John won Betty Ahern’s hand in marriage in 1962, after three years and many 11-hour trips down Highway 99. Their four children are now grown. He joined his dad’s company in 1962, and helped McColl’s grow all over the North State. But with the passing years, the dairy business “got tougher and tougher.” The elder Fitzpatrick sold McColl’s to Crystal Dairy in 1985. John C. Fitzpatrick says his father was never afraid to try something new, and when they bought the local Pepsi Cola franchise at a court sale in 1966, they were off on a new adventure. John C. Fitzpatrick worked hard building up their new business, and soon the Pepsi brand had overtaken Coke in the North State. During these years, both Fitzpatricks served their community in countless civic and service organizations. Both served as presidents of the main Redding Rotary. Both contributed significantly to Bishop Quinn High School and St. Francis Middle School. John and Betty contributed to and served Turtle Bay and Northern Valley Catholic Social Service in many ways. They donated to the new Redding Library, and were instrumental in getting the Redding Air Show “off the ground” for many years. “John and Betty have given their heart and soul to this community,” says Ken Gifford of Gifford Construction. “He and Betty both are the most generous, community spirited people I know,” adds friend Bob Anderson. In 2005, the City of Redding bestowed the Philanthropist of the Year award on the couple. Quietly, they have shared not only their worldly goods but also themselves with many people and organizations in the north state. The Fitzpatricks are now retired; John C. Fitzpatrick sold Pepsi to the Pepsi Cola Company in 2001. He now enjoys working out with a personal trainer and going to old sports car rallies and vintage “racing” events all over the state. Like his dad, he is not just a businessman; he is a man for his community. • October 2009 Enjoy 38


Brenda Hockett is surviving breast cancer and encouraging others along the way. “You have to have fun with it or it will just bring you down. You have to have a balance in your life. If I was just living for the day when I

finish my treatments, I would miss the now,” she said. “One day I was in the shower and I ran my fingers through my hair and out some of it came. There was no resistance to the hair coming loose, so my family and I went out into the driveway and I let my kids help remove the rest of it. Only a smiley face was left on top of my head, “ she said laughing out loud. Brenda is battling and surviving cancer that was discovered in March of 2009. “I had a crash course in cancer. Two weeks after I was diagnosed, I had a lumpectomy, then a port was put in to assist with the medication process and then I started Chemo,” Brenda said. She will finish her last Chemotherapy treatment Oct. 13, 2009, two days before the Redding community celebrates Think Pink Day in honor of breast cancer awareness. “That’s going to be a great celebration day,” Brenda said. Mercy Medical Center Redding is a member of CHW North State with Mercy Mt. Shasta and St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff.


Celebrate Think Pink Day 2009

October 15, 2009

The Mercy Regional Cancer Center is one of the many community sponsors of Nor Cal Think Pink.

The Mercy Regional Cancer Center offers effective and compassionate care that is provided by a team of doctors, nurses, and other health professionals working together to help the courageous people face their cancer journey with dignity and grace. Features of the Mercy Regional Cancer Center... UCSF Medical Center Collaboration | 21st Century Oncology partnership for Radiation Oncology

Emmerson Acute Inpatient Oncology Unit | Outpatient Chemotherapy | Floyd Morgan Family Cancer Resource Center The American Cancer Society’s Look Good Feel Better Program | Quit for Good – Tobacco Cessation Classes Breast Cancer Early Detection Program | Clinical Trials To read more of Brenda’s story or to learn more about the Mercy Regional Cancer Center log on to: redding.mercy.org/cancer

Michele Woods, R.N., M.A. Oncology Nurse Liaison


FEATURED ART HOP ARTIST | story: Sandie Tillery

PA N G I A P E R F O R M S AT E V E RY DAY F I T N E S S

Dramatic contrasts of color and function greet visitors and members to EveryDay Fitness, one of 2nd Saturday ArtHop’s regular venues. The work of local artists graces the walls and reflects the owners’ efforts to “expand things that bring us joy in life.” This month, EveryDay Fitness will host dancers Denise Mannion and Annie Dean, who will perform to the world and Middle Eastern music of Pangia. The gym and training facility was opened in February by visionary owner Ed White and his partner, Larry Fuqua. White’s office in the loft area overlooks the spacious 21,000 square feet of carefully renovated and creatively designed workout space. He credits Aztec Construction owner and his wife, Kelly and Alexis Asbe, “for making my dream come true.” It was a whirlwind adventure from the time he left his old location and opened the doors of the new facility on Athens Avenue. Characteristically upbeat and enthusiastic, White describes EveryDay Fitness as much more than a gym. The loft lounge is regularly filled with stretched and relaxed patrons visiting after serious workouts in the fully outfitted training gym below. Often, members bring goodies to share, while others occasionally come in just to socialize. White has created a “club” that invites more than a quick in-and-out workout. He and Fuqua spend every day at the club. They know everyone who comes in. Hospitality is a hallmark of the “way I do business,” White says. Even in this difficult economy, the business is flourishing. The club now is home to the chiropractic services of Dr. Maria Salas, and The Day Spa, offering  41 Enjoy October 2009


Breast ProBlems • Breast CanCer • Venous Disease You deserve an expert Dr. Sandberg specializes in breast disease, women’s health and venous disease. Dedicated to excellent patient care, Dr. Sandberg has been a part of the Northern California medical community since 1986. New patients welcome.

www.majaksandbergmd.com

Breast Problems: Pain & Tenderness Abnormal Mammogram Breast Disease Breast Cancer Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC) Breast Conservation Procedures: Sentinel Node Biopsy Excisional Biopsy Lumpectomy Partial Mastectomy Venous Disease: Leg Vein Problems Varicose Veins Spider Veins Venous Incompetence Venous Problems Leg Vein Treatments: Minimally Invasive Endovenous Ablation Sclerotherapy Laser

Visit our website for many helpful links regarding breast and vein health

2510 Airpark Drive, Suite 303, Redding, CA 96001 | 530.244.6619 | fax: 244.6906


Progressive medical procedures in a healing environment.

We think it’s the best of both worlds. Hip resurfacing • Knee & hip replacement • Artificial disc replacement • Sports Medicine • Shoulder rotator cuff repair • Minimally invasive techniques • and more Contact our Orthopedics Program Coordinator 530.926.7144 • mercymtshastaortho@chw.edu

914 Pine St. • Mt. Shasta • CA • 96067 www.mercymtshasta.org

Destination HealtHcare – it’s in our nature


massage and skin care. White credits some of the continual growth in business to referrals from local physicians, as well as the free monthly nutrition seminars he offers to the public the last Saturday of each month. He brings to the business his long career in fitness training and management experience beginning in San Diego, where he trained athletes at San Diego State University and several professional bodybuilders. He worked in local gyms and eventually managed one of Jack LaLanne’s Health Spas. When White moved to Redding, his career took an interesting turn with specialized training to work with spine injury patients. Now, with a following of faithful private clients, White enjoys sharing his vision and his talents as a trainer with a growing community who are seeking health and wellness, along with a good workout. White reflects warmly about his Greek heritage and the single mother who raised him. The gifts of hospitality and generosity that she instilled then are now very much a part of his efforts to invite others to share not only his space and his talents, but his sense of embracing the hopes and dreams of others. It is no surprise then that recent fundraising events held at the club have been such a great success. The High Contrast Benefit, a black-tie event held in May and co-sponsored with Hanna Gallery, raised funds for the ASPCA. A flipside event, “Jimmy Buffett, It’s 5 O’Clock Somewhere,” offered an opportunity to attend a dress-down party in September that garnered monies for another worthy cause. 2nd Saturday ArtHop and EveryDay Fitness make a good match. White supports artists as an integral part of his business. “It dresses up the club,” he says, while giving the artists a perfect gallery where many have found buyers for their work. White early on dedicated space for a small permanent gallery where a friend displays her work, and he has invited others to hang their art on the massive club walls. ArtHop opens just one more opportunity for White to support his community. Belly dancer Denise Mannion has trained through the years with many of the legends of belly dancing in the Bay Area. She performed in Troupe Mandala along with friend Jinjer Rader and others for more than 20 years, competing and winning troupe, duet and soloist competitions. Today, Mannion pursues her craft with passion and skill as she presents a “visual expression of the music.” “When you are dancing, it’s not about you, it’s about the music and how you respect and interpret it to your audience,” says Rader. Mannion performs and teaches in Mt. Shasta and as an adjunct instructor at College of the Siskiyous in Weed. Dancer Annie Dean will join Mannion in the dance during October’s ArtHop performance. Pat Olson, Mannion’s husband, is the centerpiece of the musical group Pangia, well-known throughout belly dancing and world music circles. Olson plays the oud, a stringed instrument of ancient origin that he says is considered the “prince of instruments.” With Mannion on the keyboard and guest drummers, Pangia performs up and down both the West and East Coasts. They are regular features at Rakkasah, the world’s largest belly dancing festival, held annually in the Bay area. Drawing on influences from around the world, especially Middle Eastern countries, Pangia plays traditional as well as original music written and arranged by Olson. Olson will perform solo during the ArtHop while Mannion dances. They have recorded six CDs. More information about Pangia can be found at www.pangiaraks.com . Enjoy the performances of Annie Dean, Denise Mannion and Pangia during October’s 2nd Saturday ArtHop at EveryDay Fitness, 2345 Athens Avenue. Information about EveryDay Fitness is available at www.edfitness.com or by calling (530) 246-1902. • 44 Enjoy September 2009

DEPARTMENT | story: | photos:

Photo by Sarah Skinner www.shakemyday.com

October April 2009 Enjoy 44


| story: | story: | photos: DEPARTMENT BUSINESS Beth K. Maxey | photos: KaraStewartPhotography.com

golden touch

TEHAMA COUNTY’S PACIFIC SUN GOURMET

Tucked away on a rural Tehama County road is a golden treasure – richly flavored Pacific Sun extra virgin olive oil pressed from locally grown, handharvested fruit from trees that have been in the area for decades. Pacific Sun Gourmet is part of Pacific Farms and Orchards, Inc., a family business owned by Jane Flynn and managed by her son Brendon Flynn, which grows plums, almonds and walnuts for Sunsweet, Blue Diamond and Diamond. The farm was founded in 1952 by Flynn’s grandfather Bernard, a San Diego soap company owner, who bought land in Vina which he later sold to monks who established the Cistercian-Trappist Abbey of New Clairvaux. So he bought more land on Gerber’s east side and began farming, requiring his children to spend summers working there. In the early 1970s, his son Vincent founded Pacific Farms and Orchards, Inc., which he ran until he died in a plane crash in 1986. 45 Enjoy October 2009


Thermage skin tightening —

smooth the skin around your eyes… The skin around the eyes can have wrinkles and crinkles. Laser resurfacing, Botox® & Thermage® eye treatments are ways to significantly smooth the skin texture, especially when addressed early. RENEW: Dr. Elizabeth Stratte recommends Thermage® treatment because it stimulates your body’s natural skin renewal process. The procedure tightens existing collagen and forms new collagen in the skin. Over time, sagging and wrinkled skin becomes smoother and tighter. The skin will have improved tone and texture giving the eyes a younger looking appearance. LIMITED TIME OFFER… When you schedule a Thermage® eye procedure receive complimentary Botox® for crows feet & Restylane® to erase dark circles under the eyes. (up to $450 value, offer expires 10/31/09)

A FREE Community Health Celebration for the Entire Family Saturday, October 10, 2009 • 8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Tehama District Fairgrounds LIVE ENTERTAINMENT AND FAMILY FUN

FREE Prizes • FREE Information FREE Health Screenings FREE Self-Breast Check & Education (men & women) Health and Wellness Information... And much more! St Elizabeth Imaging Center A member of CHW

Latino Outreach of Tehama County Interpreters Available

2626 Edith Ave. Ste D, Redding Find us on:

before

after

(877) 777-1266

www.renewskinsolutions.com

Sacred Heart Calico Fair • Corning Observer • KBLF Radio 1490

Roasted Pumpkin & Apple Soup kissed with cream & tarragon

from farm to table

in Octoberr

getting fresh with chef ché Happy Hours 3pm-6pm. $3 beer, $2 off all wines soju-cocktails & specialty beer.

Our Soup D’Jour is always prepared with house made stock, the freshest seasonal produce, and lots of love…

Moonstone Bistro uses biodegradable to go containers. We buy from & support local farmers & suppliers. We use only fresh, seasonal produce, free range, cage free meats & sustainable, line caught fish. Our food is prepared by hand, not unwrapped.

Celebrate Octoberfest at Moonstone Bistro!

3425 Placer Street, redding

E at. Dr i n k . P l ay.

Extensive list of Belgian, German & Austrian beer specials all month in October… Join us on October 9th & 10th for a multi-course beer pairing dinner!

(on the corner of Placer & Buenaventura)

530.241.3663


TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR LIFE

Where you can put your life on Auto…

Identify Your Allergies

Ronald L. Renard, MD

prestige

Redding’s Only Board Certified Allergist & Immunologist Treating Adults and Children For: Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

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Busy people need a place where they can do more than one task… Award-winning CARS auto repair will get your domestic or foreign car in tip top condition while shopping at Prestige, you can choose from exquisite jewelry, essential oil lotions and gourmet treats.

530.246.9277•1177 Prestige Way, Redding • 530.246.2658 (find us next to the Union 76 Station at North Market and Caterpillar)

Welcome Back to School…

We are proud to be your neighborhood pharmacy. Our community may be small in size, but we are big on old-fashioned service. For us, old-fashioned service requires certain methods, specific principles, and good communication in dealing with your health. Customers deserve the best we have to offer. Palo Cedro Pharmacy was the first (and only) pharmacists’ owned & operated pharmacy since 1975. Since no one plans for an emergency, remember that we our located next to Palo Cedro Medical Clinic. P C Pharmacy and P C Medical can turn an inconvenient situation (even urgent) and make it a manageable task. We’re located 1 block SOUTH when you exit Hwy 44 to Deschutes Road. From Redding turn right on Deschutes for fast, friendly & reliable service.

Dean Wofford, MS, Pharm.D & staff

PALO C EDRO 9180 Deschutes Road, South of 44, Palo Cedro

530-547-4465

P HARMACY

TAKING CARE OF FAMILIES for over 30 years. Open Monday-Friday, 9am-6pm; Saturday, 10am-12pm


With help and encouragement from her family and the farm’s loyal employees, his wife Jane Flynn continued the business, focusing on the orchard crops. And when Brendon Flynn, agribusiness degree from Cal Poly in hand, came home after working several years in the Salinas Valley, he had something new in mind. “I wanted to find a product to directly market from farm to fork – a direct consumer product,” he says. He had to look only as far as the old Mission olive trees lining the road to the family farm: a new olive oil industry was beginning to re-emerge in California. Pacific Sun produced 200 gallons of oil in 2002 and began its own milling in 2004. Flynn partners with local growers to buy fruit for oil in addition to hand-harvesting the old trees on the family’s land, and considers relationships both with local producers and the product’s consumers of key importance to the company. “Our desire is to connect people to where their food comes from,” says Flynn. “Our product sells best when we talk to people. We prefer to have that connection with consumers.” North state residents, food buyers, and chefs are invited to meet owners and employees, pick olives in the orchards, watch the milling process and sample olive oil during “Love at First Crush” on Sunday, Nov. 8, from 11 am to 3 pm. Families are encouraged to attend the free event, says sales manager Leslie Hoyt. Activities include tours of the mill, hay rides, olive picking, music, olive oil tasting (and free sample bottles while supply lasts) and wine tasting from local wineries. Food will be available for purchase. “People always say they didn’t know how long it takes to fill a bucket (with olives),” says Hoyt. The open house ties in with the company’s core values of sustainability, health, and quality for its employees, products and community, and with Flynn’s desire to forge relationships with his product’s users. New this year is a community milling opportunity, where people can bring olives from their own trees for crushing and then share the resulting oil based on the amount of olives they contribute. “People can bring between 20 to 500 pounds of olives,” says Hoyt. Olives will be received from 9 am to 1 pm on Sunday, Nov. 8, as part of the “Love at First Crush” event, or on Sunday, Dec. 6. Milling is 50 cents per pound. “This should add another level of merriment,” Hoyt says, smiling. Pacific Sun’s artisan extra virgin olive oil can vary in taste from year to year and batch to batch. “We handcraft our blends according to what nature gives us every year,” Flynn says. “There are small variances, but there is a difference.” “It keeps it interesting,” agrees Hoyt. “We have notes on each barrel – the fruitiness, the pungency.” The company can trace its products back to a location in each orchard. The millhouse and production facility is certified organic by the California Certified Organic Farmers. Flynn and his employees are proud of several recent awards for their signature blends, including best of show and best in class gold and silver medal awards from the 2009 Los Angeles International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition, plus two gold medals and one silver medal from the 2009 Yolo County Fair California Olive Oil competition. •

DEPARTMENT | story: | photos:

Pacific Sun Gourmet Pacific Farms and Orchards, Inc. 22880 Gerber Rd., Gerber (530) 385-1475 www.pacificsunoliveoil.com October April 2009 Enjoy 48


Nbusiness orthern

nba

associates

Meet some of the proud members of the

Business Networking Since 1985.

Irish Irish Robertson Robertson Executive Executive Director Director 2375 2375 North North Street Street Anderson Anderson (530) (530) 365-8095 365-8095

1726 COURT STREET PHONE: 530-241-2515 P.O. BOX 990700 FAX: 530-241-1106 broberts@nystromcpa.com REDDING, CA 96099

L. BRUCE ROBERTS, CPA PARTNER W W W . N Y S T R O M C PA . C O M

www.AndersonChamber.info

PREFERRED Carpet Care A Deeper Clean That Stays Clean Longer

243-8400

Since 1969 www.preferredcarpetcare.com

Gene Ebert’s

Custom Painting LaRue Rocha

Consultant/CA Lic.# 0536261

Insurance Planning Employee Benefit Planning

(530) 223-5555

1355 E. Cypress Ave. Suite A • Redding www.tri-capitalfinancial.com

River Romance

27 Years Of Quality Service Residential Commercial Faux Design Lic # 553659

Sandy Shelby (530) 547-7387

Adoption Center & Thrift Store 9384-C Deschutes Rd. Palo Cedro

(530) 515-2872

www.acawl.org

®

“A Touch of Italy on the Sacramento River”

(530) 222-2728

Two or three-hour gondolier-like dinner cruises. An unforgettable experience for couples, friends & families. www.RiverRomanceCruises.com

     The Founding Fathers of Herman Miller Max, DJ, and Hugh De Pree. 8544 AIRPORT ROAD • REDDING (530) 221-3310 •www.michaels-inc.com

Established 1996 COBURN’S ASPHALT MAINTENANCE, INC.

SEALCOATING • ADA STRIPING PATCHING • HOT CRACK FILLING Lic. # 850355

530 221-6394

John Lundberg

Web: CircleN@Clearwire.net

Greg Coburn License # 923888 (530) 347-0152

P.O. Box 815 Cottonwood, Ca 96022

www.coburnsasphaltinc.com

Bob Wagner 223-4600

1856 Keystone Court • Redding www.wagnerelectric.us

DK ENTERTAINMENT Mobile DJ Weddings • Parties • Events

Office: (530) 246-5633 Cell:(530) 410-5655 www.dkentertainment.net

Please help support the small businesses that support our community • www.reddingnba.org


SPOTLIGHT | story and photos: Wyatt Olson

80 YEARS OF GERLINGER STEEL Anyone who has driven through downtown Redding has likely noticed the large red sign emblazoned with, “Gerlinger Steel and Supply,” but few realize that inside those retro brick buildings operates one of the oldest companies in Redding. Gerlinger Steel opened 80 years ago and has been involved with some of the most groundbreaking and important construction projects in Northern California, such as Shasta Dam, Keswick Dam, Interstate 5 and more. Fred Gerlinger Sr. and his son, E.E. “Bert” Gerlinger, founded this landmark Redding business as Gerlinger Foundry and Machine Works in 1929. The poor health of Fred’s wife encouraged the family

to move from Salem, Ore., shortly before this. They came for the hot, dry climate in hopes that it would help bring her back to good health. “It must have worked because she lived to be nearly 100 years old,” says current company president Fred Gerlinger, Bert’s son. The early 1930s were not an easy time for anyone, and for Gerlinger, cash was short. According to Fred Gerlinger, Bert was once in danger of not making payroll back then because a customer owed him money. Turns out that this customer had the same problem as Bert his client hadn’t paid yet. Being insistent, Bert went to his customer’s customer and got the same story. “So he kept following the trail,  October 2009 Enjoy 50


getting the same story every time, until he finally got someone to pay, and that person paid the next, and so on until his customer paid him, allowing Bert to make payroll.” As the company matured, the types of services and products that it offered changed and evolved. In the 1930s, when a client failed to pay on several gold dredgers, the company began mining gold with them for a short time to make up money lost. The 1940s through the 1970s brought many infrastructure projects to Northern California, including Shasta, Trinity, Keswick and Oroville Dams, Interstate 5, Highway 44 and various irrigation projects. Each resulted in business for Gerlinger. In the early 1990s, the company expanded dramatically by opening branches in Sacramento and Nevada City to better serve the Central Valley region. Since then, the foundry has closed because of the introduction of EPA regulations, but Gerlinger has expanded its machine shop and other offerings. It now sells a variety of steel and aluminum products. Also, its extensive welding and fabrication shops can process the metals to a customer’s exact specification. It also offers an assortment of industrial supplies fasteners, pipe fittings, ornamental iron and even machinery. Gerlinger Steel and Supply is still family owned and operated, with its third and fourth generations of family in the business. Fred 51 Enjoy October 2009

and his wife Jo run the company together, and their son Tim is vice president. Their youngest son Scott also helps out his brother at the Sacramento shop. The business employs about 65 people among its three locations. More and more businesses are changing their products to keep up with the rapid adoption of “green” materials, but as Fred Gerlinger says, “Metal sales and metal recycling is one of the original ‘green’ businesses, as most metals are easily recycled and many products can be made from metal.” In fact, 95% percent of all the metals that Gerlinger sells are recycled. Also, the company’s delivery trucks have nearly tripled in fuel mileage in just 25 years and can haul more than ever, helping to keep fewer vehicles on the road. Even with those improvements, Gerlinger has also made it a mission to cut down further on waste and trash within the company, reusing everything. “We even use the flip sides of office paper before discarding them in the recycle bins,” says Fred. They’ve reduced their trash from 16 yards a week to only four, even while product sales increased substantially. Many things have changed in Redding over the years, but one thing will always stay the same, Fred Gerlinger promises: “As with the past 80 years, we will continue to work with customers to serve their present needs and adjust our goods and services to provide for their future needs.” •


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Front Row L to R:

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Berna Cummings

Nina Herrera

Customer Services Representative

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Justin Gordon

VP/Relationship Banker

Jena Glynn

Branch Services Manager

Steve Branstetter

Amber Black

SVP/Relationship Banker

Consumer Loan Representative

Tony DiPerry

Cindy Smith

Customer Sales Representative

Paula Leet

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Auto Dealer Loan Representative

California’s Oldest Independent Bank

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Merchant Services Representative

Whatever your financial planning entails . . . for business, for family or for something special, we’re ready to help with consistent Best-in-the-West customer service and relationship bankers who still make local loan decisions. Our customers not only appreciate the excellent, attentive personal service and great banking solutions they receive at Scott Valley Bank, they expect it! You see, when your bank is the oldest independent bank in California with a remarkable history of strength and stability, then your bankers can keep their focus where it belongs, on the best level of service for you. So. . . if your bank isn’t meeting your expectations . . . We invite you to come home to Scott Valley Bank. To learn more about us visit scottvalleybank.com.

REDDING • 221-2000 • 185 HARTNELL (across from Raley’s Shopping Center) Shingletown 474-1331 • Weaverville 623-2732

®

Serving Redding since 1990

Also ser serving r vi ving ng M Mt Mt. t. Sha S Shasta, hast sta, Wee W Weed, eedd, Yreka Y Yreka, ka, Et Etna Etna, na, Ft Ft. Jo Jone Jones, ness, H Hap Happy appy Cam Camp, mp Oakland m Oakland, Santa Clara Clara, Walnut Creek & Medford


INTEREST | story: Gary VanDeWalker | photo: John Signor

giant’spalace symbol rocks at castle crags

After a rare summer burst of rain, the casual observer along a forest path notices the glint of black glass. The edge of a boot uncovers a Native American arrowhead. The signs of the earliest inhabitants of Northern California lay hidden underneath the years of forest growth and await discovery by those with keen eyes. In 1941, along Little Castle Creek, flowing down from Castle Crags, teenagers Willis Cleaver and Robert Eller were hiking when they stumbled upon a petroglyph in a granite slab. The symbol was a hand with an eye in the palm, the letter M underneath the engraving. They kept their discovery between friends until the gossip reached Forest Ranger Frank Bascom, who began an investigation. The Castle Crags are among the oldest natural monuments in Northern California. The steep, granite pillars form a giant’s palace which looms 6,000 feet over the valley. Carpets of green skirt the foundation as clouds tease the spires. Part of the ShastaTrinity National Forest, the Crags dominate the view, providing a spectacular pairing with Mt. Shasta in the background. Twenty-eight miles of pine-scented hiking trails meander through the park. The variety of wildlife and flora is as varied as the images in Symbol Rocks. Both the Castle Crags and the glyphs are complicated, yet delicate, capturing a primitive beauty. Archaeologists began to investigate the glyphs’ similarities to etchings from Central and South America, comparing them to others as far away as India. Up the trail, the first symbols are seen on Cleft Rock. There is an all-seeing eye in the center of a hand, pigmented with red coloring. 53 Enjoy October 2009

Other symbols follow: a serpent, and a woman’s hand. Higher up, a second rock contains more symbols, and is joined by yet a third granite boulder with more symbols, including an Egyptian Ankh. The signs are curious in that they do not match other Native American art in the area. People weave tapestries of experience through the Crags. Rock climbers, fishermen, campers and day hikers build memories among the glacier-smoothed peaks. The petroglyphs fit within the long history of activity through the area, which began with the Native Americans, continued with a well-used pioneer toll road, and now includes the Pacific Crest Trail, which brings hundreds on foot through the Castle Crags each year. Symbol Rocks remains an attraction. However, the absence of lichen growth in the carvings and the necessity of tungsten steel cutting tools to create the images finally uncovered the truth. Rather than an ancient relic, they were a recent creation by a group of local boys. The carvings may be a hoax, but the majesty of the Crags and canyon with Symbols Rocks are worth a visit. For like the first Americans and those who have followed here, one should know that the beauty of the Crags is the true treasure to be found. • Castle Crags State Park is located 25 miles north of Lake Shasta (6 miles south of Dunsmuir) off Interstate 5. Take the Castella exit and follow signs to the park. Forest Rangers can give directions to Symbol Rocks.


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We are the Physicians Choice for LTAC and TCU Pulmonary/Ventilator Programs • Wound Management • Medically Complex Programs Neurological Rehabilitation Programs {Spine - Brain Injury - Stroke} Multidisciplinary Care Conferencing • Team Nursing: RN, LVN & CNA’s Clean Friendly Environment

When it comes to healing our patients,

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Long Term Acute Care Hospital - Transitional Care - Outpatient Rehabilitation 2801 Eureka Way • Redding, California 96001 • 530.246.9000 • www.norcalrehab.com


February 2007

JUNE 2008 AUGUST 2008

BILLY & PATRICK’S TOP 10 PICK

APRIL 2007

gotcha covered Top 10 ENJOY COVERS

55 Enjoy October 2009

DECEMBER 2008 MARCH 2009 JUNE 2009

VOTE each month for a new Top 10 at www.Q97Country.com and find the results in the next issue!

SEPTEMBER 2007

Patrick : November 2007 The child holding the pumpkin. I love that photo – it’s my absolute favorite cover. It’s the cutest kid and I can’t wait for Halloween.

OCTOBER 2007

Billy: December 2006 The little girl hiding behind the Christmas tree. I love the spirit of Christmas and this cover was just warm and fuzzy.

MAY 2008

gotcha covered


Redding

Packed with $6500 in free & discount coupons!

coupon book

A gift that keeps on giving & giving & giving thru summer 2010

Entertainment * Dining * Shopping * Home & Auto Health & Beauty * Excursions & Hotel * Services 30% Get your copy today at: of book proceeds Orchard Nutrition Luigi’s Pizza Great Harvest Bakery support area Fit One Athletic Clubs Holy Family Books & Gifts OJ’s 5 & Dime youth charities! Desert Sun Tanning Critter Cleaners www.YesRedding.com Available for fundraising and employee gifts from Tremblay Market Strategies at www.yesredding.com or call 530-232-5525

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5FOR$25

F I V E T H I N G S T O D O I N T H E N O R T H S T A T E F O R $ 2 5 or less

1

The air is chilling, the leaves are turning, the holidays are approaching… it’s time to get out and enjoy the changing season with these activities that won’t break the bank.

Volunteer: Volunteering costs zero dollars but brings infinite rewards. Many organizations in the North State thrive on donated labor. One is the Learning Center at the Good News Rescue Mission in Redding. Run completely by volunteers, the center can use your help to provide education services to the Mission’s residents. Most organizations are happy to work with potential volunteers’ schedules. To volunteer at the Good News Rescue Mission, obtain a volunteer application survey from the Good News Rescue Mission’s Administration office (2842 South Market Street, Redding) during business hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30am to 5 pm, or from their website (www. gnrm.org/jobs--volunteers), or call (530) 242-5920 and ask for Janet Shields.

3

Teach The Kids To Cook: Tired of doing all the cooking? Get the kids to pitch in! California Kitchen & Company in Red Bluff offers cooking classes for kids. Each Tuesday from 3:30 to 4:30pm, Jill Hill utilizes the shop kitchen to instruct youngsters in how to prepare such things as fruity French toast tortilla wraps, ham ‘n cheese calzones, Cracker Jack cupcakes and mini meatloafs. Cost is $10 per class per student, or $8 per class if you register for three or more classes. Pre-registration is required. Sign up junior today by calling (530) 529-2482.

2

Pan For Gold: Panning for gold and mining have been popular activities since the 1800s. And places remain where you can relive history and even find a few flakes of color. Experienced gold panners with equipment are welcome to seek gold anywhere on public national forest land that has not been staked (usually where posted). A few areas exist where claims are not allowed, yet recreational gold panning is permitted. Contact the National Forest Service office of the area you wish to explore for more details on gold panning regulations. Trinity County is a great place to start. Check out http://users.snowcrest.net/wb6fzh/tcgold5. html for information on how to pan, equipment needed and where to buy it, safety tips and suggestions on where to pan.

4

Tour Victorian Homes: You won’t find many small towns in California with as many historic homes as Yreka. Blessed with more than 70 pre-1900 homes, many of which have been beautifully restored, Yreka is a Victorian home haven. All sit within a few blocks of historic downtown (Miner Street) and can be viewed easily on foot. A plaque on each house details the name of the original owner, and the year it was built. Visit www.yrekachamber/historic_homes.html for a few examples of what you can see on a short walk around Yreka’s historic district. Red Bluff is also known for its beautifully restored Victorian homes. A tour through “the Victorian city on the river” takes you back in time as many of the pre-1900 Victorian homes have been painstakingly restored either as homes or professional offices. Visiting the restored Victorian, Craftsman and Tudor style homes helps to recall the unique “small town America” charm that recalls a simpler time. www.redbluffchamberofcommerce.com

5

Pick a Pumpkin: All Hallow’s Evening, known these days as Halloween, is celebrated each year with candy, costumes and freshly carved jack-o-lanterns. While pumpkins are readily found in grocery stores, nothing rings in the fall season like a trip to a local patch to pick your own! Do you know why we hollow out pumpkins? Hundreds of years ago, the Irish and Scottish hollowed out turnips with embers or candles and turned them into very popular Halloween decorations. Such carvings would ward off “Stingy Jack” and other malevolent spirits on Halloween, 57 Enjoy October 2009

and they also served as representations of the souls of the dead. Irish families who emigrated to America brought the tradition with them, and replaced turnips with pumpkins, which were more plentiful here and easier to carve. Visit www.pumpkinpatchesandmore.org/CApnorth.php to find a pumpkin patch in any North State county.


For ticket information and hours, visit hawesfarms.com

For ticket information and hours, visit haweshaunts.com

Don’t miss our Egyptian maze. Find King Tuts Tomb in our maze! New this year Pony Rides, Zip Lines, Stagecoach Rides. Don’t miss our real 24” gauge train! Pumpkin Cannons, over 50 varieties of pumpkins. Great Food and More!

Opens September 26–November 1

530-365-8488 • 21923 Dersch Rd, Anderson CA

lending a hand… Home Loans

BIBLES, BOOKS, and MORE

Home of the: • • • •

All new Scream Acres (haunted corn maze). Only Fear Grows Here! Exclusively designed by Oak Island Entertainment. And if you haven’t seen our Haunted Barn don’t miss it this year. It features the Dread Shed and Buried Alive.

The Good Book Store

FHA & VA Construction Financing Neighborhood Champions Community Commitment

530-222-2944

Marianne McAleer Vice President Sr. Mortgage Loan Officer 530.242.2422 (Office) 530.945.0366 (Cell) 530.242.2440 (Fax) Marianne.mcaleer@bankofamerica.com http://ae.bankofamerica.com/mariannemcaleer

2244 Hilltop Drive Redding, California 96002

Programs are subject to change without notice

WE

BEA T TH E BI

GB

OXE S

!

Before...

HERITAGE

WOODWORKING Custom cabinets you can afford!

Saturday, November 7, 2009 • 10:00 am to 3:30 pm Ticket/Guide for Tour and Art Show - $20 For more information call (530) 241-7676 ...After

Tickets Available after October 17th from these locations:

We have been located at4633 Mountain Lakes Blvd. Redding CA since 1986 Phone 530-243-7215 Fax 530-243-0222 heritage@shasta.com www.reddingcabinets.com

CSL# 504550

Jose Antonio’s • Palo Cedro Gift Gallery Parmer’s Furniture & Design • That Kitchen Place Tina’s Interior Design Resources • Westwood Village Florist Wild Thyme Gifts & Garden

Proceeds Benefit AAUW Local Scholarships And the Educational Foundation


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All information contained herein is supplied by the seller to the best of his/her knowledge, but is subject to verification by the purchaser, and the broker assumes no responsibility for the correctness thereof. In accordance with the law, this property is offered without respect to race, gender, color, creed, familial status, national origin or handicap.


dining guide

Advertiser Listings

G R E AT P L A C E S TO D I N E I N T H E N O R T H S TAT E

The Golf Club Tierra oaks

The Golf Club Tierra Oaks is offering many unique dining opportunities. Upcoming events include: Exhibition Pasta Night on September 10th for only $14.99 and our weekly Wednesday Night Dinner “2 for $31” including 2 drinks, 1 appetizer and 2 entrees. Please call for reservations or to schedule your next social function. 19700 La Crescenta Drive Redding; (530) 275-0795

GiroNDa’s

CeDar Tree resTauraNT

Thanks to everyone for supporting Cedar Tree Restaurant for 20 years. Our old fashion country breakfast, lunches (served 7 days) and dinners have been our main stay. Biscuits ‘n Gravy, Omelettes, Steak & Eggs, Gourmet Salads, Lots of Burgers, Homemade Soups & Chili. The best Prime Rib, Steaks and Seafood. Dinner is served Wednesday–Saturday Nights. 22020 Palo Way, Palo Cedro; (530) 547-4290

TiMbers sTeakhouse

Family owned, serving up Old World freshness, flavor, quality, service & hospitality. Large menu has wide appeal from our home made lasagna and sauces to its mouth watering Tuscan steak and nightly fish specials. Enjoy full cocktail service, over 40 wines or cold beer. Located West of Eureka Way & California Street. www.2girondas.com; 1100 Center Street, Redding; (530) 244-7663

Tucked away from the hustle of the gaming floor, Timbers is the perfect place for a special dinner. The natural décor of maple wood and stone creates an intimate, cozy ambiance where you can enjoy an outstanding meal prepared to perfection just for you. Rolling Hills Casino, 2655 Barham Avenue, Corning; (530) 528-3500

CouNTrY kiTCheN

From farm to table, Moonstone Bistro uses cage free, sustainably harvested, local & organic ingredients! Our pasta and bread is made from scratch daily. We use biodegradable to go products. Enjoy boutique beer & wines from around the world. The best part? Entrée prices range from $10.95 to $32. Reservations anytime. 3425 Placer Street #110 (530) 241-3663

PosT offiCe salooN

A great local downtown spot for over 11 years, Carnegie’s serves up savory sandwiches, soups, salads and more. Located across from the post office on the corner of Oregon and Yuba Street in Downtown Redding. Carnegie’s offers micro brews and a full lunch menu. Now serving lunch on Saturdays. Come by and enjoy the company! 1600 Oregon Street, Redding; (530) 246-2926

Started in Dunsmuir in the 1970’s, Country Kitchen shortly relocated to Redding. Lin and Charlie Moss bought the restaurant in 1993 and proudly continue the tradition of serving homemade breads, cinnamon rolls, biscuits & gravy like Grandma made and gourmet soups in a friendly family atmosphere. Nominated best breakfast by Record Searchlight readers. 1099 Hilltop Drive, Redding; (530) 223-5438

Since 1976, the Post Office Saloon & Grill has been downtown Redding’s friendliest destination for good times, great food a full selection of beer, wine and cocktails. Famous for the P.O. Burger and lively Bloody Mary’s, the Post Office also features nightly specials and live music on weekends. 1636 Market St., Redding; (530) 246-2190

riVers resTauraNT

We personally invite you to Taste, See and Experience Rivers Restaurant while enjoying the view high above the beautiful Sacramento River from Redding’s only shaded and mist cooled patio. Experience our delicious selections of pristine seafood, tender beef, unique and flavorful Pasta dishes, all artistically presented in a beautiful and relaxing setting. 202 Hemsted Drive, Redding; (530) 223-4456

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To learn more about the new Enjoy Dining Guide, contact Britanie Stratton at (530) 246-4687, x108. October 2009 Enjoy 60


WHAT’S COOKIN’ | by Lana Granfors

cookin’texasstyle

CHICKEN FRIED STEAK AND SOUTHERN BLACK-EYED PEAS Steak and Gravy Ingredients: Steaks: 2 lbs. beef bottom round, trimmed of excess fat 2 – 2 ½ cups all-purpose flour 2 T garlic powder 2 T onion powder Salt and freshly ground black pepper 3 whole eggs, beaten 2 – 3 cups buttermilk Hot sauce, to taste 4 strips bacon or if not using bacon, vegetable oil as directed below

Really good Texas Style Chicken Fried Steak is just too hard to find in restaurants, but luckily, it is pretty easy to make. While it may not be the least-caloric food item, it’s usually not something you have every Friday night. So for a couple of special guys in my life, my son Rusty and our friend, John Bertagnolli, I like to prepare this for their October birthdays. And when it comes to really tasty, tender and crispy “CFS,” the only way to serve it is with creamy milk gravy, seasoned with lots of black pepper and a great side. One of my favorites is flavorful black-eyed peas, which can be made year round, either fresh from the garden or dried from the pantry. This is truly a man-sized meal. So heat up the cast iron skillet, set the table and get ready to stuff your face… this is the real deal, right from Grandma Wood’s recipe file.

61 Enjoy October 2009

Gravy: 3 heaping T all-purpose flour 1 cup buttermilk 1 cup whole milk Salt and freshly ground black pepper Hot sauce, to taste

Slice the beef into four ½-inch-thick pieces. Use the teeth side of a metal meat mallet (if desired, top each piece with plastic wrap) to pound thin, to about ¼-inch thick. This will tenderize this cut of meat. Place the pieces in a shallow bowl (I use a Ziploc bag) and pour 1 cup of buttermilk and 1 tsp. hot sauce over the pieces. Season with salt and pepper. Marinate for at least 2 hours or overnight. In a medium shallow platter or dish, add the flour, garlic powder, onion powder, cumin, salt and pepper. In another shallow plate, lightly beat the eggs and add 1 cup buttermilk and 1 teaspoon hot sauce; season with salt and pepper. Remove the steaks from the marinade and shake off the excess buttermilk. Dredge each piece of meat in the seasoned flour, then in the seasoned buttermilk and back into the flour, allowing excess to drip off. Set out on a rack fitted over a baking sheet and allow to rest in the refrigerator for at least 20 to 25 minutes while you cook the bacon. (Chilling the battered meat will help set the crust.) Now the true Texas version calls for the steak to be cooked in bacon fat as follows, but you can substitute vegetable oil. To cook with bacon, slice the bacon into 1- inch pieces and cook in a large skillet over medium heat until the bacon is crisp. Drain the bacon on paper towels and reserve the fat in the skillet. Cook the steaks in the bacon fat, over medium heat until they are golden brown on each side, about 3-5 minutes per side, adding a bit of vegetable oil if needed. Set aside and keep warm. If using oil, add about 1 inch vegetable oil to the large skillet and heat over medium-high heat to 365 degrees F. Remove steaks and drain on paper towels. Carefully remove some of the fat from the cast iron pan, reserving 1/4 cup. With pan over medium heat, sprinkle in 3 tablespoons of flour and whisk to make a roux, scraping up any brown bits on the bottom of the pan. Once the flour has been fully incorporated and slightly browned (careful not to burn) about one minute, slowly add the buttermilk and milk and continue to whisk until the gravy is nice and thick. Season well with salt and plenty of ground black pepper, then whisk in hot sauce to taste. Place the steaks on a serving platter, top with gravy, garnish with bacon and serve with creamy mashed potatoes and these Southern Black-eyed Peas.

Southern Black Eyed Peas Ingredients: 2 – 4 slices thick-cut bacon, sliced 5 cloves garlic, peeled 2 bay leaves 1 pound dried black-eyed peas 1 - 2 quarts low-sodium chicken stock

4 tomatoes, quartered Salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 lemon, juiced 4 green onions, chopped ¼ cup chopped fresh cilantro leaves

In a large stockpot over medium heat, cook bacon until crisp. Remove the bacon to the paper towel and let drain. In the same pot, add the garlic, bay leaves and dried peas to the bacon fat and stir to combine. Add the tomatoes and pour in 1 quart of the chicken stock. Simmer over medium-low heat for at least 1 hour, adding more stock as needed, and until peas are tender. Option: Transfer 1 to 2 cups of the peas to a blender and puree until smooth (be careful, as peas are hot). Place the blended peas back into the pot and stir. Continue to cook for another 15 minutes. Before plating up, add the lemon juice and stir. Garnish with green onions, cilantro and bacon before serving.


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LIVING ROOM | story: Kerri Regan | photos: James Mazzotta

HOM E S T E AD

THE REGANS’ WEAVERVILLE VICTORIAN HOME 63 Enjoy October 2009


o a visitor, the Regan House in Weaverville offers an architectural glimpse back to the turn of the 20th century. Lofty ceilings are accented with ornate chandeliers, a formal dining area appears fit for a queen’s visit, and the multidimensional exterior has inspired local artists to capture it on canvas. Yet when Mike Regan walks these halls, he sees his family history. In the library, his father read volumes of Voltaire that still rest on the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. In the side yard, his sister and brother each took their wedding vows. In the backyard, his

mother plucked apples and pears from a tree’s heavy branches, turning them into applesauce and pies by day’s end. And upstairs, a young Regan played engineer until his wooden trains wore grooves in the sturdy track. The Victorian across the street from the Trinity County Courthouse was built in 1899 by Daniel James Hall, then the district attorney. His wife died in childbirth less than 10 years after he had built the home for her, Regan explains, and Hall sold the house to his successor in the DA’s office, Horace Given, in 1908.  October 2009 Enjoy 64


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Meanwhile, a young Edwin J. Regan became enamored with far Northern California while on a hunting trip with his brother, Harold. Edwin saw a job posting for a part-time district attorney on a bulletin board, so he applied. “Given told him, ‘Get up here and you’ve got a job,’” his son, Mike, says. He did just that in 1930. When Given died in 1935, Edwin was elected district attorney – and in 1938, Given’s survivors told him and his wife Julia, “For $2,500, the house is yours – with everything in it.” The stark white home with black composition roofing is encircled by an ivy-cloaked fence. Cone-shaped turrets and a widow’s walk (influenced by the homebuilder’s East Coast ties) help define the roofline. The home serves as a three-dimensional scrapbook of the life that the late Edwin and Julia Regan and their three children created there. Accounting books from the Depression show Edwin’s invoices for legal services rendered in amounts like $4 and $7. They’re displayed atop Julia’s antique desk. Julia moved to Weaverville in 1933 to start her teaching days at Trinity County High School, which all three of her children attended. Son Mike now sits in the chair that Edwin used during his five terms in the State Senate (he resigned his Trinity County District Attorney post in 1948 to assume that position – marking the first time that the house hadn’t been owned by the Trinity County DA). Edwin then served on the Third Appellate District Court of Appeal from 1965 until his retirement in 1987. He died in 1996.  66 Enjoy September 2009

October 2009 Enjoy 66


In the 70-plus years since the home has been in the Regan family, it’s been upgraded to include some modern conveniences – a carriage house gave way to a guest house and garage, and small stoves in every room were replaced with a furnace. Mike’s laptop computer now sits on his mother’s antique desk, and his modern television sits in the frame of the old 1959 Zenith television which was their first set; Mike removed the tube to make room. Textured wallpaper, paintings of long-gone ancestors, and nowantique furniture and décor maintain the home’s historic feel. The library’s treasures include volumes by Edgar Allan Poe, a series titled “Messages and Papers of the President” and much more – some more than a century old. On the wall is Edwin Regan’s framed invitation to John F. Kennedy’s inauguration. The kitchen still has lined flour and sugar bins and a dinner bell that his mother used to tap with a mallet at suppertime. Upstairs is a virtual museum of Regan family history. Attic space tucked behind each of three bedrooms holds a train set from the 1940s, clothing dating back to the early 1900s, and shelves full of children’s books. Dozens of hats rest in their original boxes, including a black top hat in a leather case, worn by an ancestor who Mike says was the first Marine aviator killed in World War II. There are hats from I. Magnin and Saks Fifth Avenue, an old flapper hat – even one that’s a dead ringer for a head of lettuce. The three upstairs bedrooms still maintain some of the character of the children who grew up there. Kathleen’s room includes a dressing table and a hand mirror, where one can picture a young woman making herself up for a night on the town. Mike recently discovered 67 Enjoy October 2009

some of his mother’s nude pencil drawings from her college days, which he framed and hung in this room. Mike’s room looks the most like it did back in the day, with a curio cabinet full of bottles that he collected, race car posters, yearbooks from Trinity High and the University of California at Santa Barbara, his letterman sweater, and Eagle Scout and Order of the Arrow uniforms. Also on the wall? A stuffed woodpecker. Boys will be boys, he says. “When you grow up in Possum Waller, what are you gonna do?” In the hall sits a phone chair, below a still-operational rotary phone that mystifies school-aged visitors who came of age in the era of cell phones. The size of the property has also increased since the home was built. In 1967, the Regans purchased the house next door, which “was in bad shape,” Mike says. They tore it down to create a spacious, landscaped side yard, and hosted Mike’s sister Kathleen’s wedding there in 1967. Many years later, her brother Craig was married in the yard. Despite the magnificence of the home, the yard is where many of Mike Regan’s best memories reside. An enormous walnut tree, more than a century old, shades an outdoor seating area decked with bricks from Weaverville’s historic Union Hotel, which burned down in the 1930s. A flowering pomegranate, rhododendrons and an English garden provide bursts of color, and if you’re looking to hide away, a pair of chairs is set up in a “cave” created by the merging of two enormous holly bushes. 


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The area where a school-aged Mike kept his horse and her tack room is now a grassy area perfect for horseshoes or croquet; live bands also set up there when he hosts his annual 4th of July parties (no holiday is more revered in Weaverville than Independence Day). Mike touches the trunk of an apple tree toward the back of the property, and recalls the applesauce and pies that his mother used to make from their harvest. On the other side of the yard, he gestures to another pair of trees. “She planted those trees the day she died,” he says. Mike spent much of his adult life in the Sacramento area; he made a career at PG&E after serving as a U. S Coast Guard combat corpsman and medic in the mid-1960s. After working for Shell Oil Co. in New Orleans and PG&E in Northern California, he retired in the early 1990s and was delighted to come back home. “It’s a time warp of days gone by,” he says. Although Mike and Weaverville have grown up together, he says his hometown still maintains the small-town, friendly flavor that he’s loved for his whole life. Some of his original neighbors still live there. When he walks down the street, he can’t help but bump into someone he knows. He still maintains strong ties to the town as a shareholder and on the Board of Directors of the historic New York Hotel Properties, the home of the New York Saloon and Johnny’s Restaurant. He is a longtime member of the Trinitarianus Chapter of Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus (established in the mining days to “come to the aid and protect wives, widows and orphans”). “A town like this really doesn’t change that much,” he says. And he wouldn’t have it any other way. Editor’s note: Author Kerri Regan is the great-niece of Edwin J. Regan. Visit www.enjoymagazine.net to view more photos of the Regan home.

69 Enjoy October 2009


       

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AUTUMN IN THE ALPS QUILT SHOW (Weaverville)

WINGS OF ANGELS & SONS OF ITALY 8th ANNUAL SPAGHETTI FEED (Redding)

October 3, 10 am – 4 pm Downtown Weaverville

A quarter-mile of quilts in! Huge outdoor show features over 350 quilts displayed. Live music all day, awards, basket raffle, raffle quilts and vendors, complemented by alpine scenery and fall color. For more information, visit www.textiletraditions.com/quiltshow

4th ANNUAL HARVEST WINE FESTIVAL

17

October 17, 2 – 9 pm Sons of Italy 4850 Cedars Road

Many door prizes, raffle and live auction. Proceeds from the fund-raiser will benefit local families of children with cancer or serious illnesses. For more information, call (530) 378-2373

(Shingletown)

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October 10, 2 – 6 pm Upcountry Gardens Benefitting the Shingletown Medical Center, there will be a silent auction, wine tasting and hor d’oeuvres. For more information, contact (530) 474-3240

17

RETURN OF THE SALMON FESTIVAL (Anderson) October 17 Coleman National Fish Hatchery Visitors during the festival are treated to viewing large numbers of fall Chinook salmon returning to Battle Creek and the hatchery, and may observe all aspects of day-to-day hatchery operations such as spawning, egg incubation and juvenile rearing. For more information, visit www.fws.gov/coleman or call (530) 365-8622 71 Enjoy October 2009

CIRQUE DREAMS ILLUMINATION (Redding)

21

October 21, 7:30 pm Redding Convention Center

This action packed performance is enhanced with more than 100 inventive costumes and set in a fantastical cityscape of dimension and special effects. Cirque Dreams Illumination will surpass its “jaw dropping, family friendly spectacle” proclamation by the Los Angeles Times and exhilarate audiences of all ages. For more information, visit www. reddingconventioncenter.com or call (530) 225-4130

29

AN EVENING WITH GARRISON KEILLOR (Chico)

October 29, 7:30 pm Laxson Auditorium True to his radio form, Grammy award-winner, author and humorist Garrison Keillor will share his hilarious anecdotes about growing up in the American Midwest. With a wonderful, dry sense of humor, Keillor will once again visit Lake Wobegon with his words of wisdom, class and charisma. For more information, visit www. chicoperformances.com


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Upcoming October Events

Anderson October 2, 3 • Sacred Heart Parish Annual Fall Yard & Collectibles Sale 3141 Saint Stephens (530) 365-5853 October 9 • Travel & Tourism Trade Show at the Shasta Outlets. 9:30 am - 3:30 pm (530) 365-8095 October 10 • North State Skate Series Competition Anderson Skate Park (530) 378-6656 www.ci.anderson.ca.us

Burney

October 10 • Heritage Days - McArthur-Burney Falls State Park www. burneychamber.com Chico - www.downtownchico.com October 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 • Chico Certified Farmers’ Market 7:30 am - 1:00 pm October 3 • National yo-yo contest - Chico City Plaza 10 am - 6 pm www.nationalyoyo.org October 4 • Oldies 102.1 Rock n’ Rev Show and Shine 9 am - 3 pm October 10 • Breast Cancer Awareness Fair at the Chico City Plaza 9 am - 3 pm Cottonwood October 3 • Cottonwood Old West Art, Wine & Music Festival. www.cottonwoodenrichmentcouncil.com Fall River Mills October 10 • SNIPPP’s 2nd Annual Benefit Golf Tournament - Fall River Golf & Country Club (530) 335-5469 Forest Ranch October 10 • Fall Festival and Holiday Baazar - Downtown Forest Ranch on Hwy 32 (530) 566-1099 Mt. Shasta October 17 • Women in Business Network Fall Expo - Strings Restaurant. 10:30 am - 2:30 pm Red Bluff October 3 • Guided Bird Walk - Sacramento River Discovery Center 8-10 am (530) 527-1196 October 4 • 18th Annual Antique Street Faire - Downtown Red Bluff (530) 527-3092 October 17 • Red Bluff Shopwalk 10 am - 6 pm Downtown Red Bluff (530) 527-6220 October 18 • Shoot for a Purpose, Inc. - Aiming for Awareness at Red Bank Outfitters. (530) 527-8944. www.shootforpurpose.com Redding October 3 • Haven Humane Society’s 2nd Annual Bark & Wine Fundraiser. Red Lion Hotel 6-9 pm (530) 241-5262 October 3 • Custom Painted Helmet & Tank Art Competition at Shasta Colllege’s downtown Redding campus (530) 225-4608 • PACED (Prevention Awareness and Community Education for Diabetes) presents Paced Yourself in regards to Living with Diabetes. Turtle Bay School 10 am - 3 pm (530) 524-7504, (530) 357-5386, (530) 941-2032 October 4 • Olde Fashioned End of Summer Social. Mountain View Middle School sponsored by Faith Community Church www.faith-redding.org (530) 275-5898 October 4-10 • Mental Illness Awareness Week - For event details visit www.namishastacounty.org or (530) 605-1647 October 10 • North State Symphony presents - Chamber Music Concerts at the All Saints Episcopal Church in Redding. • 2nd Saturday Art Hop - maps at www.anewscafe.com • Edelweiss German American Club’s Annual Oktoberfest Win River Casino Eagle Room (530) 246-3666 • Northern Gateway Chorus, Redding chapter of Sweet Adelines International music (530) 347-7286 • American Cancer Society Discovery Shop - Sidewalk Sale (530) 244-3032 October 15 • Genocide No More - Save Darfur and Enterprise High School STAND Club sponsor the showing of The Reckoning: The Battle for the International Criminal Court. 7 pm Enterprise High School Little Theater (530) 229-3661 Through October 23 • Shasta County Arts Council - Quilts and Stitchery exhibit October 30 • ‘Wildwoods’ Halloween Party at Redding Veteran’s Memorial Hall www.shastalandtrust.org Shasta Lake October 17, 18 • Shasta Lake Trout Derby (800) 953-4432

Shingletown October 3 • Shingletown Antique Appraisals. Shingletown Volunteer Fire Dept. Van Stellman Training Center.

Cascade Theatre www.cascadetheatre.org

October 4 • Grand Opera HD Cinema Series - Madama Butterfly October 5 • Pink Martini - Concert October 9 • Vince Gill - Concert October 10 • Ingrid Michaelson - Concert October 16 • Joan Osborne, The Holmes Brothers & Paul Thorn Laxson Auditorium

www.chicoperformances.com

October 1 • Van Cliburn Gold Medal Winner: Piano Competition October 4 • Gillian Welch: Folk Icon October 6 • Jesse Cook: Global Guitar October 9 • Sean Carroll: Lecture Series October 10 • Igudesman & Joo: A Little Nightmare Music October 13 • Yamato Taiko: Japanese Drumming October 15 • Joan Osborne, the Holmes Brothers and Paul Thorn October 21 • Sphinx Chamber Orchestra: Noveau String Orchestra

Redding Convention Center www.reddingconventioncenter.com

October 2, 3 • California Cowboys Pro Rodeo Association. Year end finals, Redding Rodeo Grounds October 3 • Carlos Mencia live in concert October 13 • David Crowder “Church Music Tour” October 27 • Skillet “Alive & Awake Tour” Riverfront Playhouse

BRIAN CULBERTSON MORNINGS 6-10

www.riverfrontplayhouse.net Through October 17 • You Can’t Take It With You. Rolling Hills Casino

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October 11, 12 • Par Fore the Cause - Charity Pro-Am Golf Tournament October 18 • Dazzling Weddings - An elegant afternoon of wedding and event planning October 24, 25 • Ribs, Rods and Rides. Rib cook-off, classic car show, hot air balloon festival Shasta District Fairgrounds

www.shastadistrictfair.com October 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 • Farmers Market October 7, 8, 9 • Fall Home Show October 18 • Shasta Gem & Mineral Show

DAVE KOZ AFTERNOONS

State Theatre Red Bluff www.statetheatreredbluff.com

October 5 • New Shanghai Circus October 23 • Recycle Nite at the Movies Flipper October 31 • The Rocky Horror Picture Show Tehama District Fairgrounds www.tehamadistrictfair.com October 2-4 • 12th Annual West Coast Monster Truck Nationals www.norcalmonsters.com October 10 • St. Elizabeth Health Faire October 22, 23, 24 • Western Open Fiddle Championships www.westernopenfiddle.com Turtle Bay Exploration Park www.turtlebay.org October 4, 11, 18, 25 • Turtle Bay Farmers Market 8:30 am - 12 pm Through January 3 • Art of the Brick Through January 10 • The Scoop on Poop Event times and dates are subject to change without notice. Please check event phone number or website to verify dates and times. Enjoy Magazine is not responsible for any inconveniences due to event changes. We do our best to include all submissions, but do not guarantee your event will be included on the calendar. Please e-mail your upcoming events to info@enjoymagazine.net

A T S M O O T H J A Z Z 961. C O M October 2009 Enjoy 74


Chore or Score? Just tell your wife you’re saving water and teaching the children hand-eye coordination… Like you, we’re always looking to raise our game. It’s one thing to say it; another to get away from the everyday. So ditch the dishes and head for the great outdoors at Rolling Hills. For the sportsman, our hunt club offers upland game birds, duck hunting, wild boar, fly fishing and trap/ skeet/sporting clays… there is plenty to ensure any sportsman has an exciting adventure while visiting us.

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75 Enjoy August 2009


GIVING BACK | story: Sandie Tillery | photos: Julie Eaton

dream dream M A R Q U I S S H A S TA H E A LT H C A R E

Sweet Ruby sits with a screwed-up face, confusion evident, as she twists the lap belt that keeps her secure in her wheelchair. I caress her shoulder and kiss her gently on the cheek before greeting her cheerfully. She perks up, and with her characteristic warmth, says, “Oh, how you doin’ today?” I think she knows it’s me, her daughterin-law. Parked in the lobby later, with the sunshine floating dust specks between us, we comment quietly about how beautiful the sky is today, how lovely the flowers look just outside the window, and how much shade the big sycamore tree provides. Sometimes we carry on brief conversations, remembering people and events from the past. Sometimes we sit peacefully, I writing in the journal we keep by her bedside and she humming bits of old hymns. I especially love those moments when I start singing a favorite gospel song and Ruby joins in as the words come back to her, her natural harmony flowing in and around my precarious melody. That’s when I sense she has returned to a place of joy, a time when she sings duets and trios and stands amidst her friends in the choir. Ruby lives at Marquis Care Shasta in Redding, a skilled nursing facility, where I visit her twice a week. I have come to greatly appreciate the care she receives. Recently I learned about a wonderful program they offer to their residents. My mind has been spinning,  October 2009 Enjoy 76


DEPARTMENT | story: | photos:

trying to figure a way for Ruby to benefit from it. It is a beautiful idea: granting wishes to our elders, similar to the Make-A-Wish Foundation for terminally ill children. Think about it—making dreams come true in the last years of life; letting seniors revisit cherished places, experience again their favorite activities, or cross off one more item on their bucket lists. “We’re never too old to aspire or set goals. Besides, a dream come true must first start with a dream,” says Julie Eaton, Marquis Care Shasta activities director. Two residents have been granted their wishes at Marquis Care Shasta. Earl, 74, has a need for speed, but now is slowed down by his wheelchair. In earlier years, he raced at Laguna Seca and Sears Point. In July 2008, Marquis Care Shasta made it possible for him to relive his youth when he again slid through the window of a race car at Shasta Raceway Park in Redding. Staff and family members cheered him five times around the half-mile track as he raced at speeds in excess of 100 mph. “I never thought I would do this again!” he exclaimed at the start. 80-year-old Alma wanted to see the world from 10,000 feet above the ground. Dave Everson, owner of Air Shasta, gave Alma the thrill of her life when he took her up in his four-passenger helicopter for a tour of the area, including a view of Shasta Dam that her father helped to build. Earlier in the year, Alma had been chosen 2009 Marquis Care Shasta Rose Queen. First item on her calendar as reigning queen was to experience her dream come true. The program is funded by the Vital Life Foundation, a nonprofit organization founded by Marquis Companies and Consonus Healthcare Services. The foundation’s mission is “to support organizations and programs that provide meaning and vitality in the lives of seniors and staff members living and working in long-term care.” The foundation partners with community and national organizations to raise funds to support such things as providing backpacks and school supplies for local students, the Susan G. Komen Foundation, Ronald McDonald House and the Alzheimer’s Foundation, among others. It is the hallmark of Marquis Companies’ “giving back” philosophy. Eaton, who has the privilege of planning the New Chapters events for the residents in Redding, says their objective is not just to fulfill dreams, but to get to the very heart of residents’ desires. She says they want to “make the last memories the best.” And it is not just her. She and Administrator Jeremy Pantovich involve the whole staff, encouraging them to listen and watch, to be alert as they serve the residents. If an aide or a food server nominates someone, they are invited to participate on some level in the event. “It’s a change in our culture,” Eaton explains of their efforts to get rid of the stigma of the institutional setting. Eaton wants everyone—staff, residents, families—to share in the excitement of the “changing social climate.” I am excited. Join me in discovering how we can make dreams come true for seniors. Information is available at vitallifefoundation.org or by contacting Julie Eaton or Jeremy Pantovich at (530) 222.3630. More New Chapters stories can be found at marquiscompanies.com. • 77 Enjoy October 2009


Calling all photographers Your photo could be on the cover of an upcoming issue of the North State’s premier lifestyle magazine.

Readers will vote online for their favorite five entries between Nov. 20 and Dec. 31. An expert panel will choose the winner from those five photographs.

Professional and amateur photographers are invited to enter Enjoy Magazine’s first-ever cover contest. The winner’s photo will be featured on the cover of the magazine sometime in 2010.

In addition to having his or her photo featured on an Enjoy cover, the grand prize winner will receive a $250 gift certificate from Crown Camera and an etching of the winning photograph

from Infinite Designs ($100 value). The four runners up will receive a free photography class from Crown Camera and a $50 gift certificate from Infinite Designs. Their photo and name will also be included in Enjoy Magazine. To see a gallery of previous Enjoy covers or for a complete list of contest rules, visit www.enjoymagazine.net.


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