March 2016

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Marin Spring

FASHION SHIO Shades of Serenity MARCH 2016

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HOMEGROWN

SUCCESS

+

End of an Era for Marin Organic

SUMMER CAMPS GUIDE 154 Ideas for Fun and Adventure

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Your options for charitable giving: The burden of a private foundation

The detachment of a commercial fund

The joy of a fund at MCF

With MCF, your giving is easy, cost-effective, tailored, and meaningful. Call Linda Sweeney at 415.464.2507.

Marin Community Foundation | www.marincf.org

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EXPERIENCE LIFE IN A NEW LIGHT

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Contents

MARCH 2016

36

Features 36 Shades of Serenity Spring is all about the cool, flowing blues.

52 Homegrown Success Mission accomplished for Marin Organic. 58 Summer Camps Guide 154 ideas for fun and learning.

CLAUDIA GOETZELMANN

46 On the Grille Three local chefs with fast and fun rides.

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BRUNELLO CUCINELLI

San Francisco 384 POST ST. 415.986.4300

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Contents In Marin 23 Currents A big cleanup, mini homes, whale watching and much more. 28 Made by Marin Cooking up Red Whale Coffee. 30 On the Job The ultimate gadget fixer. 32 Conversation What you need to know about the Seminary project.

Destinations 71 Go Go natural in Hawaii. 74 Journey Cruising through the Cold War.

MARCH 2016

113

23 Out & About 81 Calendar A roundup of what to do in Marin and beyond. 90 Dine An insider’s guide to restaurants and food in the Bay Area. 98 Flavor Moylan’s classic Irish dish. 106 On the Scene Snapshots from events in Marin and San Francisco.

81

Marin Home 113 Backstory Finding the sun in Kentfield.

14 View From Marin 16 POV 154 Looking Back

For the March cover, shot by San Francisco photographer Claudia Goetzelmann as part of our spring fashion story, we chose this image for its vibrant shade of blue. Our model’s red hair provides contrast and heightens the effect.

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TIM PORTER (TOP RIGHT); LOIS GREENFIELD (MIDDLE); NORMA MEYER (BOTTOM)

COLUMNS

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Marin’s Gateway to the Luxury Market

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MARINMAGAZINE.COM

PUBLISHER / EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Nikki Wood

Editorial EXECUTIVE EDITOR Mimi Towle MANAGING EDITOR Daniel Jewett FASHION EDITOR Veronica Sooley SENIOR WRITER Jim Wood ASSISTANT EDITOR Kasia Pawlowska COPY EDITOR Cynthia Rubin EDITORIAL INTERN Emily Hawkins CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Jacoba Charles, Laura Hilgers, Tim Porter, Calin Van Paris, Charlie Vogelheim

Art ART DIRECTOR Veronica Sooley PRODUCTION MANAGER Alex French CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Mo DeLong, Claudia Goetzelmann, Tim Porter, Barbara Ries, Michael Alan Ross, Debra Tarrant

Administration / Web CONTROLLER Maeve Walsh WEB/IT MANAGER Peter Thomas DIGITAL CONTENT EDITOR Leigh Walker OFFICE MANAGER Kirstie A. Martinelli

Volume 12, Issue 3. Marin Magazine is published in Marin County by Open Sky Media. All rights reserved. Copyright©2016. Reproduction of Marin Magazine content is prohibited without the expressed, written consent of Open Sky Media. Unsolicited materials cannot be returned. Marin Magazine reserves the right to refuse to publish any advertisement deemed detrimental to the best interests of the community or that is in questionable taste. Marin Magazine is mailed monthly to homes and businesses in Marin County. Marin (USPS 024-898) is published monthly by Open Sky Media, One Harbor Drive, Suite 208, Sausalito, CA 94965. Periodicals Postage Paid at Sausalito, CA, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Marin Magazine, One Harbor Drive, Suite 208, Sausalito, CA 94965.

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Spring FLING

MARINMAGAZINE.COM

Advertising ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Debra Hershon ext 120 | dhershon@marinmagazine.com ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Michele Geoffrion Johnson ext 110 | mjohnson@marinmagazine.com SENIOR ACCOUNT MANAGERS Leah Bronson, ext 109 | lbronson@marinmagazine.com Lesley Cesare, ext 113 | lcesare@marinmagazine.com ACCOUNT MANAGER Dana Horner ext 107 | dhorner@marinmagazine.com ADVERTISING ART DIRECTOR Alex French

Regional Sales Offices WINE COUNTRY Lesley Cesare | lcesare@marinmagazine.com SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Leah Bronson | lbronson@marinmagazine.com NEW YORK Karen Couture, Couture Marketing | 917.821.4429 HAWAII Debbie Anderson, Destination Marketing | 808.739.2200

Reader Services MAILING ADDRESS One Harbor Drive, Suite 208, Sausalito, CA 94965 PHONE 415.332.4800 FAX 415.332.3048 SUBSCRIPTION INQUIRIES subscriptions@marinmagazine.com 818.286.3160

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INTERNSHIP INQUIRIES / STORY IDEAS editorial@marinmagazine.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Please send letters to editorial@marinmagazine.com. Be sure to include your full name, city, state and phone number. Marin Magazine reserves the right to edit letters for clarity, length and style. SUBSCRIPTIONS Rates are $12 for gift subscriptions or free for general subscribers. To subscribe, manage your subscription or change your address visit marinmagazine.com/subscribe. BULK ORDERS For information on bulk orders of Marin Magazine, please call 415.332.4800.

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View From Marin

Above, from left: Mimi Towle, Nikki Wood and Dan Jewett

A

LTHOUGH IT M AY not feel that

way yet, we are heading into spring. And what better way to celebrate the season than with a new look? Fashion editor Veronica Sooley, photographer Claudia Goetzelmann and the team headed to San Francisco’s Left Space Studios, where they stayed out of the El Niño rains and captured some hot new trends you’ll be seeing around town soon.

Next up, writer Charlie Vogelheim and photographer Michael Alan Ross talked to three Marin chefs who like to get your order out fast and drive even faster. You’ll definitely want to try and catch a ride with one of these guys. We wrap up features with a look at the success of Marin Organic. Writer Jacoba Charles explains that with the achievements of West Marin’s organic farms, there is no longer a need for the 15-year-old organization. And in our annual Summer Camps list, you’ll find options and resources to help you choose the perfect camp, or two, for your little one this year. Up front we’ve got a look at wondrous whales and Marin theater options you won’t want to miss, and we meet a gourmet coffee maker, a gadget fixer, and an architect who’s working on plans for the controversial 304home Seminary project. In Destinations we explore the outdoors in Hawaii — have you ever wanted to swim like a mermaid? — and join writer Norma Meyer for a rare 16-day expedition cruise to Russia’s Far East, where she sips brut sparkling wine amid Cold War ruins. It’s a fun-filled, adventurous start to spring and we hope you enjoy sharing it with us. And if we see you out and about, we hope you keep cool and look fabulous.

Although it may not feel that way yet, we are heading into spring. And what better way to celebrate the season than with a new look?

Marin Magazine Staff Editors

The same team who brought you last year’s spring and fall shoots was at it again for 2016, this time embracing Pantone’s cool blue “serenity” color (153919). According to the experts, serenity was chosen as a color of the year because of its tendency to be an “antidote to modern-day stresses, psychologically fulfilling our yearning for reassurance and security.”

JACK WOLFORD (TOP); VERONICA SOOLEY (BOTTOM)

WE’VE GOT THE BLUES

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POV

If it can’t be recycled or composted, it’s garbage. But what is garbage? BY JIM WOOD

L

What in today’s increasing environmentally conscious world can’t be recycled or composted?

A ST W EEK, A new neighbor asked me, “Now that I’m settled in, where do I put my garbage?” Years ago, that question would get a simple answer: “In the garbage can.” But last week, I found it much more difficult to answer. This was my thinking: newspapers, wine bottles, cans, junk mail and some plastic cups go in the recycling bin; garden trimmings, leaves and dead plants go with our banana peels, steak bones, leftover salad and foodsoiled paper into the compost bin. So what — in today’s world — goes in the garbage bin? “That’s a surprisingly good question,” says Jim Iavarone, an owner of Mill Valley Refuse. Basically, he tells me, garbage is what can’t be recycled or composted. So I was back where I started. Think about it: what in today’s increasing environmentally conscious world can’t be recycled or composted? “Oh there’s lots of stuff,” Iavarone says, followed by a few seconds of silence. “Styrofoam,” he blurts, “and the popcorn used for packaging.” More silence. Then, together, we come up with other items. “Used Kleenex tissues, dirty rags and clothes no one can wear,” he says. “And grungy old running shoes that I’ve been gardening in,” I add. Also, I offer, plastic bags full of dog poop. We agree that nowadays, not that much qualifies as garbage. And Iavarone adds that more and more, his firm’s garbage pickups are coming back with less and less, actually trucking 1,000 tons less garbage in 2015 than in 2014. That said, here’s a quick wrap-up of how to get rid of waste in Marin:

• Glass bottles and jars (reasonably clean); all kinds of clean paper; soda and beer cans; catalogs; cardboard and most food cartons — Recycle Bin. • Lawn and garden trimmings; food scraps, including meat and bones; paper soiled with food; small pieces of lumber; spoiled fruit — Green Bin.

• Out-of-date computers, copy machines and dead batteries; paint and oil; light bulbs with mercury; metal scraps; CDs; old appliances — Marin Household Hazardous Waste Facility. • Coat hangers; plastic plant containers — Return them to where you got them. • Plastic newspaper and shopping bags (poop free) — Not recyclable via normal channels, but CVS, Rite Aid and most food markets accept them. • No longer used, but in good shape books; clothes; appliances; shoes (not grungy); outgrown toys — Goodwill, Salvation Army or other thrift stores. Hopefully (and ideally), that doesn’t leave much for your garbage bin. And remember, what you do put out as garbage goes to the rapidly filling up Redwood Landfill, where it will sit for ages. Joe Garbarino, of Marin Sanitary Service, says a piece of plastic takes more than 100 years to decompose. “Same for plastic bags,” he adds. As for putting food scraps in the garbage, they will also go to the landfill, where they’ll sit for months and emit the greenhouse gas methane. Far better to put them in with your garden trimmings, where they will be composted and returned to Mother Earth in the form of highly nutritious soil. OK, so I’m a zealot regarding waste. But so is Zero Waste Marin. The name says it all; its goal is to have zero waste in Marin by the year 2025. And these folks are not hoping-for-thebest do-gooders. The members form a joint powers agency created by the California State Legislature that involves the city managers of every municipality in Marin County, as well as a county representative. Its website, in clear, complete and simple verbiage, answers every possible question you might have regarding recycling, composting and hazardous waste. If we work together, it is indeed possible to totally eliminate waste (also known as garbage) in Marin County by the year 2025. That’s my point of view. What’s yours? Email pov@marinmagazine.com. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the policy or position of Marin Magazine and its staff.

RICHARD WHEELER

Trash Talk

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P R O MOT I O N

Bay Area events you’ll want to attend

19TH ANNUAL SONOMA INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL WHEN

March 30–April 3, times vary

WHERE

SIFF Village is located near Sonoma Plaza

WHY YOU SHOULD GO

SIFF is considered one of the nation’s top 10 destination film festivals. The blend of captivating films, premium wines and delicious cuisine at six screening venues and multiple hospitality areas makes for a memorable experience. SIFF is a walkable film festival. All screening venues are conveniently located in and around historic Sonoma Plaza.

COST

FIND OUT MORE

$75 day pass $275 five-day pas $675 soiree pass 707.933.2600 sonomafilmfest.org

Contributors

Michael Alan Ross Photographer, “On the Grille” (p. 46) Possessing a passion for all things automotive, Michael Alan Ross has made a career out of photographing automobiles. Inspired by a respect for the craftsmanship of car design, Ross draws on that influence as a narrative for his work, including images produced as a licensed photographer for Porsche AG. His photography is featured in a wide range of editorial and advertising media in the United States and Europe. View more of Ross’ work at michaelalanross.com.

Jacoba Charles Writer, “Homegrown Success” (p. 52) Petaluma-based freelance journalist Jacoba Charles was born to a sixth-generation Sonoma County ranching family and covers topics relating to food, farming, science and the environment. Charles is an editor at Northwest Science and produced a radio show featuring oral histories of coastal Californians. Her work has been published in The New York Times, Modern Farmer and Bay Nature, on Salon.com and elsewhere. She also likes to travel, hike, botanize and explore with her baby daughter. For more of her work, visit jacobacharles.com.

Charlie Vogelheim Writer, “On the Grille” (p. 46)

MAR. 30 – APR. 3, 2016

Friend us to share and view RSVP Hot Ticket photos at facebook.com/marinmagazine Want to see all the images from our RSVP Hot Ticket events? marinmagazine.com/hotticket

Charlie Vogelheim is an auto enthusiast whose career includes writing for Kelley Blue Book, J.D. Power and Motor Trend. Though he appreciates classic vehicles, he is deeply engaged in the future of mobility currently being reinvented in the Silicon Valley. Vogelheim grew up and lives in Mill Valley. A fan of all types of transportation, he earned his seaplane wings in Sausalito, spent several years as an Alaska bush pilot and is eagerly awaiting the flying car. To hear his weekly award-winning podcast, look for Motor Trend Audio on TuneIn.

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POV

Your Letters Off Leash

I am replying to Jim Wood’s very naive opinion (POV, “Leashing Out,” February) about the off-leash dog walking issue in Marin and in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The Crissy Field Dog Group has been working on this GGNRA dog management plan issue for 15 years, hired an attorney from a prominent law firm to work on our behalf, and has worked constructively with the Marin Humane Society and the SFSPCA as well as the three-county congressional delegation. In short, there are designated areas for people to walk their dogs off leash in Marin County, and by and large, it works well. Yes, there are a few very irresponsible dog owners who let their dogs misbehave and ruin it for us all. There are many other mitigation measures that the GGNRA can use to protect natural resources such as good fencing and signage. This is not a dogs-versus-the-environment issue. MARTHA WALTERS, CO-FOUNDER AND CHAIR, CRISSY FIELD DOG GROUP

Jim Wood, your editorial, with its long list of sites where the rules require leashes or don’t allow dogs at all, makes the case for maintaining or increasing what little offleash access does exist in Marin. With so many people wanting to enjoy the trails and fire roads in the various open space districts with their pets, we need more access, not less. No one is advocating for the unregulated roaming of dogs all over public lands. No one. But with respect to the GGNRA, the ask is very reasonable. Enforce the existing and already strict rules of the 1979 Pet Policy that are already in place. LAURA PANDAPAS, MUIR BEACH

Jim, your article detailing Marin’s dog rules avoids directly identifying the real problem — that a large minority of dog owners do not believe these rules apply to them. Willful disobedience of leash laws is readily visible on most trails throughout the county. As a runner, I politely object every time an unleashed dog nips at my heels or causes me to break stride, but I rarely get an apology. Instead, I’m usually met with open defiance. FRED W. CLOUGH, MILL VALLEY

Different Memory

A story in your December issue (Currents, “Sigmon’s Call”) says the SigAlert is named for a 1940s-era Los Angeles radio reporter, Loyd Sigmon. I lived in Los Angeles from 1948 to 1963 and I have a different recollection. In the early and mid-1950s, the Signal Hill Police Department reported traffic tie-ups to a Los Angeles TV station in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Signal Hill Police Department traffic alerts eventually became simply SigAlerts. STAN HELFMAN, MILL VALLEY

Not Cool

Your February publication shows a full-page picture (Currents, “Keeping It Cool”) of some of the regular flooding in Mill Valley, trumpeting that Marin County is “ahead of the game.” According to your article, being ahead means planning to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, which will achieve nothing whether or not it happens. Regardless, beyond the feel-good ideas, what is the county actually doing about the flooding? Having government workers stand in the rain and direct traffic around these new wetlands is not a good long-term plan. Is there a proposal to divert or restrain the water? Is anyone at the helm? DAN PISENTI, MILL VALLEY

Article Power

Such a nice article from Tim Porter (On the Job, February). Thank you for featuring this in your snazzy magazine. I’ve already received many positive comments from individuals about the article in just the first day. Your story may create social changes in our county. Already someone has contacted me regarding helping a nonprofit start a music program for a school in San Rafael for English Learner children; such is the power of media. PHOEBE DONG, NOVATO

Correction

In our Tastemakers 2016 article (February) we incorrectly listed Natale Cardamone as the owner of Piazza D’Angelo. He is the general manager. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Your comments may be edited for clarity and brevity. Send letters to Marin Magazine, One Harbor Drive, Suite 208, Sausalito, CA 94965, or email us at letters@marinmagazine.com. Please include the town where you live and a daytime phone number.

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In Marin

CE L E B R AT I N G T H E PEO PL E , PL ACE S A N D C AU S E S O F T H I S U N I Q U E CO U N T Y

A BIG CLEANUP Transforming a 1930s-era gas plant site into something much more useful.

TIM PORTER

BY JIM WOOD

The PG&E tent at Lindaro and Second streets.

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In Marin / CURRENTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 23

Are you digging the big tent in downtown San Rafael? Nope, it’s not the circus. But considerable digging is going on. According to PG&E’s Brian Swanson, 35,000 cubic yards of impacted soil that was left behind after the utility’s manufactured gas plant was shut down in 1930 must be carted away. The plant created the gas used to light homes, offices and streets but left coal tar, lampblack and cyanide in the soil. “Now we’re taking away the toxic soil,” says Swanson. The soil goes out at the rate of 35 big rig loads a day, he says, and is transported to either Vacaville or Buttonwillow for disposal. Once the cleanup task is finished — late 2016 or early 2017 — BioMarin will expand its campus with a new high-rise on the site.

Do the time and length of your commute leave you a little frustrated? To put things in perspective, head out to the Point Reyes National Seashore midto-late March and witness the longest migration of any mammal. California gray whales can swim more BY THE than 10,000 NUMBERS miles each year, spending about one-third of their lives migrating from the cold, nutrient-rich waters of Alaska to the warm, shallow lagoons of Baja California. What motivates the whales to tackle this annual journey? None other than food and reproduction. Here are some other notable facts about these spectacular cetaceans. nps.gov/pore

50 FEET AVERAGE LENGTH

40 TON AVERAGE WEIGHT 70 YEARS AVERAGE LIFE EXPECTANCY

13,000 miles

migration distance

20,000 WHALES PASSING POINT REYES

Center Stage

If you want to add some real drama to your life, consider live theater. From comedy to classics, family-friendly affairs to world debuts focusing on serious subjects, these three theaters fit the bill. Read on to find out about what’s planned for this month. K.P.

1

Throckmorton Theatre

Bay Area performers take the stage every Wednesday for the intimate noon concert series, while Thursday evenings bring Mort Sahl, the longest actively performing American social satirist, whose career spans 60 years and 11 presidents. throckmortontheatre.org

2

Marin Theatre Company

Swimmers takes a look at the relationships we have, and don’t have, with our co-workers. This is a world-premiere show from awardwinning up-and-coming playwright Rachel Bonds (pictured). On a lighter note, The Little Mermaid runs until March 6. marintheatre.org

3

Novato Theater Company

4000 Miles is a play about loss, healing and how we operate in today’s world, written by Amy Herzog and directed by Norman Hall. Twentyone-year-old Leo and his 91-year-old grandmother are unlikely roommates who fight, learn and connect. novatotheatercompany.org

TIM PORTER (TENT); KEN BACON (PREVIOUS NTC PRODUCTION)

THAR SHE BLOWS

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DON'T LET THE "BEAR" SNEAK UP ON YOU

It’s a fact that during the 2008 catastrophic “bear” market downturn, most investors lost significant wealth – and faith – in financial markets. Many never fully recovered – financially or psychologically. Strangely, most investors are poised to make the very same mistake during the next big market decline. Unfortunately, this is a result of Wall Street’s “set it and forget it” approach to investing. Here at Main Street Research we see things differently. Our Active Risk Management process mitigates the risk of catastrophic decline, as was the case in 2008, while at the same time allowing investors to participate in today’s rising market. If you are interested in avoiding past mistakes and preparing for the “bear,” we should talk. Call or visit www.ms-research.com. Minimum relationship $1 million.

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P R O MOT I O N

Connect

WITH US

• online Medical Marvels Looking to find the right doctor? How about a pediatrician for your son or daughter? The just-updated [415] Top Doctors Resource Guide is the ticket: from general practitioners to specialists, it lists more than 800 of the best doctors in Marin and San Francisco as voted by their peers. Check out marinmagazine.com/415topdoctors for more.

In Marin / CURRENTS

Think Small

There’s no escaping talk of the local housing shortage, and given that the Bay Area is among the fastestgrowing job markets in the nation, the talk won’t be stopping anytime soon. But more housing density is considered a threat to Marin’s famed open spaces. Many residents are against new construction, and recent conservation-minded funding approved by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission bolsters efforts to preserve even more open space. However, a movement is afoot that may appease both sides. Following Tiburon’s and Novato’s cue, San Rafael is the latest city in Marin to approve junior second units. The mini units are converted from existing spaces — backyard cottages, garages, spare rooms — into private apartments with basic amenities, including a separate entrance. The benefits are many: homeowners get a second income, and tenants get access to affordable housing. Leaders in Fairfax, Larkspur and Belvedere are considering similar laws. K.P.

COCKTAIL CHATTER

PIE IN THE SKY In 2014, President Barack Obama Summer Camps

PENELOPE DULLAGHAN (ILLUSTRATION)

Believe it or not, summer camp sign-ups are right around the corner. We have a comprehensive list of summer camps in this issue (see page 58) and online. From academic and theater to music and science, there’s a camp to suit every interest. Visit marinmagazine.com/camps to find a spot that’s right for your child.

officially made March 31 national Cesar Chavez Day. Chavez, as you may know, was a Mexican-American farmworker and labor activist who helped form what is today known as the United Farm Workers union. But before Chavez (1927–1993) there was another, similar-minded activist named Joe Hill. Born in 1879, Hill was a Swedish-American songwriter, farm labor advocate and member of the Industrial Workers of the World. During Hill’s times, when migrant workers sought a better life, they were told they would get their reward “in the sweet by-and-by,” a phrase derived from a late 1800s Christian hymn that can also be heard in the film Django Unchained. Hill wrote a parody of the song called “The Preacher and the Slave” that substitutes the phrase “pie in the sky” — basically an empty promise of plenty in heaven. Instead of waiting for one’s reward, Hill stressed the need for a livable wage, good working conditions and ample food in the here and now. K.P.

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In Marin / CURRENTS

MADE BY MARIN

Red Whale Coffee

Sean Boyd

T

HIS W H A LE BEGA N its migration back in 2003 on Canada’s east coast in New Brunswick, where California native Sean Boyd was working as a chef. Intent on leaving a positive lasting impression on customers and knowing he couldn’t do that with the coffee his restaurant served, Boyd began “cooking” his own. His determination to deliver coffee that complemented his menu paid off: Red Whale Coffee became an underground favorite in Canada and the side project soon became a full-time operation. In 2012, homesick for California and his family, Boyd moved back to the Golden State and settled in Marin to focus on sourcing, roasting and selling the highest-quality and best-roasted coffee beans he could. PHILOSOPHY Master roaster Boyd creates a unique roasting flavor profile for each coffee bean lot, much like a chef creating a recipe would, but Red Whale Coffee’s mission extends beyond beans. “While our objectives are to roast specialty coffee that tastes great, our greater vision is to use coffee to improve our community through education and business practices, based on ethics, respect and transparency,” says Boyd. IN MARIN The Red Whale Coffee to the Rescue program brings coffee to emergency workers, ensuing responders are alert and operating at their best during disasters. In non-emergency situations, you can stop by the San Rafael tasting room to check out the custom equipment in action and get a look at how the science, art, food and community of coffee production come together. BEYOND MARIN Boyd was invited to be a judge at the Best of Panama coffee tasting last year. Along with other select judges, he cupped, tasted and ranked the most flavorful coffee Panama had to offer. WHAT THEY SAY Most coffee roasters talk about roasting beans, but Boyd treats coffee like food and prefers the term “cooking.” He says, “Cooking coffee is like caramelizing crème brûlée. If you over-caramelize the crème brûlée becomes burnt, bitter and acrid. It’s the same for roasting coffee.” redwhalecoffee.com KASIA PAWLOWSKA

$14.95–$74.95 PER BAG

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In Marin / CURRENTS

ON THE JOB

Handy Man

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HINH NGUYEN ARRIVED in the U.S. as a 5-year-old refugee from Vietnam. Today, the 30-year-old S.F. State grad has a flourishing business repairing the damages of our digital lifestyle. His new Novato store also sells the latest in electronic gadgets. What do you do? We fix phones. We also buy and refurbish and sell used phones. It’s a big market. We also fix iPads, iPods and laptop screens. How did you start? I learned phone repair from a YouTube video. First I drove to people’s houses; then I had a tiny little hut across from Thinh Nguyen, owner of Starbucks near Montecito Plaza in Gadget Pron, 473 Third St., San San Rafael. It was about 3 feet by 7. Rafael; 857 Grant Ave., Novato Super tiny. Claustrophobic. You’re a handy guy. I’m good with my hands. I got it from my dad, who is super handy. When I was a kid, I liked to take things apart. Could you put them back together? Most of the time. What does your dad do? He used to do nails. He was a manicurist. My parents had a nail salon in San Rafael, but it closed when the economy went bad. Now my dad works for me. Works for you? Yes, I taught him how to fix phones. What’s the most

common repair? A broken screen. On most phones we can fix that in an hour. For how much? For an iPhone 6, it’s $149 — definitely cheaper than buying a new one. People tell you what happened? Right, I’ve heard it all. The most common is that they put their phone in their lap while they’re driving and when they step out of the car the phone falls to the ground. What’s the weirdest story? People drop them in the toilet or wash them in their dirty clothes, but the weirdest involved a chicken farmer. She liked to keep eggs in her bra, but she also kept her phone there. One day, the eggs broke and got all over her phone. The Novato store is more than phone repair? I’m expanding what we offer. It was always my dream to have a cool gadget store. I’m super into gadgets and unique items. For example? We have hoverboards. They go nine miles on a charge. And we have a live jellyfish tank. It’s a kit. They ship you the live jellyfish from Florida. What are your plans? My dream is to have hundreds of these stores — the new RadioShack, but much cooler. m

TIM PORTER

This local business owner wants to fix your phone. BY TIM PORTER

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In Marin / CONVERSATION

O

VER THE PA ST 20 years, architect Mark Cavagnero has master-planned the deYoung Museum in Golden Gate Park, designed the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts and been featured in Architectural Record, California Home and Design and The New York Times. His local projects include the Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center in San Rafael, College of Marin’s Academic Center, Marin Horizon School in Mill Valley and Sava Pool on 19th Avenue in San Francisco. Cavagnero is founding principal of Mark Cavagnero Associates, a 45-person, 23-year-old architectural/planning firm on San Francisco’s Embarcadero. In addition to the above, his firm has designed the Oakland Museum of California, Park City Museum in Utah and corporate headquarters for Whole Foods Market in Chicago. The 58-year-old lives in Mill Valley and is the father of two: William, 18, a senior at Marin Academy, and Jane, 22, a senior at Colorado College in Colorado Springs.

From the top: A look at the Seminary site today and what is proposed. This image: Mark Cavagnero in front of the new Academic Center at the College of Marin.

Mark Cavagnero

The noted architect and planner is in for the long haul on the controversial 304-home Seminary project. BY JIM WOOD

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COURTESY OF MARK CAVAGNERO ASSOCIATES (DRAWINGS); TIM PORTER (PORTRAIT)

For the past three years, Cavagnero has been planning, designing and advocating for the Seminary, a clustering of 304 new rental homes adjacent to a planned private high school on 127 scenic acres in the southern Marin community of Strawberry. Cavagnero fully expects to see the project through to its completion, which he envisions taking five to seven years. More than a few Strawberry residents hope that day never comes. In your own words, please describe the Seminary project. To date, this project represents three years of the developer, Bruce Jones of North Coast Land Holdings, and myself working to study and dream about what would be the ideal project for this site. We both live in Marin; Bruce was raised here. The owner of the land, the Fasken family, has long ties to the Branson School in Ross, and they are drawn to execute a project that would have high-quality education as a community benefit. There are 211 units on the property that were built 50 years ago and are currently in poor condition. A 1984 community plan, approved by the Marin County Board of Supervisors, allowed for 304 units to be built on the property. Our plan is to replace the existing 211 units “bedroom for bedroom,” meaning for every one-bedroom, we’ll build a new one-bedroom unit, and for every twobedroom, a two-bedroom unit, and so on. These will be two-story homes and none will be over 1,200 square feet in size. As for the 93 units that were approved in 1984 but never built, we will primarily be building two- and three-bedroom units, consistent with the 1984 community plan that called for larger homes for families with children. People in Strawberry have expressed a preference for single-family detached homes; however, these will be attached single-family homes clustered in threes and fours into buildings that appear similar to the singlefamily detached houses that now border the project. Still, the density of the project will be 2.47 units per acre, somewhat less than Strawberry’s Ricardo Road at 4.9 units per acre and Richardson Drive, which is 3.2 per acre, and considerably less than the nearby Strawberry Point apartments, which are 17.7

units per acre. When completed, the Seminary will have 75 percent open space, and 60 units, scattered throughout the project, will qualify as senior affordable housing. Will this be individually owned or leased housing? The owners are a group out of Texas and Northern California and they like the idea of keeping their property in perpetuity, not selling it. Their vision is akin to the setup of San Francisco’s Presidio, where homes are leased and the landscaping, trails and streets are carefully maintained. They don’t want leaky gutters or someone painting a house pink or neighbors suing over a tree blocking someone’s view. They want a rationally thought-out development organized over big meadows and a certain cohesive style and sense of community and longevity. They are thinking, 30, 40, even 50 years down the road. What are the plans for Branson School’s campus? Most of the existing Golden Gate Baptist Seminary structures — administration, a library, a cafeteria and several classroom buildings — were constructed at least 30 years ago, many over 50 years ago, and Branson has agreed to keep all of them. So we will renovate them, make them ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) compliant and improve their appearance.

I’d like to be the first example of a community that clusters its development and preserves its open space and puts housing in a parklike setting. We feel it’s better to do that than add to the local landfills. We also want to rip out asphalt and concrete areas, replace steps with ramps and dying trees with healthy ones, and build four new buildings, all of which were approved in the 1984 community plan. These would be a 1,200seat auditorium, a much-needed gymnasium, a 12,000-square-foot student center and one additional classroom building. At its present location in Ross, Branson has an enrollment of 320 students; over time this campus would increase that to approximately 1,000 students.

So far, the reaction has been all about the traffic. One critic has labeled it “a nuclear reactor in our community.” Agreed, traffic is the big sore thumb. The Branson School has got to develop a traffic management plan that limits traffic to what was approved back in 1984 or better. They have a combination of ways to do it, and they have new leadership coming in that hopes to accomplish this. One approach is staggering the starts of the school day, with a third of the students starting at 7:30 a.m., a third at 8 a.m. and a third at 8:30 a.m. That spreads traffic over an hour instead of just 15 minutes. Another way is to have shuttle buses and an off-site location where parents drop their children off. Many San Francisco schools, as well as Marin Country Day School, do that now. Another approach involves not allowing students to park on campus unless they are carpooling with two more students and, in deference to the neighbors, not allowing any students to park along neighboring streets. So there are many possible solutions, and it’s possible Branson School could seize the moment and be the most progressive traffic-controlled school in the Bay Area. How do you react to the criticism that’s already been leveled at this project? I have mixed feelings. On one hand, I totally appreciate the concerns, as these are my neighbors and I share their frustration over traffic. And sometimes people say things that may upset other developers, but they don’t upset me. I realize these are heartfelt concerns and anxieties. And I wish I could answer all their questions completely and accurately — but I can’t because this is an ongoing process. I can’t personally control the traffic plan Branson School will develop, or how the development’s overall use-plan will play out, such as determining when the school will be hosting a lacrosse game or staging a drama. I wish I could grab the whole thing and make it what everyone wants. But I can’t and that’s my frustration. I bump into these people at the coffee shop or grocery store and sometimes it’s awkward. They’ll voice to me their intense anger about the project and I’m just standing there trying to get a latte after a Sunday morning bike ride. This happens often; I don’t like it but I understand it. M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 33

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In Marin / CONVERSATION

At the same time, I do feel we have a group of local people who really care that this project comes out well. The developers are homegrown and intend to stay here. I live nearby; Bruce Jones, the developer, was born and raised in Ross, and Branson School is a Marin institution. What I also know is that I’ve been through so many of these projects — and at the end of the day, regarding every development I’ve ever worked on, the surrounding public has been extremely happy with the end product. What is the timeline for development? By early spring, the county wants to see Branson’s traffic plan analyzing every intersection surrounding the project. The county is being very methodical — which is good. This is the most impactful project Marin has seen since the county civic center was constructed over 50 years ago. And before the county does anything, our application has to be complete. We’ve filed it, and the county has said it appears complete, but items still need to be clarified. Can a large fire truck turn around at a particular intersection? Is that a lane or a driveway? Will residents park there? If so, it has to be two feet wider. Things like that. All kinds of questions have to be answered before the EIR (environmental impact report) can be submitted. Civil engineers, landscape architects, geologists, hydrologists, biologists all have to file reports, and neighborhood noise and shadow studies have to be completed, and rare birds, butterflies and plants have to be identified, all of which probably won’t be completed until the end of 2016, maybe early 2017. Then the county planning commission will review the EIR and start holding public hearings that could easily take another six months. So it could be well into 2018 before the Marin County Board of Supervisors holds hearings and makes decisions, and 2019 before any construction and/or demolition gets underway. What motivated you to take on this project? Sure, I’m getting kicked around now, and yes, I’m getting paid for the hours I put in — yet that’s not what motivates me. I live just across Highway 101 from this project, I’ve raised two children here and I’ve done considerable 34 M A R C H 2 0 1 6 M A R I N

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A look at the proposed academic quad.

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architectural work in Marin. However, the bulk of my work is elsewhere — we now have four projects in Europe and several underway throughout the Bay Area. And to be honest, for such a sophisticated, well-educated and affluent county, I’ve always felt the quality of development and architecture in Marin has been disappointing. Sure, we have buildings by Frank Lloyd Wright and I. M. Pei, but we haven’t handled residential development well, and I would like to do something exemplary in the way of housing. I’d like to be the first example of a community that clusters its development and preserves its open space and puts housing in a parklike setting. Right now, that doesn’t exist in Marin; the nearest example I can think of is the Presidio across the bridge in San Francisco. I want to do exemplary work in housing and in education. I would like to push Branson to be exemplary in every way — traffic management, obviously, but also in its design of buildings, its sustainability as a campus and its handling of the landscape. There are over 120 acres in this project that haven’t been properly maintained in over 50 years, brush that is a fire hazard, beautiful oaks that are dying. I honestly feel that when this project is done, every nearby resident will see an uptick in property value, a raise in Strawberry’s status. Branson has certainly not hurt the community of Ross — the most expensive homes are the ones nearest campus. I believe young tech types will love the idea of buying a home in Strawberry so their children can bike or walk to school at Branson — and they will be willing to pay dearly for doing it. No one is focusing on that now, they’re focusing on traffic. But if we get the traffic issues resolved — which we will — Branson will be, in every way, the most state-of-the-art high school in the entire Bay Area, and thanks to the infusion of culture, playing fields and walking trails this project will bring, Strawberry will be a very desirable place to live. I firmly believe that. m M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 35

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Shades of

Serenity This spring, the soft blue chosen by Pantone as a color of the year reigned supreme on the runway. Reminiscent of the ocean and the sky, this nature-inspired hue creates a sense of peace and calm in our sometimes chaotic world.

Photography by Claudia Goetzelmann Styling by Veronica Sooley

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{This page} Sleeveless bicolor silk dress by Prabal Gurung, $1,195 at Saks Fifth Avenue (SF) 415.986.4300. Peanut sandals by BC Footwear, $50 at nordstrom.com. Assorted lucite bangles by Alexis Bittar, $70 each at Alexis Bittar (SF) 415.567.5113. Flagstaff earrings by Jenny Bird, $36 (Rocksbox Insider price) at rocksbox.com. {Opposite} Pretti floral lace top by Trina Turk, $198 at trinaturk.com. City Safari high-rise culotte pant by The Fifth Label, $85 at Urban Outfitters (Corte Madera) 415.927.1844. Half-moon satchel by Tory Burch, $650 at Tory Burch (SF) 415.398.1525. Choice wedge by Seychelles Footwear, $100 at zappos.com. Infinity Circle tassel necklace by Waffles & Honey, $210 at wafflesandhoney.com. Lily earrings by Perry Street, $34 (Rocksbox Insider price) at rocksbox.com. Triple blue kyanite bar ring by Mapleton Drive, $65 at mapletondrive.com. {Opening spread} Carmen neoprene dress by Elie Tahari, $428 at Neiman Marcus (SF) 415.362.3900. Antique moonstone necklace, $5,750 at Lang Antique & Estate Jewelry (SF) 415.982.2213. Inner Fire quartz stud earrings by AGOOA, $69 at agooaculture.com.

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{This page} Crepe short sleeve dress with midriff detail by Ten by Tenby, $380 at tenbytenbynyc.com. Colossal natural lapis lazuli bead necklace, $4,950 at Lang Antique & Estate Jewelry (SF) 415.982.2213. Square druzy studs by Leslie Francesca, $44 (Rocksbox Insider price) at rocksbox.com. Blue jean lapis cocktail ring by Waffles & Honey, $185 at wafflesandhoney.com. {Opposite} Tesita embroidered jacket by Joie, $378; vintage whisper tee by Splendid, $78; Eloise straight wide-leg pants by Alice + Olivia, $298; all at Saks Fifth Avenue (SF) 415.986.4300. Positano lace-up platform espadrilles by Tory Burch, $350 at Tory Burch (SF) 415.398.1525. Inner Fire quartz stud earrings by AGOOA, $69 at agooaculture.com. Jane necklace by Perry Street, $59 (Rocksbox Insider price) at rocksbox.com.

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{This page} Siriana jumpsuit by Trina Turk, $598 at trinaturk.com. Glide mule sandal by Freda Salvador, $395 at Freda Salvador (SF) 415.872.9690. Sheila bib necklace, $225; sapphire honeycomb earrings, $195; both by Waffles & Honey at wafflesandhoney.com. {Opposite} Chambray high-neck romper by BDG, $69 at Urban Outfitters (Corte Madera) 415.927.1844. Amore kimono by Becca by Rebecca Virtue, $68 at everythingbutwater.com. Prime ankle boot by Freda Salvador, $595 at Freda Salvador (SF) 415.872.9690. The Atlantic belt bag by Beau & Ro Bag Company, $158 at beauandro.com. Velluto headband, $28 at Anthropologie (Corte Madera) 415.924.4197. Captivating Calm druzy stud earrings by AGOOA, $69 at agooaculture.com.

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HAIR and MAKEUP Elizabeth Chang using Bumble and bumble and yaby cosmetics HAIR and MAKEUP ASSISTANT April Foster MODEL Audrey Bomar/Look Model Agency ASSISTANT Kasia Pawlowska LOCATION Left Space Studios in San Francisco

{This page} Camila silk dress by Diane von Furstenberg, $468 at Saks Fifth Avenue (SF) 415.986.4300. Gwynn booties by Dolce Vita, $110 at Anthropologie (Corte Madera) 415.924.4197. Oversize nubby panama hat, $39 at Urban Outfitters (Corte Madera) 415.927.1844. Radiant Heart druzy earrings by AGOOA, $149 at agooaculture.com. The Power of Thought gemstone ring by AGOOA, $129. {Opposite} Moire moto jacket by J’Amy Tarr, $538 at J'Amy Tarr Design Studio (Mill Valley) 415.450.9677. Ponte flared cropped top by N / NICHOLAS, $265 at Saks Fifth Avenue (SF) 415.986.4300. Photo Ready Crop Rail skinny jeans by J Brand, $178 at Saks Fifth Avenue. Shot in the Dark flats by BC Footwear, $60 at modcloth.com. Wren necklace by Perry Street, $48 (Rocksbox Insider price) at rocksbox.com. The Deepest Ocean ring by AGOOA, $99 at agooaculture.com.

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ON THE

GRILLE

Three local chefs with a passion for engines. BY CHARLIE VOGELHEIM • PHOTOS BY MICHAEL ALAN ROSS

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E

M

A R I N L AYS C L A I M to s om e o f t h e m o s t c r e at i v e a nd p a s sion at e chefs t h i s side of the Golden Gate Bridge, but do they share any interests outside the kitchen? As an automotive journalist (and restaurant enthusiast), I set out on a quest to determine if our local chefs’ desire for spice and variety extends to the garage as well as the kitchen.

FAMILY RELIC

From left to right: Ben Balesteri, Ged Robertson and Tim Humphrey.

My journey beg ins at a sidewa lk table in Sausalito. I’m at Poggio, talking to executive chef Ben Balesteri. We will eventually have the opportunity to discuss the wonderful Italian cuisine and his journey in culinary arts, but what brought me here was his car, a 1970 Pontiac GTO, to be specific. Balesteri was born in Monterey and raised in the Salinas Valley surrounded by cars. “I grew up about 10 minutes from Laguna Seca, went to lots of races, and then there’s also the concourse and other car shows; there’s constantly something going on.” His neighbor, a collector of classic vehicles, was constantly working on cars. “I was always playing in his garage as a kid,” Balesteri recalls, “learning here and there what I possibly could.” He took his driver’s license test with a ’67 Chevy three-quarter-ton four-wheel-drive ranch truck. A task complicated by the vehicle’s three-speed granny gear. The 1970 Pontiac he drives today, a GTO 455 with a Turbo 400 transmission, has been in the family for many years. “My uncle actually bought the car brand new in 1970 off the lot, and after about two years he sold it to my grandfather,” Balesteri says. “It then just sat in a barn for about 10 to 15 years and when I was M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 47

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16 I stumbled upon this amazing beautiful car with rats running through it.” Balesteri had it towed home, flushed both the gas tank and the radiator, and changed the plugs and distributor, and it started. “It was amazing. I drove it about a month and then I blew it up,” he says. “It had been sitting for about 20 years and I was going — let’s just say — plenty fast. It was quite fun.” The engine was rebuilt and it’s been a work in progress ever since. Taking a GTO to the farmers’ market elicits remarks such as “What a beautiful car!” or “Why are you at the market with it?” or “You shouldn’t be hauling produce in that thing.” Ben tells people it’s his daily ride as he loads

up cases of Brussels sprouts, broccoli and lettuce. “I don’t even know what other car I would purchase,” he says. “I love the feeling, I love the sound, I love the power. I love the smell of gas and I guess it just reminds me of the racetrack.” Balesteri’s love of working with his hands is evident in both his cooking and his passion for cars. “I think wrenching on a car has always been natural for me, like chopping vegetables, slicing tuna or cutting up meat. It feels natural to get under the car and start wrenching and getting grease all over.” After a long day of working in the fast-paced restaurant industry, the GTO is the chef’s diversion.

“Our restaurant is very high volume so it’s a pretty intense day-to-day operation,” he says. “I start around 8 or 9 in the morning and I get off anywhere from 9 to 10 at night. So I think it just helps me release and relax a little bit when I get home to have something to play with.” When asked if there was another car that might be added to the garage, Balestri admits that he has admired Porsches and Ferraris, but overall, “I like classics and that would be my direction.” And though he loves being in the kitchen, it’s hard to avoid fine cars, even at work. “We’re fortunate to have a car show right in front of Poggio,” he says of the first-Saturday-of-themonth gathering called Biscotti and Cars.

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ON THE ROAD

Directly across Richardson Bay, Tim Humphrey is the executive chef at Tiburon Tavern and spends his time on the road cruising in a modern 2010 Dodge Challenger. Asked about the affinity many chefs share for Detroit iron, he says, “The new chefs these days have a little cutting edge to them, and muscle cars fall in that line.” Humphrey has been around Dodges his whole life. In his youth in the South, his father had “an ol’ Dodge pickup truck that we drove around in forever.” He learned to drive in that pickup, and became a big fan of Dodge classics. “It was a toss-up when it came time for me to get a car. I was going to go old school and then the new Challenger came out and I was like, ‘man, that's really beautiful,’ ” he says, “and it has air-conditioning and stuff so the functionality won out.” It had the style that he was looking for, and he figured “that one day I would reach back and get an older one, but we'll start with the new one now.” T he C h a l lenger i s r el at i vely new, s o Humphrey is able to spend less time on maintenance and more time driving. He has even taken it cross-country a couple of times. “I just like to get out on the road and go,” he says. “I usually kick open my sunroof and enjoy the weather and just cruise.” Driving is a form of escape for Humphrey. “I take solace in the kitchen and it’s a good place for me; I feel comfortable there,” he says. “But every now and again you get away and try to just clear your mind out there on the road and think of new stuff, and go see new things, and try to get new inspirations into where you’re at and what’s going on.” And that passion and inspiration found on the road often makes its way to the menu. “I got a lot of exciting stuff, exciting flavors coming from all over the world, not really just out of the South or out of California,” he says. “Whatever I can come up with, I love to put it on a plate and see how the rest of the community enjoys it.” A ske d w h at ot her c a r s i nt er e s t h i m , Humphrey says he’s drawn to the classics. “I would actually like the classic version of my car. To have them in comparison would be pretty cool.” Though he says he wouldn’t turn down a 700-horsepower Dodge Hellcat. M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 49

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CADDY COOL

Ged Robertson opened Small Shed Flatbreads in Mill Valley 10 years ago and recently transformed it into the popular Molina. He also worked on the reintroduction of the Sweetwater Music Hall and owns Shoreline Coffee Shop. On occasion he can be found driving his rather large 1970 Cadillac Deville convertible around town. “This car was from Tiburon and it’s spent most of its time in Marin. So it’s been on the hills and, surprisingly, because it has a suspension, it drives really well and we don’t scrape the bumpers going up a steep driveway,” Robertson says. W hile not his daily ride, the Deville emerges for special occasions and is regularly featured in the local Fourth of July parade. Robertson likes to think of the Caddy as a rock ’n’ roll car. “When we opened up the Sweetwater, with all the history here and the

music, the car helped channel the time and the feeling that was this place back in the day.” The restaurateur grew up in New York, where his mom made him learn to drive a stick shift and his first car was a Datsun SPL 311. “It was an old convertible and a troublesome car that could go very fast,” he says. Prior to that he rode a moped to high school. “I wasn’t the coolest kid, but maybe I’d get a girl on there once in awhile and if we stayed upright it was great,” Robertson says. “But the kids who had cars before I did were kind of badass.” While growing up, he was surrounded by people working on their muscle cars — the popular after-school hobby. “Walking home from school you’d pass by somebody’s house and they were modifying their car.” He always wanted a 1973.5 Porsche Targa and says that for him ’70s cars hold a special

attraction. Another car from that period that piques Robertson’s interest is the ’70s Citroën DS convertible. “That is my fantasy car, and by the time I was able to afford it, I think it tripled in price,” he says. “It’s a beautiful car, and unique.” Robertson’s restaurant experiences offer insight on what compels some chefs to own unique vehicles. “The good chefs are really into creating unique experiences, so they enjoy anything that gives them a different angle,” he says. “They’re attracted to doing things a little bit differently.” When it comes to cars, Shoreline Coffee Shop sees plenty of classics stop by its location in the busy junction between Mill Valley, Muir Woods, Stinson Beach and the city just over the bridge. “It’s called Tam Junction for a reason, and old cars just pull up here,” Robertson says. “It’s pretty cool.” m

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I JUST LIKE TO GET OUT ON THE ROAD AND GO. I USUALLY KICK OPEN MY SUNROOF AND ENJOY THE WEATHER AND JUST CRUISE.

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homegrown

success A sparsely populated and remote part of the county is now an organic food mecca. BY JACOBA CHARLES

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But the food landscape wasn’t always like this. Just a few short decades ago, most residents of Marin had little awareness of — or pride in — the sparsely populated agricultural half of their county. In 1990, the term “locavore” had yet to be coined. The county had only four certified organic farms totaling just 67 acres. And while interest in organic food was growing, it was far from the booming industry that it is today. Smaller growers were being squeezed out as larger growers and distributors moved into the existing market, driving down prices. Most critically, consumers had yet to differentiate between local or industrial-scale organic products. “There was no real nexus in Marin,” says Weber. “We had a certain amount of support — there were grocery stores like the Good Earth that were buying organic — but most of our connections and most growers were outside of Marin.”

Growing Roots

It was in this climate, during the mid-1990s, that a small, dedicated group of farmers and their allies began to meet, discussing how to support one another and the work they loved. Their efforts ultimately led to the formation of Marin Organic — as well as the founding of the Point Reyes Farmers Market and creation of the state’s first county-run organic certification program.

BARBARA RIES (THIS PAGE, OPENER); TIM PORTER (OPENER VEGGIES)

T

Marin Organic recently announced that its mission has been accomplished, and it closed its doors. For the last 15 years, the group has worked to promote, support and publicize Marin’s small farmers, and now, with Bay Area residents more food-source literate than ever, it seems there isn’t much more to do. But the seeds of the group’s accomplishments were sown even earlier, through vibrant yet unsung grassroots organizing. Today, western Marin is renowned regionally and beyond as a mecca for sustainable agriculture. By 2014, the county boasted 66 organically certified producers tending nearly 300 acres of row crops and more than 40,000 acres of pasture. Their wares — including vegetables, greens, fruit, cheese and meats — were worth nearly $46 million. Menus around the bay tout ingredients of local provenance, and many diners know the farms and ranches by name. “We have integrated all these different elements in the community, from the consumer to the chefs to the growers to the ranchers to the county,” says Warren Weber, owner of Star Route Farms in Bolinas — the oldest certified organic farm in California — who in 1973 helped craft the state’s first certification standards. H E NON PROFIT ORG A N I Z AT ION

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Opposite: Tending crops at Marin Roots Farm. This page from top: Mixed vegetables are off to the Marin Organic school lunch and gleaning program; Cowgirl Creamery co-founders Sue Conley and Peggy Smith; chickens at Marin Roots Farm.

“It was a really important moment,” says Peter Martinelli, owner of Fresh Run Farm in Bolinas, who was an original board member of Marin Organic. “We were thinking, let’s have our own standards and our own approach to organic ag.” Though there were initially several similar groups, including the West Marin Food and Agriculture Project, the effort coalesced into the West Marin Growers Group, says Ellie Rilla, former director of University of California Cooperative Extension in Marin (UCCE Marin). They met in iconic West Marin locations such as Manka’s Inverness Lodge, Toby’s Feed Barn and the then newly opened Tomales Bay Foods. “We met and we met and we met,” says Sue Conley, coowner of Cowgirl Creamery and original board member of Marin Organic. “We had a million meetings.” The loose-knit coalition included local farmers, retailers, county representatives and restaurateurs who all wanted to promote small-scale, artisanal, environmentally sound food, while preserving the energy and spirit of social justice that the move-

COURTESY OF MARIN ORGANIC (TRUCK); TIM PORTER (MIDDLE); BARBARA RIES (BOTTOM)

By 2014, the county boasted 66 organically certified producers tending nearly 300 acres of row crops and more than 40,000 acres of pasture. ment had originally come to represent in the 1970s. Different members had different (though often overlapping) passions. For example, Martinelli was concerned about preserving or expanding organic standards in the face of increasing industrialization, while Janet Brown, co-owner of Allstar Organics, championed the idea of food security and that a region should know how to feed itself. In 1995 the group launched the Point Reyes Farmers Market, providing a place for local growers — many of whom were little more than backyard gardeners — to hawk their wares directly to the public. The market had to overcome skepticism and local backlash, though, Conley says. “We asked the farm bureau and the Marin Agricultural Land Trust to sponsor it, and they both said, ‘We don’t have farmers in Marin; we only have ranchers,’ ” she recalls. Local stores, restaurants and a small farmers’ market based in Woodacre also objected, fearing competition. “They found it threatening — it was a big change,” says Chris Giacomini, owner of Toby’s Feed Barn in Point Reyes Station. In the following years, the Growers Group collaborated with the Marin Agricultural Land Trust (MALT) to launch the first Taste of Marin food gala (then called the All-Marin M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 55

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dinner), which featured gourmet meals composed solely of foods produced in Marin. This showcase for the usually behind-the-scenes farmers was to be a seminal culinary event for the next decade. As momentum continued to grow, the county sponsored workshops on agriculture, bringing together disparate groups that at the time rarely collaborated: conventional and organic growers, farmers, ranchers, even master gardeners. “A lot of it was about trying to look at things in different ways and going back to the way your grandparents used to do things — like making cheese,” says Rilla, who put on a 1996 workshop on agricultural diversification and also worked to help the Growers Group organize and define its goals. In 2000, two pivotal events happened. First, the county agreed to conduct organic certifications — making the process more affordable and thus more realistic for local farmers and ranchers. Second, the Growers Group redefined itself as Marin Organic and incorporated as a nonprofit. A new era had begun. “To really move the mission and values forward took a lot of work, collaboration and education, and that’s what MO was able to do,” says Albert Straus, owner of the Straus Family Creamery in Marshall. “They got out there in the public eye to talk about the values of organic farming.”

Organic Strength

AT A GLANCE

MARIN ORGANIC

This page: Crops at Star Route Farms. Opposite from top: Prince Charles in West Marin with Helge Hellberg; Marin Organic hosting an event at Toby’s Feed Barn in Point Reyes Station.

The young Marin Organic fledged quietly for its first few years, led by part-time coordinators. Weber — who had not been part of the Growers Group — brought his considerable contacts and reputation when he signed on as the first board president. The nonprofit’s first major accomplishment was the development of a labeling program to help the consumers make the connection to where food is grown, which launched in

Marin has four certified organic farms, totaling 67 acres

1990

West Marin Growers Group begins to meet

Mid1990s

Straus Family Creamery becomes the first certified organic dairy west of the Mississippi

1994

2002. The now-familiar green and white logo appeared on banners, grocery store twist ties, farm and produce signs, and on the walls of restaurants that committed to buying a certain amount of produce from Marin Organic growers. In 2004, the nonprofit hired Helge Hellberg as the first official executive director. When he came on board, he says, there was no office — nor even a website. He says building something from the ground up was a thrill. “So many people had done such great groundwork and created excitement, but there wasn’t much structure in place,” Hellberg says. “It had a really clear mission and a bank account with $60,000 in it. They literally handed me the papers and let me run with it.” Hellberg soon expanded Marin Organic’s profile, programs and staff. Born in Germany, Hellberg had spent the ’90s touring Europe with the popular a cappella band Five Live, and he brought a performer’s flair and joie de vivre to his new position. Recently he compared his first months in Marin to his band days.

Point Reyes Farmers Market launches

West Marin Growers Group hosts the first All-Marin dinner (later called Taste of Marin)

Marin becomes first county in California to perform organic certification

West Marin Growers Group becomes Marin Organic and incorporates as a nonprofit

Part-time staff is hired for Marin Organic

1995

1995

2000

2000

2001

BARBARA RIES

A lot of it was about trying to look at things in different ways and going back to the way your grandparents used to do things.

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“It was as rock ’n’ roll as you could make it,” he says. “There was so much to do that I just kept working 14 hours a day. I was sleeping on an air mattress at the office and showering outside with a garden hose.” In addition to promoting and assisting growers, Marin Organic projects grew to include young farmer education, gleaning and a cutting-edge lunch program bringing organic food to local schools. The organization led tours, hosted events and provided a directory of farms in Marin. And, of course, it famously brought Prince Charles to West Marin. Farmer members received publicity, support and a group identity that was marketed vigorously.

COURTESY OF MARIN ORGANIC

Mission Accomplished?

In recent years, however, the energy behind Marin Organic began to wane. Bay Area consumers required less education, while farmers also needed less support. Hellberg resigned in 2011, and the staff gradually shrank. Once again they didn’t need an office, so they moved out in August 2015. When current executive director Jeffrey Westman announced his resignation last fall, it spurred a conversation with the board about what to do next. “One of our weaknesses is that we were really painted into a corner between ‘Marin’ and ‘Organic,’ ” Westman says. “It was hard to address things that were outside of Marin and weren’t certified organic.” Perhaps most critically, funding for such a narrowly defined organization shrank as the obstacles to overcome grew fewer — public opinion had caught up with the organization. “The organization served a huge purpose, but at a certain point it’s kind of like beating a dead horse,” Westman says. After the board chose to officially shut down, existing programs were passed on to other nonprofits. For now, though, the group has retained control of the label and the 501(c)(3), and they are discussing what, if anything, to do next. “I’m hoping it can re-emerge in a different way that serves the issues of today,” says Conley. “I don’t think it’s dead,” adds Guido Frosini of True Grass Farm, who is the youngest and newest member of the board. “It might have to change names, and it might be wider than just Marin.” m

The county hires sustainable agriculture coordinator Steve Quirt

Marin Organic labeling project launches for participating growers, restaurants and grocery stores

Helge Hellberg is hired as full-time Marin Organic executive director

Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, visit West Marin

2002

2002

2004

2005

The term locavore is coined in the Bay Area

Helge Hellberg resigns as Marin Organic executive director

Jeffrey Westman is hired as Marin Organic executive director

Marin has 66 organically certified producers, 265 acres of row crops and 40,367 acres of pasture

2005

2011

2013

2014

Marin Organic shuts its doors

2015

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Marin Magazine’s SIXTH ANNUAL

SUMMER CAMPS GUIDE Day camps, overnight camps, sports camps and science camps. They all have one thing in common: they are filling up fast. Be sure to peruse the many great options in the following listings and make your plans soon — summer will be here before you know it. To find additional choices — searchable by town, price range and specifics such as ages, hours or specialty — visit marinmagazine.com/camps.

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SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016

Day Camps MARIN

142 Throckmorton, Mill Valley

Theater, ages 7-15 415.383.9613 throckmortontheatre.org

Academy Deturk Performing Arts Workshops, San Rafael

Theater, ages 8-16 415.456.4297 academy-deturk.com

Angel Island Day Camp, Tiburon

General, Outdoor, Nature, ages 4-14 415.435.4355 theranchtoday.org Art & Garden Day Camp, Tiburon

Art, Garden, Outdoor, ages 4-14 415.435.4355 theranchtoday.org Art Reactor, San Rafael

Art, ages 12-18 415.948.5482 theartreactor.com

Audubon Summer Adventure Camp, Tiburon

Nature, ages 4-17 415.388.2524 richardsonbay.audubon.org

Avid4 Adventure, Mill Valley

Adventure, Nature, Sports, ages 3-14 800.977.9873 avid4.com Azzi Basketball Camp, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 8-14 415.948.1263 azzicamp.com

Bay Area Discovery Museum, Sausalito

Academic, Art, Science, ages 3-16 415.339.3931 baykidsmuseum.org Belvedere Tennis Camp, Tiburon

Sports, ages 4-8 415.435.4792 belvederetennisclub.com

Bolinas Surf Camp, Bolinas

Sports, ages 6+ 415.868.0264 surfbolinas.com

Bombers Baseball Club, Kentfield

Sports, ages 8-13 415.464.3800 bombersbaseballclub.com

Camp and Teen Travel Consultants, San Rafael

General, ages 7-18 415 258 0817 campandteenconsultants.com Camp Create, Belvedere

Art, Music, ages 6-11 415.435.4501 ststephenschurch.org

Camp Doodles, Mill Valley

General, ages 4-11 415.388.4386 campdoodles.com

Camp Edmo, Mill Valley

Art, Makers, Nature, Science, ages 3-10 415.282.6673 campedmo.org Camp EdTech, Mill Valley

Tech, Digital Media, ages 10-14 415.282.6673 campedtech.org Camp Funderblast, Mill Valley

General, ages 4-11 415.843.1730 funderblast.com

CaĂąon Kids Sports Camp, Fairfax

Sports, ages 5-13 415.234.1056 maaquatics.com

Caren Horstmeyer Girls Basketball Camp, Larkspur

Sports, ages 8-14 415.794.4311 horstmeyerhoops.com

Champions Soccer Camp, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 5-14 415.482.8813 championsoccercamp.com Children’s Cottage Co-Op, Larkspur

Young Child, ages 2.5-5 415.461.0822 cccmarin.com

To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

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Fine Art meets Fun Art Mill Valley

(tam junction)

ages 3-6 Novato

Educational

(downtown)

ages 4-14

Innovative!

Sign up ONLINE

studio4art.net 415.596.5546

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SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Coastal Camp at NatureBridge, Sausalito

Enriching U, Novato

Nature, Outdoor, Science, ages 5-14 415.331.1548 coastalcamp.org

Art, Film, Science, Technology, ages 10-14 415.506.0282 enrichingu.com

College of Marin Community Education, Kentfield

Fantastical Adventures Day Camp, Tiburon

Corte Madera Montessori, Corte Madera

Fashion Camp with Western Bonime, Larkspur

Dance Palace Camp, Point Reyes Station

Fast Forward Adventure Reporters Camp, San Rafael

Dance With Sherry Camp, San Rafael

Fiona Soccer Camp, Fairfax

Sports, ages 5-13 415.485.9318 marin.edu

Academic, ages 2.5-5 415.927.0919 cortemaderamontessori.com

Dance, ages 6-12 415.663.1075 dancepalace.org

Dance, ages 6+ 415.499.1986 dancewithsherrystudio.com Danielle Rosa Music Jam Camp, San Rafael

Music, Young Child, ages 7+ 415.416.5935 pianolessonsmarin.com

Dauth Hobbies, San Anselmo

General, ages 6-12 415.454.3087 marinhobby.com

Dave Fromer’s Annual Marin Soccer Camps, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 5-12 415.383.0320 davefromersoccer.com

Davidson Clubhouse Program, San Rafael

General, ages 6-12 415.485.3790 petaluma-marinbgc.org

Dominican Summer Sports Camps, San Rafael

Sports, ages 7-12 415.482.3543 dominicansportscamps.com

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General, Art, ages 4-14 415.435.4355 theranchtoday.org

Fashion, ages 8-18 415.887.8391 marinfashionacademy.com

Writing, Film, Video, ages 11-18 415.272.3569 fastforwardweb.com Sports, ages 5-13 415.497.8164 fionasoccercamps.com

Golden Gate Learning Center, San Anselmo

Academic, Art, Makers, ages 5-14 415.383.2283 goldengatetutoring.com Higgins Summer Tennis Camps, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 5-18 415.963.2549 higginstennis.com

Hola Panama, Mill Valley

Language, Travel, ages 12-16 415.388.8408 hola-panama.com Katia & Company, San Rafael

Dance, Theater, ages 7-14 415.305.2153 katiaandcompany.com

Luis Quezada’s Soccer Camp, San Anselmo

Sports, ages 5-15 415.302.6779 usasoccercamp.org

Marin Ballet, San Rafael

Dance, ages 3-18 415.453.6705 marinballet.org

To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

2/10/16 10:06 AM


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SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Marin Blaster Camp, Sausalito

Sports, ages 7-14 415.816.0529 marinblastercamp.com

Marin Christian Academy Summer Day Camp, Novato

General, Music, Religion, Art, ages 6-11 415.892.5713 summercamp.visitmca.org

Marin Dance Theatre, San Rafael

Dance, ages 3-11 415.499.8891 mdt.org

Marin GreenPlay Camp, Mill Valley

Nature, Adventure, ages 5-18 415.264.2828 maringreenplay.com

Marin Horizon Outdoor Adventures Camp, Mill Valley

Cooking, Nature, Science, ages 10-14 415.388.8408 marinhorizon.org

Marin Idol Performance Camp!, Mill Valley

Marin Sports Academy - Wildcat Camp, Kentfield

Mark Day School, San Rafael

Sports, ages 8-14 415.464.3800 wildcatcamp.org

Arts, Chinese, Sports, Tech, Theater, ages 6-13 415.472.8000 markdayschool.org

Marin JCC Summer Camp, San Rafael

Marin Theatre Company Summer Camp, Mill Valley

Masterworks Kids’ Summer Art Camps, Corte Madera

Marin Primary and Middle School Summer Day Camp, Larkspur

Marin Treks Science Camp, Novato

Mathnasium, Mill Valley

Marin Rowing, Greenbrae

Marine Mammal Center’s Camp Sea Quest, Sausalito

Mega Gymnastics, San Rafael

Music, Theater, ages 10+ 415.383.5395 chaikenmusic.com

Traditional, Specialty, ages 5-16 415.444.8055 marinjcc.org/camp

Young Child, ages 2-6 415.924.2608, mpms.org Sports, ages 12-18 415.461.1431 marinrowing.org

Marin Shakespeare Company, San Rafael

Theater, ages 5-14 415.499.4487 marinshakespeare.org

Theater, ages 5-18 415.322.6026 marintheatre.org

Science, Nature, ages 6-14 415.250.0988 marintreks.com

Nature, Science, ages 4-13 415.289.7367 marinemammalcenter.org

Marinwood Camp, San Rafael

General, ages 3-13 415.479.0775 marinwood.org

Art, Academic, ages 6-14 415.945.7945 masterworkskidsart.com Academic, ages 5-14 415.384.8272 mathnasium.com

Sports, ages 2+ 415.257.6342 megagymnastics.com

Mill Valley Potter’s Studio Summer Camps, Mill Valley

Art, ages 7-10 415.888.8906 millvalleypottersstudio.com

WildcatCamp.org Summer 2016 62 M A R C H 2 0 1 6 M A R I N

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• Girls & Boys Basketball • Football (non-contact) • Girls Lacrosse • Baseball • Softball To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

2/10/16 9:10 AM


SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Mill Valley Recreation, Mill Valley

Multi Sport Kids Camp, Larkspur

Ninja Camps, Corte Madera

Piano Band Camp!, Mill Valley

Miss Sara’s Ballet School, Ross

Musical Theatre Camp, Larkspur

No Limits Sports Camp, Corte Madera

Pine Point Cooking School, Sausalito

Otis Guy Mt. Bike Camp, Fairfax

Play-Well Engineering FUNdamentals, San Anselmo

Arts, General, Sports, ages 3-14 415.383.1370 millvalleycenter.org

Sports, ages 6-12 415.924.6226 mttamrc.com

Dance, ages 2-11 415.450.1425 misssaras.com

Theater, ages 8-18 415.453.0199 marilynizdebskiproductions.com

Miwok Livery Summer Camps, Mill Valley

Musical You!, Mill Valley

Music, ages 7-11 415.383.3712 singersmarin.org

Horse, ages 7+ 415.383.8048 miwokstables.com

MV Code Camps, Greenbrae, Mill Valley, San Francisco

Morning Star Farm Horse Camps, Novato

Coding, Academic, Technology, ages 7-14 415.569.2112 mvcodeclub.com

Horse, ages 8-15 415.897.1633 morningstarfarm.info

Mt Tam Bikes Camp, Mill Valley

MY AMP Rock Band Summer Camp, San Rafael

Sports, ages 8-15 415.377.9075 mttambikescamp.com

Music, ages 8-18 415.306.7923 detrickmusicinstruction.com

Sports, ages 6-12 415.927.0899 practicalmartialarts.net

Sports, ages 5-12 415.717.6925 nolimitssportscamp.com

Sports, ages 7-13 415.250.2585 otisguymountainbikecamp.com Own The Mic, Novato

Music, ages 11-18 415.218.7688 ownthemic.org

Performing Arts Academy of Marin, Mill Valley

Dance, Theater, ages 6-16 415.380.0887 paamarin.com

yy e Enmjoer amidftohur

Music, ages 10+ 415.383.5395 chaikenmusic.com

Cooking, ages 9-17 415.332.4352 pinepointcooking.com

Science, Technology, ages 5-11 415.460.5210 play-well.org Point Reyes Summer Camp, Point Reyes National Seashore

Adventure, Nature, Science, ages 7-16 415.663.1200 ptreyes.org

our

sum g hills o us, n p rolli cre cam ol, a p 515 ming o n, e swim ic gard n e n orga or kitch ing o k i d t h ou m, sroo d states a l c rts s, an trail -art spo ties. e li of-th rts faci a d n a

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is Tenn ree Play F Lego men ts Craf xplorers E Kids

Arts g in Writ p Ho Hip ls Voca

tre Thea uilding B Boat Polo er Wat e! or &m 0 pm

- 3:3 am 0 0 | 9: ble M-F e availa • t r s a ugu ed c ne-A extend u J s p d sion s, an es 5 & u y ses h, buse g l k A e We Lunc

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SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Pyramid Gymnastics, Corte Madera

Scuba Camp, Novato

Roco Dance, Mill Valley

Sea Trek Kayak Camp, Sausalito

Rolling Hills Club, Novato, Novato

Slide Ranch Summer Day Camps, Muir Beach

Gymnastics, ages 3.5-18 415.927.1240 thepyramidgym.com Dance, ages 8-18 415.388.6786 rocodance.com

COASTAL CAMP 2016 • Grades K–9, June 13 - August 19 in the Marin Headlands • Outdoor adventures featuring a sailing trip, tidepooling, and exploring a national park!

REGISTER NOW!

Sports, ages 3-14 415.897.2185 rollinghillsclub.com

Ross Academy Montessori School, Mill Valley

General, ages 2-5 415.383.5777 rossacademymontessori.com Ross Recreation, Ross

NatureBridge is a proud partner of the National Park Service

coastalcamp.org | 415-331-1548

Academic, General, ages 3-15 415.453.6020 rossrecreation.org Sage Educators, Mill Valley

Academic, ages 8-18 415.388.7243 sageeducators.com

Sail Camp, Sausalito

Sports, ages 8-16 415.775.8779 sailsea.org

San Anselmo Recreation Department Camps, San Anselmo

General, ages 3+ 415.258.4640 townofsananselmo.org

San Anselmo Tennis Camp, San Anselmo

Sports, ages 7-14 415.258.4640 tennisinmarin.com

San Domenico School, San Anselmo

Art, General, Sports, Theater, ages 5+ 415.258.1900 sandomenico.org

San Francisco Yacht Club (SFYC Youth Sailing), Belvedere

Sports, ages 7-16 415.435.9525 sfyc.org

64 M A R C H 2 0 1 6 M A R I N

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Sports, ages 8+ 415.897.9962 pinnaclesdive.com Sports, ages 9-11 415.332.8494 seatrek.com

General, Nature, Animal, Cooking, ages 5-18 415.381.6155 slideranch.org Spaulding Wooden Boat Center, Sausalito

Arts, Nature, Science, ages 12-18 415.332.3721 spauldingcenter.org

SRD Athletic X Training Camps, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 8-17 415.383.6494 strawberry.marin.org

SRD Camp Strawberry, Mill Valley

General, ages 4-15 415.383.6494 strawberry.marin.org

Steve and Kate’s Camp, Sausalito

General, ages 4-13 415.389.5437 steveandkatescamp.com Studio 4 Art, Novato

Art, ages 4-14 415.596.5546 studio4art.net

Studio 4 Art, Mill Valley

Art, ages 3-6 415.596.5546 studio4art.net

Summer Day Camp - San Geronimo Valley Community Center, San Geronimo

General, ages 5-10 415.488.8888 sgvcc.org

Summer Odyssey at Dominican, San Rafael

Academic, Creative, ages 7-15 415.485.3255 dominican.edu/camps

To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

2/8/16 10:17 AM


Marin GreenPlay Summer Camp 2016 Enchanting Kids with the Wonders of Wild Marin Since 2009

nature awareness and adventure day camp for kids grades K-6

June 13 - August 26 weekly full day or half day sessions MarinEnroll Magazine Layoutor call (3.875x4.75) at www.maringreenplay.com 415.264.2828 healthy snacks sibling discounts free extended care lunch option

Dive into Marine Science (415) 435-4366

Camp Sea QueSt 2016: Summer Camp for kids in rising K – 6 grades

Real science experiments, explorations of the beautiful Marin Headlands and lots of fun are part of every day at Camp Sea Quest.

CampS Start June 13. Visit marinemammalcenter.org/camp for more info and to register.

Dolphins Age 2-5

Sharks Age 5-8

Extended Camp Hours: 7am - 6pm Weekly Sessions/ Themes Licensed Facility Hourly/ Daily Drop In Happy Feet Soccer (optional) Swim Lessons (optional) Petting Zoo Field Trips Jumpees/ Bubble Pit Dabble in Art Featured Guests and more...

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Ross Academy MONTESSORI SCHOOL R

Summer Mini-Camp

June -August Toddler Program 2-3 years Primary Program 3-5 years

SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Summer Playground — Town Park Location, Corte Madera

General, ages 5-12 415.927.5072 ci.corte-madera.ca.us

Walker Creek Music Camp, Marshall

Susan’s Art Camp, San Rafael

Walker Creek Ranch, Petaluma

Tennis and Swim Camp, San Rafael

West America Tae Kwon Do, Mill Valley

Art, ages 9-13 415.479.5277 tickenart.com

• 8, 6 & 4 week programs available • Individual weeks okay • 3-day programs (Toddlers only) • Full and half-day programs • Day care available 7 am - 6:15 pm • Hourly rates available on an “as needed” basis • “Guest Appearances” and “Special Events” • Continuing Montessori environment • Regular staff the entire summer & lots of outdoor fun! 7 Thomas Drive • Mill Valley • (415) 383-5777 rams@rossacademymontessori.com • RossAcademyMontessori.com

Sports, ages 5-12 415.456.2700 marinyachtclub.com

The Image Flow, Mill Valley

Sports, ages 4+ 415.383.4755 westamericatkd.com

ThinkMarin, Corte Madera

Willow Tree Stables Riding Lessons, Novato

Art, Adventure, ages 2-8 415.435.4366 tiburonadventurecamp.org

Tiburon Yacht Club (TYC Junior Sailing), Tiburon

Larkspur & Novato | trackersbay.com

General, ages 9-14 415.491.6600 walkercreekranch.org

WildCare Camps, San Rafael

Tiburon Adventure Camp, Tiburon

Outdoor Everything

Music, All ages 415.663.1342 walkercreekmusiccamp.org

Art, Arts, Digital Media, Film, Photography, ages 11-14 415.388.3569 theimageflow.com Academic, ages 9-18 415.461.2454 thinkmarin.net

Trackers Camps

Dance, ages 3-8 415.419.5610 tutuschool.com

Summer Sailing Program, Sausalito

Sports, ages 6-18 415.332.7400 sausalitoyachtclub.org

Program Highlights

Tutu School, Larkspur

Sports, ages 8-13 415.789.9294 tyc.org

Trackers Camps, Larkspur, Novato

Outdoor Education, Adventure, ages 4-14 510.575.9444 trackersbay.com Training Squadron, Novato

Adventure, ages 16-18 415.798.8370 trainingsquadron.com

Trapeze & Dance Camps, Fairfax

Dance, ages 6-18 415.755.3775 soullovesthebody.com

Nature, ages 3.5-12 415.453.1000 wildcarebayarea.org

Horse, All ages 415.897.8212 willowtreestables.com

Y Camp at Devil’s Gulch Ranch, Nicasio

Nature, ages 6-14 415.662.1099 ymcasf.org/marin

Y Camp at Indian Valley Campus (IVC), San Rafael

General, Sports, ages 5-14 415.492.9622 ymcasf.org/marin

Youth Tennis Programs, San Rafael

Sports, ages 4+ 415.456.1837 rafaelracquetclub.com

GREATER BAY AREA Camp Unalayee, Palo Alto

Adventure, Nature, ages 10-17 650.969.6313 unalayee-summer-camp.com COOK! Culinary Programs, Emeryville

Cooking, ages 8-18 510.594.1104 pauldingandco.com

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To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

2/8/16 10:18 AM


dancing at marin dance theatre fun summer programs for 3-11 year olds

Let’s Imagine: The ballet world is one of imagination, pantomime, and fantasy. Today’s world is full of electronics (video games, text messages, apps, etc.). In Marin Dance Theatre’s class “Let’s Imagine”, the children will tap into their imagination skills. The dancers will create a story and then bring this original story to life through dance and fantasy. Your dancer will come home with a book they will make, dance steps they will learn and an enhanced ability to imagine. For dancers age 3-4 & 5-6. This is a 4 class series. Stretch ‘N’ Dance 4 Sports---Boys Program: Successful athletes are flexible and

demonstrate a high level of co-ordination. Join us as we introduce exercises for flexibility, coordination, and body awareness. Through dance movement to lively music, your young athlete will begin the process of incorporating, stretching and strengthening their bodies prior to and after their sporting activity and find this prep as fun and rewarding. For boys age 5-8. This is a 4 class series.

Dance Arts Camps: One week full of fun interactive programs which include ballet, jazz,

contemporary, arts, crafts and more. Each week will have a different fun theme such as Under the Sea, In the Forest, The Toyshop or the Four Seasons. For dancers age 5-6 and 7-11. These camps run for one week.

Go to www.MDT.org for dates, times and fees To register call: Marin Dance Theatre at (415) 499-8891 or Marinwood Community Center at (415) 479-0775

ROBOTICS • WEB • GAME DESIGN 90 Minutes Outdoor Play • Designed by Camp Professionals

In our 1-week camps, you will:

Learn to Program

Make a Website

Learn to Program

Make a Website

Develop a Game

Build a Robot

Not sure what camp is right for you?

Come in for a free trial! (415) 569-2112 Develop a Game

Build a Robot

For camp descriptions, prices and schedules, please visit

www.mvcodeclub.com

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BEST. SUMMER. EVER. Expect a summer like no other at the Marin YMCA’s Summer Day Camp. We are committed to building an experience for your child that fosters strong and meaningful relationships, a sense of achievement, and above all, a feeling of belonging.

Register for Y Camp Today! www.ymcasf.org 415-492-9622

SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Dickson Ranch Horse Activity Camp, Woodacre

Horse, ages 7+ 415.488.0454 dicksonranch.net

embARC Summer Design Academy, Berkeley

Academic, ages 16-18 510.643.1188 ced.berkeley.edu

SAN FRANCISCO Sterne School, San Francisco

Academic, ages 9-18 415.922.6081 sterneschool.org

The Protocol Academy, San Francisco

General, ages 3-18 415.234.6616 dailyprotocol.com

TAHOE Birkholm’s Water Ski School, South Lake Tahoe

Sports, All ages 530.573.1928 birkholmswatersports.com

Lake Tahoe Sitters, Lake Tahoe

General, ages 0-14 530.545.1217 laketahoesitters.com

Wolf Pack Sports camps, Reno

Sports, ages 5-18 775.784.4046 unr.edu

Overnight Camps MARIN

Call of the Sea — Voyage Seaward, Sausalito

NEW FOR SUMMER 2016

SAFE, FUN & EXCITING NERF BLASTER GAMES & BATTLES TO DEVELOP SPEED, QUICKNESS, ENDURANCE, AND AGILITY The perfect way for kids to stay fit in the summer while playing outdoors, having fun, and making new friends.

MLK JR. PARK, SAUSALITO FOR AGES 7-14 JUNE 20-AUGUST 5, 2016

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Adventure, Science, Nature, ages 12-17 415.331.3214 callofthesea.org

GREATER BAY AREA Camp Chrysalis, Berkeley

General, ages 8-17 510.843.6157 campchrysalis.com

Gold Arrow Camp, Lakeshore

General, ages 6-14 800.554.2267 goldarrowcamp.com

Marin County 4-H, Angwin

General, ages 9-19 707.996.0354 cemarin.ucanr.edu

Plantation Farm Camp, Cazadero

General, Nature, Family, ages 8-17 707.847.3494 plantationcamp.com River Way Ranch Camp, Sanger

Adventure, ages 7-17 800.821.2801 riverwayranchcamp.com

Walton’s Grizzly Lodge Summer Camps, Portola

General, ages 7-14 530.832.4834 grizzlylodge.com

Wonder Valley Family Camp, Sanger

General, Family, All ages 800.821.2801 wondervalleyfamilycamp.com

OTHER Camp Ocean Pines, Cambria

General, Nature, Outdoor, ages 7-15 805.927.0254 campoceanpines.org Catalina Island Camp, Two Harbors

General, ages 7-17 626.296.4040 catalinaislandcamps.com

TAHOE Ultimate Sierra Mountains Dance Camp, Squaw Valley

Dance, ages 8-17 415.666.2312 americandancetrainingcamp.com

Camp Concord, South Lake Tahoe

General, All ages 925.671.2267 campconcord.org

Camp Lotsafun, Reno

Special Needs, ages 7+ 775.827.3866 camplotsafun.com

To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

2/8/16 10:18 AM


SUMMER CAMP LISTINGS 2016 Camp Noel Porter, Tahoe City

Religious, ages 6-18 530.583.3014 campnoelporter.org

Camp Wasiu II, Reno

Girl Scouts, ages 6-17 775.322.0642 gssn.org

Lake Tahoe Nike Tennis Camps Granlibakken Resort, Tahoe City

Sports, ages 10-18 800.645.3226 ussportscamps.com

Shaffer’s High Sierra Summer Camp, Sattley

Echo Lake Youth Camp, Echo Lake

General, ages 8-17 866.597.6617 highsierracamp.com

Lake Tahoe Music Camp, Stateline

Tahoe Rim Trail Association (TRTA) Youth Backcountry Camp & Backcountry Camp Squared, Stateline

General, ages 7-15 510.981.5140 ci.berkeley.ca.us Music, ages 10-18 800.233.8928 unr.edu

Sports, Nature, Adventure, ages 12-17 775.298.4491 tahoerimtrail.org m

To search by town, age or specialty, visit marinmagazine.com/camps

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2/10/16 10:33 AM


W E L C O M I N G H O M E G E N E R AT I O N A F T E R G E N E R AT I O N

Free nights and breakfast buffets at TimelessMaunaKea.com | 866.977.4589

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Destinations

T H E L AT E ST LO C A L T R AV E L D E A L S A N D G E TAWAYS PLU S J O U R N E YS A RO U N D T H E G LO B E

GO NATURAL New trends and offerings in the Hawaiian Islands.

BY MIMI TOWLE

Taking a post–zip-line dip at Halii Falls on Kauai.

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Destinations / GO

Clockwise from top left: Sites on the Hawaii Island Coast to Coast Birding Trail; mermaid swimming; mermaid training on Maui.

• Hawaii Island: Big Birds

Calling all birders: a dedicated group of Big Island birding and tourism professionals is creating the very first birding trail in the state. The group won a grant to develop the first Hawaii Island birding festival, with proceeds going to help fund and maintain the trail. The Hawaii Island Coast to Coast Birding Trail will eventually be a 90-mile cross-island series of paths from Kona to Hilo, linking a varied set of locales that include a broad representation of island birdlife, nature, geology, history and scenic vistas. The proposed route will run from Kaloko-Honokohau National Park in Kona up Hina Lani Street to Highway 190, and then on to Route 200 (the old Saddle Road), to the Daniel K. Inouye Highway, to Wainuenue Avenue in Hilo via Kaumana Drive, to Kamehameha Avenue and finally to Loko-Waka Pond off Kalanianaole Avenue. Because the route consists of a network of sites rather than a complete linear trail, users can join or leave it at any point along the way. What will you see? Reflecting the diversity of the island’s climate, the feathered friends that may appear include waterfowl, migratory shorebirds, endangered wetland birds, parrots, a collection of songbirds representing five continents, owls, hawks and Hawaiian endemic forest birds, among these Hawaiian honeycreepers, one of the world’s most endangered bird types, with one group thought to exist only on this island. “This has been a dream of mine and local birders for many years,” says Rob Pacheco of eco-minded tour company Hawaii Forest & Trail, “because it will raise awareness of our island’s unique birds and encourage the conservation of their habitat.” To raise both awareness and funds for the trail, the group will hold a family-friendly festival called Haakula Manu, or festival of the birds, on September 24–25 at the Kona Sheraton. hawaiibirdingtrails.com

• Maui: Calling All Mermaids

For the ultimate in underwater sightseeing, how about being a mermaid for the day? Luckily, if you’re heading to Maui, it can happen. Lila Jones, a newly minted marine biologist from Hawaii Pacific University, has just invested in a quiver of strap-on tails and is open for business. Her company, Light of Lemuria Retreats, is named after the mythological ancient civilization Lemuria, the Pacific Ocean counterpart of Atlantis. “I always loved the ocean,” says Jones, who grew up in Concord in the East Bay, and “I was lucky I was born at the perfect time to become obsessed with mermaids” — the late ’80s, when the Disney movie The Little Mermaid was showing. Jones’ mother continually encouraged her daughter to create a vision for her life. “When I was little and told her I was going to be a mermaid, she looked worried and told me that wasn’t a real job,” Jones recalls, “and she tried to convince

me to visualize other things, so I picked marine biology,” having seen “Free Willy at the age of 5.” After some parental nudging, Jones moved to Hawaii to pursue a marine biology career and worked for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, but has now found a way to make mermaids part of her métier. “Now I’m using my degree and working as a mermaid to teach people about the ocean I love in a way that sticks with them when they leave,” she says. “It’s a magical experience, especially during humpback whale season when the whales are constantly singing.” It’s also “a unique type of family retreat with a dash of education,” she adds. “This is how you make an impact on a personal level to inspire global change.” Clients leave with a smile, a deeper appreciation of the world we share with so many fragile sea creatures, and “a really great new profile pic for their Facebook page.” lightoflemuriaretreats.com

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Checking out the view from a glass-bottom boat leaving Koolina Harbor on Oahu.

• Oahu: Touch of Glass

Glass-bottom boats have been popular for decades, but Oahu visitors can enjoy an enlarged view. Barbara Whitman Howell, owner of Under the Sea Hawaii, says she operates one of only two fast-moving magnified-glass-bottom boats in the country. The hyrdofoiling vessel can seat up to 18, but she usually caps the on-board number at six guests plus three crew members. “These are adventure tours,” she says. “We just happen to have a huge glass bottom in our boat ideal for those who don’t want to actually get into the water.” The magnification extends downward visibility as far as 80 feet. Howell and crew offer a variety of trips; the basic day tour leaves Koolina Harbor for a six-hour adventure spotting whales (seasonal), dolphins, turtles and many smaller creatures. Two-hour bioluminescence night tours are another option. Meals and snacks are included in each trip. undertheseahawaii.com

• Kauai: Zip and Dip

Kelley Carwell Haneberg is the fifth generation of her family to be born in Hawaii, and these deep roots inspire her to make sure all the tours she leads through her company Kauai Backcountry Adventures focus on keeping the island’s culture and history alive. “In creating our zip-line and water rafting tours, we have helped to restore sections of the old plantation irrigation system,” she says. “We are pleased to be able to set a standard for balancing recreational activities and preservation of our amazing resources here on Kauai.” Unique experiences are a priority too: in her new Waterfall Zip Line tour, instead of returning to the tour offices right after the zip line, everyone loads into a Swiss Army Pinzgauer and travels about five miles deeper into the island’s interior, where a half-mile hike to Halii Falls, a swim and a picnic lunch await. kauaibackcountryadventures.com m M A R I N M A R C H 2 0 1 6 73

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Destinations / JOURNEY

Russia’s F A R E A S T A rare expedition provides glimpses of Cold War ruins, earthly explosions and extraordinary wildlife. STORY AND PHOTOS BY NORMA MEYER

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I

N RUSSIA’S SECRECY-SHROUDED Far East — a day

before a volcano sensationally erupts in front of my rubber raft — I feel like James Bond as we skim across sapphire waters in a Zodiac dinghy and land on a remote deserted island to explore a ghostly abandoned Soviet military base from the 45-year Cold War. No, the KGB isn’t tailing me, I reassure myself while stumbling over rusted artillery ammo. Gingerly stepping into a blast-proof concrete bunker, I face off with a spooky germ warfare gas mask. This covert peek at a long-contentious foreign rival is so bizarrely fascinating — maybe because my Cold War childhood memories include paranoia-fostering “duck and cover” drills under school desks in case the Communist Soviet Union nuked opposing superpower America. Or because more recently, Russia’s aggressive president Vladimir Putin can seem, well, a hair trigger from starting World War III.

I freely roam through a sprawling stronghold, once alive with soldiers but now a graveyard of decrepit barracks, radio communication trailers, bomb shelters, radar stations, thousands of empty fuel drums and piles of haphazard electronic equipment emblazoned with cryptic Russian writing, all left to nature sometime after the Cold War ended in 1991. Armored vehicles rot in waist-high fields of flowering Queen Anne’s lace. Before the Soviets seized it in 1945, this once mightily fortified tiny Kuril Island of Matua was a World War II air base for thousands of troops in the Imperial Japanese Army; I nearly fall into defensive trenches hidden by alder thickets and trek over the meadow-grass-choked lengthy runway from where Japanese dive-bombers took off to attack Allied forces.

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I get to this obscure edge of the world only because I’m on a rare 16-day expedition cruise in Russia’s most mysterious, barely accessible frontier. There are no roads or regular transportation, but Ponant, a French cruise ship company, annually brings adventurers to this ruggedly beautiful region in the volcanically volatile Pacific Ring of Fire. Cold War history haunts, craters blow, wildlife astonishes. Humans are uncommon, so unafraid arctic foxes remarkably doze at our feet on a caldera’s beach, hundreds of exuberant seals mob our 10-person Zodiacs, and pods of orca whales playfully chase our fashionable 132-stateroom ship, Le Soléal. For maritime melodrama, during our entire 2,300mile Russia-to-Japan voyage, typhoons force us off course, although our tall, movie-star-quality Parisian

captain exudes total confidence — after all, he was once held hostage by Somali pirates with his 29-member crew aboard another Ponant ship. A bit of background: the isolated military-strategic area we visit, north of Japan and more than 4,000 miles from Moscow, was long home to the Soviet navy’s robust Pacific Fleet and off-limits to foreigners until after the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. Today it’s still hard to see. Ponant tackles the bureaucratic muddle for permits, but you’ll need to obtain visas and fly from San Francisco to South Korea before hopping a Ponant-chartered flight to Petropavlovsk, a struggling Russian port city where a barking German shepherd guards the dock and a nuclear submarine base sits across the bay. MiG fighter jets are

Opening: Watching the Snow volcano on Chirpoy Island from a Zodiac. Opposite, clockwise from top left: An abandoned military vehicle; the fantasylike view of Yankicha Island, which is the summit of a submerged volcano; a rotor from a crashed helicopter.

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Destinations / JOURNEY

parked on the barbwire-ringed runway when we land and are ushered into a ’60s-era Quonset hut to be scrutinized by stony-faced immigration officers. But nyet worries. My husband and I soon clink welcome flutes of French bubbly next to the two-story abstract-art fish sculpture in the atrium of our berthed mod floating hotel. This is a whole other story, but before setting sail, we took a prearranged bus trip — past Russian army soldiers outside an ominous military compound adorned with red star symbols — to a reconstructed aboriginal village of Koryak reindeer herders. Inside a conical tent draped in animal pelts, a cheery elder named “Small Land” fried up traditional flour-and-water flat cakes for us while singing a song about Kutkh, the revered raven god. Evidently we needed a blessing, because now we gather in the ship’s cushy theater with our 121 fellow passengers (one other American, 16 other nationalities) and Capt. Patrick Marchesseau points to a scarlet-red monstrosity on a weather map. “It’s a nightmare for sure,” he warns, albeit in a suave French accent. “Something big is coming.” “Big” means a mother of a typhoon. In our path. So instead of heading south to the Kuril Islands — the gist of our itinerary — we escape north and stick along the Kamchatka Peninsula, studded with 300 volcanoes and largely unpopulated except for 10,000 roving supersize brown bears. Our five naturalist guides are accessorized with rifles when we’re ashore. This is a Russia you don’t imagine. Sloshing in our gum boots, we investigate a mystifying corroded shipwreck of a Japanese fishing barge in a verdant cove of shimmery waterfalls; we drift in Zodiacs down the unspoiled Zhupanova River, crowned by majestic snow-coated puffing volcanoes and hefty Steller’s sea eagles perched atop ancient birch trees. In Russkaya Bay, we comb through another Cold War bastion, a Soviet border guard village once on the lookout for U.S. vessels and intruders. Paperwork still plasters walls inside crumbling buildings. A man’s scuffed black boots eerily wait at a front door as if he might return. The five-blade rotor of a crashed military transport helicopter sticks up in the rocky beach, the rest of its wreckage nearby. Atop a shrubby knoll are the graves of two border agents supposedly killed here by a winter avalanche. All so strange, and then I’m jolted by an

IF YOU GO This year the “Kuril Archipelago” cruise departs September 21 from Russia. The cost starts at $10,340 per person based on double occupancy and includes a chartered flight from Seoul to Petropavlovsk and a hotel overnight in Seoul. Another Russian Far East cruise, “The Best of Kamchatka,” departs September 7 from Alaska. It starts at $10,780 per person based on double occupancy and includes a flight from Seattle to Nome (the embarkation point) and a chartered flight afterward from Petropavlovsk to Seoul and an overnight in a Seoul hotel. en.ponant.com

This is a Russia you don’t imagine. Sloshing in our gum boots, we investigate a mystifying corroded shipwreck of a Japanese fishing barge in a verdant cove of shimmery waterfalls. ear-splitting crack. Across from sleek anchored Le Soléal, two Russian fishermen wearing watch caps are on a rusty boat spray-painted with the word “HAPY.” They’re drinking and shooting semiautomatic guns into the air. Batten down the hatches. Our ship dodges another typhoon, but the next 24-plus hours at high seas are so rollicking that, shiver me timbers, the spa cancels all treatments, including decadent lemon marmalade scrubs. We’re now among the Kurils, a stunning volcanic chain of 30 main islands that our expedition leader Raphael declares “the most forgotten islands on earth.” Not to Japan. Ever since World War II’s end, when Russia took the Kurils, Japan has been demanding back four islands. We stay clear of those but had eagerly planned to go to Simushir Island, a forsaken top-secret Soviet submarine base festooned with propaganda murals depicting Communist founder Vladimir Lenin. Raphael tells us that Russia, now in the throes of a large military buildup, may reactivate Simushir as a base and has abruptly revoked our permission to visit. The places we do explore seem otherworldly. We sail Zodiacs through a narrow passage and into the turquoise lagoon of Yankicha, a fantastical volcanic caldera flooded by seawater and enveloped by craggy pea-green peaks straight out of J.R.R. Tolkien’s head. The first thing I spot on the untamed shore is a white-linen-draped table laden with pastel ganache-filled Parisian Ladurée macaroons and a silver bucket chilling bottles of brut sparkling wine. The most-surreal-ever snack time. Steam whirls up from the earth’s crust; volcanic hot springs bubble. But here’s the highlight: three cocoa-colored, goldeneyed arctic foxes. Traditionally hunted for their fur, these foxes in this uninhabited haven have no predators and exhibit little fear. One fuzzy critter sleeps curled up like a household cat just inches from two-footed strangers on a pebbly beach. When the fox awakens, he slowly pads over to a visitor and sniffs the man’s clothed knee. Then the fox ambles farther and curiously nibbles straps of a backpack lying on the ground before taking another doze, engulfed by photo-snapping humans. The next day, we stand slack-jawed on deck. “When are you ever going to see killer whales swimming in front of an erupting volcano?” the captain incredulously asks. Directly ahead, the Snow crater on the island of Chirpoy is unleashing a fury of mushrooming smoke from its cone as lava flows

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explode into billows of steam at the shoreline. Meanwhile, 20 aquatic giants perform a delicate dorsal-fin ballet. Soon we’re amazingly bobbing in a Zodiac 50 feet from the fuming showstopper. The volcano rumbles violently and shoots continuous plumes of gases into the heavens. Hot basaltic rocks tumble into the water, thunderously hissing on contact into torrents of white and brown steam. Ashes stick to our heated faces. It is a mind-blowing once-in-a-lifetime thrill. That night, our ship is deep in Cold War history, traversing the Sea of Okhotsk to Sakhalin Island. We learn that in these enemy waters the U.S. navy pulled off a daring espionage mission in the ’70s to wiretap undersea cables of the Soviet navy. In 1983, Cold War tensions severely escalated when a Korean Air New York–to-Seoul passenger jet strayed off course around here and, possibly mistaken for a spy plane, was shot down by the Soviets. All 269 aboard died. Russian ballistic missile submarines still heavily patrol the waters, but all I see is infinite pitch-blackness. Daylight brings delirium. Hundreds of bellowing, belching, baa-ing Steller sea lions and northern fur seals cavort with our Zodiac, humorously popping up like periscopes to eyeball the peculiar invaders in red Ponant-logo parkas. We are floating off the pinprick island of Tyuleniy and it could be a campy horror film. Ramshackle wood buildings — part of a deserted marine research station — are overrun by thousands of raucous seals and sea lions that completely smother the island, a monochrome beige-and-brown pinniped planet. In the action-packed waters, inquisitive whiskered creatures amusedly splash us and seem to want to jump onto our raft. Our 16-day cruise will end in Kanazawa, Japan. On the last leg, my husband and I, as part of a regular nightly ritual, drop into the ship’s command-center bridge — it’s open 24-7 to passengers. A young French navigation officer greets us: “(Expletive!) I’ve never seen waves this big!” Not that we haven’t noticed. Gnarly 35-foot swells smash against and over the bridge’s fifth-deck windows, screeching gale-force gusts are clocked at nearly 70 miles per hour and the pitching ship keeps slamming into the sea. But what’s a little inclement weather? Our captain tried to fend off Somali pirates with a water hose before they peppered his Ponant ship with assault-rifle fire off the coast of Yemen in 2008 and held him and his 29-person staff hostage for a week until a reported $2.1 million ransom was paid. Marchesseau was later awarded France’s Legion of Honor for bravery. We shakily return to our cabin. On the dresser is the autographed Captain’s Gala dinner menu from when we joined Marchesseau and guests, who nibbled oscietre caviar with mussels and seaweed poulette washed down with a standout 2012 Pouilly-Fuissé. The captain had scrawled, “Smooth seas and fair winds always. Best regards.” The storm passes. But oh, how this epic journey endures. m

From top: An arctic fox; Capt. Patrick Marchesseau on the bridge; curious onlookers off the island of Tyuleniy.

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CROSS PATHS WITH AN

ALBINO ALLIGATOR AFRICAN PENGUINS AND AN ANACONDA all in one day

Swamp Discovery Learn about alligators in live daily shows. Meet Claude the albino alligator and nearly 40,000 other creatures at the only aquarium-planetarium-rainforest-living museum.

Get tickets at calacademy.org

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Out & About C A L E N DA R / O N T H E S CE N E / D I N E

LOIS GREENFIELD

EVENTS

Smuin Ballet Gala LISTING ON PAGE 88

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Calendar

T H E AT E R / CO M E DY / M U S I C / G A L L E R I E S / M U S E U M S / E V E N T S / F I L M

E D I T E D B Y C A L I N VA N PA R I S

MUSIC MAR 13 Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Don’t miss the River Tour, Bruce Springsteen’s latest U.S. tour, which accompanies the recent release of release of The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a CD/DVD collection that offers a comprehensive look at 1980’s The River. Oracle Arena (Oakland). oraclearena.com

interactive musical with music and lyrics by Ron Lytle that features the escapades of adventurous Jack and a cast of wacky characters. Showcase Theatre (San Rafael). 415.473.6800, masqueunit.org MAR 5–APR 17 Second Time Around: A Duet for Cello and Storyteller World-renowned 20-year-old cellist Joan Jeanrenaud joins award-winning performer and writer Charlie Varon in a collaborative theater piece that tells of a longing for human connection in the digital age. The Marsh MainStage (SF). 415.282.3055, themarsh.org

THEATER THRU MAR 6 Ondine In this retelling of watercentric myths like The Little Mermaid, a water sprite leaves her ocean home in pursuit of her true love, and after he leaves, curses him to die when he falls asleep. When he returns, the two attempt to stay awake by telling tales

of their love. Cutting Ball Theater (SF). 415.525.1205, cuttingball.com THRU APR 10 The Unfortunates This darkly comic musical is inspired by Louis Armstrong’s 1920s blues song “St. James Infirmary.” Big Joe, a tough soldier cursed with oversize hands,

travels to a dream world where he risks everything to save an armless courtesan from a plague. A.C.T.’s Strand Theater (SF). 415.749.2228, act-sf.org MAR 3–27 Swimmers This unique play from playwright Rachel Bonds explores office relationships through a diverse set of

co-workers and their personal lives. Marin Theatre Company (Mill Valley). 415.388.5208, marintheatre.org MAR 4–13 The King and I The Throckmorton Youth Performers present a family-friendly rendition of the classic Broadway hit. Anna, a British schoolteacher, is hired by the King

of Siam, with unexpected consequences. Throckmorton Theatre (Mill Valley). 415.383.9600, throck mortontheatre.org MAR 5 Jack and the Beanstalk, and the Giant, and the Goose, and the Really TrulyUly Rotten Day Masque Unit Junior Theatre of Marin presents an

MAR 9 The Realistic Joneses Playwright Will Eno’s new comedy centers on two couples in a small American town who share the same last name — among other things. A.C.T.’s Geary Theater (SF). 415.749.2228, act-sf.org MAR 13 In the Mood This musical 1940s revue pays homage to the big band era — and a pivotal moment in U.S. history — through authentic costumes, music arrangements and choreography. Veterans’ Memorial

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MAR 23–APR 17 The Boys From Syracuse A musical adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors, this farce takes place in ancient Ephesus, where two sets of twins face mistaken identities, magic spells and more. Eureka Theatre (SF). 415.255.8207, 42ndstmoon.org

DANCE MAR 17–27 ODC/ Dance Downtown Enjoy a bevy of extraordinary performances choreographed by KT Nelson, Brenda Way, Kimi Okada and others. YBCA Theater (SF). odcdance.org

COMEDY TUESDAYS Tuesday Comedy Funnies An evening of hilarity featuring comedians who make us laugh and think. Throckmorton Theatre (Mill Valley). 415.383.9600, throck mortontheatre.org

MUSIC MAR 4 Eileen Ivers: Connecting the Roots Celebrate forthcoming St. Patrick’s Day with this renowned violinist, who embraces traditional Celtic music in addition to jazz and pop. Presented as part of the Irish-American Crossroads Festival. Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium (San Rafael). 415.473.6800, marincounty.org MAR 5 Beethoven Sonatas for Cello and Piano Works by Beethoven, as well as a selection from Mozart's The Magic Flute. This

concert is the third and final program in Green Music Center’s Valley of the Moon music festival. Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park). 866.955.6040, valleyofthemoon musicfestival.org

SPOTLIGHT

Golden Tunes

The California Honeydrops bring their signature sweetness to the stage.

MAR 5 Petty Theft The well-loved Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers tribute band makes an appearance in West Marin. Head to the countryside for some dancing and frivolity. Sweetwater Music Hall (Mill Valley). 415.388.1100, sweet watermusichall.com MAR 6 Jazz Sundays with Nathan Bickart Trio Enjoy original compositions and jazz standards performed by pianist, composer and educator Nathan Bickart and crew. Throckmorton Theatre (Mill Valley). 415.383.9600, throck mortontheatre.org MAR 8 An Evening with Natalie Merchant The songstress heads to San Francisco to celebrate the 20th anniversary of her hit album Tigerlily. The Warfield (SF). 415.345.0900, thewarfieldtheatre.com MAR 11 Foreverland This 14-piece Michael Jackson tribute band features four vocalists and a rhythm and horn section, intended to re-create hits from all eras of the iconic pop singer’s storied career. Sweetwater Music Hall (Mill Valley). 415.388.1100, sweet watermusichall.com MAR 12 Polish Baltic Philharmonic Orchestra Northern Poland’s Baltic Philharmonic Orchestra, founded in 1945, visits Marin

The band with Ben Malament on the washboard.

I

KEITH BERSON

Auditorium (San Rafael). 415.499.6400, marincounty.org

T’S HARD TO pin down the California Honeydrops’ sound; it’s got a bit of jazz, soul and

funk, as well as some West Coast R&B. Since their humble beginnings, the California Honeydrops have transformed themselves from a street-busking jug band into an internationally touring juggernaut. With its fourth full-length album, A River’s Invitation, the band continues to build upon groove, melody and the close connection that grows between musicians who’ve played such diverse venues and styles together. We had a chance to find out a bit more from Honeydrop Ben Malament, whose band duties rotate between tub bass, jug, washboard and drums. The California Honeydrops will be playing at San Rafael’s Terrapin Crossroads on March 5. cahoneydrops.com KASIA PAWLOWSKA You’re going to be touring with Bonnie Raitt this spring; what are some other career fantasies that have come true? That’s right! Crazy, huh? We are very honored to be on Bonnie Raitt’s upcoming tour. A few years back, opening for Dr. John at Tipitina’s, in New Orleans, during Jazz Fest, was a personal career high for me. That whole combination was out of sight. Dr. John was also a really great hang backstage, too. Definite musical dream coming alive. What excites you the most about your newest album, A River’s Invitation? I really think it’s our best album yet. I love the way it sounds and how we were able to stay relaxed and play the songs naturally for the record with each other. It’s pretty raw, not many overdubs, a lot of live takes, vocals on one mic. It’s sweet, and for such a live, high-energy performance band, I think we did a great job playing for the album, not just throwing

our usual party, yet keeping that same fun spirit. And you have to hear it on vinyl. Delicious! The illustrations for your album covers are very distinctive; can you tell us more about them? Our own Lech actually illustrated our first album, Soul Tub! I love it. The rest of the covers have been commissioned to local artists whom we know and who have some connection to our music. They are all quite different, like the albums. What are your favorite venues to play in the Bay Area? The New Parish has always been a cool home base for us in Oakland. Playing two sold-out nights at the Fillmore in San Francisco was awesome — there is serious historic energy bouncing off those walls. And we get to play Terrapin Crossroads for the first time. Looking forward to checking that place out for sure.

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Out & About / CALENDAR

MAR 31 Steve Hackett The former Genesis guitarist performs hits from his career, which began in the 1970s and continues on through collaborations and more. The Warfield (SF). 415.345.0900, thewarfieldtheatre.com

GALLERIES MARIN Art Abloom Studio and Gallery Classes for artists. 751 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, San Anselmo. 415.256.1112, artabloom.com Art Works Downtown Architecture A juried exhibition showcasing the artistic side of architecture, March 4–April 22. 1337 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.451.8119, artworksdowntown.org

Sarah Chang at Herbst Theatre, S.F.

to perform selections by Beethoven. Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium (San Rafael). 415.473.6800, marincounty.org MAR 12 Sarah Chang Chamber Music San Francisco presents violinist Sarah Chang, who made her debut with the New York Philharmonic at the age of 8, in her first Bay Area appearance. Herbst Theatre (SF). 415.392.4400, chambermusicsf.org MAR 12 The Body Sacred, Buxtehude and Bach Marin Baroque performs a selection by Dieterich Buxtehude, J.S. Bach’s teacher, as well as one by Bach himself. First

Presbyterian Church (San Anselmo). 415.497.6634, marinbaroque.org MAR 13 The Dustbowl Revival This Venice, California, band combines bluegrass, gospel, jug-band, swamp blues and 1930s swing for a truly unique, all-encompassing representation of American music. Sweetwater Music Hall (Mill Valley). 415.388.1100, sweet watermusichall.com MAR 19 Afro-Weston: A Musical Tribute to Legendary Jazz/World Music Visionary Randy Weston Percussionist/ bandleader/recording artist Ian Dogole and a collective of talented musicians offer up an evening

of tribute to pianist/ composer Randy Weston. Throckmorton Theatre (Mill Valley). 415.383.9600, throck mortontheatre.org

Bubble Street Featuring genres of fantastic art, imaginary realism, neo-Victorian and steampunk. 565 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 415.339.0506, bubblestreetgallery.com

MAR 20 Mendelssohn and New Voices Enjoy selections by Felix Mendelssohn, Jeremy Podgursky, Craig Walsh and Sean Varah as performed by Left Coast Chamber Ensemble. Throckmorton Theatre (Mill Valley). 415.383.9600, throck mortontheatre.org

Claudia Chapline Gallery and Sculpture Garden Works by Claudia Chapline, Jim Garmhausen, Etta Deikman and more. 3445 Shoreline Hwy, Stinson Beach. 415.868.2308, cchapline.com

MAR 24 An Acoustic Evening with Lyle Lovett and Robert Earl Keen Rick Bartalini presents an acoustic evening with Texas singer/songwriters Lyle Lovett and Robert Earl Keen, together for a rare performance.

Desta Gallery The Way of Art New works. 417 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo. 415.524.8932, destagallery.com di Rosa Radical Landscapes Artists use their surrounding environments as both medium and muse to reflect on a range

of larger concerns, through April 3. 5200 Carneros Hwy, Napa. 707.226.5991, dirosaart.org Fine Art Etc. Featuring a collection of sculptures and paintings by artists from Northern California and around the world. 686 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 415.332.1107, fineartetc.com Gallery Route One Works by Dennis Peterson, Omisade Amy Gerhauser, Lee Lee and Igor Sazevich, through March. 11101 Hwy One, Point Reyes. 415.663.1347, galleryrouteone.org Marin Center Natural Beauty: The Art and Artists of West Marin Work by 12 West Marin artists celebrating the county they call home, through March 30. 3501 Civic Center Drive, San Rafael. 415.473.4381, marincounty.org Mine Gallery Original contemporary art. 1820 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Fairfax. 415.755.4472, gallerymine.com O’Hanlon Center for the Arts The Brilliance of Symbols. 616 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.388.4331, ohanloncenter.org Petri’s Fine Arts Featuring contemporary works in various mediums. 690 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 415.332.2626, petrisfinearts.com Robert Allen Fine Art Group Exhibition Prints, drawings and mixedmedia works on paper, through March 31. 301 Caledonia St, Sausalito. 415.331.2800, robert allenfineart.com

Robert Beck Gallery Early California and contemporary plein air paintings. 222 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, San Anselmo. 415.456.7898, beckgallery.org Robert Green Fine Arts Between Two Worlds Work by Charlotte Bernstrom. 154 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.381.8776, rgfinearts.com Roberta English Art by Cheung Lee, Mayumi Oda, Li Huayi, Ju Ming and Toko Shinoda. 1615 Bridgeway, Sausalito. 415.331.2975, robertaenglish.com Rock Hill Gallery Watercolors by Bob Justice, March 3–April 21. 145 Rock Hill Drive, Tiburon. 415.435.9108, ccctiburon.net Room Art Gallery Works by both Bay Area artists and major masters; the largest collection of Picasso, Chagall and others in Marin County. 86 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.380.7940, roomartgallery.com Seager Gray Gallery Material Matters Artists explore the interaction of artists and their materials, through March 13. 108 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.384.8288, seagergray.com Smith Andersen North Work by Wayne Levin, through April 9. 20 Greenfield Ave, San Anselmo. 415.455.9733, smithandersen north.com Studio 333 Art and events. 333A Caledonia St, Sausalito. 415.331.8272, studio333.info

CLIFF WATTS

Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium (San Rafael). 415.473.6800, rbpconcerts.com

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Studio 4 Art Work by local artists, classes and workshops with materials included. 1133 Grant Ave, Novato. 415.596.5546, studio4art.net The Blissful Gallery Oils, watercolors and prints by painter Emmeline Craig. 3415 Shoreline Hwy, Stinson Beach, 415.868.2787, emmelinecraig.com Zener Schon Contemporary Art Contemporary works in various mediums by Eric Zener, Paige Smith, JD Wilson and more. 23 Sunnyside Ave, 415.738.8505, zenerschongallery.com

SAN FRANCISCO

ArtHaus The Great Exhibition A rotating exhibition features works in various media by noteworthy Bay Area and New York artists, through March 28. 411 Brannan St, 415.977.0223, arthaus-sf.com Caldwell Snyder Gallery Recent paintings by Melissa Chandon, March 3–31. 341 Sutter St, 415.392.2299, caldwellsnyder.com California Historical Society Experiments in Environment: The Halprin Workshops, 1966–1971, through May 8. 678 Mission Street, SF, 415.357.1848, californiahistorical society.org Fouladi Projects Art from Karen Barbour, through April 16. 1803 Market St, 415.621.2535, fouladiprojects.com

George Lawson Gallery Canal Zone: Recent Work from the Panama Project Art by Judith Belzer, through April 9. 315 Potrero Ave, 415.703.4400, georgelawson gallery.com

NEW IN TOWN

» Marin is already a great place to

live, and these new businesses are making it even more fun. Check out what’s new (or just getting better).

Gregory Lind Gallery Heights Where the Light Still Lingered Work by Sarah Bostwick. 49 Geary St, 415.296.9661, gregorylindgallery.com Hackett-Mill As I Am: Painting the Figure in Postwar San Francisco A celebration of the grand opening of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s new building featuring works by David Park and Richard Diebenkorn, through May 27. 201 Post St, 415.362.3377, hackettmill.com John Berggruen Gallery Material Considerations Work by Diana Al-Hadid, Tauba Auerbach, Mary Corse, Matthew Feyld and many others, through March 12. 228 Grant Ave, 415.781.4629, berggruen.com Meyerovich Gallery Katz and Kass New works by Alex Katz and Deborah Kass, through March. 251 Post St, 415.421.7171, meyerovich.com Pier 24 Photography Art from the Pilara Foundation collection. Pier 24, 415.512.7424, pier24.org Rena Bransten Projects Sculpture by Dennis Gallagher, through March 12. 1639 Market St, 415.982.3292, renabranstengallery.com

4 SHOP

HEAD TO TOE

Opened on Caledonia Street in Sausalito, 1 Sausalito Stationery has a great selection on cards for every occasion; sausalitostationery.com. Kacey Gardner launched Tumbleweed in San Anselmo, offering clothing and goods for men and women; tumbleweedcalifornia.com. After opening a Palo Alto location in 2006, In Her Shoes, a boutique featuring clothes from local designers, shoes and jewelry from around the world, expanded to San Rafael; inhershoespa.com.

Chiara Serpa opened 3 Lucky Bumble Beauty Lounge on San Rafael’s Fourth Street, offering organic airbrush tanning, body waxing and other treatments; luckybumble.com. Blu Kicks on Tiburon’s Main Street offers casual weekend-style footwear and accessories for men and women; blukicks.com.

EAT 2 Rocket Roll, a sushi burrito (and more) res-

taurant, opened on San Rafael’s Fourth Street; 415.866.0537. Perry’s San Francisco has finally made it over the Golden Gate Bridge and chose Larkspur for its fifth Bay Area site; perryssf. com. Neka Pasquale, a licensed acupuncturist, herbalist and certified Chinese nutritionist, opened Urban Remedy’s third Marin County location in Larkspur; urbanremedy.com.

BEAUTY Post-holiday means getting back into the groove of exercising. 4 Body Kinetics has relocated its San Rafael health club to the old Yardbirds building, offering an indoor/ outdoor experience; bodykineticsmarin.com. Owners Heather Fultz and Christine Donahue of Revery Salon have moved a block down on E. Blithedale in Mill Valley to a bigger space. Luke Fultz and Tony Morales, husbands of Revery’s owners, took over the salon’s old space and opened Shavery Barbershop, offering all types of trims; reverysalon.com, shaverybarbershop.com.

New in Town is an ongoing bulletin on new businesses throughout the Bay Area. To be considered for future listings, email lwalker@marinmagazine.com.

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Out & About / CALENDAR White Impatiens by Alex Katz at the Meyerovich Gallery, S.F.

Thomas Reynolds Gallery Pieces by contemporary painters, most addressing the intersection of realism and abstraction. 2291 Pine St, 415.441.4093, thomasreynolds.com

MARIN Bay Area Discovery Museum Children’s China Participate in a traditional tea ceremony, learn Chinese character writing, partake in dragon parades and more, through May 8 (Sausalito). 415.339.3900, bay kidsmuseum.org Bolinas Museum Shipwrecked! Asian Ceramics Discovered at Sea, through March 27 (Bolinas). 415.868.0330, bolinasmuseum.org

Marin Museum of the American Indian The First Ambassadors A look at long-forgotten Native American history told through rare lithographs depicting courageous and distinguished tribal leaders (Novato). 415.897.4064, marinindian.com Marin Museum of Contemporary Art Travels with Phil: The Art of Cartoonist Phil Frank A collection of Frank’s comic strips, including the San Francisco–based Farley and nationally syndicated The Elderberries, through April 10 (Novato). 415.506.0137, marinmoca.org

BAY AREA Asian Art Museum Pearls on a String: Artists, Patrons and

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Poets at the Great Islamic Courts, through May 8 (SF). 415.581.3711, asianart.org California Academy of Sciences Enjoy an adults-only experience after 6 p.m. every Thursday (SF). 415.379.8000, calacademy.org Conservatory of Flowers Garden Railway: 1915 Pan-Pacific The conservatory’s newest garden railway exhibition celebrates the centennial of San Francisco’s historic world’s fair, through April 10 (SF). 415.831.2090, conser vatoryofflowers.org Contemporary Jewish Museum Roman Vishniac Rediscovered

Photographs by Roman Vishniac, who created the most widely recognized photographic record of Jewish life in Eastern Europe between the two world wars, through May 29 (SF). 415.655.7800, thecjm.org de Young Oscar de la Renta: The Retrospective The world-premiere retrospective of Oscar de la Renta’s work celebrates the life and career of one of fashion’s most influential designers, March 12–May 30 (SF). 415.750.3600, deyoung.famsf.org Exploratorium Ongoing interactive exhibits exploring science, art and human perception (SF). 415.397.5673, exploratorium.edu

Legion of Honor Sublime Beauty: Raphael’s "Portrait of a Lady with a Unicorn" One of Raphael’s most beguiling and enigmatic paintings is shown in the U.S. for the first time, through April 10 (SF). 415.750.3600, legionofhonor.famsf.org Museum of Craft and Design Constructed Communication: Nakayama, Sinbondit, Venom In support of the museum’s Visible Transparency Project, this group exhibition features a collection of four artists who will communicate publicly through their work, through March 27 (SF). 415.773.0303, sfmcd.org

Oakland Museum of California Unearthed: Found and Made Oakland-born, Los Angeles–based artist Jedediah Caesar created sculptures that realistically mimic geological processes, through April 24 (Oakland). 510.318.8400, museumca.org San Francisco Botanical Garden Magnolia Bloom Watch as nature defies winter’s gloom with an impressive display of more than 100 rare and historic magnolia blooms, through March 31 (SF). 415.661.1316, sfbotanicalgarden.org Sonoma Valley Museum of Art Between Nature and Technology Works by Courtney Eagan and David Sullivan, each

using animation, sound, sculpture, photography and interactivity to explore the relationship between people, technology and the environment, through March 6 (Sonoma). svma.org The Walt Disney Family Museum Mel Shaw: An Animator on Horseback The first-ever retrospective of the life and work of Disney animator, creative and master horseman Mel Shaw, through September 12 (SF). 415.345.6800, waltdisney.org Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Murmur Wall Designed by Future Cities Lab, the Murmur Wall is a unique combination of sculpture, light and data collection along the wall at

the main entrance to YBCA, through May 31, 2017 (SF). 415.978.2787, ybca.org

EVENTS MAR 4–13 Wine Road Barrel Tasting Choose one of two weekends to take a drive to northern Sonoma County, where Wine Road makers will welcome you into their wineries for special barrel tastings. Various locations (Sonoma County). wineroad.com MAR 5 Marin Humane Society’s 10th Annual Gala Experience a night of inspiring storytelling about the animals (and people) whose lives have been changed by the work of Marin’s oldest nonprofit organization. Join MHS for

Oscar

de la Renta THE RETROSPECTIVE

M A R 1 2 – M A Y 3 0, 2 0 1 6 Oscar de la Renta’s designs celebrated the best in us — beauty, optimism, and confidence. See more than 130 ensembles in the first major retrospective to pay tribute to one of the most beloved and influential fashion icons of our time. This exhibition is organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco with the collaboration of Oscar de la Renta LLC. Presenting Sponsors: Cynthia Fry Gunn and John A. Gunn. Director’s Circle: Diane B. Wilsey. Curator’s Circle: Lisa and Douglas Goldman Fund, The Diana Dollar Knowles Foundation, Marissa Mayer and Zachary Bogue, and Yurie and Carl Pascarella. Benefactor’s Circle: Paula and Bandel Carano, Stephanie and Jim Marver, Neiman Marcus, and Jennifer and Steven Walske. Patron’s Circle: Mrs. Carole McNeil and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Tobin II. Additional support is provided by Mrs. George Hopper Fitch, and Mr. and Mrs. William Hamilton. Photo: Arthur Elgort for Vogue US, March 1999

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Out & About / CALENDAR a reception featuring animal ambassadors, followed by a gourmet dinner, live auction and dancing. The Clubhouse at Peacock Gap (San Rafael). 415.506.6265, marinhumane society.org MAR 6 Smuin Ballet’s 2016 Gala Gather with leaders in local arts and civic communities to celebrate Smuin Ballet’s 22nd season. Enjoy a cocktail reception, live auction, dinner, dancing and a performance by members of Smuin Ballet. The Galleria (SF). smuinballet.org MAR 17–20 Belvedere Tiburon Library Silent Art Auction Discover art for your home, office or a unique gift at this biannual auction

featuring gently used pieces. Donations are accepted March 11–14. Belvedere Tiburon Library (Tiburon). 415.789.2656, beltiblibrary.org MAR 18 Dance Downtown Gala Ring in a new season of artistry with cocktails and a special dinner, performance and after-party. St. Regis and YBCA Theater (SF). odcdance.org MAR 18–20 California’s Artisan Cheese Festival Celebrate the 10th anniversary of this delicious dairy-centric festival, which showcases local cheese, wine and beer. Meet and learn from California’s top artisan cheese makers, authors, chefs, winemakers and brewers through

seminars, classes and tours. Sheraton Sonoma (Petaluma). artisan cheesefestival.com MAR 19 Napa Valley Wine Train Pride Ride All aboard for the Napa Valley Wine Train’s first inaugural Pride Ride, featuring some of the Bay Area’s most prominent LGBT wine experts, with a host in each train car to guide guests in their selections. Wine Train Station (Napa). 707.253.2111, winetrain.com MAR 26 Sausalito Easter Egg Hunt The Easter Bunny hops into the waterfront community of Sausalito to lead an Easter parade, followed by a traditional egg hunt and bonnet

contest. Dunphy Park (Sausalito). 415.289.4198, sausalitoparksand recreation.com

reunited at summer camp. The Walt Disney Family Museum (SF). 415.345.6800, waltdisney.org

MAR 31 Marin Women’s Hall of Fame Induction and Celebration Dinner Honor the 2016 inductees who have impacted the county’s environment, public affairs and community. The Clubhouse at Peacock Gap (San Rafael). 415.696.0319, ywcasf-marin.org

MAR 10–13 San Francisco International Ocean Film Festival Support your desire to care for the oceans with this series of thematic independent films. Cowell Theater at Fort Mason (SF). 415.561.6251, oceanfilmfest.org

FILM MAR 1–31 The Parent Trap Bring the whole family to the Walt Disney Family Museum for daily screenings of the original The Parent Trap (1961), which tells the story of separated twins

MAR 12 Marin Catholic Fashion Show and Auction The Marin Catholic Parents Association presents the high school’s annual fashion show, themed Havana Nights, and fundraising auction featuring more than 250

students modeling the latest styles from local stores across Marin. Marin Catholic High School (Greenbrae). 415.464.3800, marincatholic.org MAR 30–APR 3 Sonoma International Film Festival Enjoy more than 100 handselected films — from documentary and world cinema to shorts and animation — supplemented by intimate panels with filmmakers, actors and directors, as well as fun and festive after-events. Various locations (Sonoma). 707.933.2600, sonomafilmfest.org

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NATURE WALKS & TALKS ONGOING First Tuesday ArtWalk Join the Mill Valley Arts Commission each month for a stroll through town to view exhibits by local artists. Various locations (Mill Valley). cityofmillvalley.org ONGOING Free First Wednesdays Visit the Bay Area Discovery Museum the first Wednesday of every month for an outing full of exploration and fun. Bay Area Discovery Museum (Sausalito). 415.339.3900, bay kidsmuseum.org ONGOING Sunday Hikes on Mount Tam Cap off your weekend

with a three- to fivemile group hike up Mount Tamalpais. Each trek is led by a Friends of Mount Tam volunteer. Various locations (Mill Valley). 415.258.2410, friendsofmttam.org MAR 6 Nature for Kids: Indian Valley Treat the family to a day of learning about the frogs, toads, salamanders and insects that make their homes in the ponds of Indian Valley, then walk to the waterfall to explore the shallow pools. Indian Valley Campus (Novato). 415.893.9527, marin countyparks.org

MAR 12 Galaxy Portrait Children are invited to look up in this special Saturday painting class focusing on planets, stars and spaceships. Make sure to register online beforehand. Masterworks Kids’ Art Studio (Corte Madera). 415.945.7945, master workskidsart.com MAR 19 Tiburon Uplands Wildflower Hike Join a ranger for a guided hike through the Tiburon Uplands to spot spring wildflowers such as houndstongue, milkmaids, Indian warrior and other species speckled along breathtaking vistas. Paradise Beach Park (Tiburon). marincountyparks.org

MAR 19–20 Body Ensouled, Enacted and Entranced: A TwoDay Workshop with Daria Halprin The cofounding director of Tamalpa Institute and dancer, poet, teacher and author draws upon her own experiences to offer a creative exploration of returning to the heart of what matters in your life through art-making. Mountain Home Studio (Kentfield). 415.457.8555, tamalpa.org MAR 23 On Equal Justice Founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama, Bryan Stevenson joins Gwen Ifill, editor and best-selling author

of The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama, to discuss equal sentencing and incarceration for all races, ages and social classes. Nourse Theater (SF). 415.392.4400, cityarts.net MAR 23 The Martian: Group Book Discussion Join the Civic Center Library book group to discuss Andy Weir’s The Martian as part of One Book One Marin 2016. Civic Center public library (San Rafael). onebookonemarin.org MAR 28 The Untold History of Autism WIRED reporter Steve Silberman discusses his debut book, NeuroTribes: the Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity,

which centers on the history of autism and investigates why diagnoses have increased in recent years. Nourse Theater (SF). 415.392.4400, cityarts.net MAR 31–APR 3 From Joshua Tree to the Salton Sea The Image Flow teams up with the Center for Photographic Art for an image-centric tour of the natural and unnatural landscapes of California’s Bermuda Triangle. Palm Springs serves as base with dinners and viewings of the day’s photographs. Various locations (California). 415.388.3569, theimageflow.com

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Dine A N I N S I D E R ’ S G U I D E T O R E S TA U R A N T S A N D G O O D F O O D I N T H E B AY A R E A

E DITE D BY MIMI TOWLE

CORTE MADERA BRICK & BOTTLE California Seasonal selections made with local ingredients are the specialty here, with service also available for private parties and catered events. Enjoy signature dishes like orzo mac ’n’ cheese with smoked Gouda and petrale sole and tomato-braised short ribs. The restaurant has been voted “Best Happy Hour,” by Marin Magazine readers. 55 Tamal Vista Blvd, 415.924.3366, brickandbottle.com s $$$ s ∞ C D º

Almond Croissant

• RUSTIC BAKERY California Organic pastries, breads, salads and

sandwiches are on the menu here, including daily seasonal specials. Try the Marin Melt —Cowgirl Creamery’s Mt. Tam and Point Reyes Toma cheeses grilled on honey whole wheat, served with dressed baby greens and crisp apple slices. 1407 Grant Ave, 415.878.4952, rusticbakery.com b $$ s ∞ BLD BR

CAFE VERDE California This revamped cafe offers wraps, paninis, salads, tea and more nearly all day long. Enjoy any of these items inside or out on the patio and be sure to inquire about the German and Belgian beer samplers. 502 Tamalpais Dr, 415.927.1060, cafeverdemarin.com b $ ∞ BLD º IL FORNAIO Italian This upscale Italian restaurant franchise’s menu offers, aside from the pizzas and pastas, a variety of salads and carb-free entrées. 223 Corte Madera Town Ctr,

415.927.4400, ilfornaio.com s $$ s ∞ C LD BR MARIN JOE’S Italian This Marin mainstay has been around for over 50 years. Choose from a menu of soups, salads, seafood, mesquite-grilled or sautéed meats and a plethora of pasta options. For a fun addition to your dining experience, order the Caesar salad — the server will prepare the dressing at your table. Not looking for a meal? Enjoy a drink and hear local musicians at the well-known piano bar. 1585 Casa Buena Dr, 415.924.2081, marin joesrestaurant.com s $$ s C LD PIG IN A PICKLE American Fresh local ingredients and the highest-quality brisket, pork, ribs and chicken comprise the menu of this Town Center eatery. Sauces are crafted to represent the best American barbecue regions, from Memphis to South Carolina. House-made pickles, buns and sausages will keep you coming back. 341 Corte Madera Town Ctr, 415.891.3265, pig inapicklebbq.com b $$$ s ∞ BLD

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THREE BIRDS WINE BAR California This one-room bar and wine shop features more than 20 options by the glass and a selection of bottles to take home. Enjoy an array of cheese and charcuterie in the comfortable lounge. 207 Corte Madera Ave, 415.927.9466, three birdswinebar.com b $$ ∞ º

FAIRFAX 123 BOLINAS California Created by four friends wanting to showcase seasonal fare in a relaxing, intimate environment, this cozy, one-room eatery offers locally brewed beer, small-production wines and seasonal food along with the view of Bolinas Park through the floorto-ceiling windows. 123 Bolinas St, 415.488.5123, 123bolinas.com b $$ s ∞ D º BAREFOOT CAFE American Chef Tony Senehi prepares fresh Californian dishes made with local, organic ingredients, from sustainable sources. A popular brunch location, neighbors and tourists come to this quaint restaurant in the heart of Fairfax for everything from their eggs benedict to panna cotta dessert. 1900 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, 415.460.2160, barefootcafe.com b $$ s BLD FRADELIZIO’S Italian Fradelizio’s blends Northern Italian cuisine with Californiainspired healthy fare using the freshest ingredients possible. 35 Broadway Blvd, 415.459.1618, fradelizios.com b $$$ s LD BR

LARKSPUR AMALFI RISTORANTE Italian Antonio Volpicelli, of Don Antonio in Tiburon, has taken over the old Fabrizio space and filled it with more traditional Italian cuisine. The menu offers an assortment of classic dishes like orgonzola gnocchi, veal parmesan, carbonara and an extensive wine list. Guests are welcome to enjoy any one of these items on the spacious outdoor patio. 455 Magnolia Ave, 415.924.3332, amalfi ristorantelarkspur.com b $$ ∞ LD EMPORIO RULLI Italian Renowned for its Northern Italian specialties and treats, the Larkspur location (there are three others) is a favored spot for lunch as well as coffee and a sweet treat. 464 Magnolia Ave, 415.924.7478, rulli.com $$ s ∞ BL FARM HOUSE LOCAL California This downtown Larkspur gem is sure to please with simple, healthy food in a warm, cozy atmosphere — both inside and outside on the covered patio. The seasonal menu follows what is fresh and local with dishes such as fluffy omelets stuffed with local meats, cheeses and vegetables. 25 Ward St, 415.891.8577, farm houselocal.com b $$ s ∞ BL FARMSHOP California Located in the Marin Country Mart since 2013, Farmshop Marin has quickly become a top spot here in the county. Indoor and outdoor seating available. Marin Country Mart, 2233 Larkspur Landing

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Out & About / DINE Circle, 415.755.6700, farmshopca.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR LEFT BANK RESTAURANT French Known for award-winning French cuisine and a lively brasserie ambience, this corner spot on Magnolia Avenue rates high with locals. Those with a small appetite (or budget) can opt for happy hour appetizers (4 to 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. to close, Monday to Friday), most priced under $6. 507 Magnolia Ave, 415.927.3331, leftbank.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR MARIN BREWING CO. American Grab a cold beer made on site and pair it with fish ’n’ chips — in this case fresh cod dipped in Mt. Tam pale ale batter, served with steak fries and homemade tartar sauce — or another item from the all-American menu. Marin Country Mart, 1809 Larkspur Landing Circle, 415.461.4677, marinbrewing.com b $$ s ∞ LD º PICCO California Popular since its inception, Picco has a seasonally driven menu featuring items such as risotto (made every half hour) that keep patrons coming back. Pizzeria Picco next door is famous for its wood-fired pizzas, wine selection and softserve Straus Family Creamery ice cream. 320 Magnolia Ave, 415.924.0300, restaurantpicco.com s $$$ s ∞ C D

MILL VALLEY BALBOA CAFE MILL VALLEY California The San Francisco institution has become a place

to see and be seen in Mill Valley, especially after 142 Throckmorton comedy nights. Menu includes Niman flatiron steak, braised beef brisket risotto and classic burgers. 38 Miller Ave, 415.381.7321, balboacafe.com s $$$ ∞ LD BR º EL PASEO American This award-wining eatery in the heart of downtown Mill Valley has been voted most romantic restaurant in Northern California. Built from Mount Tam railroad ties and brick in 1947, El Paseo was restored by owner Sammy Hagar in 2009. The menu offers California and European fare and an extensive wine list. 17 Throckmorton Ave, 415.388.0741, elpaseomillvalley.com b $$ ∞ C D HARMONY Chinese Enjoy a lighter take on Chinese at this restaurant, nestled in the Strawberry Village. The barbecue pork bun is filled with housemade roasted meat in a savory sauce, and fresh mussels are accented with red chili and Thai basil. Pair your pick with wine, beer or tea. Be sure to check out the weekday lunch special for an excellent deal. Strawberry Village, 415.381.5300, harmony restaurantgroup.com b $$ s LD JOE’S TACO LOUNGE Mexican Joe’s serves up fish tacos, burritos and enchiladas as well as more unusual items like Mexican pizza, tofu tostada and crab tostadas. Colorful interior and quick service make this a fun, easy stop. If there are too many unsupervised kids for a

peaceful meal, takeout is easy too. If you stay, grab a selection of hot sauce bottles from the wall and find your perfect match. 382 Miller Ave, 415.383. 8164, joestacolounge.com b $$ s ∞ BLD LA GINESTRA Italian A favorite family spot for over 30 years; getting a table or booth here can take awhile. While this old-school Italian eatery is known for traditional pastas, veal dishes, pizzas and dry martinis, the familiar wait staff is also part of the attraction. 127 Throckmorton Ave, 415.388.0224, laginestramv.com s $$ s D MILL VALLEY BEERWORKS American Known for handcrafted beers, imported and local microbrews and house-made kombucha and root beer, this popular downtown Mill Valley neighborhood brewery is also a full-blown restaurant. Choose from a large selection of small plates, including king oyster mushrooms, roasted potatoes and grilled squid, and a small list of large portions like confit rabbit. 173 Throckmorton Ave, 415.888.8218, mill valleybeerworks.com b $$$ D BR PIATTI RISTORANTE AND BAR Italian The staff prides itself on capturing the warm and welcoming atmosphere of a traditional Italian trattoria. Get a table by the window or on the outdoor deck for a truly exceptional view right on the water. Peruse the impressive selection of Italian wines to accompany your rustic seasonal meal.

625 Redwood Hwy, 415.380.2525, piatti.com s $$ s ∞ C LD BR MOLINA California Focusing on woodfired, California coastal cuisine, the menu features items cooked in the famed Alan Scott oven and selected from Marin County’s farmers’ markets, including shellfish, oysters, rabbit, pig, quail and cattle. Both the menu and the music change nightly. 17 Madrona St, 415.383.4200, molinarestaurant.com b $$$ ∞ D BR PIZZA ANTICA Italian This Italianinspired restaurant in Strawberry Village offers much more than impeccably prepared thin-crust pizzas. The seasonal dishes are created with local ingredients and include chopped salads, housemade pastas, and meat, fish and fowl entrees, such as the Tuscan fried chicken and roasted pork chop. 800 Redwood Hwy, 415.383.0600, pizzaantica.com b $$ s LD BR º THE PLANT CAFE California The cafe offers healthy food made from local, organic ingredients. Stop by for a California-inspired meal, raw organic juice, a diet-supplementing smoothie or a delicious dessert. Strawberry Village, 415.388.8658, theplantcafe.com b $$ s ∞ BL BR PRABH INDIAN KITCHEN Indian Owned and operated by the Singh family, this restaurant is dedicated to serving healthy, organic and sustainable food, including gluten-free and vegan

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SHORELINE COFFEE SHOP American Tucked away in a parking lot at Tam Junction, this coffee shop is a funky diner with a smalltown feel. Check out the mix of Mexican and traditional breakfast fare. 221 Shoreline Hwy, 415.388.9085 b $$ s ∞ BL BR TAMALPIE Italian Owner Karen Goldberg designed this restaurant with a large group seating area, indoor and outdoor fireplaces, and a small casual bar. The food is Italian home cooking with the daily modern inspiration of locally sourced seasonal ingredients found in the salads, house-made pastas and crispy Neapolitan style pizza, with a selection of beer and wine to match. 477 Miller Ave, 415.388.7437, tamalpiepizza.com s $$ s ∞ C LD THEP LELA Thai This jewel is tucked away in the back of Strawberry Village. Diners come for the tasty kee mao noodles, pad thai, fresh rolls and extensive bar menu. It’s also a great place for lunch. 615 Strawberry Village, 415.383.3444, theplela.com s $$ s ∞ LD URBAN REMEDY Juice With a selection of juices, snacks and bowls including plenty of gluten-free, grain-free,

and low-glycemic-index options, this is a popular stop. Raw desserts round things out. Try the namesake salad or give the cashew milk with cinnamon and vanilla a shot to see what Urban Remedy is all about. 15 E Blithedale Ave, 415.383.5300, urbanremedy.com $$ ∞ BLD VASCO Italian Whether you’re at a table, the bar or the back counter, you can expect an intimate and tasty dining experience in this one-room trattoria. Try one of the pasta dishes or thincrust wood-fired pizzas. 106 Throckmorton Ave, 415.381.3343, vasco millvalley.com s $$ s D

NOVATO BOCA TAVERN American Bring a date or celebrate a special event at this classic steak house, which features wholesome American fare. Favorites include the mac ’n’cheese croquettes, hanger steak and duck-fat fries. 340 Ignacio Blvd, 415.883.0901, bocasteak.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD º

K AT H L E E N D U G H I J E W E L E R

options. Dishes include chicken pakora, vegetable biryani and basil garlic nan. Try the thali menu (offered at lunch), a selection of several Indian dishes served at once. 24 Sunnyside Ave, 415.384.824, prabhindiankitchen.com b $$ s ∞ LD

HAND-FABRICATED FINE JEWELRY EXQUISITE CUSTOM DESIGNS BRIDAL

11 B e r n a r d S t r e e t Mill Valley 415.383.0462 w w w . k at h l e e n d u g h i . c o M

THE SPEAKEASY American There’s nothing like the comfort of a solid burger and beer when you’re kicking back and watching the game, and the Speakeasy provides you with just that. In addition to the 10 beers on tap, you can go beyond traditional pub grub with treats like a deconstructed salmon salad. 504 Alameda del Prado, 415.883.7793, thespeakeasynovato.com bº

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Out & About / DINE Crispy Duck Salad

• HAKKASAN Chinese The rich-flavored slowbraised beef and the crispy duck salad are popular at this San Francisco destination. Private dining rooms are offered: the Jade Room complete with lazy Susan and the larger Dragon Room for cocktail parties or dinners. 1 Kearny St, 415.829.8148, hakkasan.com s $$$ C LD

SAN ANSELMO COMFORTS CAFE American Established in 1986, Comforts has a cozy sit-down patio and serves breakfast, lunch and weekend brunch. A large take-out section offers fresh bakery items, seasonal salads, soups, sandwiches and even entrees for dinner at home. Besides the famous and popular Chinese chicken salad, other winners are the stuffed pecan-crusted French toast, flavorful scrambles and wonton soup. 335 San Anselmo Ave, 415.454.9840, comfortscafe.com b $$ s ∞ BL BR INSALATA’S Mediterranean Award-winning chef Heidi Krahling offers Mediterranean and Middle Eastern dishes prepared with delicious produce and artisan meats.120 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, 415.457.7700, insalatas.com s $$$ s C LD BR

L’APPART RESTO French French specialties, local favorites and a $35 three- course prix fixe menu are served up in an energetic yet sophisticated environment. 636 San Anselmo Ave, 415.256.9884, lappartresto.com b $$$ s ∞ LD BR MH BREAD AND BUTTER California This one-stop shop offers everything from coffee to braised meats. High-quality ingredients and a comfortable atmosphere make MH worth checking out. 101 San Anselmo Ave, 415.755.4575, mhbreadandbutter.com $$ s ∞ BL BR TACO JANE’S Mexican Named after the owner’s mother, this casual, colorful place welcomes the whole family. Don’t miss out on Jane’s handmade agave margarita or grilled plantains with crema. 21 Tamalpais Ave, 415.454.6562, tacojanes.com s $$ s ∞ LD BR

VALENTI & CO. Italian This bright and cozy space is the ideal environment for authentic Italian dishes made with local ingredients. A seat at the chef’s table gives a prime view of the open kitchen. 337 San Anselmo Ave, 415.454.7800, valentico.com b $$$ D

SAN RAFAEL ARIZMENDI BAKERY California A workerowned bakery cafe, Arzimendi prides itself on high-quality local ingredients. Visit any time of day for coffee and pastries, breakfast and lunch sandwiches, and thincrust sourdough artisan pizza. 1002 Fourth St, 415.456.4093, arizmendisanrafael.com $ s ∞ BLD BR GREEN CHILE KITCHEN Mexican Don’t let the name fool you; while green chilies are present on the menu, many other varieties are also featured. From the

organic, house made, blue corn tortillas to the red chile chicken wings, this restaurant located in downtown San Rafael offers a cornucopia of hues and flavors. 1335 Fourth St, 415.521.5691, greenchilekitchen.com b $$ s LD FENIX California An intimate live-music venue in the heart of downtown San Rafael, Fenix features globally inspired California cuisine with a Southern French twist. Dishes like fried green tomatoes or 72-hour sous-vide short ribs, accompanied by a glass from the extensive wine list, define the experience. 919 Fourth St, 415.813.5600, fenixlive.com s $$$ s C BLD BR º IL DAVIDE Italian The large selection of innovative and classic Tuscan dishes and house-made pasta has kept locals coming back for years. Ingredients are organic and locally sourced where possible,

and there’s a vast selection of both Italian and California wines by the glass. Don’t leave without trying the limoncello. 901 A St, 415.454.8080, ildavide.net s $$$ s ∞ C LD MULBERRY STREET PIZZERIA Italian Chef Ted Rowe won first place in the Food Network Television Pizza Challenge with his For the Love of Mushroom pizza —sautéed mushrooms in a creamy garlic sauce and a red wine reduction atop a fresh crust. Be sure to try other unique pies, like the spicy Three Beer pizza and the clam and garlic. 101 Smith Ranch Rd, 415.472.7272, mulberry streetpizzasan rafael.com b $$ s PANAMA HOTEL RESTAURANT American The dinner menu has a large selection — tortilla soup to wild mushroom raviolis — but it’s the

Sunday brunch that will please the kids; try the Panama Waffle with bananas, warm chocolate sauce and whipped cream, plus a pitcher of “make-your-own” mimosas for the adults. The tropical garden is a prime spot for peoplewatching. 4 Bayview St, 415.457.3993, panamahotel.com b $$$ ∞ C LD BR º RANGE CAFE American With floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the grand Peacock Gap lawns, the Range Cafe is the perfect place for comforting American classics with an elegant twist. This inviting lunchtime cafe with its ice-cold lemonade and refreshing chardonnays makes a great dinner spot once the sun sets. 333 Biscayne Dr, 415.454.6450, rangecafe.net s $$ s ∞ C BLD º ROCKETROLL Japanese There are plenty of fusion restaurants around, but not many that blend Mexican and Japanese favorites. Rocketroll, however, offers everything from a spicy tuna rice bowl, to yellow fin tuna and salmon sashimi sushi burritos. Smoothies like the avocado fresher round out the menu. 1109 Fourth St, 415.866.0537 $ LD SUSHI TO DAI FOR Japanese Snagging a seat in this popular Fourth Street sushi spot can be a challenge, but patience is rewarded with tasty and fresh sashimi, unique sushi rolls and great prices. 816 Fourth St, 415.721.0392, sushitodaifor.net b $$ s LD

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TAJ OF MARIN Indian Both North and South Indian cuisine is offered here, including the $8.95 lunch special and dinners that include goat curry, spinach, lentils and tandoori. 909 Fourth St, 415.459.9555, tajofmarin.com b $$ s LD TERRAPIN CROSSROADS American This waterfront restaurant and music venue presents fresh food and local talent. The menu includes salads, savory dishes and wood-fired pizzas plus a wide selection of beers, wines and cocktails. Come for the food, stay for the music. 100 Yacht Club Dr, 415.524.2773, terrapin crossroads.net s $$ ∞ C D BR º URBAN REMEDY Juice With delicious juices, snacks and bowls including plenty of gluten-free, grain-free, and low-glycemic-index choices, this is a popular spot. Raw desserts round things out. Try the namesake salad or give the cashew milk with cinnamon and vanilla a shot to see what Urban Remedy is all about. 1904 Fourth St, 
415.786.8011, urbanremedy.com $$ ∞ BLD VIN ANTICO American Vin Antico, “where passion meets the plate,” serves seasonal marketinspired cuisine like stone-oven-baked flatbreads, handmade pastas and organic salads, all innovatively prepared. The kitchen is open to the dining room and there’s a full bar with artisan cocktails. 881 Fourth St, 415.721.0600, vinantico.com s $$ s C LD º

WHIPPER SNAPPER RESTAURANT California/Caribbean Owner/chef Bill Higgins serves tapas, sangria and reasonably priced organic dishes. The California-Caribbean lunch and dinner cuisine blends local farm-fresh ingredients with Latin flavors. Be sure to try the popular fish tacos, Cuban “cigars” and chocolate bread pudding. Available for parties and special gatherings and the restaurant has a back patio for alfresco dining. 1613 Fourth St, 415.256.1818, whipsnap.biz b $$ s ∞ C LD º

SAUSALITO ANGELINO RESTAURANT Italian An authentic Italian restaurant with handmade pastas and seasonal antipasti, showcasing cuisine of the Campania region for over 20 years. 621 Bridgeway, 415.331.5225, angelino restaurant.com s $$$ s BLD

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AURORA RISTORANTE & PIZZERIA Italian Novato’s Aurora finallyC has a counterpart M in southern Marin. Traditional Italian Y food, a full bar and friendly service make CM it a great option for MY families, groups, dates and sports fans, who CY can keep up-to-date CMY on the game via flatscreen TV. 300 Valley K St, 415.339.8930, aurora-sausalito.com b $$ s ∞ LD AVATAR’S Indian If you’re on the hunt for innovative Indian fare, head to Avatar’s. Sip masala chiar sweetened with brown sugar in this casual, one-room

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Out & About / DINE • EPIC STEAK American An upscale meat lover’s mecca with a sophisticated atmosphere, EPIC Steak’s bayside location delivers on all fronts. Professional service, choice cuts of prime rib and chocolate souffles are among the things that keep patrons coming back. An upstairs bar is also a happy hour favorite. 369 Embarcadero, 415.369.9955, epicsteak. com s $$$ ∞ LD º Ribsteak and Lobster

restaurant, ideal for a quick lunch or dinner. 2656 Bridgeway, 415.332.8083, enjoyavatars.com b $$ s LD BAR BOCCE American Food just tastes better on a bayside patio with fire pits and a bocce ball court. Order one of the sourdough bread pizzas and a glass of wine and you’ll see why this casual eatery, overseen by Robert Price of Buckeye and Bungalow 44, has become a local favorite. 1250 Bridgeway, 415.331.0555, barbocce.com s $$ s ∞ LD CIBO Cafe Located in a historic brick building on Sausalito’s main drag, this is a great place to a sip a quick cup of coffee outdoors. The menu offers tarts, croissants, cookies, paninis and soups. Every dish is made from scratch with local and seasonal products. 1201 Bridgeway, 415.331.2426, cibosausalito.com $$ s ∞ BL

F3/FAST FOOD FRANCAIS French Owned and operated by the owners of Le Garage, F3 serves brunch, lunch and dinner featuring “Frenchified” American comfort food. A rotating menu includes items like the Luxe burger (Diestel turkey, brie, lettuce and a fried egg topped with truffle aioli). Enjoy with a side of Brussels sprout chips or pommes dauphines (tater tots). 39 Caledonia St, 415.887.9047, eatf3.com s $$ s ∞ LD BR FENG NIAN Chinese This spacious popular hangout has served up wonton soup, pot stickers and daily specials for nearly two decades. For an indulgent treat, order the Szechwan crispy calamari, honeyglazed walnut prawn or lemon chicken. Staying in? Feng Nian delivery available. 2650 Bridgeway, 415.331.5300, fengnian.com b $$ s LD

FISH. Seafood The ultimate place for freshly caught fare. Order the fish tacos, ceviche and a bottle of wine and take in the bay views on the open-air deck. 350 Harbor Dr, 415.331.3474, 331fish.com b $$$ s ∞ LD KITTI’S PLACE Thai/ California This homestyle family restaurant has been in Sausalito 20 years and features favorites like lettuce cups, soft spring rolls and weekly specials. 3001 Bridgeway, 415.331.0390, kittisplace.com b $$ s ∞ LD LE GARAGE French Escape the tourist crush for an indulgent Sausalito brunch right on the water. The atmosphere is animated with light French music (à la Amélie), and the much-adored croquemonsieur is under $10. Indoor or outdoor seating. 85 Liberty Ship Way, 415.332.5625, legaragebistro sausalito.com b $$$ s ∞ BLD BR

LIGHTHOUSE American A great spot to grab a classic breakfast — the fruit pancakes, omelets and Danish-influenced dishes will make you a return customer. This is a small but popular space, so arrive early or be prepared for a wait. 1311 Bridgeway, 415.331.3034, light house-restaurants.com $$ s BL OSTERIA DIVINO Tuscan Osteria Divino offers authentic florentine cuisine inspired by the finest local, organic, seasonal produce, meat and fish available, along with an extensive artisan pasta selection. Live music Tue-Sun. 37 Caledonia St, 415.331.9355, osteriadivino.com b $$ s ∞ C BLD BR º POGGIO Italian Executive chef Benjamin Balesteri creates Northern Italian fare using fresh and local ingredients. Private dining rooms above the restaurant can accommodate larger parties (10 to 150 guests). 777 Bridgeway,

415.332.7771, poggiotratoria.com s $$$ s ∞ C BLD SAYLOR’S RESTAURANT AND BAR California/Mexican Chef/owner Sean Saylor uses fresh local ingredients and seafood to create a distinctively Cabo combination of California and Mexican cuisine. Serving more than 200 varieties of tequilas that are even better when enjoyed in the private Cabo Wabo room named for (and approved) by Mill Valley’s own Tequila master, Sammy Hagar. 2009 Bridgeway, 415.332.1512, saylors restaurantandbar.com s $$ s ∞ C LD º SEAFOOD PEDDLER RESTAURANT AND FISH MARKET Seafood The fish is bought daily from local fisherman and recipes are adjusted to incorporate the freshest catch. 303 Johnson St, 415.332.1492, seafoodpeddler.com s $$$ s ∞ LD BR º

SEAHORSE Italian The spacious dining area, accompanied by a dance floor and stage, make Seahorse ideal for celebrations large and small. Enjoy a modern twist on classic Tuscan coastal cuisine while grooving to the nightly live music and entertainment. 305 Harbor Dr, 415.331.2899, sausalitoseahorse.com b $$$ ∞ C LD BR º SUSHI RAN Japanese Sample innovative small plates just big enough to share before enjoying some of the best sushi the Bay Area has to offer; the prices don’t deter the herd of enthusiasts who line up nightly to partake. Just stopping by? The wine, cocktail and sake lists keep even the pickiest barfly satisfied. Reservations are required in the main room. 107 Caledonia St, 415.332.3620, sushiran.com s $$ ∞ LD TASTE OF THE HIMALAYAS Himalayan Popular for lunch and dinner, enjoy authentic food from a faraway region. 2633 Bridgeway, 415.331.1335, sausalitotasteofthe himalayas.com b $$ s LD THE TRIDENT Seafood Set in a turn-of-thecentury building constructed for the San Francisco Yacht Club, this waterfront restaurant is a shoe-in for date night. The restaurant, a famous 1970s hangout, is now known for supporting local farmers, fisherman and organic food producers. 558 Bridgeway, 415.331.3232, the tridentsausalito.com s $$$ s ∞ LD BR º

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TIBURON CAFÉ RENZO Sicilian Café Renzo is a new European cafe on Tiburon’s historic Ark Row featuring Sicilian street food, frozen yogurt, pastries, sandwiches and soup and salads. A relaxing place not just for dining but for socializing, it’s named after executive chef Renzo Azzarello and is the “baby brother” of Luna Blu restaurant up the street. 110 Main St, 415.937.5913 b $ s ∞ BLD º CAPRICE California Book the private party room for large groups or just relax in this romantic dinner spot. Take advantage of the restaurant’s wellpriced three-course dinners for less than $25, and don’t miss prime rib Mondays. 2000 Paradise Dr, 415.435.3400, thecaprice.com s $$$ D DON ANTONIO TRATTORIA Italian Located in Tiburon’s Ark Row, this trattoria serves authentic Italian cuisine in a quaint setting. Traditional selections include chicken piccata, organic roasted rack of lamb and house-made pesto. 114 Main St, 415.435.0400, donantoniotrattoria.com b $$ D GUAYMAS RESTAURANT Mexican Situated right next to the Tiburon ferry terminal on the waterfront, it’s got touch-it-you’re-soclose city views and outdoor seating, making it a great place to bring visitors on a warm summer night. Happy

hour is 4 to 7 p.m. Monday to Friday. 5 Main St, 415.435.6300, guaymasrestaurant.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD º LUNA BLU Sicilian Executive chef Renzo Azzarello and his wife, Crystal, serve English afternoon tea (a special service by reservation only). The menu changes daily, incorporating seasonal, fresh and organic produce. The restaurant has partnered with the Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch, so all the seafood is sustainable. In 2014 diners voted Luna Blu one of the Top 100 Neighborhood Gem restaurants in America. 35 Main St, 415.789.5844 s $$$ s ∞ LD MILANO Italian Located in the Cove Shopping Center, this familyowned neighborhood spot is known for its pasta and friendly service. Favorites like the cheesy garlic bread and pesto keep customers coming back. 1 Blackfield Dr, 415.388.9100 s $$ s ∞ LD NEW MORNING CAFE American Sit outside or in at this casual cafe. On a sunny morning, the place is filled with locals enjoying the sun and extensive breakfast menu; lunch is served as well. 1696 Tiburon Blvd, 415.435.4315 s ∞ BL SALT & PEPPER American This sunfilled one-room restaurant, featuring hardwood floors and blue-checkered tablecloths, is an area favorite. Popular items include scallops, ribeye steak, a beef burger and traditional crab

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Out & About / FLAVOR

RECIPE

Corned Beef and Cabbage SERVES 8

To Prepare 1 Cure the brisket using salt, pepper, green peppercorns and crushed red peppers for at least 72 hours before cooking. 2 Cut the cured brisket into 3 or 4 pieces. Add to a large pot of water, making sure the water covers the meat. 3 Boil the brisket and keep rotating the pieces so that the bottom ones don’t get overcooked. 4 Boil for 4 hours or until cooked. 5 Peel and cut carrots; boil in a separate pot until tender. 6 In another pot, boil peeled potatoes until soft. 7 Cut cabbage into 8 even wedges and steam. 8 When the brisket is cold, trim the rest of the fat off and cut the meat into 2- to 3-ounce slices. 9 Keep it in the juice and serve with carrots, potatoes and cabbage.

B

DEBRA TARRANT

Ingredients 10 pounds of beef brisket 3 tablespoons salt 3 tablespoons pepper 2 tablespoons green peppercorns 2 tablespoons crushed red peppers 3 large carrots 24 small red potatoes 1 whole head of cabbage

Emerald Isle Eats

A local pub’s quintessential St. Patrick’s Day dish. EER LOVERS IN Marin and beyond understand that Moylan’s Brewery and Restaurant in

Novato is synonymous with quality handcrafted beers. From the Dragoons Dry Irish Stout, made with a blend of imported hops and malted barley from the United Kingdom, to Moylan’s Tipperary Pale Ale, the Irish tradition of fine beer is not waning at this establishment; in fact, it’s spreading. Currently, this local company employs 170 people who ship 30 different types of beer, many of them recognized globally — and all made on site in Novato — to 20 different states and five countries around the world. Founded more than 20 years ago by Brendan Moylan, a San Francisco–born son of Irish immigrants, Moylan’s is the proprietor’s second business venture, following his other successful restaurant-brewpub endeavor in Larkspur, Marin Brewing Company. Beer aside, the menu is stacked with pub favorites like grass-fed burgers, wood-fired pizza and a variety of daily specials. On Saturdays, kitchen manager Marco Gongora’s corned beef and cabbage is served. Here, sous chef Tomas Gongora shares his brother’s recipe for the customary meal and Moylan’s favorite. moylans.com KASIA PAWLOWSKA

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Out & About / DINE cakes with jalapeño dipping sauce. 38 Main St, 415.435.3594 b s ∞ LD SAM’S ANCHOR CAFE American Sam’s deck is a popular spot for brunch on a lazy sunny Sunday, and its bar is the town’s historic watering hole, but Sam’s is also a great place for lunch or dinner. Sample a seasonal menu served all day, every day. 27 Main St, 415.435.4527, samscafe.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR º SERVINO RISTORANTE Italian Chef/Owner Angelo Servino highlights organic ingredients in an array of rustic Italian dishes, including house-made pastas, wood oven pizzas, and seasonal specialties. Located on the bay in Tiburon, Servino also prides itself on itsextensive sustainable seafood program. Savor la dolce vita on the waterfront patio. 9 Main St, 415.435.2676, servino.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR º TIBURON TAVERN California The atmosphere here is enhanced by two outdoor patios, two indoor fireplaces and fresh flowers. Happy hour is 4 to 6:30 p.m. every day. 1651 Tiburon Blvd, 415.435.5996, lodgeattiburon.com s $$ s ∞ C BLD BR º

WEST MARIN NICK’S COVE American Nick’s Cove offers a coastal escape on Tomales Bay, serving famous barbecued local oysters, Dungeness crab mac ’n’ cheese and cocktails using home-grown ingredients. Large windows in the 130-seat

restaurant provide picturesque views of Tomales Bay and Hog Island. (Marshall). 23240 Hwy 1, 415.663.1033, nickscove.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR

Clockwise from gorgeous. Layered birch wood fruit baskets, Maine. Steel and glass cube jewelry, Germany. Mouth-blown swirl flutes, Japan. Sustainable teak pedestal bowl, Thailand. The world of handcrafted modern design, curated for you at Terrestra, in Mill Valley.

OSTERIA STELLINA California Whether it’s to cap off a day of hiking or celebrate a romantic anniversary, Osteria Stellina suits any occasion. The menu is Italian-inspired and features local, organic ingredients. If you’re up for something unusual, try the goat shoulder, a hit with both tourists and locals (Point Reyes). 11285 Hwy 1, 415.663.9988, osteriastellina.com b $$ s LD PARKSIDE CAFE American Perfect for a sit-down alfresco meal or for grabbing a burger to enjoy on the beach. Beautiful patio garden seating, ocean views, and private wood-fired dinners make this café a relaxing retreat. If you’re on the go, check out the new market and bakery. Choose from an array of organic, locally grown produce, artisan meats and wild seafood (Stinson). 43 Arenal Ave, 415.868.1272, parksidecafe.com s $$$ s ∞ C BLD RANCHO NICASIO American Known for live music and an extensive menu featuring everything from Dungeness crab cakes to garlic-rosemary lamb medallions, Rancho Nicasio is open seven days a week. Be sure to stop in for happy hour, 4 to 6 p.m. Monday to Friday. 1 Old Rancheria (Nicasio) Rd, 415.662.2219, ranchonicasio.com s $$$ s ∞ C LD BR º

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Out & About / DINE

• MARVIN’S

RESTAURANT American Voted “Best Breakfast in Novato,” this spot is known for serving up generous portions of American-style breakfast and lunch fare at a great value. The corned beef hash, benedicts and superb service attract a consistent crowd all year round. 1112 Grant Ave, 415.892.4482 $s∞

SAND DOLLAR American Originally built from three barges in Tiburon in 1921, the Sand Dollar Restaurant was floated to Stinson that same year. Enjoy live music along with barbecued local oysters and New England clam chowder. The sunny deck is great in the afternoon (Stinson). 3458 Shoreline Hwy, 415.868.0434, stinson beachrestaurant.com s $$ s ∞ LD SIR & STAR AT THE OLEMA California The historic inn has reopened as a roadhouse-style restaurant featuring rustic decor and a delicious yet affordable menu. Try the house-made bread and honey butter, the kale Caesar and the stuffed quail, then come back and work your way through the entire menu — most items are $20 or less (Olema).

10000 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, 415.663.1034, sirandstar.com b $$ s C D STATION HOUSE CAFE American Fresh local homegrown foods are showcased for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Stop in on weekends (5 p.m. on Sundays) for live music and wine, beer and cocktails (Point Reyes Station). 11180 Highway 1, 415.663.1515, stationhousecafe.com s $$ s ∞ C BLD BR º

SAN FRANCISCO AQ RESTAURANT & BAR California AQ takes seasonal to a new level, not only adapting the menu but also transforming the decor of the entire venue to match the weather outside. 1085 Mission St, 415.341.9000, aq-sf.com s $$$ ∞ D

BENU Asian/French Plan on a formal and sophisticated evening. The compositions on the tasting menu provide a full experience of this restaurant’s unique Asian fusion cuisine. 22 Hawthorne St, 415.685.4860, benusf.com b $$$ C D BOULI BAR American/ Mediterranean Head to Boulettes Larder’s new bar and dining room for the savory flavors of spicy lamb, feta and mint or the bittersweetness of salad topped with barberries, bulgur and pomegranate, all in a setting with handsome wood tables and an open kitchen. In the evening, the dining room can readily be reserved for small private parties of up to 24 on request. The views of the Bay Bridge punctuate an unmistakably San Francisco

setting. 1 Ferry Building, 415.399.1155, bouletteslarder.com s $$$ s ∞ C BLD BR BUN MEE Vietnamese A fun and casual lunch spot that puts a flavorful twist on classic Vietnamese. Sit back in this playful space with a salad, bowl or sandwich and enjoy the stylish San Francisco vibes. 2015 Fillmore St, 415.800.7696, bunmee.com b $$ s ∞ LD º CAPO’S CHICAGO Italian If you’re craving classic Chicago-style Italian and a venue to match, the endless pizza choices and flavorful pasta and meat selections here will more than satisfy your appetite and take you back in time to the mobster days of the 1920s. 641 Vallejo St, 415.986.8998, sfcapos.com s $$$ s ∞ D º

CLIFF HOUSE California Great food, beautiful view and lots of history — what else could you want? An awardwinning wine list? They have that too. Not only does Cliff House boast a popular Sunday champagne brunch, it also focuses on local, organic, sustainable ingredients and seafood on its everyday menu. 1090 Point Lobos, 415.386.3330, cliffhouse.com s $$ s BLD ESPETUS CHURRASCARIA Brazilian This steakhouse boasts a tasting menu of 14 meat courses grilled in the traditional Brazilian method. Patrons control the pace of the prix fixe experience with colored signal cards. 1686 Market St, 415.552.8792, espetus.com s $$$ s C LD FRANCES California San Francisco elegance meets comfort food. The local, seasonal menu complements any trip to the city. Bar is reserved for walk-ins, but reservations are recommended. 3870 17th St, 415.621.3870, frances-sf.com b $$$ D KIN KHAO Thai Fullflavored Thai: from spicy curries to pad kee mao (drunken noodles with pork) to off-thewall cocktails designed by Bon Vivants, this new San Francisco eatery is sure to impress. 55 Cyril Magnin St, 415.362.7456, kinkhao.com s $$$ s LD º LOLÓ Mexican San Francisco-style Mexican cuisine fuses market-fresh

ingredients with traditional dishes. The whole atmosphere is bright, colorful and festive, a reflection of Loló’s flavor-blasted menu. 974 Valencia St, 415.643.5656, lolosf.com s $$$ s D BR MICHAEL MINA Japanese/French Michael Mina has clearly mastered the fine line between award-winning art and Alaskan halibut. Each brilliantly crafted dish gives diners a delicate blend of flavors that add up to a distinctive, luxurious dining experience. 252 California St, 415.397.9222, michaelmina.net s $$$ LD NAMU GAJI Asian/ California A clean and natural design in a streamlined setting, where housemade shiitake mushroom dumplings and succulent grilled beef tongue are among the many options to discover. 499 Dolores St, 415.431.6268, namusf.com s $$ s LD BR º NOPA California The easy California menu shows off roasted chicken and pork chops, with a bouquet of appetizers to set the mood. Although this S.F. destination is busy almost every night (a good sign), the wait at the legendary bar is half the fun. 560 Divisadero St, 415.864.8643, nopasf.com s D BR PERRY’S American Perry’s, for over 45 years an institution on Union Street in San Francisco, is known for its classic American food, its warm personable service and its

DEBRA TARRANT

Farmer’s Benedict

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bustling bar. Signature dishes include traditional Cobb salad, prime steaks and, of course, the renowned hamburger. Perry’s also serves a weekend brunch. Hotel Griffon, 155 Steuart St, 415.495.6500, perryssf.com s $$ s ∞ C D º RICE PAPER SCISSORS Vietnamese At this brick-and-mortar Mission District spot with a pop-up sibling, try the popular grilled steak bahn mi on one of the bright red stools and stay warm with a pot of jasmine tea. 1710 Mission St, 415.878.6657, ricepaperscissors.com $$ s ∞ LD RICH TABLE California A bright, relaxed environment for savoring fresh ingredients grown only feet from the kitchen, creative and quirky cocktails and California wine. 199 Gough St, 415.355.9085, richtablesf.com s $$$ D

serious ties to Marin. The fruits, vegetables, herbs and olive oil hail from our county thanks in part to the restaurant’s partnership with Skywalker Ranch. Additionally, the 100 craft beer offerings, including 24 draft options, will keep beer lovers more than satisfied. 1 Letterman Drive, 415.655.9413, sessionssf.com s $$ ∞ LD SPAGHETTI BROS. American BIX and Fog City alums Erik Lowe and Aaron Toensing serve inventive American standards like St. Louis–style toasted raviolis and green chile-apple pie with a cheddar cheese crust. The chefs explore regional culinary traditions and translate them into a Northern Californian lexicon as evidenced by their playful menu and a Negroni-centered bar. 3213 Scott St, 415.939.2726, spaghettibrossf.com s $$$ C D

SESSIONS AT THE PRESIDIO American Located just across the Golden Gate Bridge, this restaurant has

KEY TO SYMBOLS s b $ $$ $$$ s ∞ C BLD BR º

Full bar Wine and beer Inexpensive ($10 or less per entree) Moderate (up to $20) Expensive ($20 and over) Kid-friendly Outdoor seating Private party room Seating: Breakfast, lunch, dinner Brunch Happy hour

For even more local restaurant listings, vistit us online at marinmagazine.com

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P R OMOT ION

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M A R I N

A DV E R T I S E R S

Halsey Schroeder,

founder and CEO of Halsbrook Inc.

Halsbrook is a luxury fashion boutique for the modern, sophisticated woman. We thoughtfully handpick our collection of clothing and accessories, mixing European and American designers and blending timeless style with today’s trends. Our outfit style guides and warm customer care complete the personalized and easy shopping experience.

Why did you start Halsbrook?

S P E A K

U P

Who is the Halsbrook customer? She is a modern, sophisticated woman who loves fashion. She looks for classic ways to wear the latest trends. Looking polished and feeling comfortable are equally important to her. Because she has a busy lifestyle and travels often, she enjoys browsing our style guides for quick pointers on current trends and putting together the perfect outfits for different occasions.

Which clothing and accessory designers are carried by Halsbrook? We work with an amazing group of more than 80 designers — from the most established names to up-and-coming talents that you’ll only find online at Halsbrook. Some of my favorites include: MaxMara’s polished classics, Paris-inspired trends from Paule Ka, the best-fitting pants from Fabrizio Gianni and luxe cashmere knits from Kinross. And I love the whimsy of our Kayu clutches.

I started Halsbrook in 2012 after shopping online with my mother and

What motivates you to go to work at Halsbrook every day?

seeing her frustration while searching for stylish and sophisticated

While other online retailers focus on fast fashion, we’re dedicated

clothing on retail websites that didn’t cater to her. I was inspired to fill this

to building the best shopping experience for our customers. It’s the

void in the market and create an online luxury fashion destination that

personal connection we feel with them that drives everything we do.

offers beautiful, timeless clothing and accessories, approachable styling, and first-class customer service.

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Julie M. Jones, CEO and president of

showrooms, vendor locations

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milestone celebrations, including but not limited to weddings, birthdays, cocktail parties and themed events.

What prompted you to start your own business? My past lives in theater, sewing, fashion, set design, marketing and web design and as a co-chair for a nonprofit’s fundraising gala over the years have given me a unique perspective that I felt I could turn into an encore career. Event planning is my passion. I truly enjoy sharing it with my clients to create events that will become amazing, lasting memories for them and their guests.

What specific services does the company provide? Any and all of the following: consultations with prospective clients; creation and draft of design and marketing plans, budgets and timelines; communication/interaction with vendors and suppliers; travel to

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What question are you asked most as an event planner? “Why do I need an event planner?” — which is a great question. Most event professionals have relationships with their suppliers and get a professional discount, which can be passed on to their clients. The time savings and stress alleviation afforded by hiring a planner is another bonus as well.

What is your favorite part of the events you put together? The smile on my clients’ faces and the hug I receive from him or her at the end of the day. THAT’S A WRAP! EVENTS, 575 REDWOOD HIGHWAY, SUITE 200, MILL VALLEY, 415.847.1748, JULIE@THATSAWRAPEVENTS.COM, THATSAWRAPEVENTS.COM

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LOCAL • SEASONAL • SUSTAINABLE 415-383-9355 201 Seminary Drive, Mill Valley, CA 94941 www.allseasonscatering.com

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ADVERTISING PR O MOTIO N

DINE out DEALS ON M

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Deals on Meals Enjoy local restaurants and save 30 percent on meals. Check out the participating restaurants in our “Deals on Meals” section and experience big savings. Spend only $35 for a dining certificate worth $50. Simply go to marinmagazine.com/ dineout to purchase a dining certificate from a restaurant in this section and we will mail it to you. Try a new restaurant or purchase a certificate for an old favorite. A perfect gift for any occasion. Limited supply each month.

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123 Bolinas Artisan Food, Wine and Beer has been a proud member of Marin Organic since we opened in 2010. They have inspired farmers and chefs countywide, and we salute them a job well done. Visit us in Fairfax, for seasonal farm to table dishes, and follow us on Facebook and Twitter for specials and updates. Photo credit Stacy Ventura.

March Madness is Here! Join us for a comfort food fest with new specials like Spicy Pepperoni and Olive Pizza, French Onion Soup, Grilled Chicken Breast Sandwich, and Signature Favorites. BEST Happy Hour in Marin. 2016 Michelin Bib Gourmand Recommendation. Private event space available.

123 Bolinas Artisan Wine and Food 123 Bolinas Rd. Fairfax, CA

Brick & Bottle 55 Tamal Vista Blvd Corte Madera, CA

415.488.5123 123bolinas.com

415.924.3366 brickandbottle.com

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ADVERTISING PR O MOTIO N

Consistently rated “Best of Marin”, Comforts offers fine city and homestyle food. Our menus change regularly to reflect what is fresh and in season, using only the best quality ingredients. Spring is fast approaching and we can provide fabulous Easter and Passover dishes for your holiday gatherings. Contact our catering department for more details.

L’Appart Resto serves a French-inspired seasonal menu. We also offer a $35 prix fixe option daily and live music on the patio every Thursday. L’Appart is available for private events. Open for lunch Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and dinner 7 nights a week.

Comforts 335 San Anselmo Ave San Anselmo, CA

L’Appart Resto 636 San Anselmo Ave San Anselmo, CA

415.454.9840 comfortscafe.com

415.256.9884 lappartresto.com

The historic Cliff House offers awesome views from every angle and one of nature’s best shows every day. Dine in the casual Bistro Restaurant or the elegant Sutro’s at the Cliff House. Sunday Brunch in the Terrace Room is a Bay Area tradition with free-flowing champagne and a delicious buffet.

Serving Lunch, Dinner and Weekend Breakfast. RangeCafe Bar and Grill, located on the course at Peacock Gap Golf Club, offers a delicious array of dining options to satisfy the whole family. All items are freshly prepared and served in a relaxed and inviting environment.

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Taj of Marin offers exquisite North and South Indian cuisine in a luxurious setting. The menu includes meat, seafood, vegetarian, glutenfree, and vegan options. We carry a wide selection of beer, fine wine, and traditional Indian drinks. Live music Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings. Certificate for dinner only.

Serving Marin for over 25 years with delicious Szechwan, Mandarin cuisine. Always fresh food and friendly service, nice decor, and easy parking. Also offer delivery to Southern Marin, and private parties for any occasion.

Taj of Marin 909 4th Street San Rafael, CA

Feng Nian 2650 Bridgeway Sausalito, CA

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On the Scene

S N A P S H OT S F R O M S P EC I A L E V E N T S I N M A R I N A N D S A N F R A N C I S CO

E D I T E D B Y DA N I E L J E W E T T

Nikki Wood and Zahid Sardar

Elena Calabrese and Nadine Curtis

Ian Stallings and Regina Franco

Jaimee Lowe and Amelia Hyde

Jason Moline, Sarah Lynch and Mead Quin

John Rosekrans and Kathy Geissler Best

Linda Cosgrove and Perry Burr

Matt Hollis, Denise Lamott, Davis Dalbok and Tim O’Shea

Chris Bergin and Jason Ip

Paula Fonsteca and Dustin Feider

Steve Justrich and Kyle Hayes

Tim Paschke and Yael Putterman

• MARIN AT HOME More than 125 guests enjoyed drinks, small bites, music and stunning views at the January 27 launch of Marin At Home at Ondine in Sausalito.

MO DELONG

Ric Serrano, Ruth Livingston, Sandy Lipkowitz, Diane Doodha and Paul Bigley

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Lisa Cohan and Julia Baker

• THE SHADE STORE Guests sampled drinks and local bites as they welcomed the Shade Store to Mill Valley’s Strawberry Village December 10. Ania Omski-Talwar, Grace Sorg, Joshua and Ziva Hasson, and Diane Nicolson

MO DELONG (SHADE STORE); DREW ALTIZER PHOTOGRAPHY (HOLIDAY HEROES)

• HOLIDAY HEROES EXTRAVAGANZA Members of the 49ers, Raiders and other sports stars came together at AT&T Park December 7 to inspire youth and raise funds for local charities.

Michael Kim and Jonny Moseley

John Hoch, Amy Wender-Hoch, and Justin and Lauran Tuck

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Marin’s Original Reclaimed Wood Company

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Cal Performances U N I V E R S I T Y

O F

C A L I F O R N I A ,

2015/16

S E A S O N

B E R K E L E Y

Robert Battle, Artistic Director Masazumi Chaya, Associate Artistic Director

Featuring four West Coast premieres, including new works by Robert Battle, Rennie Harris, and Ronald K. Brown; plus returning favorite Revelations

March 29–April 3 ZEL L ER B A C H HA L L

calperformances.org 510.642.9988

Rachael McLaren Photo by Andrew Eccles

Season Sponsor:

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We are where our clients are. In the best locations. Each Engel & Völkers shop—whether it’s San Francisco, Newport Beach, or Lake Tahoe—is united by a single shared vision: to link together the aspirations of discerning individuals around the world, be it in a private or business context, and deliver an authentic level of service and professionalism in the luxury real estate and lifestyle world. As part of a culture that appreciates fine living and exquisite taste, Engel & Völkers advisors represent the best of the best in premium real estate service.

Engel & Völkers San Francisco 582 Castro Street • San Francisco • CA 94114 • Tel: + 1 415-872-7729 sanfranscisco@evusa.com • SanFrancisco.evusa.com

PARK CITY | LAKE TAHOE | NEWPORT BEACH | SAN FRANCISCO | ST. GEORGE | MARIN | LAGUNA BEACH ©2016 Engel & Völkers. All rights reserved. Each brokerage independently owned and operated. Engel & Völkers and its independent License Partners are Equal Opportunity Employers and fully support the principals of the Fair Housing Act. If your property is currently represented by a real estate broker, this is not an attempt to solicit your listing.

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Marin Home FRO M TO U R S A N D M A K EOV E R S TO D ECO R AT IV E D E TA I L S A N D R E A LTO R I N S I G H T S

HERE COMES THE SUN A Kentfield woman finds the perfect home to let the light shine in. BY LAURA HILGERS • PHOTOS BY TIM PORTER

The view and yard are the focal points of the home’s airy great room.

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Marin Home / BACKSTORY

J

ENNIFER GRELLM A N WA S clear, perhaps even luminescent, about what she wanted in her new home: light. She had lived for many years in a beautiful, but dark, home in Kent Woodlands, and after her divorce she craved sunshine. If she could find it nearby, all the better. Her first stop was a rental house in the flats of Kentfield, where she lived with her then high school–age daughter (she also has an older son) and menagerie of pets. Grellman, a psychotherapist, loved walking the flat streets of her new neighborhood and wanted to stay in the ’hood if she could, but she spent a year looking all over Marin for a place to buy. It was while walking her dogs that she spotted this house. Her first impression wasn’t great. “The exterior was painted blue, and weird looking,” says Grellman. But when she and her

realtor, Donna Goldman, saw the interior a few days later, Grellman slowly changed her mind. The house was renovated and sunny. Its kitchen, with sleek gray cabinetry, white subway tile and a nearly six-foot-long island, seemed ideal for Grellman’s frequent entertaining. But she wasn’t really sold until she opened the backyard door. Her thought? “Wow, this is fabulous.” No kidding: the property, which abuts Corte Madera Creek’s wetlands, has seemingly infinite views of marshes, creek and hills. “The home seems so much more expansive because of that view,” says Goldman, “and this was a perfect place for Jennifer because she was still near to Kent Woodlands and wouldn’t have to start over.” It was perfect — as soon as Grellman added more light. Before moving in, she hired Fairfax architect Charles Theobald and

contractor Adelson Fuentes to open the home up, adding a bank of glass doors along the back wall to highlight the view, removing a pony wall from the great room to create better flow and expanding the home to include a master suite with a home office. Like everything else, the master bedroom was designed to welcome the sun. The airy suite has vaulted ceilings, built-in white bookshelves and large patio doors that lead to the backyard, which Grellman also renovated, installing a flagstone patio and lawn and planting a garden of roses, hydrangea and lemon trees. She also created a cozy sitting area, with a concrete Restoration Hardware fire pit, caned couch and chair, where she likes to curl up at the end of the day and look at the wetlands. “It’s heaven when it’s warm,” Grellman says. And the perfect place to savor the last of the light. m

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THE DETAILS WHERE SHE PURCHASED Kentfield Gardens (the flats of Kentfield) WHAT SHE BOUGHT A renovated 1951 three-bedroom home LISTING AGENT Jenn Pfeiffer, Zephyr Real Estate SELLING AGENT Donna Goldman, Alain Pinel Realtors STATS Price per square foot for homes in the neighborhood: $650–$1,000

Opposite page: A sitting area and potting shed anchor the backyard. This page, clockwise from top left: The home’s living room; Jennifer Grellman; the mahogany dining table creates a natural break between the kitchen and family room; a trellis leading to the front entrance; the master suite, with gas fireplace; a view of the deck from the master suite; the family cat.

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RECENT SALES

92 Mt. Tiburon $7,300,000 12 West Shore $3,882,000 233 Jamaica Street $3,750,000 1805 Mar West $2,950,000 460 Bella Vista $2,750,000 109 Cloud View $2,350,000 625 Locust Street $1,927,000 20 Elaine Avenue $1,900,000 99 Rancheria Road $1,725,000 37 Bonnie Banks $1,600,000 207 Julia $1,425,000

rce ng u o s A Re arin Livi for M

Julie Casady 415.246.3200

julie.casady@sir.com

Robert Craig 415.720.1053

robert.craig@sir.com

460 BELLA VISTA, BELVEDERE 460BELLAVISTA.COM

43 ALTA VISTA, SAN ANSELMO CALL FOR DETAILS

Client Resource Guide Our best resources are yours. Receive a complimentary copy of our best contractors, handymen, painters, electricians, landscapers, plumbers, other professional services and our favorite lifestyle choices. Call or order online at CasadyCraig.com.

Superb Estate In Seadrift Spacious and private, this is a rare double lot oceanfront home in Seadrift, Stinson Beach, California. This home offers the finest for a beach lifestyle. • Less than an hour from San Francisco and the Wine Country. • Spectacular residence, situated on two beachfront parcels. • Views throughout this oceanfrontCalBRE# dwelling span01715679 a wide swath of the Pacific blue, Twin Peaks, Land’s End and Marin foothills. • Point Reyes Seashore, Mt. Tamalpais State Park, Marin Headlands and Muir Woods are nearby points of interest. • 5 bedrooms, 4.5 bathrooms • 2 lots

Julie Casady

415.246.3200 CC_MarinMagazine_May15_FINAL.indd 1

266 Seadrift Road Listed for $9,950,000 • www.seadrifthome.com

NANCY BUTLER Robert SARAH Craig

Conveniently Located in Stinson Beach

415.720.1053

3470 Shoreline Highway,

Stinson01258090 Beach, CA 94970 CalBRE#

(415) 868-0717 oceanicrealty.com | DRE #01258888

Specializing in Sales, 4/8/15 2:10 PM Vacation Rentals, and Property Management in Stinson Beach.

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WE MARKET YOUR HOME TO THE WORLD

APR.COM Over 30 Offices Serving The Bay Area Including 6 Offices in Marin County 415.755.1111

The Home in Mill Valley Available for $3,680,000

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//

Alain Pinel Realtors

WE’RE LOCAL RO S S

$8,875,000

128 Winding Way | 6bd/4ba Donna Goldman | 415.509.2427 128WindingWay.com

TIB U RO N

$1,750,000

202 Trestle Glen Terrace | 2bd/2ba H. Carter/C. DeRouen | 415.730.9445 202TrestleGlenTerrace.com

NOVATO

$1,095,000

63 Caribe Isle | 4bd/3ba Jeffrey Brown | 415.637.3172 63CaribeIsle.com

SA N R A FA E L

$3,950,000

76 Bridgegate | 4bd/5ba Tom Verkozen | 415.637.7974 76Bridgegate.com

SA N R A FA E L

$1,710,000

103 Peacock Drive | 3bd/2.5ba Jonathan Marks | 415.307.0505 103Peacock.com

SA N R A FA E L

$825,000

350 Johnstone Drive | 3bd/3ba Lloyd Pittman | 415.246.2983 apr.com/lpittman

M IL L VAL L EY

$3,680,000

155 Circle Avenue | 2 Lots, 4bd/3ba home Jeffrey Brown | 415.637.3172 155Circle.com

M IL L VAL L EY

$1,100,000

44 Miller Avenue | 2bd/2.5ba Jennifer A. Palacio | 415.601.3130 44MillerAve.com

K E N T FIEL D

PR I CE UPON R EQUEST

941 Sir Francis Drake Blvd | 4bd/2ba Lisa Adrian | 415.847.9252 MarinDream.com

A

APR.COM

O 6

Over 30 Offices Serving The Bay Area Including 6 Offices in Marin County 415.755.1111

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e

//

Alain Pinel Realtors

WE’RE GLOBAL MONTAG N O L A , SW I T Z E RL A N D

V E RO B E AC H, FLO R IDA

SA N D HUR ST, SOUTH AF R I CA

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: SOFW $13,870,999

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: DLVB $12,900,000

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: IDKU $3,814,706

PALM S PRI N G S , C A L I F O RN I A

A N DRO S , BA HA M A S

K U IL SR I V ER , S OUTH AF R I CA

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: PATU $3,295,000

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: EIUU $2,500,000

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: DJOZ $826,201

AUC KL A N D , N EW ZE A L A N D

B E LLEV U E HILL, AU ST R A LIA

SI LV ES, PORTUGAL

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: COZU Price Upon Request

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: GYOW Price Upon Request

LuxuryPortfolio.com | WEB ID: NUKC Price Upon Request

APR.COM

Over 30 Offices Serving The Bay Area Including 6 Offices in Marin County 415.755.1111

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EXQUISITE ROSS ESTATE

Originally built in the 1920’s and having recently undergone an exquisite, Architectural Digest-worthy renovation, this Maybeck-influenced 5+ bedroom, 4 bath home, plus guest cottage, retains its original, authentic character. While the house reflects a European sensibility, it also has a distinctly California vibe. Both privacy & serenity emanate throughout the home. From every room, nature makes herself known. Drenched in sunlight and offering stunning views of the Ross Valley, Mt. Tamalpais, and Bald Hill, this truly special home is ideally sited within a private park-like setting. The forever views are reminiscent of a private wine country estate, making it easy to forget the home is just minutes north of the Golden Gate Bridge and in the middle of everywhere—San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Wine Country—or just a stone’s throw from the charming downtown of Ross and the highly acclaimed Ross K-8 School. 128WindingWay.com

DONNA GOLDMAN

415.458.3500 donna@lifestylemarin.com www.lifestylemarin.com

#1 Marin Realtor for Alain Pinel Realtors since 2009, the Go-To Realtor in Marin

Offered at $8,875,000

APR.COM

Square footage, acreage, and other information herein, has been received from one or more of a variety of different sources. Such information has not been verified by Alain Pinel Realtors. If important to buyers, buyers should conduct their own investigation.

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THINK ATTENTIVE & ASTUTE Think Zephyr.

Highly competitive and nuanced, the Bay Area real estate market can be both challenging and rewarding. Zephyr turns local clients into successful home sellers, buyers and investors.

350 Bon Air Center #100 Greenbrae, CA 94904 • 415.496.2600 • ZephyrRE.com

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WE ARE PLEASED TO WELCOME JJ DAVIS TO OUR EXPANDING ZEPHYR MARIN TEAM! JJ has chosen Zephyr Real Estate based on their innovative technology, superior marketing and team culture. JJ's drive and enthusiasm has earned him the distinction of Top Producer in Marin County since 2009. He is excited to bring that same determination and passion to our Greenbrae office.

120 Coleman Drive, San Rafael

201 Center Avenue, San Rafael

Remodeled 5 bedroom / 3.5 bath gated property located in a park-like setting

Purchased at $787,000 and in just 2 years, with strategic planning and fine detail, this home sold off market for $2,000,000 +

Offered at: $1,399,999

...AND COMING SOON 71 Convent Court, San Rafael A meticulously updated 3 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom home, on over 1/2 an acre of usable flat lot space in gorgeous Dominican - Price Upon Request

"Relentless and resilient, I will execute your real estate plan one step at a time."

JJ Davis, REALTORÂŽ Top Producer, CRS and EcoBroker 415.246.7622 jj@zephyrmarin.com www.jjdavisrealestate.com LIC #01483381

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Mill Valley Gem 172 Florence Avenue Remodeled 3BR 2BA energy efficient home with soaring ceilings, bamboo floors, stainless steel appliances, spacious master suite & detached studio.

Rick Stern, Broker 415.515.3126 rickstern@pacbell.net www.RickSellsMarin.com Lic# 00798694

“Helping Buyers and Sellers for Over 30 Years”

$2.2

38

#1

50+

6

BILLION IN ANNUAL SALES

YEARS IN THE SF BAY AREA

BRAND IN SF & FASTEST GROWING IN MARIN

CHARITIES SUPPORTED

OFFICES

Member of GREENBRAE 350 Bon Air Center #100 415.496.2600

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Bradley Real Estate is Proud to Present Our 2015 Top Producers COMPANYWIDE

Top Producer

Eric Gelman

San Anselmo Office

(415) 686-1855

COMPANYWIDE

Top Producer/ Runner-up The Donlan Team

San Rafael Office Fran Donlan: (415) 721-1194 Bob Donlan: (415) 717-1096

Hall of Fame Award Andy Falk

(415) 250-8025

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Bradley Real Estate is Proud to Present Our 2015 Top Producers

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

KENTFIELD OFFICE

SANTA ROSA OFFICE

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

PETALUMA OFFICE

NOVATO OFFICE

PAT SKIPPER (415) 823-3099

MEAGHAN CREEDON (707) 280-4772

GAIL & LEVI SWIFT (415) 847-4775

KRISTIE MARTINELLI (415) 412-4720

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

MILL VALLEY OFFICE

MICHELE AFFRONTE (415) 798-0236

TOP PRODUCER NAPA OFFICE

MELANIE MUTERS (707) 688-6003

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TIBURON OFFICE

AUDREY SHIMKAS (415) 847-8331

FAIRFAX OFFICE

SUSAN SWAN (415) 297-4085

TOP PRODUCER

TOP PRODUCER

MULTI-FAMILY & UNITS DIVISION

COMMERCIAL DIVISION

STEVEN LEVEL (415) 747-2150

NAPA OFFICE

MIKE MUTERS (707) 695-9964

BILL HART 519-1113

(415)

2/4/16 3:44 PM


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MARIN

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|

SAN FRANCISCO

|

PENINSULA

|

EAST BAY

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2/8/16 9:55 AM


Gorgeous Custom Home on Sunny, Private Knoll-Top

289 Redwood Road, San Anselmo | Offered at $2,450,000 | www.289RedwoodRoad.com

Built with thoughtful attention to form, function and flow in 2000 on a beautiful, approximately one-acre, knolltop setting. A spacious, impressively built home, offering superb indoor-outdoor flow and the ideal balance of grand-scale living with intimate spaces. Level lawn and gardens off the living areas. Sweeping, peaceful views south across the Ross Valley. The entry is on the main floor, along with the office/library, kitchen, dining room,

Sharon Faccinto

living room and more. Above, a sumptuous master suite with romantic balcony & luxurious bath. Below, three

McGuire Partner™

additional bedrooms, an inviting family room, laundry room, ample storage, and access to the workshop or

415.272.3799

craft studio. Gorgeous details such as Loewen windows, custom cabinetry and bookcases, hardwood floors,

sfaccinto@mcguire.com

truly a delight. San Anselmo’s award-winning schools easily accessible. Hiking trails right out the door!

WINE COUNTRY

|

GLOBAL

|

MCGUIRE.COM INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATE

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LEADERS BY DESIGN “I first looked for a word with power, strength, or wisdom, but ‘deeply caring for our best interests’ is a common testimonial I’ve received time and time again for more than a decade. And, honestly… that’s what fuels me. Add to that a deep commitment to achieving my clients’ goals in an ethical, astute and compelling manner, and you begin to get a sense of how I work.“

David Doyle 415.215.3169 ddoyle@vanguardmarin.com BRE# 01397556

caring

“Finding the right home is like speed dating. Finding the perfect home is like magic. I worked for many years as a postpartum doula, and have spent countless hours in my clients’ homes, so I understand how family needs can change. Schools, play areas, proximity to shopping, even floor plans… I get it! It’s my job to bring you housing solutions that work for your evolving family!“

Emily Schaffer 415.302.6450 emily@vanguardmarin.com BRE# 01863623

family

“The wise adapt themselves to circumstances”, Chinese Proverb. Change occurs for all of us at different stages and times of our lives. Whatever the change is for you, it will require a plan… and support. That’s where I come in. Having lived and worked throughout our diverse and beautiful Bay Area, I understand what it is like to adapt to new and ever-changing environments. Let me adapt to your change.“

F

Lisa Gartman 415.234.7997 lisa@vanguardmarin.com BRE# 01922624

adaptable

770 Tamalpais Drive, Suite 306, Corte Madera, CA | T: 415.758.6800 Coming Soon to 1118 Magnolia Avenue, Ross Valley www.vanguardproperties.com

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LEADERS BY DESIGN

AN AWARD-WINNING TEAM The Costa Group delivers experience and hands-on availability to elevate your life and bring you home.

Your Home Awaits With over 30 years of combined experience, The Costa Group is a top-producing Real Estate team ranked in the Top 1% of San Francisco area Realtors. From Mission Bay to Richardson Bay, experience our extraordinary service, involvement and concern for you and your lifestyle.

Franck Costa & Sara Werner Costa SAN FRANCISCO & MARIN REAL ESTATE

415.730.2604

www.thecostagroup.com info@thecostagroup.com BRE# 01853603 | BRE# 01772972

770 Tamalpais Drive, Suite 306, Corte Madera, CA | T: 415.758.6800 1801 Fillmore Street, San Francisco, CA | T: 415.563.5900 www.vanguardproperties.com

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LEADERS BY DESIGN

Would you let these two represent you in a Real Estate Transaction?

Great News...We’ve grown up! And here’s what we can do for you: §

PROFESSIONAL ADVICE - EXPERT NEGOTIATION 26 combined years experience and a comprehensive assessment

§

DILIGENT PREPARATION - CLEAR COMMUNICATION We work with you to prepare your home and have a team of experts

§

PROFESSIONAL MARKETING - TARGET AUDIENCE We use professional photographers and have an in-house Marketing team.

When your sales price matters. Call us today for a confidential consultation.

Kevin Kearney 415.297.3874

Stacy Hart 415.244.8785

BRE #01355515

BRE #01362692

kevin@vanguardproperties.com

stacy@vanguardproperties.com

www.KearneyHartGroup.com

The

KearneyHart

Group

770 Tamalpais Drive, Suite 306, Corte Madera, CA | T: 415.758.6800 Coming Soon to 1118 Magnolia Avenue, Ross Valley www.vanguardproperties.com

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LEADERS BY DESIGN

Distinguishing details...

43 Prospec t Avenue, Sausalito Exclusively marketed by

THE BOWMAN GROUP

n.

B U I L D I N G R E L AT I O N S H I P S

Elliott B. Fink

Jennifer Bowman

Susan Bowman

Kevin B. Brown

BRE# 01960863

BRE# 01933147

BRE# 00905409

BRE# 01979009

rt

up

Marketing Fun

Negotiation

Design

Project Management Perfection

Detail

770 Tamalpais Drive, Suite 306, Corte Madera, CA | T: 415.758.6800 www.TheBowmanGroupMarin.com www.vanguardproperties.com

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I needed a change of scenery.

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53 RIDGE ROAD FA I R FA X

Fall in love with this eco-essence, modern stucco home nestled in the Fairfax hills with awe inspiring views of Mount Tamalpais. Offered at $1,799,000 www.53RidgeRoad.com

• 3 Bedrooms / 3 Baths

• Designed by Wagstaff+Rogers Architects

• Open Kitchen and Dining Room

• Terraced Sitting Gardens

• High Ceilings, Reading Nooks

• Greenhouse Workshop, Koi Pond

• Expansive 4+/- Acre Property

300 DRAKES LANDING RD., SUITE 120 GREENBRAE, CA 94904 PARAGON-RE.COM 415.805.2900

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Paragon Real Estate Group is pleased to announce

Matt Hughes has joined our office as Assistant Manager

Matt Hughes

Real Estate Agent 415.515.2804 mhughes@paragon-re.com LIC# 01761944

PARAGON-RE.COM

MARIN

3 0 0 D R A K E S L A N D I N G R D . S T. 1 2 0

GREENBRAE

415.805.2900

PA R A G O N - R E . C O M

Beautiful new ocean front villa in Puerto Vallarta. Private beach, 6 bedrooms, 6 1/2 baths with gym, elevator and double garage. 7962 square feet and completely furnished. Gated community with 24 hours security. Only 5 miles from downtown. Offered at $2,995,000. Contact (415) 789-5906

134 M A R C H 2 0 1 6 M A R I N

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166 ELINOR AVENUE M A G N I F I C E N T

M A R I N

5 BED | 5.5 BATH | INQUIRE FOR PRICE

E S T A T E

1 6 6 E L I N O R . CO M

The historic Sherman Estate is an indoor-outdoor country home offering magnificent panoramic views of downtown San Francisco, SF Bay and Bay B r i d g e . Po s i t i o n e d p e r f e c t l y i n a s u n - s o a ke d p a rt o f M i l l Va l l e y o n a l a rg e l y level lot, the property is exclusive and tranquil, while still close to shops, restaurants and schools. Historic oak and dogwood trees, expansive gardens, a sparkling 60’ x 12’ pool and play areas offer relaxation and fun. ALEXANDER FROMM LURIE

DAVIS PEMSTEIN

CalBRE#: 01952347

CalBRE#: 01920807

Luxury Estate Specialist 415.696.0288 alexander@teamlurie.com teamlurie.com

CLIMB_0316_FNL.indd 1

Senior Sales Associate 415.735.8301 d a v i s @ c l i m b S F. c o m c l i m b S F. c o m

2/1/16 11:12 AM


COLDWELL BANKER SELLS MORE HOMES IN MARIN COUNTY COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE | 17.7% DECKER BULLOCK SOTHEBY’S | 15.9% PACIFIC UNION | 13.2%

BRADLEY REAL ESTATE | 12.7%

ALAIN PINEL REALTORS | 7.2%

ZEPHYR REAL ESTATE | 2.4% MARIN MODERN REAL ESTATE | 2.3%

RE/MAX GOLD | 1.4%

The numbers speak for themselves. If you are considering selling or buying a new home, experience the power of the #1 real estate brand today. Make Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage your first call.

VISIT COLDWELLBANKERPREVIEWS.COM | COLDWELLBANKERHOMES.COM GREENBRAE | LARKSPUR | MILL VALLEY | NOVATO SAN ANSELMO | SAN RAFAEL | TIBURON

Based on information from Bay Area Real Estate Information Services, Inc. for the time period 1/1/15 through 12/31/15. Due to MLS reporting methods and allowable reporting policy, this data is only informational and may not be completely accurate. Therefore, Coldwell Banker does not guarantee the data accuracy. Data maintained by the MLSs may not reflect all real estate activity in the market. Owned by NRT LLC. ©2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker® is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Office is Owned by a Subsidiary of NRT LLC. Real Estate Agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are Independent Contractor Sales Associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage or NRT LLC. CalBRE License #01908304.

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Lauren Hamblet 415.233.1659 laurenhamblet.com CalBRE #01324847

Magnificent Healdsburg Estate

1245 BRACK ROAD, HEALDSBURG Offered at $5,495,000 Located just minutes from Healdsburg Plaza on a private 7-acre setting, this Dry Creek Valley vineyard estate features a custom-designed approximately 3,000 square foot wine cave, a semi-Olympic sized pool, cabana with a fireplace, an outdoor kitchen and a tennis court. The stylish main house boasts custom high-end finishes and a chef’s dream kitchen. The property includes a separate guest cottage with expansive views of the vineyard. The vineyard consists of approximately 5 acres of ultra-premium grapes. Enjoy your wine from the gazebo while gazing at your olive groves and the views of Mt St Helena beyond. ©2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker®, Previews® and Previews International® are registered trademarks licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned by a Subsidiary of NRT LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage or NRT LLC. CalBRE License #01908304.

ColdwellBankerHomes.com

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LOVE WHERE YOU LIVE

SM

2/9/16 4:32 PM


Katie Jarman, Realtor® 415.720.9413 katie@katiejarmanre.com CalBRE #01940656

Wine Country Farmhouse in Kentfield

17 HOTALING CT, KENTFIELD Price Upon Request

Located on a highly desirable cul-de-sac in the flats of Kentfield, this one-of-a-kind property has the look and feel of a wine country farmhouse. Totally-remodeled and expanded in 2005 by architect Ken Lindsteadt & Associates, the floorplan includes 4 bedrooms/4.5 baths, a private office/study, wine cellar, pool and lush landscaping. Private, tranquil setting. Ross Schools. ©2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker®, Previews® and Previews International® are registered trademarks licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned by a Subsidiary of NRT LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage or NRT LLC. CalBRE License #01908304.

Linda Kjaempe (kempa)

415.298.4444 | lkjaempe@cbnorcal.com LindaKjaempeCoastalProperties.com CalBRE #01914212

Specializing in Marin Luxury Homes, International Real Estate, Local and Worldwide Relocation Services Candy Grippi, International Broker

Cristina Hale, Realtor®

415.250.9154 cgrippi@cbnorcal.com CalBRE #00685646

LOVE WHERE YOU LIVE

415.302.6722 cristina.hale@cbnorcal.com CalBRE #01959530 SM

“Linda diligently searched for homes for us and was a tremendous help with recommending locations that were best suited for our needs. I don’t know what we would have done without her help.” - Max and Patty B. ”Linda truly cares and dedicates herself completely to each one of her clients’ needs.” - John and Valerie C.

ColdwellBankerHomes.com

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My thanks to my family, friends, clients, assistant, and fellow agents for your trust and support. You helped make 2015 my best year ever! I couldn’t do it without you!

Lindy Emrich 415.717.4005

lindy@sothebysrealty.com

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Team in T ra #1

in Volum am e Te

ions • # act 2 ns

#1 Team in Transactions Company Wide #2 Team in Volume Company Wide

2015

Thank You for Making Us #1

Jennifer Falla Firkins

Alva Falla

415.602.5768

415.518.1930

jennifer.firkins@sir.com

alva.falla@sir.com

Janice Guehring 415.717.9636

janice.guehring@sir.com

Falla Associates Providing extraordinary luxury service at all price points. Please give us a call if you are thinking of buying or selling.

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SAN RAFAEL

400 Upper Road, San Rafael Majestic private retreat on top of a ridge. Offers stunning 300 degree views. Large living and dining area, hardwood floors, enormous kitchen, stone fireplace, and private road. 400UpperRoad.com

John Zeiter

415.720.1515

John.Zeiter@sothebysrealty.com

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284 Seadrift Road, Stinson Beach Mid–Century Modern Oceanfront. Famed American Architect William Wurster designed this home specifically for the beachfront location to accommodate sunlight in every season and views from every room. Dramatic vistas south across Bolinas Bay to San Francisco and north to the Coastal Range rising above the Bolinas Lagoon. Wurster’s elegant 4 bedroom, 3 bath home brings the beauty of both the mountains and the sea into the house, celebrating nature. An open layout draws you into the sunlight filled great room, designed for entertaining the whole family, while the private inner courtyard is the perfect escape from the afternoon wind. This property, the undeveloped parcels on each side of the house and the three undeveloped lagoon parcels across the street are being sold Offered at $6,650,000

separately. A truly once in a lifetime opportunity.

The Sherfey Group 3605 Shoreline Highway, Stinson Beach, California Cell | 415.531.8850 Office | 415.868.9200 SherfeyGroup@deckerbullocksir.com

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A Once in a Lifetime Opportunity

Point Reyes Station, Marin County CA | 701CstPointReyes.com

Offered for sale the last three remaining parcels of the historic Waldo Giacomini Ranch. The properties border downtown Point Reyes Station, the National Park, and the Giacomini Wetlands. Spectacular views of the wetlands, Black Mountain and the Inverness Ridge! The Waldo Giacomini Ranch House — Built in 1950 this spacious one level four bedroom/two bath with an indoor pool and large entertainment area sits on a 1.35-acre level lot that borders the National Park on three sides. Enjoy beautiful views of the wetlands and the Inverness Ridge. Bike, hike the surrounding trails; enjoy a short walk to downtown Point Reyes Station with its well known restaurants, galleries and shops. Offered at $1,995,000 C St. Land— 3.55 level acres. Opportunity to build your dream home, offering scenic views of the wetlands, Inverness Ridge, Point Reyes Station, and Black Mountain. Offered for $ 1,500,000 6th St. Lot — .091-acre level lot at the corner of C St. and B St. Opportunity to build your dream home, offering scenic views of the wetlands, Inverness Ridge, Point Reyes Station, and Black Mountain. Offered at $850,000

Zoning for all properties C-R-A (Coastal Residential Ag.) B-2.

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Rick Trono 415.515.1117

rick.trono@sothebysrealty.com LivingMarin.com

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Kentfield Modern elegant Santa Barbara style on west-facing parcel in coveted flats of Kentfield’s Del Mesa. Built new in 2003 by Kelly Pacific: grand scale, views of Mt. Tam. Expansive kitchen-great room opens to large patios, salt water pool, sweeping level lawn, built-in BBQ, & outdoor fireplace. Ross School District. onehotaling.com

$5,495,000

Ross Classic East Coast style residence beautifully updated with designer finishes. Gracious gated entry to private, southwest facing enclave; stunning views of Mt. Baldy. Outstanding kitchen with Calacatta Marble counters. Ideal indooroutdoor flow to bluestone patio, lawns, gardens, & fun play areas.

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$3,400,000

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Top 1% Agent in Marin 415.806.3176

stephanie@stephanielamarre.com stephanielamarre.com

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JUST LISTED

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1/2 BA

$2,995,000

San Rafael

136Margarita.com

Casual California Living At Its Finest! Enter through the gates, to this beautifully remodeled private estate in the highly desired Country Club of San Rafael. Entertain in a grand scale or host intimate family gatherings all year round with this fabulous indoor/outdoor home featuring: a great room, multiple Ipe decks, backyard and pool on over one acre on park-like surroundings. With four bedrooms, each with an ensuite bathroom, the home is perfectly situated facing south for plenty of sunshine and views of Mt. Tamalpais and the San Francisco Bay. A five car garage is perfect for a car aficionado or part could be converted to a media room?

To See How I Can Help You, Please Visit My Website at ChristineChristiansen.com

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Christine Christiansen, MBA

415.259.7133

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christine@sothebysrealty.com christinechristiansen.com

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San Rafael

$1,695,000

129RossValley.com

Ross Valley Serenity Get away from it all and take a deep breath when you enter this sophisticated home. Located on the border of San Anselmo and San Rafael this property is minutes away from downtown San Anselmo location with restaurants and shops, centrally located in the heart of Marin in a charming neighborhood with a feeling of yesteryear. The home was rebuilt in 2007 by the previous owner and has all the modern amenities that make this home beautifully functional and tranquil.

• Open concept floor plan • Chef’s Kitchen • Convenient close to downtown San Anselmo • Great for San Francisco commute, two blocks to transportation

Just Sold

364 Riviera Drive San Rafael Represented Buyer $1,750,000, Off Market

830 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. #12 Kentfield Represented Seller $640,000, multiple offers

317 Oakdale Avenue Corte Madera Represented Buyer $1,100,000, multiple offers

Christine Christiansen, MBA For Every Home We Sell We Help Build A Home For A Family In Need

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415.259.7133

christine@sothebysrealty.com christinechristiansen.com

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$5,000,000

79StThomas.com

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Site of the “Blue Jasmine” movie filming, this stunning, approximately 5,600 sf, one-level bayfront does truly offer movieland’s version of the perfect

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large waterfront master suite with huge closet and dressing area, and beautiful limestone his-&-her baths with center shower. Bayside guest suite

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waterfront retreat. Palatial great room, high beamed-ceiling, gorgeous kitchen with huge granite-topped center isle and cozy family/eating area, and with separate entrance and two additional bayfront bedrooms, all with the vast expanse of the San Francisco Bay. Recent landscape design with

fenced lawn and the enormous water-side terrace, adjoining the entire length of the residence. Beautifully executed designer upgrades, two-car garage with additional storage and end of cul-de-sac location. Four bedrooms, four full and two half baths.

Max Applegarth 415.298.7600

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Lydia Sarkissian 415.517.7720

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Bill Bullock 415.384.4000

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$2,995,000

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From the Sausalito waterfront through the San Francisco financial district, and nothing but islands and bay waters in between, the incomparable penthouse-

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never expected, to find in Sausalito. The great room with large wrap-around windows and their remote-controlled awnings, the kitchen with travertine

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11Edwards.com

like views create the feeling of floating over the Bay. Chic, contemporary, sophisticated and luxurious, this hillside residence embodies all that you hoped, but countertops, Viking and Bosch appliances, and the upper-level, spa-like master suite with view-side terrace, fireplace, huge walk-through closet and dressing

area, and the ever-present bay and San Francisco views. Lower-level guest suite with separate entrance and wine cellar. In southernmost Sausalito, only minutes’ walk to the Sausalito waterfront and minutes’ drive to the Golden Gate Bridge. Pied-à-terre, vacation retreat or main residence, this property offers it all. Three bedrooms, three and one-half baths, and once-in-a-lifetime, unsurpassed, world-class views.

Bill Bullock 415.384.4000

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Lydia Sarkissian 415.517.7720

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Belvedere

$5,800,000

130SanRafael.com

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Brand new-construction, this striking contemporary with the unusual feature of offering beautiful views of both Mt. Tam and the Bay, and the

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design and finishes, and extraordinary view-orientation in opposite directions. Entry level with the great room (pictured) that features the kitchen,

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beautiful and rare “long view” straight down the Belvedere Lagoon, offers the perfect opportunity for first-time occupancy, stunning contemporary family and dining rooms, the lagoon-side decks with cascading water feature, the lavish master suite and en-suite guest bedroom. The sleek new kitchen includes the Wolf and Sub-Zero appliances, center island, beautiful stone countertops and mud room to the two-car garage. Upper level with two bedrooms, shared bath and “green” rooftop gardens. Integrated audio, electronic shades, Lutron lighting and hardwood and concrete flooring. Four bedrooms, three and one-half baths and gorgeous Lagoon frontage and views.

Bill Bullock 415.384.4000

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GLOBALESTATES.COM

Lydia Sarkissian 415.517.7720

2/8/16 11:13 AM

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$5,495,000

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level lawn area and the fountain-like sound of the winter creek in the canyon below. The entry level to this stunning contemporary features the great room

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Beach and beyond, through the back gate. Sunny, sparkling pool, folding panel doors that open entire rooms to the view-side wrap-around terrace, huge

with living and dining areas, gourmet kitchen with adjacent family room, and three bedrooms and two and one-half baths. On its separate level, upstairs, is the master suite with large dressing area and closet, lavish bath with separate stall shower and tub, and view-side balcony overlooking the pool and those vast, serene woodlands. National-park seclusion and beauty, yet only minutes to Woodlands market, Branson, Bacich and Redwood schools. Four bedrooms, three and one-half baths, two-car garage, and the close-in park-like beauty you’ve always wanted, but never found – until now.

Bill Bullock 415.384.4000

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GLOBALESTATES.COM

Lydia Sarkissian 415.517.7720

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Two Opportunities Not to be Missed

14 Edgehill Way, San Rafael | Offered at $1,549,000 This stunning four bedroom and four bath home is situated in a stately, private, gated enclave named San Rafael Heights. Boasting fine custom homes and located in a lovely cul-de-sac, the property backs up to open space and offers beautiful views from most windows. Soaring ceilings, hardwood floors, exceptional cook’s kitchen with an enormous island and a large back yard add to its appeal. Close proximity to shopping, hiking and biking trails and Highway 101.

Jus vie for roo

113 Robinhood Drive, San Rafael | Offered at $1,225,000 This recently remodeled four bedroom and three bath jewel in the heart of Glenwood is the perfect combination of location, curb appeal, and stylish upgrades. The home has a flexible floor plan that is light-filled and welcoming. The backyard is level with a sunny patio, garden, fruit trees, and a terraced area and deck. Close to Victor Jones park, schools, hiking, biking, golf, shopping and yacht clubs.

Your Team at Fine Living Marin

27 Ross Common, Suite 2A, Ross, CA 94957 | www.FineLivingMarin.com

Marilyn Rich

Whitney Rich

License #01156159

License #01211911

415.461.8608

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415.380.2116

2/5/16 1:18 PM

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Just Listed! 4625 Paradise Drive, Tiburon. This incredible 4 bedroom, 2 bath Tiburon home has breathtaking water, mountain and cove views. Tucked away from the wind on a gorgeous, 1+ acre lot with fragrant plum and lemon trees, a tranquil creek and numerous vistas for relaxing and enjoying your enchanting surroundings. This special home exudes warmth as-is or could easily be expanded to make room for a larger family. Listed at $2,895,000 | www.4625ParadiseDr.com

Just Listed! 4 Saba Lane, Tiburon. This charming property is right on the water in desirable Paradise Cay; a flat, family friendly neighborhood in the award winning Reed School District. 4 Saba Lane exudes original charm. Classic 3 BR/2BA with great potential. Excellent yard space and prime, end of canal location with shared deep-water boat dock. Listed at $1,795,000 | www.4SabaLane.com

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For Sale! 572 San Pedro Cove, San Rafael. This is a rare opportunity to live in a gated community on the water, in a low maintenance property. Just minutes away from the newly remodeled Andy’s Market, China Camp, McNear’s Beach, Peacock Gold Club, Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Loch Lomond Marina, the freeway, vibrant downtown San Rafael and tons of hiking trails. The views are unbeatable. Listed at $2,150,000 |www.572SanPedroCove.com

Penny Wright-Mulligan

415.601.8191

penny@pacunion.com pennywright-mulligan.com License #01495932

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Radhi Ahern Luxury Property Specialist

Scott Kalmbach Luxury Property Specialist

Contact 415.531.2981 Radhi@ahern-kalmbach.com License #01411471

Contact 415.350.7911 Scott@ahern-kalmbach.com License #01795204

2/5/16 1:18 PM


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Looking Back

CIRCA 1950s

Lasting Landmark

I

T STA RTED IN the 15th century as an Indian trading

village named Olompali, a composite of Miwok words meaning “southern,” “village” and “people.” Then in 1834, a Miwok named Camilo Ynitia was awarded a land grant, and he built an adobe home on the property. But during the Civil War, when Ynitia’s grant was questioned, he sold the property to James Black, who willed it to his daughter Mary and her husband, Galen Burdell, San Francisco’s first dentist. Come the early 1900s, the Burdells’ son James built the 22-room mansion depicted in the above 1950s-era photo. The word “depicted” applies because in the years that followed, someone — no one is sure who, or why — encased the handsome wooden mansion in

plaster. And there it mostly sat. Then one day in 1967, a bearded houseboat developer turned hippie named Don McCoy leased the property, turned it into a commune and moved in a group who named themselves “the Chosen Family”; it soon became known as “the White House of Hippiedom.” Periodic tenants included Janis Joplin, Grace Slick, the Grateful Dead and a five-year-old girl named Courtney Michelle Harrison, now known as the rock star Courtney Love. But sometime after midnight on February 2, 1969, a devastating electrical fire ruined all the fun. No one was hurt (reportedly, the tenants were at a rock concert), yet all was lost — all, that is, except the plastered exterior. It still stands, located in what is now called Olompali State Historic Park. m

COURTESY OF NOVATO HISTORY MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES

From Miwoks to Burdells to “the Chosen Family,” a microcosm of Marin history. BY JIM WOOD

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ACCEPT NOTHING LESS THAN AN ICONIC ADDRESS On the corner of Webster and Sacramento streets. In the heart of Pacific Heights. Seventy-six superlative, jewel box residences. Offering a breathtaking array of luxurious services and amenities. Visit thepacificheights.com for a first look. Register Today for Priority Selection

2121 WEBSTER STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94115 415 928 2121 THEPACIFICHEIGHTS.COM Trumark Urban and The Pacific reserve the right to make modifications in plans, exterior designs, prices, materials, specifications, finishes, and standard features at any time without notice. Photographs, renderings, and landscaping are illustrative and conceptual. Real estate consulting, sales and marketing by Polaris Pacific. A licensed California, Arizona, Colorado, Oregon and Washington Broker— CA BRE #01499250. Š2016 The Pacific. Brokers must accompany their client(s) and register them on their first appointment in order to be eligible for a broker commission.

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March

Printed at: 100.02/3/16 % 1:00 PM


OSKA 153 Throckmorton Mill Valley, CA 94941 415 381 1144 OSKA 310 Center Street Healdsburg, CA 95448 707 431 7717 Shop online millvalley.oska.com

Beverly Hills / Chicago / Edina / Healdsburg / Mill Valley / New York / Pasadena / Seattle / Calgary / Vancouver London / Paris / Munich / Amsterdam / Stockholm

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