Nbb1714

Page 1

SERVING SONOMA & NAPA COUNTIES | APRIL 5-11, 2017 | BOHEMIAN.COM • VOL. 38.48

THE LOPEZ CASE P6 STEAM POWER P21 POT TRENDS P30


Bohemian

2

847 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, CA 95404 Phone: 707.527.1200 Fax: 707.527.1288

SALE

NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

10–30% OFF #NoDapl

Editor Stett Holbrook, ext. 202

News Editor Tom Gogola, ext. 106

Arts Editor Charlie Swanson, ext. 203

Copy Editor

Welcome to

Bella Nails Spa! Best Nail Services in Napa New! Deep iN powDer

Lasts longer than Gel color, lighter than Acrylic. No damage to nail bed. Looks and feels natural. No liquid or UV light needed.

851 Highway 116 South Sebastopol

707.829.8544

Specials: Seniors & Teen/Prom Discount

Walk-ins Welcome

707.255.1175

2032 Redwood Road, Napa

Mon–Sat 9–6, Sun 10–6 nativeridersarts.com

Mon–Fri 9am–7pm | Sat 9am–6pm Sun 10am–5pm | bellanailspa.wixsite.com

Gary Brandt, ext. 150

Contributors Rob Brezsny, Michael Hayes, Nelson “Buzz” Kellogg, James Knight, David Templeton, Tom Tomorrow

Intern Amelia Malpas

Design Director Kara Brown

Art Director Tabi Zarrinnaal

Production Operations Manager Sean George

Senior Designer Jackie Mujica, ext. 213

Layout Artist Gary Brandt

Advertising Director Lisa Marie Santos, ext. 205

America’s Premier Jewelry & Bead Shows

GEM FAIRE

Best French Restaurant SONOMA COUNTY

Merci

Advertising Account Managers Augusto León, ext. 212 Mercedes Murolo, ext. 207 Lynda Rael, ext. 204

Sales Operations Manager Deborah Bonar, ext. 215

Publisher Rosemary Olson, ext. 201

CEO/Executive Editor 620 Fifth Street, Santa Rosa 707.546.2929 | www.bistro29.com

APRIL 28, 29, 30 SANTA ROSA

Sonoma County Fairgrounds { 1350 Bennett Valley Rd., Santa Rosa, CA }

SHOW HOURS:

FRI 12pm-6pm | SAT 10am-6pm | SUN 10am-5pm

*Bring this ad to receive ONE

EE FR dmission a

***** Admission $7

Now serving lunch 11:30-2pm Tues-Fri

Swimwear boutique Petite to Full SizeS RAILROAD SQUARE 205 5th Street Santa Rosa

JEWELRY ² CRYSTALS

Jewelry GEMS ²Repair BEADS ² SILVER Largest Selection MINERALS ² FOSSILS New Vendors!

Jewelry Repair | Largest Selection | New Vendors!

*Not valid with other offer. ONE per person. Property of Gem Faire, Inc, can be revoked without notice. Non-transferrable.

Sponsored by GEM FAIRE, INC | (503) 252-8300 | GEMFAIRE.COM

707.595.1458 sunkissedbysunsations.com

Dan Pulcrano NORTH BAY BOHEMIAN [ISSN 1532-0154] (incorporating the Sonoma County Independent) is published weekly, on Wednesdays, by Metrosa Inc., located at: 847 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, CA 95404. Phone: 707.527.1200; fax: 707.527.1288; e-mail: editor@bohemian.com. It is a legally adjudicated publication of the county of Sonoma by Superior Court of California decree No. 119483. Member: Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, National Newspaper Association, California Newspaper Publishers Association, Verified Audit Circulation. Subscriptions (per year): Sonoma County $75; out-of-county $90. Thirdclass postage paid at Santa Rosa, CA. FREE DISTRIBUTION: The BOHEMIAN is available free of charge at numerous locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies may be purchased for one dollar, payable in advance at The BOHEMIAN’s office. The BOHEMIAN may be distributed only by its authorized distributors. No person may, without permission of the publisher, take more than one copy of each issue.The BOHEMIAN is printed on 40 % recycled paper.

Published by Metrosa, Inc., an affiliate of Metro Newspapers ©2017 Metrosa Inc.

Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal.


ANIMAL HEALING ARTS

Integrative Wellness Care Over 18 years experience

Dr. Lisa Pesch • Dr. Ilsi Medearis 5430 Commerce Blvd., Suite 1K, Rohnert Park AnimalHealingArts.net • 707.584.PETS (7387) ONE FOR THE ROAD

nb Armando García-Dávila takes readers back to 1968 in ‘The Trip.’ p15

‘It’s a chance to meet these authors that are really inspiring characters.’ DI N I NG P 13

Easter at the Bay View Sunday, April 16, 2017

Served 10:30am - 7:00pm • Complimentary Mimosa Cocktail First Course

Ahi Poke ~ $16 00 • Parma Prosciutto and Melon ~ $1500 Pear, Leek and Dolcelatte Tart ~ $14 00 • Asparagus Bisque ~ $10 00 Mixed Green Salad ~ $10 00 • Traditional Caesar Salad ~ $1200

MAin CourSe

Quiche ~ $16 00 • Bay View Benedict ~ $18 00 • Crab Cake Benedict ~ $26 00 Steak & eggs ~ $24 00 • Angel Hair Prawns “Scampi Style” ~ $26 00 • Grilled Salmon ~ $28 00 Herbed Brick Chicken ~ $24 00 • Grilled Filet Mignon ~ $38 00 Grilled Lamb Chops ~ $38 00

DeSSerT

Traditional Cheesecake ~ $8 00 • Fresh Strawberry Pie ~ $8 00 • Almond rum Cake ~ $8 00 Sicilian Cannoli ~ $8 00 • Coppa Gelato ~ $8 00

The Bay View Restaurant & Lounge at The Inn at the Tides 800 Highway One, Bodega Bay 800.541.7788 ~ www.InnattheTides.com

Sycip at 25

Craft Beer!

SP OT LIGHT P 9

• Full Bar

‘The Trip’

• Happy Hour Twice Daily

COV ER STORY P15

Simon Staged STAGE P 2 2 Rhapsodies & Rants p4 The Paper p6 Spotlight p9 Dining p13 Swirl p14

Cover Feature p15 Culture Crush p20 Arts & Ideas p21 Stage p22 Music p23

Clubs & Concerts p24 Arts & Events p26 The Nugget p30 Classified p31 Astrology p31

K&L

BISTRO

3pm–6pm & 9:30pm–11pm

• laTe nigHT Bar menu • oysTer Bar • ouTDoor HeaTeD paTio • Dog FrienDly • BruncH 11am–4pm, sat & sun • open Daily 11am–11pm

119 South Ma in Street | SebaStopol, Ca 707.823.6614 | klbiStro.CoM

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Holistic Veterinary Medicine

3


NORTH BAY BOH E MI AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

4

Rhapsodies BOHEMIAN

Yes on C I have lived in Santa Rosa for over 30 years. I value this community for its diversity, livability, music and art. I am voting Yes on C because I want Santa Rosa to continue to be a vibrant community, not an enclave for the rich. Stopping unjust evictions and steep rent increases will not prevent ethical property owners from making a profit, but it will keep students, working families and artists from being kicked out of their homes in the middle of a

housing crisis. Long-term residents are already being forced out of the area by the high cost of housing. Let’s choose to keep Santa Rosa a place where people can create, work, learn and grow. Yes on C!

ALLEGRA WILSON Santa Rosa

Wasteful You ungrateful dreamer (“A Dreamer’s Diary,” March 8). Spend all that money

THIS MODERN WORLD

on that good education, and all you are is an artist. What a waste.

JOE MARTINEZ St. Helena

Water Rights Sonoma County will be facing, in the next few weeks and months, important decisions about groundwater. It is vitally important that the public be given a voice in these determinations involving the composition and voting

By Tom Tomorrow

rights of new agencies regulating groundwater in Sonoma County under California’s new Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA). Over the past 18 months, working groups representing Sonoma County and other public entities have been meeting to consider these questions. These have not been public meetings, and little is known about them. It now appears, however, that the working group for the Santa Rosa Plain groundwater basin has determined that Sonoma County, the Sonoma County Water Agency, five cities including Santa Rosa, Windsor, Rohnert Park, Cotati and Sebastopol, the Sonoma Resources Conversation District and one representative for mutual water companies will be the only voting members on the board of the contemplated agency, even though 80 percent of groundwater users in Sonoma County are rural agricultural or rural residential users. These water users have “overlying rights” to groundwater which can reasonably claim the highest priority of any class of groundwater users under the common law. Overlying rights are enjoyed by virtue of ownership of overlying real property. The fact that the proposed agency posits a nonvoting advisory committee of 18 representatives, two of which are rural, residential well owners and two of which represent agricultural interests, can offer little comfort to holders of overlying rights to groundwater in Sonoma County. Sonoma County and other members of the SGMA working group for the Santa Rosa Plains basin should take steps to inform the public and provide representation to stakeholders commensurate with their legal and equitable rights.

MATT WITTEMAN

Sebastopol

Write to us at letters@bohemian.com.


Rants

5

As the arts face cutbacks, local support is crucial BY LISA MICHAELS

T

he Trump administration has threatened to cut all funding for the National Endowment for the Arts, which will save each American citizen less than 50 cents per year. Nevertheless, some people ask, why should I pay even 50 cents to support some kind of strange art form that I don't really like? Trump thinks art should be supported by private patrons. But that depends on people being generous, and being interested.

I don’t go out to theater or dance as much as I used to, but last year I saw a performance by UPside Dance, a modern dance troupe based in Healdsburg, that knocked my socks off. The dancing was incredible. Not just incredible as in, “Wow, look what the human body can do! And look what a whole bunch of human bodies can do together when they practice a lot!” Incredible in that the dances evoked a whole range of feelings: they were funny, they were touching, they were sad. One was about addiction—an incredible duet between a character and her shadow, which somehow expressed the longing between addicts and the thing they crave. There was a dance about Post-It notes. (The theme and title of the whole show was “Paper.”) A soloist came out with her stack of yellow stickies and began to dance. At first she was mastering her life through these little pieces of paper, but soon the pieces of paper started to master her. They were peeling off and getting lost and she was chasing after them. I recognized myself in this person. I felt silly that I didn't know more about UPside Dance. So I became a subscriber—a patron of the arts, if you will—and I have been following their doings ever since. I hope people will come out to support these artists who are making brave, beautiful, uplifting work, and I hope that we as a community can embrace them and show them, at a time when the arts are facing financial cutbacks, that we will arrive, in person, to show them we see their place in society. They are here to delight us. And that is priceless. Lisa Michaels lives in Healdsburg. Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write openmic@bohemian.com.

9070 Windsor Road Windsor

707 836 1840 MarkShimizuDesign.com

HAPPY HOUR EVERY DAY 4–6PM BEST PLACE TO DINE AFTER 10PM 20 BEER TAPS $ 2 BEER EVERY DAY 4–6 WE DELIVER UNTIL 3AM

707.52NYPIE

7 0 7. 5 2 6 . 9 7 4 3 NEW-YORK-PIE.com 65 Brookwood Ave, Santa Rosa

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Dance Moves


NORTH BAY BOH EMIAN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

6

Paper THE

WATCH THIS SPOT Plans are in the works to build a county park at the site of Andy Lopez’s shooting,

but it’s short of what some residents want.

At What Cost?

Sonoma County commits $3 million to Andy’s Unity Park, but where’s the unity? BY TOM GOGOLA

T

he Sonoma County Board of Supervisors voted last month to spend $3 million on a partial build-out of Andy’s Unity Park in Moorland—even as it has committed up to $2.35 million in legal fees to beat back a federal lawsuit brought by Andy Lopez’s parents. Lopez was killed by a sheriff’s deputy in 2013.

The park and the legal fees are driving a split narrative around the county’s posture in the postLopez Sonoma County political landscape, exacerbated by persistent officer-related lawsuits emerging from the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office. On the one hand, the board of supervisors and Sonoma County Counsel’s Office doggedly continue to pursue a legal strategy, using outside counsel, in a case that may eventually find its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

According to records reviewed by the Bohemian, the county has signed off on three legal services agreements with outside attorneys since November 2013, when the Lopez family sued the county and Sheriff’s Deputy Erick Gelhaus (now a sergeant), charging that the Oct. 22, 2013, shooting ran contrary to the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment provisions around reasonable force in policing. Lopez was shot multiple times and died on the scene.

On the other hand, the board of supervisors clearly wants to be part of the county’s healing process, after the Lopez shooting ruptured public trust in policing in the county’s Latino neighborhoods—and in March approved a $3 million contract for a limited build-out of Andy’s Unity Park on Moorland Avenue, after rejecting a fully tricked-out proposal to build a park that included a skate park, a community garden and a basketball court. The supervisors “agreed to move forward with the minimum level of development, which includes open turf, trees and a memorial area for Lopez,” reported the Press Democrat on March 31. “That excludes a wide range of additional amenities, including a skate spot, basketball court and community garden, which would cost an additional $564,500.” In the meantime, how much has the county spent on the Lopez suit? Citing the ongoing litigation, now in its fourth year, the county counsel’s office couldn’t say. But current legal services contracts with the three law firms it’s hired indicate that the county is willing to spend up to (and perhaps more than) $2.35 million through next June to defeat the suit brought against Sonoma County and Gelhaus. By then, voters will be gearing up for a local election to replace Sheriff Steve Freitas, who recently announced he would retire after his term ends in 2018. Meanwhile, a citizen’s group began a campaign to recall Freitas last month. According to legal services agreements reviewed by the Bohemian, the county currently has a $500,000 contract with the Santa Rosa firm of McNamara, Ney, Beatty, Slattery, Borges & Ambacher, which runs through November. That contract began as a two-week, $25,000 deal signed by the county right after the Lopez shooting. It was extended by three years as of Dec. 1, 2014, to a not-to-exceed $500,000 agreement. Similarly, after an initial June, 2015, $25,000 contract was


continued. “This information, including the aggregate amount spent, is exempt from public disclosure based on attorneyclient communication, attorney work product and pending litigation privileges.” Bruggisser cautions against reading too much into the $2.35 million commitments. “Please note that not-to-exceed amounts in legal services agreements are generally included to denote a ceiling limit. The actual fees and costs expended under these contracts

The park and the legal fees are driving a split narrative around the county’s posture in the post-Lopez landscape.

can be significantly lower.” In a followup email, she said the fees and costs could also be higher than the original contract, and that those fees and costs would be reflected via amendments. Those are subject to approval by the board of supervisors. “Generally, legal service agreements include provisions that limit the term of the agreement and the maximum amount of fees and costs that can be expended under each agreement.” Sonoma County lost its bid to

get the suit dismissed in early 2016. Instead, U.S. District Court judge Phyllis Hamilton ruled that the Fourth Amendment issue over the reasonableness of the shooting was a contestable issue. In its pleadings, the county made the claim that Gelhaus was entitled to qualified immunity in the lawsuit. That claim was denied and the county appealed. The appeal is pending in the Ninth Circuit Court in San Francisco. There’s a hearing in Pasadena in May. Citing a federal gag order, Lopez family attorney Arnoldo Casillas could not comment for this story. According to media reports from the time, his L.A.based law firm, Casillas, Moreno & Associates, won a multimillion-dollar 2012 case that involved a 13-year-old who was shot and killed by a Los Angeles police officer while playing cops and robbers with a toy gun. Lopez was killed while carrying a toy replica of an AK-47. Fifth District Supervisor Lynda Hopkins is new to the board and represents the part of town where Andy’s Unity Park is located. The site is an overgrown field now with a shrine to Lopez. Citing the pending litigation against the county, Hopkins couldn’t comment on the Lopezfamily lawsuit. She said that in the Moorland-Roseland area “there’s a tremendous amount of need to build trust and support the healing process.” Hopkins says that coming in as a new supervisor means she isn’t embroiled in the tragedy. She’d like to see a fully built park. “We don’t want to be left with a half-built park,” she says. “The community will feel the same way as they have for decades.” The push to make even a halffulfilled Andy’s Unity Park a reality is a good first step, says Francisco Saiz, as he notes the decades-long neglect that’s gone on in Moorland-Roseland. “It’s amazing how Sonoma County would allow this sort of division to happen, to allow this sort of infrastructure to be so inferior to the rest of the county,” he says.

DEBRIEFER

Putting His Foot Down Art Brown isn’t taking this Donald Trump disaster lying down. Nope, he’s standing up and putting on his shoes and walking—clear the hell across the country, from Salt Point State Park on the Sonoma coast, all the way to New York City. Brown plans to embark on his latest cross-country walking adventure in mid-April—he’s done this before, he says— and reports that he’s going to do a sort of trial run along the northern Sonoma Coast before lighting out east, and to Sacramento, where he hopes to be by April 30. There he will honor an old friend who died last year. Michael Israel was killed by ISIS in November while he was fighting with the YPG (the People’s Protection Unit) against the ghoulish be-headers of Syria and elsewhere. “It’s a celebration of his life,” says Brown of his proposed journey and departed friend. “I walked with Michael from Peoria to Washington, D.C., in 2007,” he recalls, to attend a big rally that called for the impeachment of George W. Bush. Brown figures the journey will take six months and he plans to walk across the George Washington Bridge in Uptown Manhattan by Oct. 24. “I’m doing this for the people of the world,” says Brown. “I’d be lying through my teeth if I said there wasn’t a sense of adventure in it, but my primary motivation is in bringing awareness and helping people.”—Tom Gogola

7 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH EMI A N.COM

signed with the firm of Robinson & Wood, the county amended that agreement to a do-notexceed limit of $325,000 the following June. That contract expires at the end of May. The county has another $1.5 million contract with Geary, Shea, O’Donnell, Grattan & Mitchell that runs through June 2018. The firm had a previous $1.5 million retainer contract with the county which ran from 2010 through October 2013, and which was extended to the end of June 2015 following the Lopez shooting. In July 2015, the county signed a second $1.5 million contract with the firm (which, in fairness, could include legal work for the county outside the Lopez case). Steven Mitchell, a principal in that firm, committed suicide in June 2016, adding another tragedy to a case filled with them. The contracts are subject to amendments to enhance payments and extend the term of the agreement. And the notto-exceed overall $2.35 million limit does not include reasonable expenses invoiced by the law firms. No trial date has been set. “To this day, I have no idea why Sonoma County is being resistant to settling this,” says Francisco Saiz, a county resident who says he has gone to every supervisors meeting since the Oct. 2013 shooting with a photo of Lopez affixed to his chest. Last week the counsel’s office turned back two Bohemian California Public Records Act requests for Lopez-related legal expenditures to date. “The County understands and appreciates the public’s interest in knowing how much money the County spends for litigation related expenses,” wrote Deputy County Counsel Petra Bruggisser in her reply. The county has disclosed information before, she says, but not until cases are closed and not in active litigation. “However, in order to maintain the integrity of the litigation process in active cases, the county does not disclose the amount of fees and costs spent in pending litigation matters,” she


NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

8

April 7 - 9, 2017

Family friendly - All ages welcome

CLEAN UP YOUR SOUND AND LET THE MUSIC spring to life!

GHOSTBUSTERSSSLIVE! A New Musical Parody

Conceived and composed by

Justin Pyne

Lavish Hi-Fi

a division of Lavish Automation

1044 4th Street, Santa Rosa 707.595.2020 | www.LavishHiFi.com Tues–Fri: 10–6:30pm | Sat: 10–6pm

Your Local Audio Experts CUSTOM ELECTRONIC DESIGN & INSTALATION ASSOCIATION

MEMBER

WHO YOU GONNA CALL!?

Everyday heroes stand up when there's a job to do - even if it's a dirty job! Join Venkman, Egon, Ray and Winston - THE GHOSTBUSTERS in this new, musical parody version of the famous 1984 original film!

52 W. 6th Street, Santa Rosa, CA 95401

2017 BEST NEW RESTAURANT 535 4th Street, Santa Rosa, Ca 95401, (707) 535-0700


9

CITY SCENE This week, we debut a monthly section of profiles on Sonoma and Napa county cities and towns called Spotlight. First up is Santa Rosa. In this photo, downtown Santa Rosa seems far away as children zoom past a mural on Jeju Way between Fourth and Fifth streets.

SPOTLIGHT ON SANTA ROSA

Rory McNamara

SANTA ROsA

NO RTH BAY B O H E MI A N | B O H E MI A N.COM

SPECIAL SECTION: SPOTLIGHT ON


N O RTH BAY B O H E MI A N | B O H E MI A N.COM

Rory McNamara

10

WELL WROUGHT Jeremy Sycip’s renown as a custom-bike builder has grown, along with Santa Rosa’s

SPOTLIGHT ON SANTA ROSA

reputation as a cycling mecca, since he moved his business here in 2000.

Big Wheel

Santa Rosa bike builder Jeremy Sycip marks 25 years BY STETT HOLBROOK

B

ike builder Jeremy Sycip and his wife moved here in 2000 to escape the rising cost of living in San Francisco, not for the city’s bike scene. “Back then, the dotcom thing was getting big and we didn’t want to get pushed out of our shop space and the cheap lease we had,” he says. “We looked at Marin but it was too expensive and eventually found Santa Rosa.” Sycip (pronounced “SEEsip”) was used to driving up to Santa Rosa to have his frames painted, but living there was

an adjustment. “When we first moved to Santa Rosa, it kind of scared us a little bit,” he jokes. “My first time mountain biking in Annadel [State Park], there was a big old truck with a Confederate flag sticking out. I was like, ‘Where did we just move to?’” But 17 years later, the move proved to be a good one, as Sycip celebrates 25 years building some of the industry’s most soughtafter custom bike frames. As Sycip’s reputation for elegant, highly functional road and mountain bikes grew, so did Santa Rosa’s reputation as a bike

lover’s town. “It’s just getting bigger and bigger, and it’s great to see that,” he says. It was Ibis Cycles founder and Mountain Bike Hall of Famer Scot Nicol who first sold him on the area. Nicol, who started Ibis in Sebastopol before moving the business to Santa Rosa, was one of Sycip’s first cycling buddies in the area. (Ibis is now based in Santa Cruz). “Scot said, ‘Santa Rosa seems like a small town but pretty much any direction you go there are beautiful cycling roads.’ And it’s true. And the mountain-biking is world-class.

Annadel is right in the middle of town. What other city has great mountain-bike trails in the middle of town? It’s pretty cool.” Sycip makes about a hundred bikes a year from his 500-squarefoot shop behind his house in eastern Santa Rosa. He recently moved out of his 4,000-squarefoot shop in Railroad Square after restructuring the company. And he couldn’t be happier. While he misses some of the social aspects of his former space and the quick access to food and drink, the trade-off is no commute, no rent and easy access to Annadel and Hood Mountain. The shop is exactly the kind of place you’d imagine it would be. It’s loaded with hulking lathes, mills, jigs and other heavy metal machinery. Bike frames in various stages of construction hang from the ceiling while Sycip’s cat Violet wanders in and out. Walk into a bike shop, and pricey carbon fiber bikes occupy prime floor space, but about 90 percent of the bikes Sycip makes are steel, an old-school material that he says is coming back into fashion as the tubing gets lighter, and riders appreciate its supple, forgiving feel. He also makes frames of aluminum and titanium. While he’s known for his classic designs and traditional materials, he continues to innovate and builds everything from cargo bikes to around-town cruisers. Sycip is celebrating his 25th year as a frame builder with a limited run of 25 road bikes patterned after the first bike he built, with lots of geek-worthy details, like a sterling silver head badge and flowers hand-painted by his brother, Jay, who did the artwork on his first frame. He jokes that it’s too late for him to change careers but he clearly loves what he does. “Everything is done one at a time. It’s individual, for each person makes a big difference to me. It’s not a mass-produced thing. I get to meet the people who order the bikes, build them what they want and see them riding off on it and enjoying the bike. It’s an art piece and very functional. That’s what’s appealing to me and why I keep on doing it.”


SUBSCRIBE NOW TO OUR NEW 2017-2018 SEASON AND JOIN US ON THE...

G.K. HARDT THEATRE

STUDIO THEATRE

NO RTH BAY B O H E MI A N | B O H E MI A N.COM

ROAD TO DISCOVERY

11

For season tickets and discounted flex passes 6thstreetplayhouse.com OUT STANDING IN HIS FIELD Craig Anderson has a dream: turn Highway

101 into a ‘farmway.’

707-523-4185 x101 52 W. 6th Street, Santa Rosa CA 95401

Local Knowledge

Describe your perfect day in Santa Rosa? On an early spring weekend day, the chorus of birds in our Santa Rosa Junior College ’hood backyard wakes us up (always the crows that do the waking part); espresso as the chorus winds down, followed by a bike ride with the family to a local breakfast place like Dierk’s or Hank’s or A’roma Roasters, to be followed by a visit later on to King’s Nursery to buy starts and seeds (I never can manage all the tomatoes, but hope does spring eternal). Where is your favorite place to eat in Santa Rosa and why? How does a true-blue Santa Rosan answer this but to say, “Here’s my favorite place given this occasion, and favorite for that . . .” When pushed on this one, it’s Simply Vietnam. We love supporting familyowned restaurants, especially ones that speak to a certain place and culture as expressed through cuisine and art. Simply Vietnam is what we aspire to be: it’s not fussy, it’s quick and to the point, healthy fare with various shades of taste and texture—soups or noodles, barbecued meats and enough basil and hot peppers to scare the devil. The staff is nice and it feels extra-positive now to support an establishment run by a family that broadens the weave of our cultural fabric, who we truly are as Americans. Where do you take first-time visitors to Santa Rosa? We typically go to Bayer Farm & Community Park in Roseland, and

Proud to be your Best Fine Jewelry Store. We appreciate your vote!

SPOTLIGHT ON SANTA ROSA

Santa Rosa resident and LandPaths executive director Craig Anderson tells all


Local Knowledge ( 11

N ORTH BAY B O H E MI A N | B O H E MI A N.COM

12

not because it’s a city park envisioned and largely built by LandPaths, but because we delight in the place and its people, and what that breeds as hope for our future. Bayer Farm is a confluence of a historic barn, gardens with 40-plus families from a minimum of seven different ethnic and cultural traditions farming it (including potlucks on Friday evenings). There are always interesting people to talk with and learn from. And what says more about Sonoma County than a beautiful place to farm right near downtown within the historic shadow of local son, Luther Burbank? What do you know about Santa Rosa that others don’t? Probably nothing, but what little-known fact intrigues me? A mountain lion has been spotted more than once in the Paulin Creek area (near the old Sutter Hospital off Chanate Road), and yet I’ve heard of few pets gone missing, though that flock of turkeys there never seems to get much bigger.

707•545•6900 135 fourth street, santa rosa jacksonsbarandoven.com

Dog Training the Natural Way Offering: • group classes • private sessions • boot camp

an intensive 3 week in board program with unlimited owner follow-up

Things To Do In Santa Rosa

SPOTLIGHT ON SANTA ROSA

Training Evaluations always FREE by appointment 707.322.3272 We have over 40 years of experience training dogs and their people. From helping you raise a well adjusted puppy to resolving serious behavioral issues—our expertise gets RESULTS! incrediblecanine.com

A FULL SERVICE MOVER WITH VAULT & STORAGE FACILITIES

FREE

E-WASTE DROP SPOT

LOCAL • LONG DISTANCE • PIANO MOVING HEALDSBURG 707.433.2240 • SANTA ROSA 707.545.2001 • bob@redwoodmoving.com

RESIDENTIAL • OFFICE • INDUSTRIAL INSURED PL & PD CAL PUC# T-189615 ICC# MC74681

If you could change one thing about Santa Rosa what would it be? I’d like for Highway 101 to be magically relocated and allow Santa Rosa to be reconnected into its former, whole self. What would be done, then, with the linear “hole” through the heart of Santa Rosa left by the former 101? It would become like the Highline in New York, that elevated green parkway, but instead it could be the great Santa Rosa Farmway, with community garden allotments and even production farms linked by bike trails both north-south with spurs going to east and west. This is ground zero in Luther Burbank’s “chosen spot on Earth”; it is also a time in our history where economic and ecological costs for shipping food is not only increasingly expensive, but has been shown to reduce nutritional value. Participatory farming, like Bayer Farm and LandPaths Rancho Mark West, time and time again builds communities through relationship. Imagine what a three- or four-mile farmway could do for our city? That would be something to see.

SERVING SONOMA COUNTY FOR OVER 25 YEARS

921 PINER ROAD • SANTA ROSA, CA 95403

FREE ESTIMATES

redwoodmoving.com LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED BOB FRASER, Owner

World Language Fair & World Heritage Day Things get international at the Santa Rosa Junior College this month when the school’s department of modern and classical languages hosts two separate days of bilingual presentations and entertainment, the World Language Fair and World Heritage Day. First, on April 18, the SRJC’s Emeritus Plaza welcomes an array of musicians, dancers and authors, such as Spanishborn and Los Angeles–based poet Mariano Zaro, to demonstrate their creative cultural expression in several languages. An international cafe will be serving food from around the world, and SRJC language department staff will be on hand to offer more information about their academic offerings. Next, on April 20, the SRJC’s World Heritage Day event takes over the student center for an interactive lecture by nationally syndicated cartoonist and satirist Lalo Alcaraz, who has

produced editorial cartoons for the LA Weekly since 1992. Both events begin at noon and are free to attend (campus parking is $4). 1501 Mendocino Ave. 707.527.4011.

9:30am. Earth Day On Stage kicks off at City Hall, 100 Santa Rosa Ave. Noon to 4pm. srcity. org/earthday.

Earth Day at City Hall

It’s an idea that dates back decades, and a process that’s been over a year in construction, but Santa Rosa is finally close to completing the Old Courthouse Square reunification project. Just in time for summer days, the downtown outdoor plaza is set to open to the public with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and festival on April 29. Santa Rosa mayor Chris Coursey will lead the opening ceremony, and local historian Gaye Lebaron will speak on the square’s historical roots and the cultural significance of the reunification. Once the site is dedicated, the festival boasts live music and dancing, art and history displays, a farmers market, beer and wine gardens, and lots of family-friendly activities. 12:30pm to 4pm. Mendocino Avenue and Fourth Street. srcity.org/CHS.

Santa Rosa’s eighth annual Earth Day On Stage event makes its debut at City Hall on April 22 for a day of inspiration and conservation. The free, family-friendly event features a stellar lineup of multicultural entertainment, including VOENA children’s choir, Sonoma County Taiko drumming ensemble, the Native Youth Pomo Dance Group and martial arts demonstrations from the Redwood Empire Chinese Association. Accompanying the stage show are local vendors and experts who will show off their eco-friendly products and organize activities for the kids. Delicious food and a positive environment compliment the event. Anyone looking to start Earth Day early in Santa Rosa can join the creek cleanup at Prince Memorial Greenway at

Courthouse Square Festival


VEG ED Vegetarian cooking doyenne Deborah Madison appears at one of the Spinster Sisters’ author events this month.

Bookish Banquet At Santa Rosa’s Spinster Sisters, literature is on the menu BY CHARLIE SWANSON

L

ocated in the heart of Santa Rosa’s South of A arts district, the Spinster Sisters is a culinary destination that bolsters the artsy neighborhood with creative and delicious locally sourced menus.

Beyond the food, the Spinster Sisters—recently named Best Restaurant in Sonoma County in the Bohemian’s Best Of 2017 readers poll—is also making a name for its

food-friendly literary events. This month, the Spinster Sisters hosts two literary dinners. First, acclaimed British mystery writer Ann Cleeves reads from her new novel, Cold Earth: A Shetland Island Mystery, in a Dinners to Die For event co-hosted with Copperfield’s Books on April 21. The following week, famed vegetarian chef and author Deborah Madison is on hand to showcase her new book, In My Kitchen: A Collection of New and Favorite Vegetarian Recipes. The

dinner is a Cooks with Books event co-presented with Book Passage on April 27. “We’re interested in doing more community-oriented events, not necessarily all food-related events,” says Spinster Sisters general manager Ela Jean Beedle. The restaurant has already hosted events with Book Passage and recently reached out to Copperfield’s Books to collaborate with the North Bay bookseller. “For our author dinners, we include a three-course meal, and in the

Dinners to Die For with Ann Cleeves happens Friday, April 21, and Dinner with Deborah Madison happens Thursday, April 27, at the Spinster Sisters, 401 South A St., Santa Rosa. $105–$170 per couple. Register at copperfieldsbooks.com and bookpassage.com, respectively.

13 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Dining

case of any cookbook events, the menu is inspired directly from the books,” Beedle says. For Madison’s appearance on April 27, the restaurant is preparing a three-course vegetarian meal using recipes from In My Kitchen, such as an artichoke scallion sauté and blood-orange almond cake. For Cleeves, the restaurant is going to take a more creative angle that will draw inspiration from both the novel’s United Kingdom location and mysterious subject matter. Cold Earth is the latest in Cleeves’ ongoing Shetland Island Mystery series, now a British television drama. Following inspector Jimmy Perez, the series is praised internationally for Cleeves’ clever plots, witty dialogue and evocative action. For the upcoming readings, the Spinster Sisters offers a familystyle dining experience. “We want to encourage conversation,” says Beedle. “We sell a lot of single tickets, and people may not know those they sit next to. That familystyle experience opens people up.” The tickets to these events are limited at only 65 seats, though if you get your hands on one, it is an all-inclusive package that includes dining, wine pairings and a signed copy of the book. Along with the casual atmosphere, these events are a way for literary fans to meet their favorite authors. “We let the author decide how they want to do it,” Beedle says. “Some will read excerpts, some will talk and tell their story about what inspired them.” “I feel like this is an awesome opportunity to meet people you have a common interest with, and get an intimate, interactive experience over a great meal,” Beedle says. “And it’s a chance to meet these authors that are really inspiring characters.”


Swirl

NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

14

F rench Tr adi t ion

Savory & Sweet delights cafe • bakery • catering • pop-up dinners

Wizard of Olivet Follow the Olivet Road to a less-traveled wine event BY JAMES KNIGHT

Weds–Sun 7–4pm 4552 Gravenstein Hwy N, Sebastopol 95472 707.823.3122 ~ pascalinefinecatering.com

best tacos in town!

Ta st y Me x ican Food B e e r & Win e B i g S cree n TVs P le nt y of Par kin g D i ne I n or Take O u t

57 Montgomery Drive Santa Rosa

(In the Creekside Center) O P E N EV ERY DAY 11A M - 8PM

707-890-5046

C

ompared to most wineries on the welltraveled winetasting trail, Tara Bella is a bit of an odd duck in a backwater.

Hidden from the main road, Tara Bella Winery is tucked into a neighborhood off a side road of a side road. The only kind of tasting offered includes a personalized tour, one group at a time, for a smaller fee than most wineries charge these days for a walk-in tasting. They make only one varietal of wine here in the heart of Pinot country—and it’s Cabernet Sauvignon. But this boutique bodega is just the right fit for the Olivet District. The association of

wineries hosts its seventh annual open house and winetasting this Saturday, April 8. While the event still goes by the tagline “Follow the Olivet Road,” members voted to change the association name when outliers like Martinelli, Battaglini and Tara Bella joined a few years ago. Kevin and Wendy Morrow are the second owners of Tara Bella, taking over from their friends Rich and Tara Minnick. Rich had the big idea to plant Cabernet in the Russian River Valley, on what looks like mainly a north-facing slope, at that. The naysayers said it couldn’t be done, but the 2000 vintage landed a double gold at the San Francisco Chronicle’s 2003 wine competition. After CNN ran a four-minute spot on prime time, wine went flying out the door. Still, production tops out at 600-plus cases, and the hatdonning winery basset hounds appear to have as many fans as the wines. I’m told that little Tara Bella puts on the biggest party for “Follow the Olivet Road.” They’ll have their “house band” on a stage by the vineyard, and in the spirit of the event’s yellow-brick-road theme, eats will include “munchkin mushroom” soup shooters from Belly Left Coast Kitchen. Further down the road, look for homemade pizza to pair with old-vine Zin at Battaglini, sausages and sliders from grill master Robert Pellegrini to go with Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Zinfandel—the classic varietal triad of this Russian River Valley neighborhood. Other participating wineries include Benovia, DeLoach, Gamba, Harvest Moon, Hook & Ladder and Martinelli. Don’t miss the Caribbean pizza truck parked outside Inspiration Vineyards, in a business park off Coffey Lane, where the afterparty may continue, says winemaker Jon Phillips, at Moonlight Brewing’s tap room across the way. Taste of Olivet, Saturday, April 8, 11am–4pm. Tickets $45 (free for designated drivers) at Eventbrite or at the door. olivetroad.com. Tara Bella Winery, 3701 Viking Road, Santa Rosa. By appointment only, Wednesday– Sunday. $15 per person. 707.544.9049.


15 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

What a Trip Armando García-Dávila takes to the open road in debut novel BY CHARLIE SWANSON

GOOD MILEAGE Looking for an experience to weave into fiction, Armando García-Dávila drew on a cross-country motorcycle trip he took nearly 50 years ago.

I

n 1968, Armando García-Dávila joined his older brother and two friends on a crosscountry motorcycle ride that took 30 days and traversed over 7,000 miles. He was 19-years-old, just out of high school.

“We had real-life adventures,” says García-Dávila, who recounts

run-ins with Texas Rangers and Mississippi rednecks and shares memories of seeing the Grand Canyon and stealing corn out of fields in Nebraska when the money ran low. That real-life adventure inspired García-Dávila’s debut novel, The Trip: Speeding Toward the Cliff at the End of the World, out now. It’s a novel that’s been 10

years in the writing, according to García-Dávila, who’s known in the North Bay more for his poetry. After majoring in English at Sonoma State University in the mid-1970s, García-Dávila fell in love with the North Bay and made the region his home, working as a landscape contractor and writing in his spare time. His writing has been published locally in magazines and

) 16


NORTH BAY BOH E MI AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

16 The Trip ( 15 newspapers since 1990, and his short stories and chapbooks have sold well. His writing career has also included volunteer work with inmates of San Quentin State Prison and a year serving as literary laureate of Healdsburg in 2002. “Finally, someone told me to write my memoir,” says GarcíaDávila. Growing up in a large Mexican-American family with a twin brother and Catholic upbringing, there was a lot for the

writer to explore. Yet the memoir didn’t hold his interest and ultimately didn’t go anywhere. “I thought to myself, what could be something that I would be interested in writing about,” he says. “It was the motorcycle trip.” Initially, The Trip began as a memoir, though García-Dávila evolved the book into a fantastical novel infused with creative license that he says is loosely based on the Odyssey.

“It’s the hero’s journey—a boy leaves on a long dangerous journey and a man returns,” says García-Dávila. “And along the way, he has to face his deepest fears.” Several visual references to the Odyssey pop up throughout the book’s wild head-trips and unexpected adventures, and García-Dávila’s characters develop in a similar manner. At one point in the novel, the main character, Tino Caballero,

goes through an out-of-body experience akin to Odysseus traveling to the underworld in Homer’s Greek epic. When readers meet Tino in the following excerpt from The Trip, he’s just setting out on the open road, wide-eyed and naive. Get a taste of the adventure, and find García-Dávila at one of several readings he is holding in the North Bay, beginning April 23. —Charlie Swanson

Freedom

air streamed gloriously through his dark wavy brown hair and whipped the sleeves of his nylon jacket. If he spread his arms, he’d fly. Tino blasted through town after town. He had never gone on a trip without his family. Not even his twin was along. Tino had shared everything with Val: bedrooms, circle of friends, ball teams, they even shared their underwear. For eight years they’d made a daily mile-long trek to Saint Rita’s Catholic Grammar School. Their teachers, the nuns, called them “the Bookends.” “Where’s Val?” people asked Tino when alone. Val had made the responsible choice to register for junior college instead of taking this motorcycle odyssey to New York and back. His father said, “No trip for you. You’re registering for school.” When Pa went to bed that afternoon to sleep before his graveyard shift at his job, Tino made his escape. Tino would pay a heavy price for his transgression on his return, maybe a beating. But he had planned this trip for a year with his older brother and friends. He was not going to miss out. Screw the consequences, I’ll pay ’em. Tino and his bike ascended into the Laguna Mountains in East County and entered the Cleveland National Forest. The multilane highway had narrowed to a twolane road. Traffic, except for an occasional car or long-haul truck, was nonexistent. The air, cool with altitude and impregnated by the

scent of pine forests, soothed him from the summer heat. Smooth round boulders nestled into the landscape looked like eggs from a prehistoric age. By the time he reached the foot of the eastern slope, night had folded over the land. He tripped the headlight switch and began the trek across the furnace-like Anza-Borrego Desert. He checked the odometer. Tino had only traveled seventy miles. So cool. He had barely started—the month of freedom lay ahead.

sweat.” He hung the hose and reached for his wallet. Tino peeled out a dollar and handed it over. The attendant inserted a key into a cash drawer. “You been riding long?” “Not really. I’ve ridden my big brother’s bike a few times, and I just bought this bike today. I’m taking a trip around the country.” “Long way for a beginner.” “I can handle it.” The attendant fingered coins from slots in the drawer. “I tried a cross-country trip on a bike.” “Cool, how’d it go?” “Fell.” The attendant extended his arm showing a nasty scar. “Compound fracture. Wound up with this zipper.” Suture points on either side of the scar that ran palm to elbow. “Ended my trip right there.” A dust-coated station wagon packed with adults and kids, roof rack loaded with baggage, windshield splattered with insects, pulled into the adjacent pump island. The attendant grabbed paper towels, a squeegee. “Be careful.” “Yeah, sure,” Tino said, disappointed he couldn’t say more about the trip. And who was this clown to tell him to be careful? Tino swung a leg mounting the bike and gave the kick-starter a hearty jump. The engine roared. He gave it gas and let go of the clutch. The bike’s front tire lifted a foot off of the ground. The rear tire screeched, leaving a black line of pulverized rubber on the concrete. “Whoa! Easy, boy!” Tino disappeared into the night. ) 18

San Diego, California— Saturday, August 3, 1968

“¡Ándale! (Charge!),” screamed Tino Caballero, speeding out of the driveway on his powerful new motorcycle. He bolted up Euclid Avenue glancing into the rearview mirror. Standing at the curb were his identical twin brother Val, his pregnant sister, and his mother. She made the sign of the cross toward Tino, blessing him. He shook his head. Pathetic how much faith she put in that invisible world of hers. Did her countless blessings and invocations to God, the saints, and her ancestors ever do any good? He reached the Highway 94 on-ramp, narrowed his deep brown eyes, and raced down the incline toward the highway. Trees and shrubbery on either side of the on-ramp formed a darkened tunnel. He emerged into the light feeling as if he had shed his skin and could truly see—as if an entirely new world had just opened before him. He gunned the engine. The bike jumped with a burst of speed. He wove in and out of highway lanes, effortlessly passing car after car. A teenage boy sitting in a car stared at Tino on his bike loaded down with gear. That’s right kid, I’m on the trip of a lifetime! The sun lay low behind him casting his shadow long to his front. He was leading himself, no one to tell him what to do. Warm

Rocinante An hour into the ride, Tino rolled out of the dark into a Chevron station in El Centro. His body tingled from the vibration of the engine. Without the air fanning him, the full intensity of the desert heat engulfed him. He stashed his jacket in his gear. A twentysomething attendant stepped up to the gas pump—white uniform shirt taut over his paunch—navy blue pants smudged with engine grime. Tino set the gas nozzle into the tank. “Bitchin’. Bought it from an old guy who hardly rode it, in his garage most of the time.” “Damn, no kiddin’. Looks like it’s fresh off the showroom floor. You sure it wasn’t an old lady who just rode it to church on Sundays?” He stepped back to get a good look. “450 cc’s, plenty of power.” “It carried me and my gear over the mountains without so much as a hiccup. If it were a horse, it wouldn’t have even broken a


17

ADVERTISEMENT

Dear Friend, I wanted to let everyone know what happened while I was in college. It was a moment that changed my life forever. But before I tell you about my experience, I wanted to tell you my story from the start. Let me start by explaining the photo in this letter, I’m the guy in the middle, Dr. Taatjes. You know when I meet people in town and they usually say, “Oh yeah, I know you, you’re Dr. Taatjes. You’ve been in Petaluma for years…” Well, that’s me. Twenty-seven years ago something happened to me that changed my life forever. Let me tell you my story.

I was studying pre-Med in college, in hopes of becoming a medical doctor. Things were looking up, and life was good, until things took a turn for the worse. I began to have terrible back and stomach problems. For a young guy, I felt pretty rotten. My back hurt so badly that I had a hard time even concentrating in class. I was miserable. The medical doctors tried different drugs, but they only made me feel like I was in a “cloud.” I was just not getting better.

A friend of mine convinced me to give a chiropractor a try. The adjustment didn’t hurt, it actually felt good. I got relief, and I soon was off all medication. It worked so well that I decided, then and there, to become a chiropractor myself. Now for my kids, Hayden and Henry. They have been under chiropractic care their entire lives. And, unlike most other kids in their class, they never get the “common” childhood illnesses like ear infections, asthma and allergies. In fact, they have never taken a drug in their lives. And they are now 19 and 21!

It’s strange how life is, because now people come to see me with their back problems and stomach problems. They come to me with their headaches, migraines, chronic pain, neck pain, shoulder/arm pain, whiplash from car accidents, asthma, allergies, numbness in limbs, athletic injuries, just to name a few. If drugs make people well, then those who take the most should be the healthiest, but that simply isn’t the case. With chiropractic we don’t add anything to the body or take

Dr. Taajes with his sons anything from it. We find interference in the nervous system and remove it thus enhancing the healing capacities of the body. We get tremendous results…it really is as simple as that. Here’s what some of my patients had to say:

“I have had a problem with migraines as well as low back pain. Even after seeing doctors and other health professionals, the pains remained. After coming to Dr. Joel, they have helped tremendously. They even take away my migraines. They’re great!” (Judy E.) “I came in pending laser surgery for two herniated discs. Over a few months here the need for surgery subsided, and the pain has subsided to a mild discomfort with occasional morning stiffness. Over all, I feel better visit after visit. It’s a gradual process.” (Jaime O.) Several times a day patients thank me for helping them with their health problems. But I can’t really take the credit. Find out for yourself and benefit from an AMAZING OFFER. Look, it shouldn’t cost you an arm and a leg to correct your health. You are going to write a check to someone for your health care expenses, you may as well write one for a lesser amount for chiropractic. When you bring in this article between April 1, 2017 through

May 4, 2017, you will receive my entire new patient exam for $27. That’s with x-rays, exam, report of findings…the whole ball of wax. This exam could cost you $350 elsewhere. Great care at a great fee… Please, I hope that there’s no misunderstanding about quality of care just because I have a lower exam fee. You’ll get great care at a great fee. My qualifications… I’m a graduate of Northwestern College of Chiropractic who regularly goes to monthly educational chiropractic seminars. I’ve been entrusted to take care of tiny babies to neighbors that you may know. I just have that low exam fee to help more people who need care.

My staff and I are ready to see if we can help you. Our office is both friendly and warm and we try our best to make you feel at home. We have a wonderful service, at an exceptional fee. Our office is called REDWOOD CHIROPRACTIC. Our office is located at 937 Lakeville Street, Petaluma, phone number is 707-763-8910. We would love to help you. Call Alex, Phoebe or Christine today for an appointment. We can help you. Thank you.

– Dr. Joel Taatjes

redwoodchiropractic.com

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Doctor’s Confession to Petaluma


The Trip ( 16

NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

18

Thank you for your vote!

BEST HOLISTIC HERBAL SHOP BEST HOLISTIC PRACTITIONER Come see us for:

• • • • • •

All-natural Vitamins & Herbs Herbal Tincture Bar & Body Bar B-Shot Clinic Mondays Herbal & NutriƟonal ConsultaƟons Seaonal Cleanses Low-cost Acupuncture Happy Hour

www.farmacopia.net Santa Rosa 707.528.HERB

Best of the North Bay

BEST CATERER! Thank You Everyone!

707.769.7208 www.SonomaCaterers.com

PR E F E R R E D SONOMA CATERERS

Gusts of hot wind rolled tumbleweeds across the road. Tino leaned adroitly left dodging a tumbleweed then right dodging another. He laughed, skillfully zigzagging. Damn, you’re a great bike. Blink! Tino’s world turned black. The headlight had gone out. Panicked, Tino hit the brakes and skidded off of the road into the desert. He ran head on into a spindly creosote bush. The bike stopped dead. Tino didn’t. “¡Ay!” He flew over the handlebars, through the bush, its stiff branches raked hard against Tino’s face. He slammed against the ground, tumbled over the loose grit of the desert floor and came to a dusty stop. No hard pain anywhere but a wet sensation on his cheek. He put a hand to it. Blood. He walked unsteadily to the bike pressing a handkerchief against his cheek. The bike stood held up by branches, engine softly puttering. Tino tugged on the bumper. Stuck. Pulled harder; maybe an inch of movement. A coyote’s howl. Tino had heard of javelinas that can slice a man open with razor tusks, and what man-eaters could be on the prowl for an easy meal? He pulled with adrenaline-fueled strength, ripping his bike from the entanglement. He pushed on the handlebars, jogging it to the road. Tried the light switch—nothing. Lights from a distant town formed a faint halo on the horizon. His eyes, now adjusted to the dark, allowed him to differentiate between the black asphalt and the desert floor along the roadside. He rode slowly, pitched forward, eyeing the road for objects that might cause him another fall. He looked up at the halo, down to the road, checked his mirror for vehicles coming from behind. Up, down, mirror. A little more gas. The air pressed harder against him. Bam! A jolt. He lost and regained control in a beat. What the hell? Rock? Dead animal? He slowed to a nervous crawl. Lights from approaching vehicles shimmered through

waves of heat rising off of the baked earth. A set of headlights riding high off the road closed in from behind. Tino pulled over. A Greyhound bus sped past. He hit the gas, caught up, and followed in a wake of hot diesel exhaust, resting his hand and foot on the brakes should the bus suddenly stop. They reached a town. A sign read “WELCOME TO HOLTVILLE—CARROT CAPITAL OF THE WORLD.”

The Wrath of Carrots Tino pulled into a Texaco station that serviced long-haul trucks. Small clouds of insects hovered around the overhead fluorescent lights. He dismounted and inspected the wiring—nothing obvious. Better to wait until tomorrow when he would meet up with Sal. Tino’s neck muscles ached from keeping his head up against the constant push of air. He stretched and made for the bathroom. He washed the threads of dark dry blood from across his cheek. Cold water felt good against the heat. He then asked a clerk for directions to the town jail. Tino parked at the Holtville Police Station and Detention Center, a single-story building, slightly bigger than a two-car garage. He opened the station door. The policeman’s swivel chair squeaked as he swung around. “Excuse me, sir. I’m on a trip and wonder if I could sleep in a cell.” “Sgt. Wood,” read the officer’s nameplate. His dark hair was neatly combed, mustache trimmed, uniform starched. An ancient black fan on his desk begrudgingly oscillated side to side. “Think we’re running a motel?” “No, sir. My older brother told me that sometimes police will let a guy sleep in a cell if it’s empty.” Wood looked to a cop at the opposite side of the room pouring cream into a mug. “Let him stay, Flattop?” “I don’t know, Bobby. He fits the description on the guy that there’s an APB on.” “I’ve never been in trouble in my life, sir.”


hills onto the cell wall. Relief— the long, hot night had come to an end; the air pleasantly cool. Tino rose and caught the eye of the cop at the desk. “Good morning,” Tino said. The cop stared. Tino put on his boots. “I’m ready to leave sir. The sergeant put my stuff in an envelope last night and—” “You think I don’t know the drill?” “I’m sure you do, sir.” The cop took the envelope out of the cabinet and walked in a deliberate gait toward Tino, waving the envelope in an ugly tease. “Is this what you want, August?” “Y-yes, sir, but maybe it’s somebody else’s. My name is Augustino.” The cop slapped the envelope against the bars. “Not here, it ain’t. You’re in America, Seenor Augustino Cabalero. I’ll let you out only because I have to. But first you become an American. We’re going to start by getting your name right. Say, ‘My name is August Wetback.’” He laughed mean. Beads of sweat formed on Tino’s brow. “You chicken? No. Not chicken, a yellowbellied taco bender. Ha! Ha!” The cop took the wallet from the envelope and peeled out a twenty. “City ordinance to cover costs.” He dropped the wallet into the envelope, went to the cell, and unlocked the door. He tossed the envelope, bouncing it off of Tino’s chest. Tino snagged it. “Time to pick carrots.” Tino made a wide arc around the cop to the door. “If you people just came and worked and went back, but no. You got to bring your damn music and put your kids in our schools, spreading head lice. Go on, get outta here before I cite you for vagrancy.” Armando García-Dávila reads from ‘The Trip’ on Sunday, April 23, at Bean Affair (1270 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. 1:30pm), Thursday, April 27, at the Sebastopol Senior Center (167 N. High St., Sebastopol. 7pm) and Sunday, April 30, at the Arlene Francis Center (99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa. 2pm).

19 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Flattop took a sip. “That’s what they all say. It’s your call, Bobby. Just don’t blame me if you wind up with a slit throat in the morning.” “I’m going to lock you up,” Wood said. “You know, just in case.” “Thank you, sir. You won’t have any trouble with me.” “That’s what they all say.” Wood took a clasp envelope from a desk drawer. “Empty your pockets.” A large patch riding high on the arm of his uniform had a graphic of the earth skewered by a carrot. Tino handed over his bike key and coins, but hesitated letting go of his wallet, fat with bills. Wood tugged it away. “Relax, it’ll be safe with me.” He placed Tino’s items in the envelope and into a file cabinet. A tall, broad-chested policeman with beefy arms entered the station and pointed his chin toward Tino. “Whadda we got here?” Wood took a heavy black skeleton key off a hook on the wall behind his desk. “He wants to stay the night.” Tino sat on the lower bunk and leaned over to unlace his boots and jumped when a black cockroach the size of his thumb scurried out between his feet. “Don’t step on Fido!” Wood said. Tino looked out the wire-mesh window and took comfort in seeing his bike parked alongside a police cruiser. A mutt meandering by stopped, sniffed a tire, and lifted his leg. Tino sighed and lay down. The cotton-stuffed mat smelled moldy and had nasty dark stains in the middle. The wall radiated the day’s heat like an oven. The cops played cards at the sergeant’s desk under a blue haze of cigarette smoke. Tino faced the wall and covered his eyes shielding them from the light. Sleep came in sporadic naps through a string of disturbances: ringing phones, slamming doors, the acrid odor of tobacco smoke. Tino awoke deep into the night confused then remembered where he was. A different cop, alone, was lying back in Wood’s chair—feet on desk, hands on chest, hat over face. Tino rolled to his side and fell asleep. Sharp spikes of sunlight pierced the gray dawn over the

YOU have a personal path to

andwiches

MINDFULNESS your lifeboat in these uncertain times

Dr. Susan J Hirshfield, PhD. MINDFUL LIFE TRANSITIONS

Life Coaching for a better tomorrow 707.569.0616 | mindfullifetransitions.com

Ayurvedic Indian Head Massage • relief from tension headaches, & sinusitis • improves mobility in neck & shoulders

Margery Smith

CMT# 62066

707.536.1797 margerysmith.massagetherapy.com

• Mediterranean • Curry Chicken • Ham & Brie Melt • Tuna Nicoise • Club Chloé 3883 Airway Drive Ste 145, Santa Rosa 707.528.3095 www.chloesco.com M–F, 8am–5pm Full Catering Menu Available


NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

20

FEEL THE COLORS Canadian acid-folk songwriter Lee Harvey Osmond paints by (musical) numbers when he performs on Sunday, April 9, at HopMonk Tavern in Sebastopol. See Concerts, p24.

Crush CULTURE

The week’s events: a selective guide

R O H N E R T PA R K

S A N TA R O S A

YOUNTVILLE

HEALDSBURG

Humane Happening

Brew Brawl

Oh, What a Night

The West Coast’s best breweries are once again presenting their top beers for the 21st annual Battle of the Brews. The day starts with the revered Craft Cup, a juried tasting event that also features the Sandwich Showdown, in which local chefs compete to make the tastiest concoctions between two slices of bread. The battle’s main event is a People’s Choice competition where you get to decide whose suds are studs. Presented by the Active 20-30 Club of Santa Rosa, the event also benefits kids in need. Raise a glass on Saturday, April 8, at Sonoma County Fairgrounds’ Grace Pavilion, 1350 Bennett Valley Road, Santa Rosa. 1pm. $50–$95. battleofthebrews.com.

Napa Valley’s biggest concert event of the season welcomes more than 200 performers onstage for the La Notte Gala. Guest conductor Ragnar Bohlin, born in Sweden and the director of the San Francisco Symphony Chorus since 2007, leads the Symphony Napa Valley and vocalists from Sing Napa Valley, St. Helena Chamber Singers and Napa Valley College Chorale, with soloists Marnie Breckenridge and Igor Vieira, in a performance of Brahms’ German Requiem, considered a masterpiece of classical music. A reception and VIP dinner are also available on Saturday, April 8, at Napa Valley Performing Arts Center at Lincoln Theater, 100 California Drive, Yountville. 5pm. $49 and up. 707.944.9900.

Writers in the Vineyard

Formed 10 years ago in Forestville, Sinkyone Animal Sanctuary has made it its mission to rescue animals ranging from cats to cows and help them live free onsite or at forever homes they help find. This week, Sinkyone is hosting a massive fundraising party, Freedom for All, with music and merriment galore. Local singer Lester Chambers leads an all-star band, Humane Minds, which also features members of California Honeydrops, Dirty Red Barn, Stone Cold Mollie and more. A silent auction, raffle and vegan/vegetarian buffet completes the evening, taking place on Friday, April 7, at Sally Tomatoes, 1100 Valley House Drive, Rohnert Park. 6pm. $15– $25. sassonomacounty.com.

Writing Between the Vines is a program that offers writers of all kinds a chance to enjoy a residency in the most picturesque wineries in the world, giving them a relaxing environment to focus on works in progress or explore new ideas. This month, current Writing Between the Vines residents and alumni come together for a night of wine and stories. Journalist and essayist Grace Hwang Lynch, best known for her awardwinning blog HapaMama, is joined by writer and university writing professor Jacqueline Doyle and pop-culture reviewer and novelist Monica Nolan for illuminating readings on Monday, April 10, at Moshin Vineyards, 10295 Westside Road, Healdsburg. 5:30pm. 707.433.5499.

—Charlie Swanson


MEET AND GREET Students presenting their projects at the STEAM Showcase were evaluated

in part on how they were able to explain their work.

Head of STEAM Sonoma County showcases new multidisciplinary trend BY NELSON ‘BUZZ’ KELLOGG

H

ere’s a question: Think back to your first years of school, from kindergarten through high school. What do you recall from, say, sixth grade? Sure, maybe you remember your first crush. You might even recall a class bully or your teacher’s name. Most people have vivid memories of coaches and athletic events, of musical performances, of friendships and everything

not part of a class. How do we make the learning experience memorable and a powerful inspiration for later life? That is a major focus of an emerging direction in innovative education, STEAM. The acronym stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Mathematics, and the first major exhibition of K-12 student projects encompassing these fields was held last month at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts in Santa Rosa. The Sonoma County Office of Education has held science fairs before. Typically they are

well-defined efforts in a single area of expertise done by a single student, with guidance from a faculty mentor, described in a triptych poster-board display. They are judged and ranked by qualified evaluators, and if they score highly enough, move on to the next level. But to what degree do these showcases inspire students to pursue investigations into the unknown, or perhaps into their own ability to express provocative ideas in novel ways for others? Likely, the answer would be, not so much.

Now consider last month’s Synopsys Outreach FoundationSonoma County STEAM Showcase, where students explored any idea that caught their interest. This could have been a new idea for which students designed an experiment or exploration in a field of knowledge to which they applied their own creative talents. It was not a competition with winners going on to the next level and losers left behind. Evaluators paid significant attention to students’ efforts in explaining and promoting their work, including how their project led to further interest and application, rather than just being a standalone project for the event. One student presented her investigation into the environmental challenges that sea turtles face. Not too challenging, perhaps. But she included a 20-minute presentation to evaluators, complemented by a computer slideshow, flawlessly delivered without notes. The student also included several models of physical evidence, and even a beautiful sheet-metal sculpture that she welded using the hood of an old VW—she had her uncle first teach her how to weld. She also raised money for a sea turtle conservancy in South Carolina. And, oh yes, English was her second language. Where might this all lead? What if cross-disciplinary projects, begun in schools with curricula that encouraged STEAM-like projects, such as those on display at the Luther Burbank exhibition were to become the norm? We can only imagine the worlds our children might create. Nelson ‘Buzz’ Kellogg is a humanities professor emeritus at Sonoma State University.

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Arts Ideas

21


Killin’ it Daily

Stage

• Color • Brows • Waxing • Make-Up Applications • Eyelash Extensions

SIMON SAYS Cinnabar Theater

Eric Chazankin

NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

22

thu apr 6 sat apr 8 thu apr 13 fri apr 14 sat apr 15 thu apr 20 fri apr 21

Thornrose

8pm/Dancing/$5

ron Thompson & The Blues DefenDers 8:30pm/Dancing/$10

Kevin russell & frienDs 8pm/Dancing/$10

sTanD up ComeDy! 8pm/$10/18+

sTring rays

8:30pm/Dancing/$10

paBlo moses

9pm/$18 Adv/$22 Dos/21+

sang maTiz

8:30pm/$12 Adv/$15 Dos

manDy BrooKs

sat apr 22 CD release parTy 8:30pm/$10

raChel Tree anD frienDs,

thu Benefit show for Deb “Root” Grant’s apr 27 Wellness Fund, 8pm/$5–20 sliding scale fri The pulsaTors apr 28 8:30pm/Dancing/$10 sat The BlooDsTones wiTh apr 29 DJ loisaiDa 8pm/$10 Advance Tickets Available at Eventbrite & Redwood Cafe resTauranT & musiC venue CheCK ouT The arT exhiBiT visiT our weBsiTe, reDwooDCafe.Com 8240 olD reDwooD hwy, CoTaTi 707.795.7868

® BRINGING THE BEST FILMS IN THE WORLD TO SONOMA COUNTY

Schedule for Friday, April 7 – Tuesday, April 11

DINE-IN CINEMA

Bargain Tuesday - $7.50 All Shows Bargain Tuesday $7.00 All Shows Schedule forFri, Fri,April Feb -16th 20th Thu, Feb 26th Schedule for –– Thu, April 22nd Schedule for Fri, June 22nd•- Salads Thu, June Bruschetta • Paninis • Soups • 28th Appetizers

Academy Award “Moore Gives Her BestNominee Performance In Years!” – Box Office Foreign Language Film!Stone “RawBest and Riveting!” – Rolling Demi MooreWITH DavidBASHIR Duchovny PG-13 WALTZ A MIGHTY HEART (1:00) THE 3:00 5:00 9:15 RR (12:30) 2:45 JONESES 5:00 7:20 9:45 (12:30 2:40 5:00)7:00 7:20 9:30 (12:30) 2:40Noms 4:50 Including 7:10 9:20 2 Academy Award BestRActor! Back by Popular Demand! “A Triumph!” – New “A Glorious Throwback ToYork The Observer More Stylized, THE WRESTLER (1:15 5:15) 7:15 9:15 Painterly Work Of Decades Past!” – LA (12:20) 2:45 5:10 9:45 R Times LA3:15 VIE EN 7:30 ROSE (12:45) 3:45 6:45OF 9:45 PG-13 Mon: NoNoms (1:15) or KELLS 7:15 THE SECRET 10 Academy Award Including Best Picture! (1:00) 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 NR SLuMDOG MILLIONAIRE PG – “★★★★ – Really, Truly, Deeply “Superb! No One4:00 Could Make This 7:10 R Believable One of (1:15) This2:10 Year’s Best!”9:40 – Newsday (12:00 6:45 9:00 If It Were Fiction!” – 4:20) San Francisco Chronicle

8 Great BeersBest on Tap + Wine by theFilm! Glass and Bottle Foreign Language

GOING IN STYLE

KEDI

BOSS BABY

ONCE Including 8 Academy Award PRODIGALNoms SONS

(1:00) 3:10 THE 5:20 RPG-13 GHOST IN SHELL Best Picture, Actor7:30 & Best9:40 Director! (2:20) 9:10 Best NR No 9:10 Show Tue or Thu

(12:10 2:40MILK 5:00) 7:25 9:40

MILK – Rolling Stone “Haunting and Hypnotic!” “Wise, Humble and Effortlessly (1:30) 4:10 6:45 Funny!” 9:30 R – Newsweek THEBEAUTY GIRL THE TATTOO AND THE BEAST Please Note: 1:30 Show Sat, No Thu PleaseWITH Note: No No 1:30 ShowDRAGON Sat, No 6:45 6:45 Show Show Thu WAITRESS

WAITRESS (1:10) 4:30 7:30 NR

(1:00 4:00) 7:00 9:50 (1:30) 4:00 7:10 9:30 Best RPGPicture! 5 Academy Award Noms Including

“★★★1/2! AnFROST/NIXON unexpected Gem!” – USA Today Ends Tuesday!

LOVE &FROST/NIXON TAXES (2:15) 7:20 R GREENBERG

“Swoonly Romatic, Mysterious, Hilarious!” (2:45 5:00) 9:30 NR (12:00) 9:50 R – Slant5:00 Magazine

REVOLuTIONARY ROAD “Deliciously unsettling!” Times THE ZOOKEEPERS PARIS, JE T’AIME (11:45) 4:45 9:50– RLAWIFE

707.978.2399

428 Larkfield Center, Santa Rosa

4/7–4/13

Honorable

Frantz PG13 10:15-12:45-3:15-6:00-8:30 Personal Shopper R

10:30-1:00-3:30-6:15-8:40 Weds 4/12 and Thurs 4/13 only: 11:15-5:15

T2: Trainspotting R 11:15-2:15-5:15-8:15 Weds 4/12 and Thurs 4/13 only: 2:15-8:15

The Zookeeper’s Wife PG13

11:00-2:00-5:00-8:00

The Sense of an Ending PG13 10:45 The Last Word R 1:15 Kedi NR 3:45-9:00 A United Kingdom PG13 6:30 Gifted PG13 10:30-1:00-3:30-6:15-8:40 Opens Wednesday 4/12!

551 SUMMERFIELD ROAD • SANTA ROSA 707.525.8909 • SUMMERFIELDCINEMAS.COM

(1:30 7:10 9:50 PG-13 THE4:10) GHOST Kevin Jorgenson presents the WRITER California Premiere of (1:15) 4:15 7:00 9:30 R (2:15) 7:15 PG-13

PuRE: A THE BOuLDERING FLICK SMURFS: LOST VILLAGE Michael Moore’s Feb 26th at 7:15 THE Thu, MOST DANGEROuS

(12:10 2:20 4:30) 6:40 9:00 PG No Pass SICKO

SICKO MOVIES MORNING MANIN INTHE AMERICA

GET OUT

Starts Fri, June 29th! R Fri, Sat, Sun &PENTAGON Mon DANIEL ELLSBERG AND THENow PAPERS Advance Tickets On Sale at Box Office! 9:50 AM (12:10) 4:30 6:50 No7:30 6:50 Show Tue or Thu (12:00 2:15 4:45) 7:30 9:45 FROZEN RIVER (12:00) 2:30 NR 5:00 10:00 10:15 AM VICKY Their CRISTINA BARCELONA First Joint Venture In 25 Years! R 10:20 AM CHANGELING Venessa RedgraveAND Meryl CHONG’S Streep Glenn CloseAM CHEECH 10:40 RACHEL GETTING (12:15)MARRIED 7:15 Ends Tuesday! HEYSHORTS WATCH THIS 2009 LIVE ACTION (Fri/Mon Only)) 10:45 AM EVENING 10:45 Sat, Apr17th at 11pm & Tue, Apr 20th 8pmAM 2009 ANIMATED SHORTS (Sun Only) StartsOpens Fri, June 29th!April 12! Wed,

PATERSON

GIFTED TOMORROW

Opens Fri, April 14!

The Zookeeper's Wife Beauty and the Beast The Boss Baby Ghost in the Shell Bistro Menu Items, Beer & Wine available in all 4 Auditoriums

SHOWTIMES: ravenfilmcenter.com 707.525.8909 • HEALDSBURG

revives the comic gold of ‘The Odd Couple.’

Pace Race Comic timing major factor in two Neil Simon plays

BY DAVID TEMPLETON

L

ast weekend, two Neil Simon plays opened in the North Bay, each a demonstration of the legendary playwright’s mastery of rat-a-tat dialogue, skillful one-liners and flawed but relatable characters.

At San Rafael’s Belrose Theater, Marin Onstage presents The Sunshine Boys, Simon’s 1972 hit about a long-feuding former vaudeville duo lured into reuniting for a television special. Directed with obvious affection by Ron Nash, the production boasts an agreeably likeable cast, headlined by Grey Wolf as the irascible, grudge-carrying comedian Willie Clark and Michael Walraven as Al Lewis, clearly wary of his old partner but game to give the reunion a try. In supporting roles are Richard Kerrigan as Willie’s devoted

nephew, Ben, and Christina Jaqua as an exhibitionist actress and a sassy registered nurse, with director Nash appearing as a television producer. This kind of comedy, it should be stated, is not easy. To work, it requires metronome-perfect pacing. Wolf and Walraven do occasionally rise to that challenge, though their funniest moment is a nearly silent scene in which the two do nothing but move furniture around. Unfortunately, the poky pace of the production— possibly fueled by openingnight tentativeness and some conspicuous line bobbles—is far too slow and riddled with pauses for Simon’s language to truly sing. Rating (out of 5): Preceding Sunshine Boys by seven years was Simon’s early masterpiece, The Odd Couple, another tale of mismatched men. Now playing at Cinnabar Theater, the play gets a delightfully spot-on, perfectly paced production, directed with genuine warmth and slapstick-savvy by Jennifer King. Oscar (Nathan Cummings, superb in every way) is a messy, undisciplined sportswriter who impulsively offers a room to his freshly separated, compulsively tidy best friend Felix (Aaron Wilton, perhaps a bit young for the part, but every bit as excellent). It does not take long for the fragile Felix— constantly chasing around with ashtrays and coasters—to start driving the laidback Oscar nuts. The supporting cast—Oscar’s Friday-night poker buddies and the neighborly twins, the Pigeon sisters (Samantha Dakin and Morgan Harrington)—are all extremely good, mining the text for laughs without losing sight of the characters’ inherent humanity. But ultimately, it’s the gracefully winning chemistry between Wilton and Cummings that makes this hilarious Odd Couple so fun and so emotionally satisfying. ‘The Sunshine Boys’ runs Friday– Saturdays through April 15 at Belrose Theater, 1415 Fifth Ave., San Rafael. $10–$25. 415.448.6152. ‘The Odd Couple’ runs Friday–Sunday through April 23 at Cinnabar Theater, 3333 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. $15–$30. 707.763.8920


FRESH GRASS Tim O’Brien plays

tributes to lesser-known bluegrass musicians on his new record.

Full Circle

Tim O’Brien revisits West Virginia on new album BY CHARLIE SWANSON

G

rammy-winning bluegrass and folk songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Tim O’Brien grew up in the mill and steel town of Wheeling, W.V., along the Ohio River. His Leave It to Beaver upbringing included a lot of country music on the radio but little in the way of local job prospects, so he headed west to Colorado before moving to Nashville. Since becoming a famed figure in that city’s music scene, O’Brien has released over a dozen acclaimed albums that have made him a household name for

Tim O’Brien plays on Friday, April 7, at Freight & Salvage (2020 Addison Ave., Berkeley; $26–$28; 510.644.2020) and on Saturday, April 8, at the Sebastopol Community Center (390 Morris St., Sebastopol; $25–$28; 707.823.1511). Both shows start at 8pm.

23

LA GUNS

SATURDAY, APRIL 15

ORIGINAL LINEUP

Featuring: Tracii Guns and Phil Lewis Special Guests KINGSBOROUGH

SATURDAY APRIL 22

STEPHEN PEARCY OF RATT

Performing the RATT Hits and more

FRIDAY JUNE 9

HOUSE OF ROCK 1 YEAR ANNIVERSARY WITH THE RETURN OF

BLUE OYSTER CULT

Don't Fear The Reaper ~ I'm Burning for You ~ Godzilla

FRIDAY, JUNE 16 ROCK GUITAR GOD George Lynch

LYNCH MOB “Wicked Sensation”

RECORD LIKE A PRO AT RSU RECORDING & FILMWORKS

STATE OF THE ART AUDIO AND FILM PRODUCTION CONTACT JARED @ 707.694.1785 FOR RATES & INFO

Treatment Pro a s o R gr a ta n a m S GET YOUR LIFE BACK! Do you or someone you care about rely on prescription or opioid pain medication or heroin to get through the day? Ask the following questions: • Have they ever given up activities to use them? • Are they spending more time on activities to get them? • Have they ever used them despite negative consequences? If the answer to any of these questions was YES, they may have unintentionally become opioid dependent. Help might be closer than you think.

For more information on opioid dependence and its treatment, please call

707-576-0818 or visit www.srtp.net

SANTA ROSA TREATMENT PROGRAM 1901 Cleveland Ave Suite B, Santa Rosa

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Music

bluegrass fans across the country. O’Brien returns to his roots with his new album, Where the River Meets the Road, inspired by his home state. O’Brien performs off the new record April 8 at he Sebastopol Community Center. “When I sang bluegrass and country music, people took me more seriously because I was from West Virginia,” O’Brien says. “The love of the music kept going, but I kept viewing it from afar.” West Virginia’s long musical heritage includes eclectic popular artists like Bill Withers, Blind Alfred Reed and Billy Edd Wheeler, as well as traditional mountain music from the likes of the Lilly Brothers and the Lonesome Pine Fiddlers. O’Brien rediscovered these artists and learned about many others when he became a board member of the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame several years ago. He was also inducted in 2013. Where the River Meets the Road is the culmination of O’Brien’s rekindled interest in West Virginia music. Ten of the 12 tracks on the new record are covers of songs written by the state’s diverse array of native talent, including bluegrass singer Hazel J. Dickens. “A lot of them are old favorites,” says O’Brien of the songs he chose to record. “I tried to make the best set of songs that would show some of the breadth of the music.” O’Brien’s two original tunes on the album are among his most personal songs. The title track is the story of his family’s arrival in West Virginia from Ireland in the 1850s, and “Guardian Angel” is the heartbreaking story of the death of O’Brien’s older sister when he was just a toddler. “If I look at it one way, I’ve been spending my whole artistic life getting ready to make this record,” O’Brien says. “It’s a reflection of where I’m at and what I’ve experienced.”


FREE LOCAL LIVE MUSIC

707.829.7300 230 PETALUMA AVE | SEBASTOPOL

OPEN MIC NIGHT

EVERY TUES AT 7PM WITH CENI WED APR 5

SCIENCE BUZZ CAFE

$5/DOORS 7/SHOW 7:30 /ALL AGES

THU APR 6

CLIMBING POETREE

+ DJ DELPHI AND DAKINI STAR $10–15/DOORS-SHOW 9 /21+

FRI APR 7

MONOPHONICS

+ MARSHALL HOUSE PROJECT $20 /DOORS 8/SHOW 9 /21+

SAT APR 8

LADY ABSTRACT CD RELEASE EVENT + AGAINST ALL ODDS ALBUM LISTENING PARTY 8PM

$10–40/DOORS-SHOW 7/21+

SUN APR 9

LEE HARVEY OSMOND $12/DOORS 7/ SHOW 7:30 /21+

MON APR 10

MONDAY NIGHT EDUTAINMENT

YUNGG TRIP & DJ TRIPLE CROWN $10/$5 B4 10:30/DOORS-SHOW 10/21+

THU APR 13

RHYTHMSTAR NAUGHTY PRINCESS $10/DOORS-SHOW 9/21+

WWW.HOPMONK.COM Book your

next event with us, up to 250, kim@hopmonk.com

Fresh everyday, local, always Franco

We are a long-standing purveyor to Sonoma County restaurants. Shop in our store or local retailer.

CO AMERIC AN

AN

FR

NORTH BAY BOH E MI AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

24 GIGS LIVE MUSIC. NEW STAGE AND SOUND. NEW DANCE FLOOR. NEW AIR CONDITIONING. SUDS TAPS - 18 LOCAL & REGIONAL SELECT CRAFT BEERS & CIDERS. EATS NEW MENU, KITCHEN OPEN ALL DAY FROM 11AM ON. CHECK OUT OUR FRIED CHICKEN SANDWICH W/CORN ON THE COB. DIGS DINING OUT-DOORS. KIDS ALWAYS WELCOME - NEW KID’S MENU. RESERVATIONS FOR 8 OR MORE. HAPPY HOUR M-F 3-6PM. $2 CHICKEN TACOS. $3 HOUSE CRAFT BEERS. WEEKLY EVENTS MONDAYS • BLUES DEFENDERS PRO JAM TUESDAYS • OPEN MIC W/ROJO WEDNESDAYS • KARAOKE CALENDAR THU APR 6 • LEVI’S WORKSHOP SPECIAL GUEST MZ DEE 7:30PM / 21+ / FRE FRI APR 7 • FRANKIE BOURNE AN EVENING WITH 2 SETS! 8PM / 21+ / FREE SAT APR 8 • THE INCIDENTALS AN EVENING WITH 2 SETS! 8PM /21+ / FREE CHECK OUT OUR FULL MUSIC CALENDAR www.TwinOaksRoadhouse.com Phone 707.795.5118 5745 Old Redwood Hwy Penngrove, CA 94951

Music Concerts SONOMA COUNTY Spencer Brewer

Platinum-selling pianist, composer, artist and producer works on the cutting-edge of instrumental music. Apr 7, 7:30pm. $10-$20. United Church of Cloverdale, 439 N Cloverdale Blvd, Cloverdale. 707.894.2039.

Lee Harvey Osmond

Canadian musician Tom Wilson brings his self-described “acid folk” rock and roll persona to the North Bay. Apr 9, 7:30pm. $12. HopMonk Sebastopol, 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. 707.829.7300.

Sonoma County Philharmonic

Pianist Leyla Kabuli joins the philharmonic to perform Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto no 2. Mahler’s Symphony no 1 with the rediscovered “Blumine” movement follows. Apr 8, 7:30pm and Apr 9, 2pm. $10-$15. SRHS Performing Arts Auditorium, 1235 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. 800.838.3006.

MARIN COUNTY Marin Symphony

A program titled “The Majesty of Mahler” and featuring Gustav Mahler’s Symphony no 5 wraps up the current masterworks series. Apr 9, 3pm and Apr 11, 7:30pm. $20-$80. Marin Center’s Veterans Memorial Auditorium, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415.473.6800.

Planned Parenthood Benefit

Songwriters Olivia Davis, Matt Jaffe, HowellDevine and Todd Morgan perform. Apr 9, 7:30pm. $17-$20. Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley. 415.388.3850.

NAPA COUNTY Sheila E YOUR LOCAL BAKERY

707.545.7528 202 W. 7th Street, Santa Rosa Mon, Tue, Thur, Fri 8:30–4:00 Sat 8:00–2:30 • Closed Wed & Sun

Powerhouse percussionist, singer and songwriter talks about her epic career as part of the “Stories Beyond the Spotlight” series. Apr 9, 5pm. $30-$35. Silo’s, 530 Main St, Napa. 707.251.5833.

Chris Isaak

Wickedly talented crooner comes to Napa for two nights of exciting melodies. Apr 7-8, 8pm. $75-$115. Uptown Theatre, 1350 Third St, Napa. 707.259.0123.

Symphony Napa Valley

More than 200 musicians and singers join the symphony for their annual La Notte gala and perform Brahms’ “Requiem” masterpiece. Apr 8, 5pm. $49 and up. Napa Valley Performing Arts Center at Lincoln Theater, 100 California Dr, Yountville. 707.944.9900.

Clubs & Venues SONOMA COUNTY A’Roma Roasters

Apr 8, Rachel Efron and Paul Fifield. 95 Fifth St, Santa Rosa. 707.576.7765.

Annie O’s Music Hall

Apr 8, Know with Slandyr and the Quitters. 120 Fifth St, Santa Rosa. 707.542.1455.

Arlene Francis Center Apr 8, Characters with Hizi, Rob Ford Explorer and Slender Blossom. Wed, Open Mic. 99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa. 707.528.3009.

Barley & Hops Tavern

Apr 6, Mark McDonald. Apr 7, Amha Selassie Baraka. Apr 8, Ian Franklin & the Infinite Frequency. 3688 Bohemian Hwy, Occidental. 707.874.9037.

The Big Easy

Apr 5, Wednesday Night Big Band. Apr 6, Dictator Tots. Apr 7, Junk Parlor and Rikkha. Apr 8, the Grain and Timothy O’Neil. Apr 9, Total Rex. Apr 11, Ill Eagles. Apr 12, Cygne. 128 American Alley, Petaluma. 707.776.4631.

Cinnabar Theater

Apr 9, SonoMusette. 3333 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. 707.763.8920.

Forestville Club

Apr 8, the Interpretations. 6250 Front St, Forestville. 707.887.2594.

Geyserville Gun Club Bar & Lounge

Apr 8, the Rusty String Express. 21025 Geyserville Ave, Geyserville. 707.814.0036.

HopMonk Sebastopol

Apr 5, Science Buzz Cafe. Apr 6, Climbing Poetree with DJ Delphi and Dakini Star. Apr 7, Monophonics with Marshall House Project. Apr 8, Lady Abstract album release listening party. 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. 707.829.7300.

HopMonk Sonoma

Apr 7, Clay Bell. Apr 8, Michael on Fire. 691 Broadway, Sonoma. 707.935.9100.

Hotel Healdsburg

Apr 8, Harvey Wainapel Trio. 25 Matheson St, Healdsburg. 707.431.2800.

Jamison’s Roaring Donkey

Wed, open mic night. Apr 7, LIFE with Sasquatch Josh and the Nugget King. Apr 8, Pacific Soundrise. 146 Kentucky St, Petaluma. 707.772.5478.

Jasper O’Farrell’s

Apr 8, Carly D and Gabriel Francisco. 6957 Sebastopol Ave, Sebastopol. 707.829.2062.

Lagunitas Tap Room

Apr 5, Osito. Apr 6, New Skye. Apr 7, the Oakland Stroke. Apr 8, Fog Swamp. Apr 9, Swoop Unit. Apr 12, Jason Bodlovich. 1280 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma. 707.778.8776.

Main Stage West

Apr 12, “Players on the Stage” with David T Carter, Jon Gonzales, Doug Jayne and Katie Phillips. 104 N Main St, Sebastopol. 707.823.0177.

Main Street Bistro

Apr 6, Susan Sutton. Apr 7, Vernelle Anders. Apr 8, Levi Lloyd & the 501 Blues Band. Apr 9, Mac & Potter. 16280 Main St, Guerneville. 707.869.0501.

Mc T’s Bullpen

Apr 7, DJ MGB. Apr 9, 4pm, Barbara Olney and friends. Apr 10, DJ MGB. 16246 First St, Guerneville. 707.869.3377.

Murphy’s Irish Pub

Apr 7, Timothy O’Neil Band. Apr 8, Blithedale Canyon. 464 First St E, Sonoma. 707.935.0660.

Mystic Theatre

Apr 5, the Wind & the Wave. Apr 7, the London Souls with People’s Blues of Richmond. Apr 8, That 1 Guy. 23 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. 707.765.2121.

Occidental Center for the Arts Apr 8, Laughing Gravy plays Gram Parsons and beyond. Apr 9, 4pm, Four Shillings Short. 3850 Doris Murphy Ct, Occidental. 707.874.9392.


Paul Mahder Gallery

Apr 9, the David Berkman Quartet. 222 Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg. 707.473.9150.

Apr 10, Musical Mondays with Kayleen Asbo. 20 Fourth St, Petaluma. 707.778.4398.

Phoenix Theater

Apr 7, Broke in Stereo and Silas Fermoy. 201 Washington St, Petaluma. 707.762.3565.

Pongo’s Kitchen & Tap Apr 6, Justin Brown. Apr 8, Don DeBaggis. 701 Sonoma Mountain Pkwy, Petaluma. 707.774.5226.

Redwood Cafe

Apr 7, Relay for Life event. Apr 8, the Blues Defenders. Apr 9, 3pm, Celtic Fiddle Music. Apr 9, 6pm, Irish jam session. Apr 10, Open Mic with DJ Loisaida. 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati. 707.795.7868.

Rio Nido Roadhouse

Apr 8, the Thugz. 14540 Canyon 2 Rd, Rio Nido. 707.869.0821.

Sebastopol Community Center

Apr 8, Tim O’Brien. 390 Morris St, Sebastopol. 707.823.1511.

Sonoma Speakeasy

Apr 5, the Acrosonics. Apr 6, open mic with Glenn McNulty and Steve Della Maggiora. Apr 7, 6:30pm, Jim Caroompas. Apr 7, 8pm, Magic Band. Apr 8, 5:30pm, the Marks Brothers. Apr 8, 8pm, Grey Stripes with John Allair and Julia Herrell. Apr 9, 5pm, Wine Country Blues Band. Apr 11, R&B House Band. 452 First St E, Ste G, Sonoma. 707.996.1364.

Stout Brothers Irish Pub

Iron Springs Pub & Brewery

Apr 5, Rattlebox. Apr 12, Michael LaMacchia and April Grisman. 765 Center Blvd, Fairfax. 415.485.1005.

JB Piano Company

Apr 8, Ian Dogole & Music Beyond Borders. 540 Irwin St, San Rafael. 415.456.9280.

Marin Country Mart

Apr 9, 12:30pm, folkish festival with the Lemonhammer. 2257 Larkspur Landing Circle, Larkspur.

19 Broadway Club

Apr 5, the Damon LeGall Band. Apr 6, Festival Speed. Apr 7, 5:30pm, Danny Montana and friends. Apr 7, 9pm, First Friday reggae with Broken Silence Sound System. Apr 8, 5:30pm, Judy Hall Trio. Apr 8, 9pm, the Pulsators. Apr 9, the Jazz Roots Band. Apr 10, open mic. Apr 11, 6pm, Jeb Brady Band. Apr 11, 8:30pm, Guy and friends. 17 Broadway Blvd, Fairfax. 415.459.1091.

Panama Hotel Restaurant

Apr 5, Dale Polissar with Bart Hopkin. Apr 6, Ann Brewer. Apr 11, Blonde Sided. Apr 12, Paul VornHagen. 4 Bayview St, San Rafael. 415.457.3993.

Peri’s Silver Dollar

Apr 5, the Weissmen. Apr 6, Barnyard Hammer. Apr 7, Swoop Unit. Apr 8, Ann Halen. Apr 9, Chrissy Lynne Band. Apr 10, Billy D’s open mic. Apr 11, Fresh Baked Blues. Apr 12, the New Sneakers. 29 Broadway, Fairfax. 415.459.9910.

Presidio Yacht Club

Apr 6, Fly by Train. 527 Fourth St, Santa Rosa. 707.636.0240.

Apr 7, the 7th Sons. 600 Sommerville Rd, Sausalito. 415.332.2319.

Twin Oaks Roadhouse

Rancho Nicasio

Apr 6, Levi’s Workshop with Mz Dee. Apr 7, Frankie Bourne. Apr 8, the Incidentals. 5745 Old Redwood Hwy, Penngrove. 707.795.5118.

MARIN COUNTY Fenix

Apr 6, Shelby, Texas. Apr 8, James Henry & Hands on Fire. Apr 9, 11:30am, Sunday Brunch with Sam Peoples and Lynne Billig. Apr 9, 6:30pm, the Rivertown Trio. Apr 12, pro blues jam. 919 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.813.5600.

HopMonk Novato

Apr 6, Funkschway and Relevancy. Apr 7, Pop Rocks.

Apr 7, Jerry Hannan. Apr 8, the Overcommitments. Apr 9, 5pm, Jeffrey Halford & the Healers. 1 Old Rancheria Rd, Nicasio. 415.662.2219.

Rickey’s

Apr 7, SwingSet. Apr 8, Tracy Rose Trio. 250 Entrada Dr, Novato. 415.883.9477.

Sausalito Seahorse

Apr 6, Judy Hall Quartet. Apr 7, MSA Jazz with Alan Pasqua and Aarón Serfaty. Apr 9, 5pm, Rumbache. 305 Harbor View Dr, Sausalito. 415.331.2899.

Smiley’s Schooner Saloon

Apr 6, Cygne. Apr 7, French

Oak. Apr 8, Future Twin. Apr 9, Major Powers and the Lo Fi Symphony. 41 Wharf Rd, Bolinas. 415.868.1311.

25

Spitfire Lounge

First Thursday of every month, the North Bass DJ night. First Friday of every month, Truthlive. 848 B St, San Rafael. 415.454.5551. WED, APRIL 26

Sweetwater Music Hall

Kip Moore

Apr 6, Greg Loiacono & His Band. Apr 7-8, the Funkin Truth with Leo Nocentelli and Melvin Seals. Apr 10, open mic with Austin DeLone. Apr 12, Roger Clyne & the Peacemakers. 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley. 415.388.3850.

special guest Levi Hummon

SUN, MAY 7

An Evening with David Sedaris

Throckmorton Theatre Apr 7, Will Ackerman with Todd Boston, Matthew Schoening and Jeff Oster. Apr 9, Sunday Sessions Songwriter’s Circle. 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.

WED, JUNE 14

#IMOMSOHARD Live

FRI, SEPTEMBER 8

Trek Winery

Kansas— Leftoverture 40th Anniversary Tour

Apr 7, Chime Travelers. 1026 Machin Ave, Novato. 415.899.9883.

NAPA COUNTY

707.546.3600 lutherburbankcenter.org

Blue Note Napa

Through Apr 6, Laith Al-Saadi. Apr 7-9, Ravi Coltrane. Apr 12, Kellie Fuller & the Mike Greensill Quartet. 1030 Main St, Napa. 707.603.1258.

Ca’ Momi Osteria

Apr 8, the Novelists. 1141 First St, Napa. 707.224.6664.

Downtown Joe’s Brewery & Restaurant Apr 8, Jinx Jones & the KingTones. 902 Main St, Napa. 707.258.2337.

Napa Valley Performing Arts Center at Lincoln Theater

Apr 11, 7pm, Semi-Toned presents Sing Theory. 100 California Dr, Yountville. 707.944.9900.

Napa Valley Roasting Company

Fri, jammin’ and java with Jeff Johnson. 948 Main St, Napa. 707.224.2233.

Silo’s

Apr 5, Syria T Berry. Apr 6, the Deadlies. Apr 7, the Boys of Summer. Apr 8, Fleetwood Mask. Apr 12, David Kelleher. 530 Main St, Napa. 707.251.5833.

St. Clair Brown Winery Apr 7, the Speakeasy music session. 816 Vallejo St, Napa. 707.255.5591.

Thu 4 ⁄ 6 • Doors 7pm ⁄ $17–$19

Greg Loiacono (The Mother Hips) & His Band feat: Scot Thunes (Mother

Hips, Frank Zappa) Todd Roper (Cake), Alex Koford (Phil Lesh & Friends) & Dave Zirbel with Victoria George

Fri 4 ⁄ 7 & Sat 4⁄8 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $27–$30

The Funkin Truth

feat Leo Nocentelli of the Meters with Special Guest Melvin Seals of JG B Sun 4 ⁄9 • Doors 6:30pm ⁄ $17–$20

Planned Parenthood Benefit feat Olivia Davis, Matt Jaffe, HowellDevine & Todd Morgan

Wed 4 ⁄12 • Doors 7pm ⁄ $20–$22

Roger Clyne Peacemakers

and the

Thu 4 ⁄13 • Doors 7pm ⁄ $20–$22

HTK Trio feat Howard Wales (Hooteroll with Jerry Garcia), Terry Haggerty (Sons of Champlin) & Kevin Hayes (Roy Rogers)

Fri 4 ⁄14 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $22–$24

Wild Child

A Live Re-Creation of a 1960s Doors Concert www.sweetwatermusichall.com 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley Café 388-1700 | Box Office 388-3850

WEDNESDAY

THE WIND + THE WAVE

PIERCE, HALEY JOHNSEN APR 5 ALLISON COUNTRY• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

FRIDAY

THE LONDON SOULS

BLUES OF RICHMOND APR 7 PEOPLE'S ROCK• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

SATURDAY

THAT 1 GUY

THURSDAY

MARCO BENEVENTO

SATURDAY

SPAWNBREEZIE

MONDAY

BEAUSOLEIL AVEC

APR 8

ROCK• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

KIRKE APR 13 WYNDHAM/LOLA ROCK• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

APR 15 GONZO REGGAE• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

DOUCET APR 17 MICHAEL CAJUN• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+ WEDNESDAY

KATCHAFIRE

SATURDAY

PETTY THEFT

VISION, MYSTIC ROOTS BAND APR 19 INNA REGGAE• DOORS 8:30PM • 21+

DRINKERS & HELL RAISERS APR 22 BEER ROCK• DOORS 7:30PM • 21+ 4 ⁄24 Joseph, 4 ⁄28 Gregory Alan Isakov, 5 ⁄4 Keith Greeninger with ACHILLES WHEEL, Joe Craven, 5 ⁄5 Mustache Harbor, 5 ⁄7 Devin The Dude, 5 ⁄10 TODD SNIDER, Great American Taxi, 5 ⁄10 Geographer, 5 ⁄12 FOREVERLAND, 5 ⁄13 Danny Click & The Hell Yeahs, STU ALLEN & MARS HOTEL, Elliott Peck

WWW.MYSTICTHEATRE.COM 23 PETALUMA BLVD N. PETALUMA, CA 94952

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Petaluma Historical Library & Museum

224 Vintage Way, Novato. 415.892.6200.


Lunch & Dinner Sat & Sun Brunch

Din ner & A Show

Hannan Apr 7 Jerry Marin’s Favorite Troubador Fri

8:00 / No Cover

Sat

Overcommitments Apr 8 The Rock and Funk Dance Party! 8:30

Sun

Arts Events

Fireside Dining 7 Days a Week

Apr 9 Jeffrey Halford and The Healers

Rockin’ Bluesy Originals 5:00 / No Cover

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

Join Us for a Special Evening

THANKS FOR VOTING US BEST VINTAGE CLOTHING STORE IN NAPA G U Y S • G ALS • VIN TAG E • RETRO

Thu

Foster Apr 13 Ruthie Multi Blues Awards Winner 8:00 Apr 14

“West Marinicana”

High lonesome twang to Lowdown dirty roots 8:00 / No Cover

& The Nails

er Su ppClub

Apr 15 “1940’s Supper Club” His Birthday Party! 8:30

JOIN US FOR OUR A NNUAL

Easter Sunday Buffet

A PR 16, 10AM–4PM Reservations Advised Fri

Apr 21

7:45 Swing Dance Lessons Stompy Jones 8:00 Reservations Advised

415.662.2219

On the Town Square, Nicasio www.ranchonicasio.com

WILDCAT

VINTAGE CLOTHING 81 0 RA N D O LPH ST, D O W N TO W N N APA 707.2 2 4.3 1 62

Gentle and Effective Acupuncture & Manual Medicine

Robert Allen Fine Art, “Landscapes Reimagined,” works on canvas by Amy Donaldson, Beatrice Findlay, William Leidenthal and John Maxon. 5:30pm. 301 Caledonia St, Sausalito. 415.331.2800.

B&V Whiskey Bar & Grille, “Photographic Show,” featuring works by Steven Krause, Mark Stupich and Tom Deininger. 5pm. 400 First St E, Sonoma. 707.938.7110. Chroma Gallery, “Nature Unbound,” juried exhibit of a wide range of art interprets and reacts to the awesome powers of nature. 5pm. 312 South A St, Santa Rosa. 707.293.6051. Desta Art & Tea Gallery “East West Rhythmical Harmony,” featuring mixed-media works by Modern Chinese and French Impressionism expert Anita Wong and acrylics by eclectic California artist

• Headaches • TMJ • Neck & Back Pain • Digestion • Body Aches

Galleries SONOMA COUNTY Alchemia Gallery

Best Holistic Practitioner 3 Years in a Row!

Dr. Joshua Margolis LAC, DOMTP

95 Montgomery Drive, Ste. 126, Santa Rosa farmacopia.net/services/#joshua

707.861.0625

456 Tenth St, Santa Rosa • Tue–Sat 11–5 707.781.7070 • calabigallery.com

power. 456 10th St, Santa Rosa. Tues-Sun, 11 to 5. 707.781.7070.

Gaia’s Garden Apr 6

Arts Guild of Sonoma, “Pets Lifeline Fundraiser Exhibition,” Sonoma students draw, paint, collage or otherwise assemble a picture of their special pet. 5pm. 140 E Napa St, Sonoma. 707.996.3115.

LoWatters

Lee Presson

Sat

RECEPTIONS

Apr 7

★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

Fri

Man in a Box by Jan Stussy, 1977

NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

26

Through Apr 30, “Habitat,” collaboration between the Alchemia visual arts studio and guest installation artist Emile Rosewater transforms the gallery into a lush alternative dimension. 111 Kentucky St, Petaluma. Mon-Tues, Fri, 10 to 5; Wed-Thurs, Sat, 10 to 4; Sun, 11 to 4. 707.775.3794.

Art Museum of Sonoma County Through Apr 30, “Outside

Elizabeth Geisler. 6pm. 417 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo. 415.524.8932. Jessel Gallery, “Arts in April at Jessel,” the gallery gets in the spirit with an eclectic show and artist demonstrations each weekend. 5pm. 1019 Atlas Peak Rd, Napa. 707.257.2350.

Apr 8

Gallery Route One, “Rising to the Surface,” Inverness artist Zea Morvitz exhibits large-scale drawings of found objects in the center gallery, with a Lucid Art Residency and Mary Mountcastle Eubank’s mixed-media sculptures in the annex. 3pm. 11101 Hwy 1, Pt Reyes Station. 415.663.1347. Markham Vineyards, “Selected Works/Animals Among Us,” Harold Francis shows acrylic paintings on canvas, board and ceramic tile, while Peggy Francis celebrates Napa’s bounty of livestock and wildlife. 1pm. 2812 St Helena Hwy N, St Helena. 707.963.5292. Upstairs Art Gallery, “Yellow,” a color-themed collection of paintings from dry Creek Valley artist Donna Schaffer. 5pm. 306 Center St, Healdsburg. 707.431.4214.

Voice,” painter Marc Katano debuts his recent series of abstract works, done on massive canvas tarps. 425 Seventh St, Santa Rosa. TuesSun, 11 to 5. 707.579.1500.

The Art Wall at Shige Sushi Through Apr 30, “Contemporary Bay Area Photography,” features works by Bob Cornelis, Janis Crystal Lipzin, Michael Maggid, Colin Talcroft and others. 8235 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati. Hours vary. 707.795.9753.

Calabi Gallery

Through Apr 15, “We Shall Overcome,” showing art of defiance and resistance to

Through Apr 30, “Food, Flowers and Beyond,” featuring paintings by Riley Street Art students and instructor Donna DeLaBriandais. 1899 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. Lunch and dinner, MonSat; lunch and brunch, Sun. 707.544.2491.

Graton Gallery

Through Apr 16, “Spaces Retraced,” featuring works by Susan Ball, Tim Haworth and several guest artists. 9048 Graton Rd, Graton. Tues-Sat, 10:30 to 6; Sun, 10:30 to 4. 707.829.8912.

Guerneville Bank Club Through Apr 30, “Glory Days,” exhibit by Russian River Historical Society is a tribute to Clare Harris, who helped turn Rio Nido into the town it is today. 16290 Main Street, Guerneville. Daily, 11am to 9pm 707.666.9411.

IceHouse Gallery

Through Apr 22, “Body Language,” five artists offer diverse interpretations on the figure. 405 East D St, Petaluma. 707.778.2238.

Paradise Ridge Winery Through Apr 30, “Geometric Reflections,” sculpture by 10 renowned artists celebrates 10 years of the Voigt Family Sculpture Foundation. 4545 Thomas Lake Harris Dr, Santa Rosa. Daily, 11 to 5. 707.528.9463.

The Reel Fish Shop & Grill

Through Apr 30, “Fine Art Collage,” longtime Sonoma artist Augustus Manly shows many of his works. 401 Grove St, Sonoma. 707.343.0044.

Ren Brown Collection

Through Apr 30, “Robert DeVee Memorial Exhibit,” the late artist and gallery owner’s paintings, silkscreens, monoprints and 3-D photographs are on display in a celebration of his life in art. 1781 Hwy 1, Bodega Bay. WedSun, 10 to 5. 707.875.2922.

Sebastopol Center for the Arts

Through Apr 16, “Exhibition 60+,” celebrate artists over 60 and see their perspective on


life and the world. 282 S High St, Sebastopol. Tues-Fri, 10 to 4; Sat-Sun, 1 to 4. 707.829.4797. Through Apr 23, “Juried Student Exhibition,” artist Randy Colosky and SRJC art instructor Claudia Morales McCain juror the group show featuring over 40 works in all mediums. Sonoma State University, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park. Tues-Fri, 11 to 4; Sat-Sun, noon to 4. 707.664.2295.

MARIN COUNTY Art Works Downtown

Through Apr 8, “Asleep in the Tanning Bed,” Nathan Lynch and Em Meine display abstract 2D and 3D works in 1337 gallery, visual art students tackle identity and ideals in the underground gallery and Jonathan Eden shows enchanted landscapes in the founders’ gallery. 1337 Fourth St, San Rafael. Tues-Sat, 10 to 5. 415.451.8119.

Marin Art & Garden Center

Through Apr 16, “Between Nature & Technology,” multimedia artworks by New Orleans-based Courtney Egan and David Sullivan criss-cross the two realms. 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Ross. 415.455.5260.

Marin Center Redwood Foyer Gallery Through Jun 2, “Animalia Musicale: A Chorus of Critters,” artist Leslie Lakes paints images of animals over musical score sheets. A portion of the proceeds benefits Enriching Lives through Music (ELM). 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415.499.6800.

O’Hanlon Center for the Arts

Through Apr 20, “Landscapes: Real or Imagined,” the creatively interpreted group show is juried by Marin landscape artist Kathleen Lipinski. 616 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. Tues-Sat, 10 to 2; also by appointment. 415.388.4331.

Throckmorton Theatre

Through Apr 30, “Gardens Markets Landscapes,” Muriel Schmalberg Ullman’s garden paintings show with Laurie Curtis’ watercolors and Kathryn Strietmann’s silkscreens. 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.

Tiburon Town Hall

Through Apr 30, “The Creative

NAPA COUNTY Caldwell Snyder Gallery

Through Apr 30, “Kenton Nelson Solo Show,” the artist idolizes the ordinary in his illuminating paintings of figures and landscapes. 1328 Main St, St Helena. Open daily, 10 to 6. 415.531.6755.

Napa Valley Museum

Through Apr 30, “Ebb & Flow,” artist Ryan Reynolds visualizes the concept of historical ecology, the interactions between man and nature over time. Through Apr 30, “Embracing Imperfection: Contemporary Expressions of Wabi Sabi,” exhibition explores contemporary artists Adam Chapman, Jim Melchert and Leah Rosenberg through the lens of traditional Japanese aesthetic and philosophy of Wabi Sabi. 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville. Wed-Sun, 11 to 4. 707.944.0500.

Comedy

East Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park 866.955.6040.

Events Art Is You MixedMedia Retreat

Dozens of art classes from masterful instructors appeals to any art enthusiast. Apr 5-9. Hyatt Vineyard Creek, 170 Railroad St, Santa Rosa, eatcakecreate.com.

Astronaut Lullabies

Immersive live concert experience with Jim and Kathy Ocean, exploring inner and outer space, returns by popular demand. Sun, Apr 9, 3pm. $10-$15. SRJC Planetarium, Lark Hall, 1501 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. 707.527.4465.

BAM Gala

Brain health, art and music come together in Schurig Center for Brain Injury Recovery’s sixth annual fundraiser with buffet dinner, live entertainment, auctions and a gallery of art by brain injury survivors. Apr 8, 5:30pm. $200. Osher Marin JCC, 200 N San Pedro Rd, San Rafael. 415.461.6771.

Bodega Bay Fisherman’s Festival

Comedy variety show features magic, juggling, stilt-walking, fire-eating, unicycling and more. Apr 8, 8pm. $23-$40. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.

Celebration of local fishermen returns with a theme of “A Wish for Fish.” Wooden boat-building competition, winetasting, food, crafts for all ages, live music and entertainment is included. Apr 8-9. $10-$20. Westside Park, Westshore Road, Bodega Bay, bbfishfest.org.

Scott Capurro

Brain Candy Live!

Frank Olivier’s Twisted Cabaret

Popular standup comedian takes the stage. Apr 8, 8pm. $20-$25. HopMonk Novato, 224 Vintage Way, Novato. 415.892.6200.

Dance Por la Luz de la Luna

Epic Mexican-American ballet is presented by Sonoma Conservatory of Dance. Sebastiani Theatre. Apr 8-9, 1pm. $12-$25. 476 First St E, Sonoma 707.996.9756.

Son of the Wind

Leela Dance, world’s leading Kathak artists present the premiere of their latest work of classical Indian dance. Green Music Center. Apr 8, 7:30pm. $35. 1801

27

“Mythbuster” Adam Savage and YouTube star Michael Stevens team up for a night of mind-blowing science experiments and interactive theatrics. Apr 7, 8pm. $49 and up. Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.546.3600.

Cuvaison Kite Flying Day

The whole family is invited for a day of kites and wines, with adorable and adoptable animals from Napa Humane and Napa County Animal Shelter. RSVP required. Apr 9, 11am. $50. Cuvaison Carneros Tasting Room, 1221 Duhig Rd, Napa. 707.942.2455.

The French Market

Outdoor antique market features vintage, retro and antique furniture, decor,

EASTERN EPIC Leela Dance collective premieres ‘Son of the Wind’ as part of a weekend celebrating Indian culture at the Green Music Center in Rohnert Park. See Dance, below.

clothing, jewelry, housewares and more. Crepes and live music add to the ambiance. Sun, Apr 9, 9am. Free admission. Marin Civic Center, 3501 Civic Center Dr, San Rafael, goldengateshows.com.

Napa Valley Arts in April A month of events aims to foster a unique sense of place through locally produced art paired with Napa Valley’s best wine and culinary offerings. Through Apr 30. Napa Valley, various locations, Napa, artscouncilnapavalley.org.

Roller Derby Two local teams, Resurrection Roller Girls and Sonoma County Roller Derby, go head-to-head in a rolling bout of action. Apr 8, 6:45pm. $10-$12. Cal Skate, 6100 Commerce Blvd, Rohnert Park.

Slow Art Day A mindful morning of yoga puts you in a meditative mood to view and discuss the current exhibit of art. Apr 8, 10am. Napa Valley Museum, 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville. 707.944.0500.

Sonoma County BunFest Inaugural event celebrates bunnies and their friends with educational speakers, local rescue organizations and vendors offering the latest in bunny toys and food. Apr 8, 11am. Free admission. Burton Recreation Center, 7421 Burton Ave, Rohnert Park. 707.588.3456.

Field Trips Habitat Hike

Naturalist Michael Sheffield leads a leisurely exploration of the flora and fauna along the Meadow Trail. Apr 9, 10am. $10. Sugarloaf Ridge State Park, 2605 Adobe Canyon Rd, Kenwood. 707.833.5712.

Sapling Chavurah Hike

Welcome the Jewish holiday of Passover in a family-friendly walk through nature, with stories and song. Apr 8, 10am. Helen Putnam Regional Park, 411 Chileno Valley Rd, Petaluma, nershalom.org.

Spring Hike at Indian Valley

Ascend a steep trail and view local critters and flowers. Apr 9, 10am. College of Marin, Indian Valley Campus, 1800 Ignacio Blvd, Novato. 415.893.9527.

Film Cinema & Psyche

Watch and discuss eight masterful movies with folklore and fairy-tale motifs. Mon, 2pm. through Apr 24. $165. Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 240 Channing Way, San Rafael, cinemaandpsyche.com. Watch and discuss six masterful movies with folklore and fairytale motifs. Thurs through Apr 13. $125. Santa Rosa Junior

College, 1501 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa, cinemaandpsyche. com.

CinemaBites

Foodie film series presents the documentary “Ella Brennan: Commanding the Table,” about the matriarch of a New Orleans restaurant family, paired with food from Evangeline in Calistoga and wines from Mad Hatter. Apr 10, 5:45pm. $45. Cameo Cinema, 1340 Main St, St Helena. 707.963.9779.

Father Goose

The Cary Grant-starring movie screens as part of the museum’s First Friday Film series. Apr 7, 7pm. $5. Charles M Schulz Museum, 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa. 707.579.4452.

Gender Revolution

National Geographic documentary narrated by Katie Couric explores the complexities of gender identity throughout the US. A panel discussion follows. Apr 8, 7pm. Congregation Shomrei Torah, 2600 Bennett Valley Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.578.5519.

The Great Escape

Steve McQueen, James Garner, Charles Bronson and an all-star cast attempt to ditch a German camp during WWII in this 1963 classic. Apr 10, 7pm. $10. Sebastiani Theatre, 476 First St E, Sonoma. 707.996.9756.

Kalpana

Vibrant drama from 1948 is the only film by celebrated Indian dancer Uday ) Shankar, brother

28

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

University Art Gallery

Spark,” the Golden Gate/ Marin Artists group shows with unique art, gifts and cards on hand. Reception, Apr 9 at 4pm. 1505 Tiburon Blvd, Tiburon.


NORTH BAY BOH EM I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

28

A E LAW OFFICES OF OMAR FIGUEROA

( 27

of sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar. Apr 7, 7pm. $20. Green Music Center Schroeder Hall, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.

National Bird

Documentary about whistleblowers breaking the silence around the US drone war screens with whistleblower Lisa Ling and producer Ines Hoffman Kana on hand to discuss the film. Apr 10, 1 and 7pm. Free. Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley St, Sebastopol. 707.525.4840.

Normal Is Over

Award-winning documentary chronicles the way humans have inadvertently imperiled our planet. Screening is followed by Q & A with filmmaker Renée Scheltema. Apr 12, 7pm. $18. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.

Nearly two decades of Experience in Cannabis Defense Cannabis counsel focusing on freedom defense, legal compliance, and medical cannabis licenses & permits.

707.829.0215 / 415.489.0420

omar@omarfigueroa.com • assistant@omarfigueroa.com

7770 Healdsburg Ave., Suite A, Sebastopol, CA 95472

www.omarfigueroa.com

LIFETIME MEMBER, NORML LEGAL COMMITTEE Omar habla español

Not Your Typical Home Movie Short Film Festival Two-part program of short films spans a 50 year period. Apr 9, 12pm. Free. Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley. 415.388.3850.

Petaluma Film Alliance Spring Cinema Series

Featuring recent awardwinning favorites and top Oscar contenders as well as classic and local films, with pre-screening lectures and post-film discussions. Wed through May 17. Carole L Ellis Auditorium, 680 Sonoma Mountain Pkwy, Petaluma. 415.392.5225.

Pollyanna

Filmed in Santa Rosa, the classic movie is screened along with Historical Society of Santa Rosa’s short doc on the city. Apr 11, 6pm. $5. Roxy Stadium 14 Cinemas, 85 Santa Rosa Ave, Santa Rosa. 707.525.8909.

San Francisco Cable Cars

Bay Area filmmaker Strephon Taylor presents and discusses his new documentary about one of San Francisco’s most recognizable icons. Apr 9, 4:15pm. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.454.1222.

Sonoma County Student Film Festival Ninth annual fest features winning short films from Sonoma County students.

Apr 7, 6pm. Free. Carole L Ellis Auditorium, 680 Sonoma Mountain Pkwy, Petaluma. 415.392.5225.

Food & Drink Backyard Cheese Workshop

Learn about alternatives to dairy cheeses, including almond, hemp and soy cheese. Apr 9, 5pm. The Fairfax Backyard Farmer, 135 Bolinas Rd, Fairfax. 415.342.5092.

Battle of the Brews

The popular brewing competition turns 21 and celebrates with craft beers and premium food. Apr 8, 1pm. $50-$95. Sonoma County Fairgrounds, 1350 Bennett Valley Rd, Santa Rosa, battleofthebrews.com.

Beginning Cheesemaking

Learn to make chevre, mozzarella, burrata and ricotta at home Apr 8, 1pm. $60. The Beverage People, 1845 Piner Rd, Ste D, Santa Rosa. 707.544.2520.

Community Passover Seder

Feast on a gourmet Passover dinner, with kosher wine, songs, stories and more. Apr 10, 7:30pm. $36. Chabad Jewish Center of Petaluma, 1970 Rainier Circle, Petaluma. 707-559-8585.

Fresh Starts Chef Event Chef Charles Phan of San Francisco’s Slanted Door demonstrates his awardwinning, modern Vietnamese cooking. Apr 6, 6:30pm. $60. The Key Room, 1385 N Hamilton Pkwy, Novato. 415.382.3363, ext 215.

Signature Sonoma Valley

Inaugural event offers two days of immersive winetasting activities among the valley’s most acclaimed vineyards. Apr 7-8. $175 and up. Sonoma Valley wineries, various locations, Kenwood, sonomavalleywine.com.

Spring Fever

Workshop features chef Sarah Scott, Author of “Wild Table,” creating a meal paired with 2014 Bergfeld Cabernet Sauvignon. Apr 9, 12pm. $150. Hall Winery, 401 St Helena Hwy S, St Helena. 707.967.2620.

For Kids A Year with Frog & Toad

Based on Arnold Lobel’s wellloved books, this whimsical performance is part of Clover Sonoma’s family fun series. Apr 9, 3pm. $5-$21. Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.546.3600.

Lectures The Enemy of the American People

Sonoma Speaker Series explores the Trump administration and its media relations, with Brooke Gladstone, host of public radio’s On the Media, and Dan Schnur, director of the Jesse M Unruh Institute of Politics at USC. Apr 10, 7:30pm. $35-$75. Hanna Boys Center, 17000 Arnold Dr, Sonoma. sonomaspeakerseries.com.

Inclusion, Community & Equity

Keynote speakers address pressing fair housing issues affecting Marin and the Bay Area. Apr 5, 9:30am. $35. Marin Center Showcase Theatre, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415.499.6800.

The Journal as Source of Prose, Poetry & Performance

Free write using prompts and sensory details to capture a moment, then expand those passages to publicationworthy works. Wed, 6:30pm. through May 17. $95. College of Marin, Indian Valley Campus, 1800 Ignacio Blvd, Novato, marincommunityed.com.

The Largest Possible Life

New School host Irwin Keller talks with poet and playwright Alison Luterman about how we live our lives to the fullest. Registration requested. Apr 6, 7pm. by donation. Congregation Ner Shalom, 85 La Plaza, Cotati. 707.664.8622.

Ocean Acidification

Talk looks at the impact on the California Coast. Apr 5, 6:30pm. Romberg Tiburon Center for Environmental Studies, 3150 Paradise Dr, Tiburon. 415.338.3757.

Redwood Writers Meeting

Sonoma County poet laureate


Sailing, Surfing & Swimming with Sharks John McCosker, former director of Steinhart Aquarium and California Academy of Sciences speaks from his extensive knowledge of sharks. Apr 6, 1pm. Outdoor Art Club, 1 W Blithedale Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.2582.

Wildlife & Habitat Connectivity Explore the concepts of habitat connectivity and learn what you can do to be a good neighbor to local wildlife. Apr 12, 7pm. First Presbyterian Church of San Rafael, 1510 Fifth St, San Rafael.

Hall School

Apr 5, 2:30pm, “Thirteen Reasons Why” with Jay Asher. Free. 200 Doherty Dr, Larkspur.

Healdsburg Copperfield’s Books

Apr 6, 6pm, “Be Frank with Me” with Julia Claiborne Johnson, followed by wine reception at Thumbprint Cellars. 104 Matheson St, Healdsburg 707.433.9270.

Jack London State Park

Apr 8, 4pm, Jack London Short Story Read Aloud with Jeff Falconer. 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen 707.938.5216.

Moshin Vineyards

Apr 10, 5:30pm, Writing Between the Vines, featuring Grace Hwang Lynch, Jacqueline Doyle and Monica Nolan reading. 10295 Westside Rd, Healdsburg 707.433.5499.

Napa Bookmine

Readings

Apr 5, 7pm, “Hidden Biscuits” with Audrey Ward. 964 Pearl St, Napa 707.733.3199.

Book Passage

Napa Bookmine at Oxbow

Apr 5, 12pm, “The Nest” with Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, a literary luncheon. $55. Apr 5, 7pm, “The Twelve Lives of Samuel Hawley “ with Hannah Tinti. Apr 6, 7pm, “The Empath’s Survival Guide” with Judith Orloff. Apr 7, 7pm, “The Ayurveda Way” with Ananta Ripa Ajmera. Apr 8, 11am, “A Year Right Here” with Jess Thomson. Apr 8, 1pm, “It Takes One to Tango” with Winifred Reilly. Apr 8, 4pm, “Life After Diagnosis” with DR Steve Pantilat. Apr 8, 7pm, “Red Fire” with Wei Yang Chao. Apr 9, 1pm, “White Tears” with Hari Kunzru. Apr 11, 7pm, “Mozart’s Starling” with Lyanda Lynn Haupt. Apr 12, 7pm, “A Fine Mess” TR Reid. 51 Tamal Vista Blvd, Corte Madera 415.927.0960.

Book Passage By-the-Bay Apr 8, 4pm, “Nicaragua Way” with Nina Serrano. 100 Bay St, Sausalito 415.339.1300.

Diesel Bookstore Apr 7, 6pm, “Ready, Set, Build!” with Meg Fleming. Apr 9, 2pm, “Smarty Marty Steps Up Her Game” with Amy Gutierrez, includes fun and games. 2419 Larkspur Landing Circle, Larkspur 415.785.8177.

Gaia’s Garden Mon, Apr 10, 6pm, Dine with Local Authors. 1899 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa 707.544.2491.

Apr 8, 12pm, “Back Pocket Pasta” with Colu Henry. 610 First St, Shop 4, Napa. 707.726.6575.

Petaluma Copperfield’s Books

Apr 5, 7pm, “Lust and Wonder” with Augusten Burroughs. Free. Apr 8, 7pm, “Smarty Marty Steps Up Her Game” with Amy Gutierrez. Apr 11, 4pm, “Rocket and Groot: Keep On Truckin’” with Tom Angleberger. 140 Kentucky St, Petaluma 707.762.0563.

Readers’ Books

Apr 6, 6:30pm, “Sonoma Writers Alliance Anthology” with various authors. 130 E Napa St, Sonoma 707.939.1779.

Sebastopol Copperfield’s Books

Apr 7, 7pm, “Small Homes: The Right Size” with Lloyd Khan. 138 N Main St, Sebastopol 707.823.2618.

Theater The Birds

The gripping theatrical version of the short story that inspired Alfred Hitchcock’s film gets a North Bay premiere. Apr 7-23. $15-$30. Main Stage West, 104 N Main St, Sebastopol. 707.823.0177.

Bondage

Award-winning playwright

29

Star Finch’s surreal ghost story follows a mixed-race girl who dares to chart her own path to womanhood on an island plantation. Through Apr 16. $25. AlterTheater Performance Space, 200 Tamal Plaza, Corte Madera. 415.454.2787.

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Iris Jamahl Dunkle talks about how Jack London changed her life and inspired her to become a writer. Apr 9, 2pm. $10. Flamingo Resort Hotel, 2777 Fourth St, Santa Rosa. 707.545.8530.

Company

A single man weighs the pros and cons of married life in a series of hilarious musical vignettes. Through Apr 16. $12$27. Novato Theater Company, 5240 Nave Dr, Novato. 415.883.4498.

The Diary of Anne Frank

The gripping new adaptation of the book creates a contemporary, impassioned story of the lives of people persecuted under Nazi rule. Apr 7-23. $10-$25. Raven Theater, 115 North St, Healdsburg. 707.433.3145.

Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus

The light-hearted comedy of vignettes comes to the North Bay. Apr 7-8. $60. Marin Center Showcase Theatre, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415.499.6800.

The Odd Couple

Neil Simon’s Tony-winning comedy pits a clean-freak and a slob who share an apartment with hilarious results. Through Apr 23. $9-$25. Cinnabar Theater, 3333 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. 707.763.8920.

Concentrate Headquarters

The Sugar Bean Sisters

The quirky comedy involves romance, murder and alien abduction. Through Apr 9. $16-$26. Spreckels Performing Arts Center, 5409 Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park. 707.588.3400.

The Sunshine Boys

Neil Simon’s hilarious love letter to Vaudeville is presented by Marin Onstage. Through Apr 15. $12-$24. The Belrose, 1415 Fifth Ave, San Rafael. 415.454.6422.

The BOHEMIAN’s calendar is produced as a service to the community. If you have an item for the calendar, send it to calendar@bohemian. com, or mail it to: NORTH BAY BOHEMIAN, 847 Fifth St, Santa Rosa CA 95404. Events costing more than $65 may be withheld. Deadline is two weeks prior to desired publication date.

• Vendor Demonstrations, Samples & Specials • Largest Edible Selection in the North Bay

Scales certified by Sonoma County Weights & Measures

• Wide Topical Selection • Organic & Lab Tested Medicine

• Student Discounts Friday • Bulk Discounts • Senior & Veteran Discounts 7 Days A Week 10am–7pm Mon–Fri • 10am–5pm Sat–Sun 2425 Cleveland Ave, Ste 175 Santa Rosa (Next to Big 5) 707.526.2800

FRIENDLY AND KNOWLEDGEABLE TRAINED STAFF


THE

30 NORTH BAY BOH E MI AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BO H E M I AN.COM

Nugget

Survey Says

Tracking cannabis consumers BY MICHAEL HAYES

T

his will be my last column for a while, as I anticipate an extended assignment out of the area soon. I will leave you with a look back at 2016 cannabis trends.

Best Criminal Lawyer • DUI • Misdemeanors • Felonies

We also handle: • Major personal injuries • Wrongful death

1510 Fourth Street, Santa Rosa www.adamsfietz.com • 707.999.9999

The basis of this review of last year is the Eaze “State of Cannabis” 2016 report. Eaze is a Californiabased cannabis-delivery service with virtually statewide coverage. Eaze did approximately 350,000 deliveries last year. Using its sales data and a survey of 5,000 members, this is what Eaze reported: The top strains of the year were Gorilla Glue #4, Jack Herer, Bubba Kush, Girl Scout Cookies and Headband. The cleverly named Berry White is a rising star at No. 8. A quick look at the terpene profiles of the above strains shows a strong presence of humulene in five out of the six. Humulene, also found in sage and ginseng, is reported to have anti-bacterial, anti-inflammatory, nonproliferative properties (inhibits cancer cell

growth), and is known as an appetite suppressant similar to THCV, a cannabis compound with a number of potential health benefits. In other findings, 2015 vape cartridges represented 6 percent of Eaze sales, which in 2016 rose to 24 percent. The utility, immediacy and comparative stealthiness of vape cartridges is rapidly winning over the most hardened flower smoker. The top cannabis holidays were 4/20, Green Wednesday and Halloween. Green Wednesday is the day before Thanksgiving. Apparently, spending time with the family requires significant premedication. Forget the baked yams, go with the Girl Scout Cookies. Want to know why the alcohol industry and Big Pharma are afraid of the cannabis industry? Cannabis is replacing opioids for pain management, according to the Eaze report. Ninety-five percent of survey respondents reported using less opioids for pain management. Ninety-five percent! With respect to alcohol, Eaze reports that 82 percent of its customer base has reduced alcohol consumption, with 11 percent quitting altogether. On a personal level, I find myself less interested in alcohol these days, and, on a related note, find that consuming 20mg of CBD prior to any drinking virtually eliminates hangovers. Awareness of the benefits of CBD continues to grow—there was a 38 percent increase in CBD dominant products from 2015 to 2016, says Eaze. Specifically, patients were using CBD to reduce anxiety and inflammation. Well, let’s see: California cannabis consumers are using fewer painkillers, drinking less, reducing anxiety and (perhaps unknowingly) managing appetite. And these aren’t alternative facts. Contact Michael Hayes at mhayes339@comcast.net.


BOHEMIAN

&

PLACE AN AD: Phone: 707.527.1200, Monday-Friday 8:30am-5:30pm

Alternative Health Well-Being

Fax: 707.527.1288 | Email: sales@bohemian.com

SUBOXONE available for Safe Oxy, Roxy, Norco, Vicodin, and Other Opiate Withdrawal!

STACS

SUBOXONE Treatment and counseling services Confidential Program. 707.576.1919

SPIRITUAL

Connections Finding inspiration & connecting with your community

Reality, Truth, and Conscious Light A video Presentation on the Life, Teaching, and Living Spiritual Presence of Avatar Adi Da Samraj “The life and teaching of Avatar Adi Da Samraj are of decisive spiritual significance at this critical moment in history.”

B12 SHOT HAPPY HOUR

B12HappyHour.com Dr. Moses Goldberg, ND Dr. Dana Michaels, ND 707.284.9200

Thai Massage & Body Work

VIVI

Professional Thai massage therapy by Natalie

MASSAGE STUDIO

FOOT REFLEXOLGY THERAPEUTIC BODY MASSAGE

707.308.4169 2635 Cleveland Ave # 7 Santa Rosa

707.981.7128

620 E. Washington St. Suite 208, Petaluma

5 OFF

with this ad

Araya Thai Spa 707.478.2689 Authentic Thai Massage

45/hr, $65/90 min

$

Swedish Massage

— Bryan Deschamp

FRIDAY • APR 21 • 7 PM FREE Adidam.org Maple Room, 2060 W College Ave, S.R. Full Body Sensual Massage

With a mature, playful CMT. Comfortable incall location near the J.C. in Santa Rosa. Soothing, relaxing, and fun. Gretchen 707.478.3952. Veterans Discount. ....................................

Enjoy the Moment

Classic massage by a unique gentleman. Women, men, couples. Since 1991. Aft/eve appts. Santa Rosa 707.799.4467(C) or 707.535.0511 (L) Jimmy

A Wild Irish Rose

$60/hr, $80/90 min

Mature, Independent, *82 415.233.2769 No calls before 9am or after 11pm KARA in Marin Co. ....................................

Tell Me When You’ve Had Enough!!

$1.00 min. for excellent Therapeutic massage. Introductory & Vets. discounts. 30 + years experience. colingodwinmassage. org 707.823.2990 Mon–Sat 10–10

Foot Scrub Reflexology Massage $30/hr Open 10-8 daily

1220 4th Street, Ste. B, Santa Rosa Please call for an appointment

Bearhands4U

Massage for men Sebastopol. Mature strong professional. 707.799.0637. Days evenings weekends $60/hr. Outcalls available. ....................................

A Safe Place For Healing

Holistic, tantric, mature masseuse. Private, unhurried, heart centered. Free consultation with Session. Please call in advance for appt. 707.793.2188.

ARIES (March 21–April 19) Be interested in first things, Aries. Cultivate your attraction to beginnings. Align yourself with uprisings and breakthroughs. Find out what’s about to hatch and lend your support. Give your generous attention to potent innocence and novel sources of light. Marvel at people who are rediscovering the sparks that animated them when they first came into their power. Fantasize about being a curious seeker who is devoted to reinventing yourself over and over again. Gravitate toward influences that draw their vitality directly from primal wellsprings. Be excited about first things. Are you weary of lugging around decayed guilt and regret? Is it increasingly difficult to keep forbidden feelings concealed? Have your friends been wondering about the whip marks from your self-flagellation sessions? Do you ache for redemption? If you answered yes to any of those questions, listen up. The empathetic and earthy saints of the Confession Catharsis Corps are ready to receive your blubbering disclosures. They are clairvoyant, they’re nonjudgmental, and, best of all, they’re free. Within seconds after you telepathically communicate with our earthy saints, they will psychically beam you 11 minutes of unconditional love, no strings attached. Do it! You’ll be amazed at how much lighter and smarter you feel. Transmit your sad stories to the Confession Catharsis Corps NOW!

175 Concourse off Airport Blvd.

Senior Advisor, United Nations

BY ROB BREZSNY

For the week of April 5

TAURUS (April 20–May 20)

Thursday 4–6pm

$

Astrology

Great Massage

By Joe, CMT. Swedish massage, 18 years experience. Will do outcalls. 707.228.6883 ...................................

Therapeutic Massage Deep Swedish

massage. Experienced professional. Edward. 415.378.0740. ...................................

Win Free Stuff

bohemian.com/ northbay/freeStuff

GEMINI (May 21–June 20) Now is an excellent time to FREE YOUR MEMORIES. What comes to mind when I suggest that? Here are my thoughts on the subject. To FREE YOUR MEMORIES, you could change the way you talk and feel about your past. Reexamine your assumptions about your old stories, and dream up fresh interpretations to explain how and why they happened. Here’s another way to FREE YOUR MEMORIES: If you’re holding on to an insult someone hurled at you once upon a time, let it go. In fact, declare a general amnesty for everyone who ever did you wrong. By the way, the coming weeks will also be a favorable phase to FREE YOURSELF OF MEMORIES that hold you back. Are there any tales you tell yourself about the past that undermine your dreams about the future? Stop telling yourself those tales. CANCER (June 21–July 22) How big is your vocabulary? Twenty thousand words? Thirty thousand? Whatever size it is, the coming weeks will be prime time to expand it. Life will be conspiring to enhance your creative use of language . . . to deepen your enjoyment of the verbal flow . . . to help you become more articulate in rendering the mysterious feelings and complex thoughts that rumble around inside you. If you pay attention to the signals coming from your unconscious mind, you will be shown how to speak and write more effectively. You may not turn into a silvertongued persuader, but you could become a more eloquent spokesperson for your own interests. LEO (July 23–August 22) We all need more breaks from the routine—more holidays, more vacations, more days off from work. We should all play and dance and sing more, and guiltlessly practice the arts of leisure and relaxation, and celebrate freedom in regular boisterous rituals. And I’m nominating you to show us the way in the coming weeks, Leo. Be a cheerleader who exemplifies how it’s done. Be a ringleader who springs all of us inmates out of our mental prisons. Be the imaginative escape artist who demonstrates how to relieve tension and lose inhibitions. VIRGO (August 23–September 22) People in your vicinity may be preoccupied with trivial questions. What’s more nutritious, corn chips or potato chips? Could Godzilla kick King Kong’s ass? Is it harder to hop forward on one foot or backward with both feet? I suspect you will also encounter folks who are embroiled in meaningless decisions and petty emotions. So how should you navigate your way through this energydraining muddle? Here’s my advice: Identify the issues that are most worthy of your attention. Stay focused on them with disciplined devotion. Be selfish in your rapt determination to serve your clearest and noblest and holiest agendas. LIBRA (September 23–October 22)

I hope that

by mid-May you will be qualified to teach a workshop called “Sweet Secrets of Tender Intimacy” or “Dirty Secrets of Raw Intimacy” or maybe even “Sweet and Dirty Secrets of Raw and Tender Intimacy.” In other words, Libra, I suspect that you will be adding substantially to your understanding of the art of togetherness. Along the way, you may also have experiences that would enable you to write an essay entitled “How to Act Like You Have Nothing to Lose When You Have Everything to Gain.”

SCORPIO (October 23–November 21)

If you have a dream of eating soup with a fork, it might mean that in your waking life you’re using the wrong approach to getting nourished. If you have a dream of entering through an exit, it might mean that in your waking life you’re trying to start at the end rather than the beginning. And if you dream of singing nursery rhymes at a karaoke bar with unlikable people from high school, it might mean that in your waking life you should seek more fulfilling ways to express your wild side and your creative energies. (P.S.: You’ll be wise to do these things even if you don’t have the dreams I described.)

SAGITTARIUS (November 22–December 21)

If you’re a Quixotic lover, you’re more in love with love itself than with any person. If you’re a Cryptic lover, the best way to stay in love with a particular partner is to keep him or her guessing. If you’re a Harlequin, your steady lover must provide as much variety as three lovers. If you’re a Buddy, your specialties are having friendly sex and having sex with friends. If you’re a Histrionic, you’re addicted to confounding, disorienting love. It’s also possible that you’re none of the above. I hope so, because now is an excellent time to have a beginner’s mind about what kind of love you really need and want to cultivate in the future.

CAPRICORN (December 22–January 19) Your new vocabulary word is “adytum.” It refers to the most sacred place within a sacred place—the inner shrine at the heart of a sublime sanctuary. Is there such a spot in your world? A location that embodies all you hold precious about your journey on planet Earth? It might be in a church or temple or synagogue or mosque, or it could be a magic zone in nature or a corner of your bedroom. Here you feel an intimate connection with the divine or a sense of awe and reverence for the privilege of being alive. If you don’t have a personal adytum, Capricorn, find or create one. You need the refreshment that comes from dwelling in the midst of the numinous. AQUARIUS (January 20–February 18) You could defy gravity a little, but not a lot. You can’t move a mountain, but you may be able to budge a hill. Luck won’t miraculously enable you to win a contest, but it might help you seize a hard-earned perk or privilege. A bit of voraciousness may be good for your soul, but a big blast of greed would be bad for both your soul and your ego. Being savvy and feisty will energize your collaborators and attract new allies; being a smart-ass show-off would alienate and repel people. PISCES (February 19–March 20)

Here are activities that will be especially favorable for you to initiate in the near future: 1. Pay someone to perform a service for you that will ease your suffering. 2. Question one of your fixed opinions if that will lead to you receiving a fun invitation you wouldn’t get otherwise. 3. Dole out sincere praise or practical help to a person who could help you overcome one of your limitations. 4. Get clear about how one of your collaborations would need to change in order to serve both of you better. Then tell your collaborator about the proposed improvement with light-hearted compassion.

Go to REALASTROLOGY.COM to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. Audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1.877.873.4888 or 1.900.950.7700.

31 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | AP R I L 5-1 1 , 20 17 | BOH E MI A N.COM

Classifieds

FREE WILL


WHEN YOU

MORE THAN 980 LOCAL EMPLOYEES 5 Local Employees

Support Us WE SUPPORT OVER

400

Sonoma County

Business Partners

15,000 Who Coectively Create Over

345 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

9 Local Employees

184 Local Employees

35 Local Employees

650 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

25 Local Employees 73 Local Employees 20 Local Employees

4 Local Employees

400 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

7 Local Employees

20 Local Employees

25 Local Employees

LOCAL JOBS

Oliver’s would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge some of our local partners. These logos represent many of the Sonoma County businesses that help make Oliver’s such a great place to shop. When you support independent, local businesses like Oliver’s, research shows that three times more of your money is used to make purchases from other local businesses, services, and farms. You see, stimulating the local economy really does stimulate more economy. When you shop at Oliver’s Markets, we are able to help support—in turn—over seventy other local businesses as well as their 5,943 local employees. Thanks to you, it really does pay to shop local.

15 Local Employees

3000 Local Employees

1 Local Employee

20 Local Employees

60 Local Employees

35 Local Employees

10 Local Employees 16 Local Employees 6 Local Employees

5 Local Employees

900 Local Employees

100 Local Employees

132 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

7 Local Employees

The Tides Wharf 20 Local Employees

150 Local Employees

220 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

9 Local Employees

60 Local Employees 6 Local Employees

155 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

120 LOCAL EMPLOYEES

Real Food. Real People.®

40 Local Employees

98 Local Employees

140 Local Employees

9230 Old Redwood Highway • Windsor • 687-2050 | 546 E. Cotati Avenue • Cotati • 795-9501 | 560 Montecito Center • Santa Rosa • 537-7123 | 461 Stony Point Road • Santa Rosa • 284-3530


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.