North Bay Bohemian November 6-12, 2019

Page 1

SERVING SONOMA & NAPA COUNTIES | NOVEMBER 6-12, 2019 | BOHEMIAN.COM • VOL. 41.25

So Wasted Does the Petaluma River’s elevated fecal indicator bacteria leave the town without a paddle? P8

SAVING SALMON P16 NAPA VALLEY FILM FEST P25 DARK CITY P27


Great Play Days

NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

2

Celebrating 6 Great Years This November! WEDNESDAYS

UP TO

7X

POINT MULTIPLIER DAYS E A R N A ND GE T UP TO 7 X P O I NT S! Preferred = 2X points • Premier = 3X points • Platinum = 5X points • Elite = 7X points

THURSDAYS

POINTS FOR SLOT PLAY

8 A M -M I D N I G HT

Turn points into slot play. 1,000 points = $1 slot play

TH

ANNIVERSARY UP TO

$120,000

FREE SLOT TOURNAMENT

5 P M - 1 0 PM | N O W - N OV E M B E R 2 8

50 guaranteed winners at each tournament. Win up to $15,000 paid in cash!

SLOT TOURNAMENTS

GRATON REWARDS Get your free collectible anniversary rewards card! Available while supplies last.

Not a member? Sign up today and get up to $500 Free Play - Guaranteed!

FROM BAY TO PLAY IN 43 MINUTES. US 101 TO EXIT 484

288 Golf Course Drive West | Rohnert Park, CA

P 707.588.7100

ACTIVATE WEDNESDAY POINT MULTIPLIER OFFERS AT A REWARDS KIOSK. GRATON REWARDS CARD REQUIRED FOR PARTICIPATION IN PROMOTIONS AND EVENTS. MUST BE 21 OR OLDER. COMPLETE RULES AVAILABLE AT THE REWARDS CENTER. MANAGEMENT RESERVES ALL RIGHTS. PLAY WITHIN YOUR LIMITS. IF YOU THINK YOU HAVE A GAMBLING PROBLEM, CALL 1-800-GAMBLER FOR HELP. ROHNERT PARK, CA. ©2019 GRATON RESORT & CASINO.

JOB #: GRT-167434


3

Bohemian The Most Pet-Friendly Winery

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

847 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, CA 95404 Phone: 707.527.1200 Fax: 707.527.1288 CEO/Executive Editor Dan Pulcrano

Publisher

Rosemary Olson, ext. 201

Interim Editor

Daedalus Howell, ext 202

Arts Editor

Charlie Swanson, ext. 203

News Reporter Will Carruthers

Contributors

Alastair Bland, Rob Brezsny, Harry Duke, Christina Julian, James Knight, Charlene Peters, Richard von Busack

WINE TASTING | GIFT SHOP DOG FRIENDLY | HOUND LOUNGE

Copy Editor Mark Fernquest

Editorial Assistant Alex T. Randolph

Design Director Kara Brown

Art Director Tabi Zarrinnaal

Production Operations Manager Sean George

Senior Designer Jackie Mujica, ext. 213

Layout Artist Kathy Manlapaz

Advertising Director Lisa Marie Santos, ext. 205

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

Office Manager Liz Alber

LOCAL

Financial Good Guys

fall sale! save $75* *on a complete eyewear purchase october 27 - november 9 • see store for details.

Local depo sits repurpose d as LOCAL loa ns!

Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Photograph by Scott Hess and Jesse Kaltenbach 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 ©2019 Metrosa Inc.

VOTE FOR US!

as the BEST optical shop in the North Bay! HERE FOR GOOD! Not-for-profit financial cooperative 707/546-6000 comfirstcu.org

534 larkfield shopping center, santa rosa

707.578.2020 sonomaeyeworks.com

store hours mon-sat 9am – 6pm


NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

Scott Hess and Jesse Kaltenbach

4

Let us love your jewelry as much as you do

Drop by for a FREE clean & check SH*T CREEK Does the Petaluma River’s elevated fecal indicator bacteria leave the town without a paddle? p8

9070 Windsor Road Windsor

707 836 1840 MarkShimizuDesign.com

KNOW YOUR WORKPLACE RIGHTS FREE SEMINAR November 13, 2019 at 5pm Are you an independent contractor? A new law might make you an employee entitled to many benefits… • Do you work more than eight hours a day but don’t get paid overtime? • Does your employer deny you 30 min. uninterrupted meal periods? • Does your work prevent you from rest periods? • Do you do piece work? • Do you do construction? • Do you do agricultural work? • Do you work in a salon?

WE WILL DISCUSS THE NEW LAW SIGNED BY THE GOVERNOR AND OTHER EMPLOYEE RIGHTS AT THIS FREE SEMINAR.

O’BRIEN LAW, P.C

Location: 755 Baywood Dr, Ste. 185, Petaluma Questions? Please contact Ellyn Moscowitz at 707.789.6518 RSVP: TANIA@POBRIENLAW.com

nb

“It’s such a simple thing to do; come to a show, enjoy the music and help the homeless.” MUS I C , P 3 0 Waste Deep TH E PA PE R P8

Saving Salmon FEATURE STO RY P 1 6

Reality Grip A RTS & IDEAS P25 Rhapsodies & Rants p6 The Paper p8 Dining p12 Swirl p15 Feature Story p16

Crush p24 Arts & Ideas p25 Stage p27 Film p28 Music p30

Calendar p31 Classified p35 Astrology p35


5

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. Thirty-four 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 23 and 24!

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. Taatjes 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 November 6, 2019 through

January 1, 2020, you will receive my entire new patient exam for $99. That’s with x-rays, exam, report of findings…the whole ball of wax. This exam could cost you $ 380 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 my associates Dr. Jim Rogers, Dr. Shawn Lorenzen, 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. Alex, Nisha or Lupita today for an appointment. We can help you. Thank you.

– Dr. Joel Taatjes

redwoodchiropractic.com

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Doctor’s Confession to Petaluma


NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

6

Rhapsodies BOHEMIAN

Canyon Candidate Though we are still a year out from Election 2020, I’d like to introduce you to a Congressional candidate who promises progressive representation for Californians in the 5th district. Kason Kishineff lives in American Canyon, went to Napa College and is a former pharmacy technician who has witnessed the injustices brought by big

pharma and bad legislation. You can find his platform at kishineff.net.

Take Control

also profit-driven enterprises which will not owe allegiance or duty to us.

As a former candidate for California governor, a “Dark Horse” as reporter Janet Wells called me (MetroActive, 1998), I understand how difficult it is to garner the support needed to succeed. But, I think times are different and people are ready for change. Please support Jason Kishineff for Congress, District 5.

Mr. Peter Byrne,

While never perfect, Californians need public control of our energy at the very least, otherwise we will continue to be in fire danger and sacrificed to corporate greed and avarice.

THIS MODERN WORLD

PIA JENSEN

Napa County

I very much agree with your editorial “Pull the Plug.” (Open Mic, Oct. 30) PG&E is a shareholder-owned corporation that will always put shareholder and management materialistic self-interest above customers, or rate payers. Their fiduciary duties are to owners, not fire victims or other Californians. The interests vying for control of PG&E are

By Tom Tomorrow

JOHN C. HARINGTON, PHD Napa

Open Letter to PG&E PG&E, three little letters with a whole lot of power. Well, here’s three little letters for you: WTF? You try living without power or gas for four or five nights at a stretch and tell me what letters come up for you. I want to know why this company can’t shut off, and more importantly, turn on power quickly and timely? Where is the money from your considerable profits going ($1.6 billion from one quarter in 2017!)? besides the pockets of your executives and shareholders? How much of our money goes to lobbyists and PR-peddlers in Sacramento working on PG&E’s behalf? These aren’t rhetorical questions: I’d really like to know. PG&E has had decades to prepare for weather-related events, improve service for its dependent customers, and troubleshoot future likely events. It has failed mightily and has proven its ineptitude in the power business. Proof of this is their financial failure. PG&E has no business being in the power business. May the fickle finger of fate find its way to your backdoor. *This is not directed at the myriad workers who do the labor and the management for the company. This is to the top brass of this failed corporation and those that have gotten fat off it, which includes the shareholders.

WILL SHONBRUN,

Boyes Springs

Write to us at letters@bohemian.com.


Homerun

Sean Doolittle scores on conscience BY E.G. SINGER

‘I

can’t do it, I just can’t do it.” This statement was made by Sean Doolittle, pitcher for the World Series Champion Washington Nationals. It was a response to the invitation to visit Mr. Trump and the White House. Showing his humanity, integrity and character (traits sorely lacking in the political circles of Washington D.C.), reflected his upbringing. As he told the New York Times, “When I was a kid, I remember my parents would say, ‘Baseball is what you do, but that’s not who you are.’” That he felt that the current administration’s policies and rhetoric had widened the divide in this country, and in good conscience, (another trait, absent from the halls of Congress these days), could not attend. Many professional athletes, as well as other celebrities, address social issues, through financial donations, setting up foundations, or volunteering and speaking out for causes close to their hearts. Sean is one of the many fortunate individuals to be able to do that. To generalize about wealthy, snobby movie stars or spoiled athletes, especially when they choose to be outspoken, is to take a myopic and cynical view of these people. It should be remembered that these individuals, who may be known by face and profession in the social media, are also compassionate human beings, who may in their own private lives, also face certain difficulties—whose lives may have been or presently are touched by the numerous problems that confront us all. Most pitchers are not known for their hitting acumen—they do one thing well, they pitch. Most athletes won’t be remembered for their statistics, which is reserved for a very small group. But Sean Doolittle has exemplified through his words and actions what it means to live by certain principles, about crossing that line—and that has nothing to do with record books. But his decision has surely made him the most valuable player of this 2019 World Series. He has hit a tape-measured home run right out of the park! We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write openmic@bohemian.com.

WINTER SPECIALS 15% OFF

BATHROOM REMODELS BOOKED BEFORE DECEMBER

500

$

FULL HOME INSPECTION REPORT And what is it to work with love? It is to build a house with affection, even as if your beloved were —Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet to dwell in that house.

BROADHEAD CONSTRUCTION

BroadheadConstruction.com | sethbroadhead@gmail.com | 805.315.5397 CA License #1039845 | Serving Sonoma County

E VO T VOTE For Sonoma & Napa’s Best

Oct 2 - Dec 31

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BER 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Rants

7


Paper THE

WATER POOLUTION High bacteria levels from the Petaluma River have reached San Antonio Creek in Marin.

Waste Deep

Petaluma River brims with ‘fecal bacteria’ BY WILL CARRUTHERS

T

he river winding through downtown Petaluma might be the city’s single most defining feature. The city’s annual Rivertown Revival Festival features views of the river and, farther south, recreationists use the water for entertainment and exercise every day. Yet, since 1975, the state

has designated the water a contaminated water body due to excessive levels of bacteria tied to fecal matter. The river has also been included on the list for excessive amounts of pesticides, trash and sediment at other times. Now, a state water oversight board may pass a plan laying out the steps to lower the levels of bacteria in the river and its watershed. At a Wednesday, Nov. 13 meeting in Oakland, the

San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board will consider approving an amendment to the board’s water quality control plan for the region, a document known as a basin plan. The proposed amendment will set a cap on the amount of fecal indicator bacteria in the river’s watershed—the TMDL— and identify actions required to reach that goal. The federal Clean Water Act requires the state to create the cap

Photo credit: Scott Hess

NORT H BAY BOHE MI AN | N OVEM B ER 6-12 , 2 019 | B OH E M IA N.COM

8

and cleanup plan, known as a Total Maximum Daily Load [TMDL]. Staff members working for the water board, one of nine similar regional bodies tasked with setting water quality rules in California, have been assembling the Petaluma River plan for several years, according to Farhad Ghodrati, an environmental scientist with the San Francisco Bay board. Although there are over 100 potentially dangerous bacteria related to fecal matter, scientists generally only test for a few varieties. These “fecal indicator bacteria,” including E. Coli, are a sign that animal waste has contaminated the water body. If those levels are above the bar set by the water quality control board, they add the water body to a list of “impaired” waterways. “High FIB levels indicate presence of pathogenic organisms that are found in warm-blooded animal (e.g., human, cow, horse, dog, etc.) waste and pose potential health risks to people who recreate in contaminated waters,” a report prepared by water board staff states. The results of the Petaluma River tests weren’t good. Multiple tests for traces of E. Coli between winter 2015 and summer 2016 across 16 testing stations in the watershed revealed levels far in excess of water board requirements. For instance, water quality rules allow for the discovery of excessive levels of E. Coli in less than 10 percent of samples, but tests in the Petaluma River watershed showed excessive levels in 65 to 100 percent of samples in a series of six rounds of tests conducted over 18 months. “This result shows that the magnitude of impairment in the river is pretty significant, and some of the highest concentrations we have seen in the region,” Ghodrati said about the E. Coli results. While many strains of E. Coli are harmless, others can cause health problems, including diarrhea and vomiting, according to the Centers for Disease ) 10 Control and Prevention.


9

TH I S SATU R DAY !

SA N RA FA E L N OV. 9

PE TA LU MA

N OV. 20

O F F E R S TO T H E S E R E S O RTS : ®

BUY TICKETS HERE

GET T IC K ETS ! IT ’ S T RA D IT ION !

WARR E NMILLER.COM

Fine Dining For Wild Birds

MUSIC

WHEN YOU WANT IT WHERE YOU WANT IT

BETTER SOUND FOR BETTER LIVING

71 Brookwood Ave., Santa Rosa 707.576.0861 Mon–Sat 10am–6pm, Sun 11am–4pm • www.wbu.com/santarosa

Birdseed • Feeders • Birdbaths • Optics • Nature Gifts • Books

YOUR LOCAL AUDIO & VIDEO EXPERTS 1044 4th Street, Santa Rosa 707.595.2020 | LavishAutomation.com Tues–Fri: 10–6:30pm Sat: 10–6pm

CUSTOM ELECTRONIC DESIGN & INSTALATION ASSOCIATION

MEMBER

Locally Owned & Operated

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

PRESENTS


Dennis Ferguson

NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

10 Petaluma River ( 8

GO WITH THE FLOW Many people use the Petaluma River recreationally.

according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. If the water board passes the proposed amendment, San Antonio Creek, a creek running along the border between Sonoma and Marin counties, will also be added to the list of impaired water bodies for excessive levels of fecal bacteria. “The testing we did as part of this TMDL development showed that the bacteria levels in all tributaries, including San Antonio Creek, were well above the impairment threshold level,” Ghodrati, the state scientist, told the Bohemian. Because the Petaluma River has long been unhealthy, the news that state scientists have discovered excessive levels of bacteria, while concerning, was not all too surprising to one longtime river recreationist. Susan Starbird, a coach for the River Town Racers, a kayakracing group based in Petaluma, has been using the river since the 1980s.

While Starbird takes for granted that the urban rivers she uses around the Bay Area are somewhat contaminated, she still uses them with caution. Although it is inevitable that kayak racers tip over in the river—“It’s part of the sport,” Songbird says—she makes sure her students rinse off completely before leaving each day.

Sources There are many potential sources for the excessive fecal matter in the river. Agricultural uses and various human sources, including city and county sewer systems, private septic tanks, boats on the river and homeless encampments are among the sources named in the water board’s report. For each source, the water board recommends actions to reduce bacteria levels. The water board has set a zero tolerance rule for human waste, because it presents the greatest risk to humans and is entirely preventable if one follows the

proper procedures, according to the staff report. “When operated properly and lawfully, sanitary sewer collection systems, [onsite wastewater treatment systems] and vessel marinas are designed to not discharge any human waste to waters,” the report states. One major source of human waste may be the two public sewer systems within the watershed: the Sonoma County Water Agency’s small but aging sewer facility in Penngrove; and Petaluma’s larger city collection system. “Sewer line backups, overflows and leaks occur, frequently during periods of wet weather, creating a potential source of bacteria on land surface that may be transported via urban runoff to the nearby water bodies,” according to the staff report. Because recent tests by water board staff detected “fecal bacteria of human origin” throughout the watershed, “discharges from the sanitary sewer collection systems [are] a likely source,” the report states. The county’s Penngrove facility, which serves 1,300 customers compared to the 62,000 served by the Petaluma system, is disproportionately prone to leaking, according to the report. Between 2007 and 2017, Petaluma’s system overflowed 77 times, while the county’s Penngrove station spilled over just 17 times. However, despite being a fraction of the size of the Petaluma system and leaking far fewer times, the Penngrove facility poured 534,331 gallons of sewage into the watershed over the 10-year period, compared to the roughly 818,475 gallons of overflow tied to the Petaluma facility. Overall, the Penngrove facility’s mainlines were over four times more likely to overflow than the average public sewage system in the state, according to the water board’s report. The Petaluma system’s overflow rates for mainlines are below the state average. Overflows are generally caused by “aging infrastructure

that needs maintenance or replacement,” according to the water board report. In a statement, Brad Sherwood, Sonoma Water’s community and government affairs manager, said that recent upgrades to the Penngrove facility are expected to reduce the number of overflow events. At least one problem remains. Because the facility’s pump station is located in a flood plain, it must be disconnected from power during floods, according to Sherwood. “Sonoma Water plans to use FEMA and local funding to elevate the pump station equipment so that the station can continue to operate during [floods],” Sherwood told the Bohemian. The project is expected to cost $900,000. If the improvements are successful, they could bring the facility into compliance with the TMDL. Onsite wastewater treatment systems (OWTS) within the watershed, such as septic tanks owned by homeowners in unincorporated areas, may also be a source of human fecal matter. Owners may have to make changes to their systems pending review by Sonoma or Marin county authorities. Farming facilities with horses and cows within the watershed are another possible culprit. All told, there are approximately 16,000 grazed acres in the river’s watershed, and 149 grazing operations within the watershed which are larger than 50 acres. If those operations are not following water quality controls properly, animal waste may make its way into the rivers and creeks. Water board staff will test the waters five years after passing the plan to give local governments and businesses time to fix potential problems, according to Ghodrati. Once they have the results, the water board can revisit the Petaluma River’s listing on the list of impaired rivers. If the river is clean, they will remove it from the shit list.


Every Wednesday & Thursday 3–6pm

BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND CATERING

$ 6 APPETIZER MENU—ROTATES WEEKLY

Open M–F, 7:15–2:30pm ~ 707.843.3829 ~ startingfromscratch.biz 400 Aviation Blvd, Ste 300, Santa Rosa ~ in the American Ag Credit Bldg

Thank You Bohemian Readers for Voting Ramen Gaijin

Best Ramen North Bay

Handmade Noodles

HAPPY HOUR 3:30-5:30

$ 3 Yakitori & Izakaya

6948 Sebastopol Ave, Sebastopol 707.827.3609 | ramengaijin.com

s! Vote fof r20U 20 Best o

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Happy Hour!

11


Dining Photo credit: Kelly Fleming

NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

12

OLIVE ME Although handpicking is laborious, Jamie Anzalone prefers this method of climbing a ladder to fill his buckets.

Oiled Up

Olives are Wine Country’s other crush BY CHARLENE PETERS

N

ow that the grape harvest is complete, it’s time to turn to the olive groves to pick, crush and extract the oil. According to Jamie Anzalone, in about a week, olives in Napa Valley will be ready for harvest, and he should know. As the former owner of two storefront olive oil companies in Upper Napa Valley, Anzalone’s experience dates back to 2011.

Initially lured from his roots in Buffalo, New York, to enroll in a food and beverage education at the Culinary Institute of America 20 years ago, Anzalone last worked at Solbar at Solage Calistoga as maître d’ before he switched his career to accommodate his restructured family life. He knew he wanted to do something different, so when he found an available retail space on Lincoln Avenue, he transitioned to an olive oil sommelier and opened the storefront, Calistoga Olive Oil. He later changed the

name to Napa Valley Olive Oil and opened a second storefront in St. Helena. At first, he bought olive oil direct from producers, but when the late Bob Pecota of Bennett Lane entered the store and asked if he’d be interested in picking from the 100 olive oil trees on his property, Anzalone accepted the opportunity to produce his own olive oil and began to research the process. “That year when I picked olives, I took a gold medal at the 2012 New York International Olive Oil Competition,” he said.

“The valley proved to be the perfect growing area.” He knew he was onto something—utilizing a crop he noticed usually falls to the ground and goes ignored. Through connections he made while working at Solbar, Anzalone arranged to source from olive trees at several wineries and estates within the Napa Valley. His neighbor introduced him to some olive pickers and everything fell into place. He worked with viticulturists on properties where he picked from the olive groves, advising them on pruning techniques and necessary nutrients. When the time is right for harvesting, he takes his crew in to pick and then press the olives. Once they’ve harvested the olives, the processing begins at a local mill in either Sonoma or Lake county. The mill process takes about an hour per ton. “Once they go in the machine,” he explains, “an hour later you’ve got fresh olive oil.” Anzalone allows the oil to rest for 45 days, or until the sediment falls to the bottom. The business deal varies with each grove, but in the case of Pecota, Anzalone forfeited 10 percent of the olive oil in exchange for owning the olives. “Sometimes they hire me to pick with the crew, and they pay the mill and own the oil,” Anzalone explained. “I’m like a consultant. They keep the oil, but I can buy it back from them.” When his family situation changed, however, so did Anzalone’s business model. His young daughter moved to San Diego with his ex-wife and he could no longer work 12-hour days with the new visitation in place. So, in one slick move, Anzalone closed the doors to both his storefront Napa Valley Olive Oil companies and succumbed to the online shopping world. That was in 2016, when he realized the online presence of his company was enough to sustain him. “I trimmed the fat,” he said. “Looking at the numbers, I asked myself why I gave landlords so much money every month?” The online plan allows ) 14


NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Happy Hour 4-6pm, Tuesday-Saturday

eers B t

Tap on

25 Craf

13

Bardoli Buck

Vodka, Raw Tumeric, Ginger, Lime, Bitters, Ginger Beer, Golden Beets

TM

has R E G R U S U P E R Bn d s p a n k i n a bra urger palace! new b

W H A A A A A A A T !! E DIN

IN

! TAKE

8252 Old Redwood Hwy.

OUT

Cotati

VISIT OUR OTHER LOCATIONS!

707 665-9790

Santa Rosa • Windsor • Stony Point • Bennett Valley originalsuperburger.com


NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

14

Voted Best Italian restaurant

Lo Coco’s C u c i n a R u s t ic a

Olives ( 12

—North Bay Bohemian

LoCoco’s is everything an Italian restaurant should be— boisterous, busy, fun, with excellent authentic food of the best quality: fresh seafood, meats and pasta. Serving Lunch & Dinner hiStoric r aiLroaD Square

117 Fourth Street, Santa Rosa 707-523-2227

LoCocos.net

R ated

the

e m ia boh

n ’s

best

of

ay th b nor the

COLD PLAY Once the olives are harvested, they can’t be heated up—this is when the cold press comes in to play.

2005

Gift CeRtifiCates available | loC oCos.net

Tune in to THE DRIVE’S “California Wine Country” with Co-host Dan Berger, Wine Expert! WEDNESDAYS AT 5PM The Drive 3 TO 6, WEEKDAY AFTERNOONS ON KSRO 1350AM & 103.5FM To become a Drive sponsor contact Cathy Ratto at cathy.ratto@yahoo.com

/JAXONDRIVE

him time to participate at local events such as Calistoga Food & Wine and Festival Napa Valley’s Taste of Napa and across the country to a circuit of food and wine shows. He continues to source from olive groves on Mt. Veeder, Diamond Mountain and in St. Helena. A few wineries, such as Cliff Lede, Duckhorn, and Spottswoode, are sources as well. Next year, he plans to sell his olive oil and products at the St. Helena Farmers Market on Fridays, and every other Saturday at the Napa Farmers Market, alternating between the San Diego Farmers Market during visitation with his daughter. Storefronts that carry his new label, Anzalone’s Olive Oil (honoring his Sicilian surname), include Cal Mart in Calistoga, Oakville Grocery and potentially the new Gary’s Wine & Marketplace in St. Helena. Restaurants such as Perry Lang’s in Yountville serve Anzalone’s

Olive Oil with their bread service, and it’s also on the menu at Angèle’s Restaurant & Bar on the riverfront in Napa. The new business model agrees with Anzalone, who has more time to spend with his daughter and more time to travel. “Now, I love it. It’s the dream for me,” he said. “It’s afforded me a great lifestyle, freedom and the ability to make great olive oil—100 percent pure, property-specific from the Napa Valley.” Anzalone plans to create a food line based on olive oil, and to create a healthy line of olive oil beauty products such as soaps and lotions, in the new year. He admits olive oil is best served in its raw form as a finish to soups, as a salad dressing, over risotto and for use in baking (he says it’s a natural preservative). His personal favorite is to make scrambled eggs pooled in his own olive oil. Charlene Peters can be found at Siptripper.com.


BLUE SKIES, RED WINE

Alexander Valley won’t let a little thing like the Kincade Fire keep them down.

Rock On Burnt but unbroken, Soda Rock pops corks amid the ashes BY JAMES KNIGHT

T

he smoke wasn’t quite as thick this year in wine country, but the love needn’t be any thinner. That spirit was on full display last weekend when I stopped by Soda Rock Winery, having heard rumor of a “pop-up” wine tasting, and found the parking lot nearly full, and the grounds teeming with wine tasters sipping caramel-scented Chardonnay. I could hardly get an elbow on the bar.

Yep—that Soda Rock, the Alexander Valley winery that recently burned down in the Kincade fire of October 2019. Turns out, the historic redwood barn adjacent the winery, although it leaks daylight through its spindly

15

HEALTHY VIETNAMESE CUISINE • Natural

Meats

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Swirl

boards, rebuffed the flames (with the help of firefighters who arrived in the nick of time) and still stands, only slightly singed. With my nose in a glass of red, cherryfruited Postmaster Zinfandel, I stroll over to inspect the site of the wine’s namesake. Soda Rock’s stone facade was originally built as the area’s post office. And it wasn’t really a winery when embers jumped across Highway 128 the week before. “Soda Rock primarily was an events center with a fabulous tasting room,” explains Antoine Favero, winemaker and general manager for Mazzocco Sonoma, where he also makes Soda Rock wines. “So the good thing is that we still have some juice. Unfortunately, we did have case goods there.” The Wilson Artisan Wineries group owns Mazzocco and Soda Rock. “I went there yesterday and it was not a good day,” Favero says. But he’s sanguine about the future. “We’re going to pick ourselves up and rebuild and keep on going!” For now, he’s focused on the challenges that power outages, evacuations and smoke present for the 2019 vintage. “We were very, very lucky this year, because about 97 percent of the grapes had been picked before the fire,” Favero says. “The bad thing was, yeah, we had to leave some behind,” because of smoke tainted grapes, he explains. “But you can’t win it all—it’s just the nature of the beast right now.” Grapes safely picked and crushed, however, were bubbling away when the power went out. “I grew up in South America, where every other day we had a power outage,” Favero shrugs. “So I don’t freak out. But in the United States? It’s kinda going back to my third world country.” Modern wineries control temperatures with cooling systems to guide fermentations to suit the winemaker’s style. “This is something brand new for me. I have never, in my 30 years of winemaking, been away from my fermentations for eight days,” Favero says. He could check on them nearly every day, but do little else. Nevertheless, he feels that the high quality of the fruit this year will prevail. “Whatever we had in tank before the fire, I think is going to be wonderful.”

• Organic

Veggies & Tofu • Dine-In or Carry-Out

320 West 3rd St • Santa Rosa 707.595.4447 • phocrazy.biz

Everest Indian

Restaurant WED NIGHT: 5-7p

18” Cheese $13.99! 18” 2 Tops $19.99! Stuffed Shells for $5 Meatballs for $1 ea.

showcasing Chef Gopal’s quality recipes and service

dine in, take out, & catering

Indian, Nepalese and Tibetan cuisine lunch specials 11am–3pm dinner 4–9pm $10 corkage fee vegan & gluten-free options 104 Calistoga Road, Santa Rosa open 7 days 707.843.7441 everestrestaurantsantarosa.net

HAPPY HOUR EVERY DAY $299

DRAFT BEERS 4–6PM

707.52NYPIE

7 0 7. 5 2 6 . 9 7 4 3

www.NEW-YORK-PIE.com 65 Brookwood Ave, Santa Rosa


NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

16

Danny Moore

DAM’D IF YOU DON’T Some see an opportunity to revive fish runs by overhauling the Scott Dam and related infrastructure pieces collectively called the “Potter Valley Project.”

Saving Salmon Will overhauling Scott Dam save native fish?

S

almon three feet long seem to clog the water as the chrome-colored fish, fresh from the ocean, begin their journey upriver toward the high-elevation gravel riffles where they were born. Here, in the remotest tendrils of the watershed, they will lay and fertilize the eggs that ensure the next generation of salmon.

At least that’s how it once was early each autumn on the Eel River. But nature’s security system for fish survival is only as good as the health of a river. In the case of the Eel, a local power company built a dam on the Eel’s main fork in 1920. As a result, Chinook salmon lost access to about 100 miles of spawning habitat. Steelhead, which swam farther upstream into smaller tributaries, suffered even greater impacts. Intensive

BY ALASTAIR BLAND

in-river commercial fishing, water diversions, logging and other land degradation took their toll, too. Today, annual salmon runs in Eel River that once may have totaled a million or so adults consist of a few thousand. Lamprey eels, too, have dwindled. Now, there is serious talk of removing Scott Dam, owned by PG&E since 1930. For fishery proponents, such a river makeover is the optimal way to revive the Eel’s salmon runs.

“We want to see volitional passage, both ways,” says Curtis Knight, executive director of the conservation group California Trout. Volitional, in this context, means the salmon are able to make their historic migration on their own—downstream as newly born juveniles and, later, upstream as sexually mature adults—all without the assistance of human hands. “We think dam removal ) 21


17

The Bohemian Best of 2020

Readers Poll

Vote online at bohemian.com (mailed ballots will not be counted)

The Bohemian publishes the North Bay’s longest running Best Of contest and we owe it all you the reader. We know a thing or two about what makes the North Bay special, but we certainly don’t know as much as the collective braintrust of Bohemian readers. We depend on all of you to ferret out the best taquerias, barber shops, dentists, brew pubs and everything in between. Some winners will no doubt be old favorites while others will rise to topple perennial victors. It’s up to you to tell us what’s cool and great about North Bay people and places. Armed

with that knowledge, we’ll then package it all up, come up with a clever, creative theme and then share your findings with the larger world. This year we’ve made a slight change. While we continue to celebrate all things indie and local (no chain stores allowed), we’re allowing votes for businesses that began in the North Bay but have expanded into other areas and those have been scooped up by larger companies—so long as you think they’re still cool. So think about what you love about the North Bay and vote! The deadline is December 31st. —The Editor

A few online voting rules:

Important! Check one of the following.

☐ ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐

Complete at least 20 votes of the ballot for inclusion in the poll

My selections are for:

Deadline for online ballots is December 31, 2019

Include your name and a daytime phone number Ballots are confidential, but you may be called to confirm your vote Only 20 ballots per IP address

First Place Winners will be chosen

Bohemian staff members, contributors, advertisers and their families may vote

Art & Culture

Best Art Gallery Best Ballet Company Best Band Best Charity Event Best Comedy Night Best Cover Band Best Dance Studio Best Festival Best Film Festival Best Indy Filmmaker Best LGBTQ Event Best Media Personality: TV, Radio, Print Best Movie Theater Best Museum Best Music Festival Best Music Venue Best Outdoor Art Event Best Outdoor Music Festival Best Outdoor Music Venue Best Performing Arts Center Best Performing Dance Company Best Photo Services Best Place to Dance Best Theater Troupe Best Videographer

Recreation

Best Bike Route/Trail Best Bike Shop Best Cycling Event

☐ Sonoma County ☐ Napa County Keep your votes to locally born businesses!

Best Gym Best Health Club Best Hiking Trail Best Horse Back Riding Best Martial Arts School Best Outdoor Adventure Tour Best Park Best Personal Trainer Best Pilates Studio Best Skate Shop Best Surf Shop Best Swimming Pool Best Tai Chi⁄Qigong Instructor Best Water Sports Company Best Yoga Studio Best Yoga Winery Experience

Food & Drink

Best Art Inspired Winery Best Bakery Best Bar Best Bartender Best BBQ Best Beer Label Best Bourbon Best Breakfast Best Brew Pub Best Brunch Best Burger Best Business Lunch Best Butcher Shop

Best Cabernet Best Cafe⁄Coffeehouse Best Caterer Best Chardonnay Best Cheese Shop Best Chef Best Chinese Best Chocolatier Best Cider Best Cocktails Best Craft Beer Selection Best Craft Brew Event Best Craft Canned Beer Best CSA (community supported agriculture) Best Diner Best Dining After 10pm Best Dive Bar Best Eco-Friendly Winery Best Emerging Winery (less than 1 year) Best Farmers Market (specify location) Best Food Delivery Best Food Producer Best Food Truck Best French Best Fried Chicken Best Frozen Yogurt Best Gin Best Gluten-Free Menu Option Best Happy Hour Best Ice Cream

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

NEW RIES CATEGO


NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

18

Best Indian (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Italian Best Japanese/Sushi Best Latin American Best Local Coffee Roaster Best Locally Made Food Product Best Mediterranean (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Mexican (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Micro Distillery Best Microbrew Best New Restaurant Best Outdoor Dining Best Pet-Friendly Winery Best Pinot Noir Best Pizza Best Port Best Ramen Best Restaurant Best Restaurant with a View Best Rosé Wine Best Rum Best Sandwich Shop Best Sausage Maker Best Sauvignon Blanc Best Seafood Best Server⁄Restaurant Best Sommelier Best Sparkling Wine Best Spot to Dine Solo Best Syrah Best Tea Shop⁄Cafe Best Thai (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Vegan Menu Best Vegetarian Best Vietnamese Best Vodka Best Whiskey Best Wine Club Best Wine Education Experience Best Wine & Food Experience Best Wine Grower Best Wine Label Best Wine List Best Wine Made From Sustainably Grown Grapes Best Winemaker Best Winery Charity Event Best Winery Event Best Winetasting Room Best Zinfandel

Family

Best Animal Adoption Center Best Animal Hospital Best Animal Rescue Group Best Baby Gift Store Best Birthday Party Place Best Children’s Clothing Store Best Children’s Consignment Store Best Children’s Educational Center Best Children’s Indoor Sports Center Best Children’s Museum Best Dog Obedience School Best Dog Park Best Doggie Day Care Best Kennel

Best Pet Boutique Best Pet⁄Feed Store Best Private School Best Public School Best Summer Day Camp Best Toy Store Best Veterinary Services

Home Improvement

Best Appliance Store⁄Repair Best Architect Best Carpet Cleaning Best Carpeting⁄Flooring Best Cleaning Service Best Contractor (Commercial) Best Contractor (Residential) Best Deck & Fencing Best Demolition Firm Best Electrician Best Emergency Preparedness Service Best Furniture⁄Home Furnishings Best Green Builder Best Hauling Best Home Improvement Store Best Interior Designer Best Kitchen⁄Bath Remodeler Best Landscape Design Company Best Landscape Supplier Best Landscaper Best Mortgage Broker Best Moving & Storage Best Paint Supplier Best Painting Contractor Best Plumber Best Real Estate Agent⁄Firm Best Roofer Best Self-Storage Best Solar Supplier Best Tree Service Best Window Cleaners

Romance

Best Boutique Hotel Best Couples Counseling Best Erotica Store Best Flower Farm Best Lingerie Shop Best Place for Singles to Meet Best Romantic Dinner Best Sex Therapist Best Staycation Best Wedding Caterer Best Wedding Event Planner Best Wedding Officiant Best Wedding Photographer Best Wedding Reception Venue

Beauty, Health & Wellness Best Acupuncturist Best Allergist Best Assisted Living Facility Best Barber Best Chiropractor Best Day Spa Best Dentist


Cannabis

Best Attorney—Cannabis Best Cannabis Body Care Best Cannabis Event Best Cannabis Label Best CBD Product Best Edibles Best Hydroponic Supply Store Best Medical Dispensary Best Mobile Delivery Best Pipe Shop Best Therapeutic Product

Everyday

Best Accountant Best Ad Agency Best Antique Shop Best Art Supply Store Best Attorney—Bankruptcy Best Attorney—Business Best Attorney—Civil Best Attorney—Criminal

Best Attorney—Divorce Best Attorney—Intellectual Property Best Attorney—Labor & Employment Best Attorney—Real Estate Best Attorney—Trusts and Estates Best Auto Dealer Best Auto Detailing Best Auto Glass Repair Best Auto Repair Best Bank—Business Best Bank—Consumer Best Body-Art⁄Piercing Place Best Bookstore—New Best Bookstore—Used Best Car Audio Best Casino Best Chamber of Commerce Best Church Best Clothing Alterations Best Clothing Store—Men’s Best Clothing Store—Women’s Best Costume⁄Festival Apparel Shop Best Co-Working Office Space Best Credit Union Best Culinary Store Best Digital Creative Services Best Ethnic Market Best Event Production Services Company Best Fashion Jewelry Store Best Financial Advisor Best Fine Jewelry Store Best Framing Shop Best Gift Shop Best Green Business Best Grocery Store Best Home Audio Best Insurance Agent Best Jewelry Repair Best Law Firm Best Locally Made Retail Product Best Mortuary Best Motorcycle⁄Scooter Shop Best Musical Instruments Store Best Natural Foods Store Best New Retail Business Best Nonprofit Best Optical Store Best Psychic Best Public Relations Firm Best Record⁄CD Store Best Recycling Center Best Repair (Computer) Best Repair (Phone) Best Resale Store Best Resort & Spa Best Senior Living Facility Best Shoe Repair Best Shoe Store Best Spiritual Leader Best Tire Shop Best Transportation Best Travel Agency Best Vape Shop Best Vintage Clothing Store

The End...

Vote online at bohemian.com.

19 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Best Dermatologist Best Endodontist Best ER Doctor Best Esthetic Dentist Best Eye Lash Extensions and⁄or Brow Enhancements Best Family Practitioner Best Full-Service Beauty Salon Best General Practice Physician Best Hair Salon Best Health Care Clinic Best Heart Surgeon Best Holistic Herbal Shop Best Holistic Practitioner Best Home Health Care Provider Best Internal Medicine Physician Best Laser Surgery Center Best Lasik Eye Surgery Best Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) Best Local Hospital Best Marriage Family Therapist (MFT) Best Massage Services Best Midwife Best Nail Services Best Nutritionist Best OB⁄Gyn Best Oncologist Best Ophthalmologist Best Oral Surgeon Best Orthodontist Best Orthopedic Surgeon Best Pediatrician Best Pharmacy Best Physical Therapist Best Plastic Surgeon Best Psychiatrist Best Psychologist Best Rehabilitation Center Best Skin Care Spa Best Spa⁄Hot Tub Store Best Spray Tan Best Sports Medicine Specialist Best Urgent Care Center Best Waxing Studio Best Wellness Retreat


NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

20

3AM EVERY DAY!

DINE-IN OR DELIVERY

CONSTRUCTION, INC

BEST OPTICAL STORE sonoma county BEST YOGA STUDIO Sonoma County

www.bikramyogaofsantarosa.com

BEST SPOT TO DINE SOLO

BEST HAPPY HOUR

BEST LATIN AMERICAN RESTAURANT BEST RESTAURANT

Sonoma County www.elcoqui2eat.com

sonomaeyeworks.com

BEST RESIDENTIAL CONTRACTOR BEST GREEN BUILDER

BEST PIZZA BEST DINING AFTER 10PM BEST CRAFT BEER SELECTION

karmadogconstruction.com

www.NEW-YORK-PIE.com

Sonoma County

Sonoma County

VOTE A CLEAN APPROACH TO A DIRTY JOB

BEST DOGGIE DAYCARE BEST KENNEL BEST DOG OBEDIENCE

BEST AUTO REPAIR BEST GREEN BUSINESS

www.fourpawspetranch.com

www.greentechautomotive.com

Sonoma County

BEST PIZZA

Sonoma County

BEST AUTO REPAIR

Sonoma County mombospizza.com

Sonoma County www.outwestgarage.com

For Sonoma & Napa’s Best

OctO 2 -T Dec E31 V

BEST ITALIAN RESTAURANT Sonoma County www.lococos.net

BEST CANNABIS DISPENSARY

LOGO

8 YEARS IN A ROW!

BEST RESALE STORE

BEST CHOCOLATIER

www.restylemarketplace.com

www.sonomachocolatiers.com

Sonoma County

Sonoma County

Best toy store Sonoma County sonomatoyworks.com

SPARC.CO


Scott Dam ( 16

21

Potter Valley Project Congressman Jared Huffman began eyeing the orphaned dam-and-diversion operation as the future of the project came into question over the past several years. Recognizing an opportunity to revive fish runs by overhauling the dam and a variety of connected infrastructure pieces—collectively called the “Potter Valley Project”—Huffman rounded up more than two dozen local stakeholder groups, including tribes, environmental groups, government agencies and farmers, to weigh in and help steer the process. Huffman determined that everyone with a stake in the Eel River, its fish and its water would need to make compromises. “The two-basin solution is built around a fairly central compromise,” Huffman explains. “There are certainly folks in the Russian River basin who, in their perfect world, would not be making changes to provide fish passage or alter the way the project is operated, and there are people in the Eel River drainage who would like to see the dam and the diversions go away completely.” Huffman describes his vision as one of “coequal goals,” and a “twobasin solution,” which treats the needs of fish and people with equal consideration. The hope is that no stakeholders will be left high and dry, says Huffman, who represents people in both river basins.

ROCK ‘N’ ROLL This historic photo of the Scott Dam from October of 1920 shows concrete being poured and the dam’s

south end anchorage to the outcropping of what was assumed to be bedrock. It turned out to be a huge boulder, unattached to bedrock, and located at the base of a long landslide going uphill. This was apparently unnoticed by the design engineers.

But keeping this process civil to the end could prove a challenge in an era where water management often takes shape as a tug-of-war between farmers and fishery advocates. A core consideration in amending the project to help fish will be a community of about 150 farms in Potter Valley, actually in the upper Russian River basin, which receive water from Lake Pillsbury, contained by Scott Dam, via a one-mile tunnel bored through a mountain in the first years of the 20th century. Scott Dam effectively creates a pool of water that can be drawn from in the summer months. If the dam comes down, Potter Valley farmers will need an alternative source of summertime water—a complicated problem. “If we didn’t have that diversion, you’d be putting a whole lot of people out of business,” says Mac Magruder, who irrigates 300 acres

in the Potter Valley for his grassfed meat farm. Altering the operation of Scott Dam and the diversion tunnel a few miles downriver will require a new license—what California Trout, Humboldt County, the Sonoma County Water Agency, the Mendocino Inland Water and Power Commission and the Round Valley Indian Tribes are now pursuing. They will first conduct a feasibility study and submit it to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission no later than April. Currently, representatives for the relicensing stakeholder groups try to talk in careful terms, without showing strong preference for one plan over another. “All options are on the table,” says Janet Pauli, the chair of the Inland Water and Power Commission. However, there is no doubt

that the interests of farmers and fishery advocates hardly align. For farmers in Mediterranean climates where virtually no rain falls for four straight months, dams and aqueducts make farming possible. Dam But for 21st-century river and salmon advocates, dam removal is the holy grail of achievements. “A free-flowing river without dams is optimal for anadromous fish,” says Joshua Fuller, a fisheries biologist with the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service. “Unfortunately, in today's world that setting doesn't exist in a lot of places. It's a major reason why we have many listed salmonid species." In Washington, the removal of two dams on the Elwha River five years ago reportedly resulted in increased returns of depleted salmon. ) 22 On the Klamath River,

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

removal is one possibility here,” Knight says. California Trout is one of several local groups and agencies now formally considering taking over the operation of Scott Dam from PG&E. As a hydroelectric facility, Scott Dam is not very productive, and with PG&E’s operating license scheduled to expire in 2022, the utility giant recently stepped away from the project. PG&E even briefly put the Potter Valley Project up for auction, though the offer attracted no takers.


NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

22

Scott Dam ( 21

WE’RE HERE TO HELP YOU HELP YOURSELF. We provide treatment for: Heroin, Oxy, Roxy, Norco, Fentanyl and other Opiates using Methadone. • • • •

Subutex/Suboxone available Providing Treatment since 1984 Confidentiality assured MediCal accepted

SANTA ROSA TREATMENT PROGRAM HAS MOVED We are now located at 625 Steele Lane in Santa Rosa Santa Rosa treatment Program specializes in treatment for opiate use disorder.

IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW IS STRUGGLING WITH AN ADDICTION TO OPIATES WE CAN HELP!

SANTA ROSA TREATMENT PROGRAM 625 Steele l ane • Santa RoSa 707.576.0818 • www.SRtp.net

AFFECTION Catch a feeling, not HIV

FACE 2 FACE ending HIV in Sonoma County

Find out if PrEP is right for you! Free confidential HIV test with results in 20 minutes Tuesday thru Friday, 9:00am to 4:30pm Face to Face - 873 Second Street, Santa Rosa 544-1581 more info: f2f.org

four dams face dismantling as part of an aggressive effort to revive the river’s Chinook and Coho salmon runs, once among the largest on the West Coast. Fuller says providing access to the spawning habitat upstream of Lake Pillsbury is a key component of his agency’s Chinook-and-steelhead recovery plan. Creating that access would be, in some ways, simplest by removing Scott Dam. But it’s not the only way. Building fish ladders is another means of opening the higher reaches of the watershed to spawning salmon and steelhead. These winding stairways of cascading water allow migrating fish to climb up and over otherwise impassable dams. They allow juveniles to safely return downstream, too. But the Eel River system poses complications. Scott Dam bridges a deep canyon, and building a fish ladder up and over the dam could prove technically difficult. Ascending such a ladder might be difficult for fish, too. The other big problem with relying on a fish ladder system at Scott Dam involves a non-native predator called the pikeminnow that was somehow introduced to the system in the late 1970s. Pikeminnows, which can grow to about four feet in length, prey aggressively on smaller fish and are abundant in Lake Pillsbury. Thus, a system that requires young salmon and steelhead to swim across the lake to the outflow might be a death sentence for many, if not most, of the fish. The pikeminnow is a major reason why dam removal remains a favored option among environmentalists. “A salmon smolt in a reservoir full of pikeminnows hardly stands a chance,” says Craig Tucker, a natural resources consultant working for the County of Humboldt. David Keller, with the Friends of the Eel River—a stakeholder group but not one of the relicensing applicants—says elaborate systems are necessary

for assisting the juveniles across the lake. “It would be extremely laborintensive and time-intensive,” he says. “You’d have to have people there at the right time, when the fish are coming through.” Like Knight, he wants to see fully volitional passage. “The only way that makes ecological sense is to allow the fish to do it themselves, and that means taking out the dam,” Keller says. Keller thinks more efficient storage in Lake Mendocino, on the Russian River’s east fork just upstream from its confluence with the main fork at Ukiah, could meet summertime irrigation needs for Potter Valley farmers. This would involve pumping systems that push water various directions, often against gravity. It could also require increasing the height of Coyote Valley Dam to store more water in Lake Mendocino—what stakeholders say would be a very expensive strategy. Using Lake Mendocino for new storage would be complicated, too, since the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which operates Coyote Valley Dam, prefers not to fill Lake Mendocino in the winter months and instead maintain significant available storage for flood control purposes. Only in the spring could surplus water be retained in the lake—though relying on late-winter rains in California is a chancy gamble. In many years under such a system, they may find it impossible to top off the reservoir with water for the Potter Valley farms. “We don’t see increased storage in Lake Mendocino as a very likely, affordable option,” says David Manning, the environmental resources manager with the Sonoma County Water Agency. Keller also says Scott Dam is a hazard and “a disaster waiting to happen.” He says its south side is “anchored to an ancient landslide” that is liable to continue sliding. The dam is also situated almost


23

Water wonk and a fish-head

The evolutionary sharpening stone that honed the Chinook into the most resilient and adaptive species of the Pacific salmon could not prepare the fish for the advent of the concrete hydroelectric dam. Beginning early in the 20th century, state and federal agencies reengineered California’s major rivers with massive walls of cement and steel, connecting canals and tunnels, and pumps to move water. In their respective waterways, Chinook salmon nosed up against the newly built barriers. In the San Joaquin River, where salmon runs of half a million to a million fish survived for millennia migrating every summer through a valley as hot as the deserts of Saudi Arabia, Chinook evaporated into extinction about five years after Friant Dam’s completion. While effective fish hatcheries maintained the Chinook of the Sacramento River, the Eel River’s salmon were already nearly gone. So was the Eel’s namesake representative species, the Pacific lamprey. Now, salmon in California face even greater challenges than dams. Global warming will make the cold water the fish require for spawning a rarer and rarer asset. In fact, Knight, at California Trout, co-authored a report in 2017 warning that most of the salmon and trout species and subspecies in California are likely to go extinct if efforts are not

made to preserve their habitat. In some watersheds, there may be no saving the fish. But rivers born in high elevations, and fed by yearround, ice-cold springs, have the potential to keep salmon and steelhead alive and running. The uppermost tributaries of the Eel River constitute precisely this type of habitat. “It’s high and it’s got cold water and it’s going to be cold for a long time,” Knight says. Fuller, with the National Marine Fisheries Service, also sees that habitat as critical for maintaining salmon runs in a warmer future. “Tributaries above Scott Dam contain high-value habitat with cold water and perennial flows essential for long-term population viability and recovery of anadromous salmonids within the Eel River," he says. Human beings are more adaptable than salmon, and if they remove Scott Dam, nobody will perish, though the livelihoods some now enjoy could be shaped by new and unwelcome pressures. “We have more than a lot to lose—we have everything to lose,” Magruder says. Tucker, with Humboldt County, says he is open to all options now being discussed in the relicensing feasibility study. But full dam removal is the one he thinks may be most amenable to salmon while still allowing human users to get the water they need. “There are engineering possibilities for producing agricultural diversions without Scott Dam,” he says. Huffman calls himself a “water wonk and a fish-head.” He says the potential of creating “a winwin” solution that sustains fish populations amid dense human populations and thriving farm economies drew him to the project. But he also knows all bets are still off. “There’s no guarantee that this plan holds together,” he says. “There are centrifugal forces at play that could pull it all apart before the end.”

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

on top of Bartlett Springs Fault, an offshoot of the Hayward fault that runs beneath Lake Pillsbury and which seismologists have modeled for the potential to cause a 7.5 earthquake. “Scott Dam was not built for that level of shaking,” Keller says. Writers have cited the hydroelectric barrier before as a poster child for poor dam building. “This dam is literally a textbook example of where not to build a dam,” Keller says.

The best dog you’ve ever had is the one you have right now. Offering: • private sessions • boot camp, an intensive 3 week in board program with unlimited owner follow-up

TRAINING EVALUATIONS always FREE by appointment We have over 45 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 • 707.322.3272

“Take a Little Stroll...” Women’s & Men’s Shoes, Handbags & Accoutrements. Worldly style. Fiercely local. CHIE MIHARA

SWEDISH HASBEENS

AS98

CYDWOQ

EL NATURALISTA

GEOX

THE FLEXX

CLOUD

CAMPER

STONEFLY

FRYE

SAVA UNITY IN DIVERSITY

At the Historic Petaluma Clocktower 7 Western Avenue PasseggiataShoes.com Tue–Sat 11–6 » Sun 11–5


24 NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

Crush CULTURE

S T. H E L E N A

P E TA L U M A

Viral Laughs

Original Roadhouse

Comedian, actor and director Brent Pella is the ultimate example of an internet-savvy performer. His comedy sketches, celebrity impressions and parody-music videos have gone viral on sites like YouTube and gained more than 50 million views, and he’s been featured on Funny or Die, Mashable and more. Pella is also a star on the stage, and he’s headlined clubs across the country. Now, Pella hits the stage in Napa Valley, courtesy of the folks at the Laugh Cellar, who host him on Friday, Nov. 8, at Charles Krug Winery, 2800 Main St., St. Helena. 6:30pm. $20–$28. 707.318.3845.

C O TAT I

The week’s events: a selective guide

Located along Stony Point Road in West Sonoma County on the northern edge of Petaluma, the Washoe House has been open since 1859, meaning the iconic, red-walled roadhouse has 160 years of history. Celebrate this milestone at The Washoe House 160-Year Anniversary featuring a full day of fun that recognizes the landmark’s history and offers a cheer to its future with food and drink specials, live music, special guests and more on Sunday, Nov. 10, at Stony Point Road and Roblar Road, Petaluma. Open all day. Free admission. 707.795.4544.

SEBASTOPOL

State of Twang

The Peace & Justice Center of Sonoma County empowers and inspires peaceful living and social justice in the community through activism, education and other avenues of engagement. This weekend, the Center recognizes those in the community who share their spirit at the Peacemakers Awards. The presentation and fundraiser honors the awardees, including criminal defense attorney and advocate Izaak Schwaiger and organization Petaluma Blacks for Community Development. The night also boasts live music and a silent auction to support the Peace & Justice Center on Saturday, Nov. 9, at Redwood Cafe, 8240 Old Redwood Hwy., Cotati. 7pm. $15–$20. pjcsoco.org.

San Francisco Bay Area banjo master Bill Evans brings together some of the best banjo players in the world every November eight years running for the California Banjo Extravaganza. This year’s five-string celebration features incomparable old-school entertainer Leroy Troy, Virginiabased, three-finger banjo virtuoso Gina Furtado and Evans performing solo, in duets and as a trio in front of an all-star backing band featuring local favorites John Reischman, Chad Manning, Sharon Gilchrist and Dale Adkins on Sunday, Nov. 10, at the Sebastopol Community Center Annex, 425 Morris St., Sebastopol. 7pm. $23– $25. 707.823.1511.

—Charlie Swanson

DREAM ON Pulitzer Prize– winning journalist and immigrationrights activist Jose Antonio Vargas reads from his new book, ‘Dear America,’ on Saturday, Nov. 9, at Copperfield’s Books in Petaluma. See readings, pg 32.

Elena Seibert

Make Peace


SURVIVAL ON SCREEN Natural-disaster documentary ‘Code and Response’ is

one of many timely films screening at the Napa Valley Film Festival.

Reality Grip

Napa Valley Film Fest lines up special guests, provocative films BY CHRISTINA JULIAN

A

s locals reel over the Kincade fire, the Napa Valley Film Festival (NVFF), running Nov. 13–17, keeps a grip on reality with apt screenings of powerful films.

First up, Code and Response, which tracks four coders bent

on using technology to fight the wrath of Mother Nature. The IBM-produced documentary goes inside the aftermath of some of the worst natural disasters of 2018, as four “coders,” from California, Japan, Puerto Rico and Mexico, use technology to support frontline first responders. “We were compelled to get on the ground and learn more from

first responders but also learn from some local coders who are making a difference,” said executive producer/writer George Hammer. “When we actually saw towns turned to ash and the personal toll on individuals, it really hit home. I am pleased that we can premiere the film for the people of California as their battle with Mother Nature rages on and

their search for answers inspires the next generation of ideas.” The war against anti-LGBTQ laws peacefully unfurls through a song in Gay Chorus Deep South, which takes viewers on an emotional ride of reckoning. The award-winning film follows the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, as they perform throughout the Southern states, to enlighten and shift thinking in a place where people remain divided over faith, politics and sexual identity. Motherload propels the cargo-bicycle movement and the mission to decrease the carbon footprint, one cycler, bike and family at a time. Director Liz Canning went in search of a way to bike with her young twins and unearthed a new way of life. Canning posted a trailer for the film in 2011 and invited submissions that captured the cargo-bike experience. The effort fueled a crowdsource initiative that resulted in the feature-length documentary. “There’s a Fairfax family in the film who replaced a car with a cargo bike after watching the trailer online,” she says. “They were one of hundreds of local families whose lives were transformed by Jelani Bertoni and The Bicycle Works [one of two Marin-based cargo/utility/e-bike shops featured].” Provocative programing continues with Coach, which follows the plight of San Francisco State Women’s Soccer Coach, Tracy Hamm, who the U.S. Soccer Federation denied access to an internationally recognized accreditation. Martha: A Picture Story, chronicles the life of Martha “Marty” Cooper who upset the continuum when she documented the first images of graffiti to appear in New York City subway cars in the 70s and became the first female photographer at the New ) 26

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Arts Ideas

25


Napa Valley Film Fest ( 25

NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

26

SCI-FI SOCCER MOMS The demented, alternate-reality suburban comedy ‘Greener Grass’ screens at NVFF.

Vote for us Best of 2020!

Best Shoe Store, Best Women’s Clothing and more!

Shop Our Fall Gift Inspirations …that make everyone feel good! • Fashionable, new scarves just arrived! • Stylish, quality shoes from brands that you know and love! CLOTHING | JEWELRY | SCARVES ACCESSORIES | SHOES

195 N Main Street, Sebastopol | 707.824.4300 Open Mon–Sun 10 to 6ish | silkmoon.org

E VO T VOTE For Sonoma & Napa’s Best

Oct 2 - Dec 31

York Post. Cooper’s book Subway Art went on to become one of the most stolen books of all time. Frothy features like Greener Grass step in to lighten the mood. The farcical romp stars Upright Citizens Brigade mainstays Jocelyn DeBoer and Dawn Luebbe, who make their directorial debut. They set the film in a candy-coated, soccer-mom-infested, Stepford-like suburbia, where family members are “swapped,” braces reign, and social-climbing and neighborliness hit hilarious highs. Good vibes roll on at the screening of I Want My MTV, where ‘80s-lovers and MTVworshipers unite. The buzzedabout doc takes viewers on a nostalgic ride that chronicles the rise of the network that brought music videos to the masses. Commentary from Sting, Pat Benatar, Billy Idol and more is sure to get people dancing not only with themselves, but down the aisles. The throwback theme continues at the Saturday-night Gala at Lincoln Theater, which encourages attendees to tease up their hair, stick on the shoulder pads and slide into a pair of acid-washed jeans to rock the night away. A-list celebs will light up screens throughout the fest, starting with the Tuesday Sneak Preview of Ford V Ferrari (Matt Damon and Christian Bale) and the Wednesday Opening Night screening of Just Mercy (Jamie Foxx, Brie Larson). This year’s Celebrity Tribute programing honors Kevin Bacon, Olivia Wilde, Vanessa Hudgens,

Jillian Bell, Mena Massoud, Kelsey Asbille, Dean-Charles Chapman, Jacob Elordi, Kelvin Harrison Jr., Liana Liberato and others, who should attend events on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The fest rolls out the red carpet for locals with a new communityscreening program that grants Napa Valley residents free entry to all morning screenings at Lincoln Theater. No NVFF would be complete without a hefty pour of winerelated screen talk. The closing night showing of Verticals delivers. The series, directed by Jason Wise, focuses on Napa Valley winemakers and the human condition that comes with the territory. The Sunday screening at the Uptown Theatre marks not only the world premiere of Verticals, but the launch of SOMMTV, the first food and wine dedicated streaming platform. Wise, whose filmmaking cred includes the SOMM trilogy, describes the venture as a Netflixlike streaming service for wine and culinary enthusiasts. After days of turmoil over wildfires, public safety power shut offs and the general state of the union, a clink of the glass to honor the strength and endurance of our valley and the people who inhabit it feels like the perfect “wrap” to the festival week. Napa Valley Film Festival runs Wednesday, Nov. 13, through Sunday, Nov. 17, at several locations. Full lineup and tickets available at napavalleyfilmfest.org.


BHS19_BohoSQ1.pdf

Katie Kelley

HIGH EMOTION A proposed

settlement from an officer-involved shooting leads to a Pulitzer Prize–winning drama in ‘Between Riverside & Crazy.’

Dark City

Two NYC-set plays run in the North Bay BY HARRY DUKE

L

ocal theaters seem to be in a New York state of mind with two very different shows set in the Big Apple running on North Bay stages. 6th Street Playhouse brings the somewhat ironically titled Wait Until Dark to their Monroe Stage while Left Edge Theatre places their audiences somewhere Between Riverside and Crazy.

Wait Until Dark–playwright Frederick Knott only wrote three plays, but two of the three (the other being Dial M for Murder) became theatre standards. Film adaptations led to increased audience familiarity with the material, robbing them of a bit of the suspense Knott built into his scripts.

‘Between Riverside and Crazy’ runs through Nov. 10 at Left Edge Theatre. 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. Thu–Sat, 8pm; Sun., 2pm. $15–$42. 707.536.3600. leftedgetheatre.com ‘Wait Until Dark’ runs through Nov. 10 on the Monroe Stage at 6th Street Playhouse, 52 W. Sixth St., Santa Rosa. Thu–Sat, 7:30pm; Sat–Sun, 2pm. $18–$29. 707.523.4185. 6thstreetplayhouse.com

10/30/19

12:52 PM

27

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

DEC 6 - 8

LUTHER BURBANK CENTER FOR THE ARTS

707 546 3600

Get Tickets

DEC 14 -15

LINCOLN THEATER NAPA VALLEY

707 944 9900

BroadwayHolidayShow.com

sctransit.com

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Stage

Photographer Sam Hendrix (Steve Cannon) unwittingly transports a child’s doll full of heroin from Canada to New York and leaves it in the care of his sight-impaired wife Susi (Olivia Marie Rooney). Soon a trio of very nefarious gentlemen (Ezra Hernandez, Matt Witthaus, Justin Thompson) arrive on the scene determined to get the doll surreptitiously by playing a deadly game of impersonation. Director Meghan Hakes’ cast works well here, but lightingdesigner Vincent Mothersbaugh is the show’s MVP. Without giving too much away, lighting plays a big role in this play, and Mothersbaugh delivers. Playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis’s Between Riverside and Crazy won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and a stack of theater awards. An odd mixture of comedy and drama, at its heart it’s a story of families—father/son, son/ fiancé, father-figure/son and the “brotherhood” of law enforcement. Retired New York City police officer Walter “Pops” Washington (Corey Jackson) lives in a rentcontrolled apartment with his recently paroled son Junior (Sam Ademola), his son’s fiancé Lulu (Pilar Gonzales) and their friend Oswaldo (Jared Wright). Walter’s former partner Audrey (Sandra Ish) and her fiancé Lt. Dave Caro (Mike Schaeffer) try to get Walter to sign off on a settlement agreement stemming from a shooting. The powers they represent aren’t above threatening Walter with the loss of his home to get his signature. Walter, who always seems pissed, gets really pissed. It’s a solid production, and credit director Argo Thompson for bringing some theatrical diversity—both in casting and subject matter—to the area. Rating for both (out of 5):

1


NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

28 ®

Film

BRINGING THE BEST FILMS IN THE WORLD TO SONOMA COUNTY

Schedule for Fri, November 8 – Thu, November 14

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 28th Bruschetta • Academy Paninis • Award Soups • Appetizers “Moore Gives Her BestNominee Performance 8 Great Beers on Tap + Wine by the Glass and Bottle

Foreign Language Film!Stone In Years!” – Box Office “RawBest and Riveting!” – Rolling Demi MooreWITH DavidBASHIR Duchovny WALTZ PG-13 CC DV A MIGHTY HEART (1:00) THE 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:15 RR (12:10 2:30 4:50) 7:15 9:40 (12:30) 2:45 JONESES 5:00 7:20 9:45 (12:30) 2:40Noms 4:50 Including 7:10 9:20 2 Academy Award BestRActor! R Subtitled “A Triumph!” – New “A Glorious Throwback ToYork The Observer More Stylized, THE WRESTLER (12:15 5:05) 7:25 9:50 Painterly Work Of Decades Past!” – LA (12:20) 2:45 5:10 9:45 R Times LA2:40 VIE EN 7:30 ROSE (12:45) 3:45 6:45OF 9:45 PG-13 THEAward SECRET KELLS 10 Academy Noms Including Picture! R Best CC DV (1:00) 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 NR SLuMDOG MILLIONAIRE (1:40 4:45) 8:00 “★★★★ – Really, Truly, Deeply – “Superb! No One4:00 Could Make This 7:10 R Believable One of (1:15) This Year’s Best!”9:40 – Newsday If It Were Fiction!” – San Francisco Chronicle

JO JO RABBIT

PAIN AND GLORY DOCTOR SLEEP

LAST CHRISTMAS PG-13 CC DV ONCE 8 Academy Award Noms Including PRODIGAL SONS

(12:20 2:45 5:20 5:00) 9:45 (1:00) 3:10 7:30 R Best Picture, Actor & 7:20 Best9:40 Director! (2:20) 9:10 Best NR No 9:10 Show Tue or Thu MILK “Haunting and Hypnotic!”R –Subtitled Rolling Stone “Wise, Humble and Effortlessly (1:30) 4:10 6:45 Funny!” 9:30 R – Newsweek

PARASITE

THE GIRL WITH THE TATTOO (1:30 4:20) 7:00 9:40 Please Note: 1:30 Show Sat, No Show Please Note: No No 1:30 ShowDRAGON Sat, No 6:45 6:45 Show Thu Thu WAITRESS

WAITRESS (1:10) 4:30 7:30 NR (1:30) 4:00 7:10 9:30 Best R Picture! 5 Academy Award Noms Including PG-13 CC DV “★★★1/2! AnFROST/NIXON unexpected Gem!” – USA Today

HARRIET

Organic Fall Clothing is Here! dresses • cardigans • ponchos shirts • socks • leggings sweaters • and more! 605 Fourth Street | Downtown Santa Rosa 707-579-1459 | M-Sa 10:30-6, Su 12-5

FROST/NIXON (1:15 4:00) 6:45 9:30 (2:15)Mysterious, 7:20 R GREENBERG “Swoonly Romatic, Hilarious!”

THE LIGHTHOUSE

(12:00) 9:50 R – Slant5:00 Magazine REVOLuTIONARY ROAD R “Deliciously unsettling!” – RLA Times PARIS, JE T’AIME (11:45) 4:45 9:50 (12:00 2:30 5:00) 7:30 9:50 (1:15)GHOST 4:15 7:00 9:30 R THE Kevin Jorgenson presents the WRITER California Premiere of (2:15) 7:15 PG-13

MOTHERLESS BROOKLYN PuRE: A BOuLDERING FLICK Michael Moore’s (1:00 4:15) 7:45 R CC DV Thu, Feb 26th at 7:15 THE MOST DANGEROuS

SICKO MOVIES IN THE MORNING

MOVIES MORNING MANIN INTHE AMERICA TERMINATOR: DARK FATE

Starts Fri, June 29th! Fri, Sat, Sun &PENTAGON Mon DANIEL ELLSBERG AND THENow PAPERS Advance Tickets Sale Box ROffice! Fri-Mon: (1:20 On 4:10) 7:10 at 9:55 CC DV 9:50 AM (12:10) 4:30 6:50 6:50 Show Tue or Thu FROZEN RIVER (12:00) 2:30 NR 5:00No7:30 10:00 Tue: (2:45) 9:00 Wed: (4:00) 10:15 VICKY Their CRISTINA BARCELONA First Joint Venture In 25 Years! AM 10:20 AM CHANGELING Thu: (3:00) 9:00 Venessa RedgraveAND Meryl CHONG’S Streep Glenn CloseAM CHEECH 10:40 RACHEL GETTING MARRIED 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 Only) Starts Fri,(Sun June 29th!

MADAMA BUTTERFLY MET OPERA LIVE IN HD Sat, Nov 9 10am Wed, Nov 13 12:30 & 6:30pm

NOW SERVING BEER & WINE 11/8–11/14

Tennessee Queens Lolo & Garrison Starr

Honorable

Jojo Rabbit – CC & AD PG13 10:30-1:45-4:30-7:00-9:25 Pain & Glory – subtitled – CC & AD 10:15-1:00-3:45-6:30-9:00

The Lighthouse – CC & AD

4:00-9:15

R

R

Harriet – CC & AD PG13 10:00-12:45-3:30-6:15-8:55

Nov 9th

Parasite – subtitled R 10:15-1:15-4:15-7:15 The Current War: Director’s Cut – CC PG13 Judy – CC & AD PG13 1:30-6:45

E

LIV

No Time To Waste 10:45am

551 SUMMERFIELD ROAD • SANTA ROSA 707.525.8909 • SUMMERFIELDCINEMAS.COM

The Urgent Mission Of Betty Reid Soskin

Nov 10th

Balloon Presented By The Sonoma International Film Fest

RAVENFILMCENTER.COM HEALDSBURG Bistro Menu Items Beer & Wine available in all 4 Auditoriums

FOR SHOWTIMES: 707.525.8909

Nov 14th And Now Love Nov 17

www.SebastianiTheatre.com

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON The kid from ‘The Shining’ is all grown up and played by Ewen McGregor in ‘Doctor Sleep.’

Evil Never Sleeps Stephen King sequel sources Lynch over Kubrick BY RICHARD VON BUSACK

T

he best parts in Doctor Sleep, the sequel to The Shining (1980), do without Stanley Kubrick and Stephen King’s sense of gigantism. It’s not a haunted house movie trying to end all haunted house movies, even as it reprises shots of Danny pedaling his Big Wheel down endless hallways.

Director Mike Flanagan sources David Lynch, who scares me more than Kubrick ever did. The music is also familiar even beyond the quotes of Wendy Carlos’s Moog of Doom from The Shining, there’s that echoing violin screech they’ve been using since Buffy the Vampire Slayer. We commence with a pack of non-humans. Like the other-world denizens in Twin Peaks, they live on “steam”—the distilled essence of pain and suffering. The best quality is hard to come by, complains Rose the Hat, the queen bee of this traveling coven. Something’s polluting the essences these days. The lovely and malign Rose (Rebecca Ferguson) is kind of a witch, kind of a vampire. Though her age and exact backstory are vague, she might have become whatever she is now about the time Guns and Roses’ Appetite for Destruction

came out. The undead are always a little unfashionable in their dress. The boy casualty of the Overlook Hotel, Danny (Ewan McGregor, at his best) grew up to be a mean alcoholic like his late dad Jack. Danny floats into a small town in New Hampshire and is bailed out by a good-guy municipal worker (Cliff Curtis) who is in AA. Cut to eight years later; the chip is in Danny’s hand, not on his shoulder. He landed a job as an orderly at a hospice, where his empathy is put to good use. Meanwhile, there’s Abra (Kyleigh Curran) who has The Shining in abundance, a beacon bright enough to summon Rose’s family of fiends all the way cross-country. Abra has been in communication with Danny for years as a psychic friend. He warns against challenging Rose and her gang. But being the headstrong, affluent, Harvardbound girl that she is … As it ends, this movie starts to cycle a reunion of the old beasts from the Overlook. Flanagan hardly needed to revisit this familiar house of horrors when the story he’s telling was already a highly satisfactory horror movie: a bonbon for those of us who haunt theaters and suck up other people’s suffering. ‘Doctor Sleep’ opens in wide release on Nov. 8.


‘Baycation’ Amazing Views Fun Dining

Jewish Film Festival 2019 Oct 10 - Nov 12

Elevated Food, Beverage & Service Fresh Sustainable Seafood, a locals favorite

Fiddler on the Roof – SING ALONG

This is a positive energy place!

Tues. Nov 5 1:00 and 7:00 p.m.

Abe

Tues. Nov 12 1:00 and 7:00 p.m.

Events Ondine

specializing in unforgettable private events on the bay

...originally owned by the legendary Kingston Trio

558 BRIDGEWAY ~ SAUSALITO ~ 415.331.3232 ~ THETRIDENT.NET

Tickets and Information

WWW.JCCSOCO.ORG or call (707) 528-4222

SCREENINGS: Rialto Cinemas®

1/4S color ad. Specs: 4.3438" wide X 4.8438" high

6868 McKinley Street, Sebastopol, CA 95472

T H U R S D A Y, D E C E M B E R 5 , 2 0 1 9

Dine at these restaurants and they will donate 25% to 100% of your purchase to Food For Thought, a local nonprofit dedicated to meeting the nutrition needs of people living with HIV and other serious illnesses in Sonoma County. BODEGA BAY Terrapin Creek Cafe

OCCIDENTAL Hazel Restaurant

COTATI Lynn’s Thai Restaurant

PETALUMA Central Market Cucina Paradiso Ristorante Italiano Dempsey's Restaurant & Brewery McNear’s Restaurant

FORESTVILLE Canneti Roadhouse Italiana Sunshine Coffee Roasters* Twist Eatery GEYSERVILLE Rustic, Francis's Favorites GUERNEVILLE boon eat + drink Coffee Bazaar Koala's Fine Food The Farmhand HEALDSBURG Baci Cafe and Wine Bar Mateo's Cocina Latina spoonbar Wicked Slush

PICKUP ONLY

PICK UP AND DELIVERY

ROHNERT PARK Amy's Drive Thru Hana Japanese Restaurant SANTA ROSA Basilico Bistro 29 Blue Beagle Coffee Brew Coffee & Beer Bruno's on Fourth Carmen's Bistro and Bar Cascabel Cibo Rustico Pizzeria Dierk's Midtown Cafe

Dierk's Parkside Cafe Gerard's Paella Hank's Creekside Restaurant Jack and Tony's Restaurant & Whiskey Bar Jackson's Bar & Oven JoJo Restaurant & Sushi Bar* Mac's Deli & Cafe Mombo's Pizza Perch + Plow Pizza Gourmet Ricky's Eastbound Russian River Brewing Co. Sazon SEA Noodle Bar Spinster Sisters Three Leaves Foods* Walter Hansel Bistro** Yeti Restaurant Zoftig Eatery

SEBASTOPOL Bar B Que Smokehouse Bistro Eight Cuisine and Wine Reservations are recommended, contact the restaurants directly. Fern Bar *50% of sales and **100% of sales goes to Food For Thought. Fork Roadhouse Gravenstein Grill Presenting Sponsor

Gold Fork Sponsors

Gypsy Cafe Handline Coastal California Hole in the Wall K&L Bistro Martha's Old Mexico Restaurant Mombo's Pizza Namaste Kitchen Ramen Gaijin Retrograde Coffee Roasters Rialto Cinemas Screamin' Mimi's Sunshine Coffee Roasters* Sushi Kosho Sushi Tozai SONOMA Hopmonk Tavern Maya Restaurant Plaza Bistro VALLEY FORD Rocker Oysterfeller's Kitchen + Saloon WINDSOR Russian River Brewing Co. Sweet T's Restaurant & Bar Ume Japanese Bistro Silver Spoon Sponsors

WWW.FFTFOODBANK.ORG/DINING-OUT-FOR-LIFE

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Join Us for a

29

JCC Presents


Music

HOPMONK .COM

WEDNESDAY CHARLEY CROCKETT

SEBASTOPOL

The Abbey

WED, NOV 6 • 7:00

RHETT MILLER ACOUSTIC

(OF OLD 97’S)

FRI, NOV 8 • 7:00

MOONALICE SAT, NOV 9 • 8:00 SOL HORIZON SUN, NOV 10 • 6:00 JESCA HOOP MON, NOV 11 • 10:00

MNE HOLIDAY TOY DRIVE FEAT KONNEX & DJ DINGA TUE, NOV 12 • 7:00 • EVERY TUES OPEN MIC NIGHT W⁄ CENI WED, NOV 13 • 7:00 EVERY 2ND AND 4TH WEDS

TRIVIA NIGHT WED, NOV 13 • 9:00 CHARLES THE FIRST THU, NOV 14 • 5:00 WILDERADO

FREE KRSH HAPPY HOUR SET FRI, NOV 15 • 8:00

ONE DROP SAT, NOV 16 • 9:00 ELECTROPICAL SUN, NOV 17 • 7:00 • EVERY 3RD SUNDAY COMEDY OPEN MIC MON, NOV 18 • 10:00 MNE SINGERS SERIES FEAT RAS ATTITUDE &

DUGSY RANKS

TWIN OAKS PENNGROVE

The Grand Ballroom WED, NOV 6 • 7:30

HONKY TONK NIGHT

EVERY 1ST & 3RD WEDNESDAY THU, NOV 7 • 7:00

COUNTRY LINE DANCE SAT, NOV 8 • 8:00 HELL AND THE HIGH WATER MON, NOV 11 • 7:00 • EVERY MON OPEN MIC WITH BRANDON EARDLEY TUE, NOV 12 • 7:00 • EVERY TUES TUESDAY NIGHT TRIVIA FRI, NOV 15 • 8:00 REED TURCHI SAT, NOV 16 • 8:00 THE INCUBATORS WED, NOV 22 • 8:00 MIKE SALIANI 20+ SHOWS PER WEEK VISIT HOPMONK.COM FOR FULL CALENDAR

SEBASTOPOL | SONOMA NOVATO | PENNGROVE

WITH

NOV 6

ABRAHAM ALEXANDER

COUNTRY • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

THURSDAY TAB BENOIT W⁄ WHISKEY BAYOU REVUE FEAT ERIC MCFADDEN & ERIC JOHANSON BLUES • DOORS 7PM • 21+

NOV 7

RODNEY CROWELL

FRIDAY

WITH

NOV 8

JOE ROBINSON

COUNTRY • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

SATURDAY CORDUROY PEARL JAM TRIBUTE GREEN DAY TRIBUTE NOV 9 LONGVIEW COVER • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

PORTLAND CELLO PROJECT

MONDAY

RADIOHEAD & MORE NOV 11 DOES ALT-CLASSICAL• DOORS 7:30PM • ALL AGES WEDNESDAY RECKLESS KELLY

NOV 13

WITH

JEFF CROSBY

COUNTRY • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

THURSDAY FLATLAND CAVALRY

NOV 14

WITH

MITCHELL FERGUSON

COUNTRY • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+

FRIDAY DAVID NELSON & ELECTRIC TUMBLEWEED W⁄ GRATEFUL NOV 15 BLUEGRASS BOYS AMERICANA • DOORS 7PM • 21+ 11⁄16 Whitey Morgan, 11⁄17 Over The Rhine, 11⁄22 &11⁄23 Y&T w⁄ James Durbin, 11⁄24 Fortunate Youth w⁄ Mike Love & Kashʼd Out, 11⁄27 One Grass Two Grass X The Timothy O'Neil Band w⁄ Joshua James Jackson, 11⁄29 Jim Breuer: Live And Let Laugh, 11⁄30 T Sisters w⁄ Forest Sun, 12⁄1 Walter Trout, 12⁄6 Illeagles with Johnny & June Forever, 12⁄7 Asleep At The Wheel "Merry Texas Christmas Y'all", 12⁄8 The Grouch with Special Guest Murs Plus Pure Powers

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

Outdoor Dining Sat & Sun Brunch 11–3

Lunch & Dinner 7 Days a Week

Din ner & A Show

Rancho Debut! Nov 8 Valerie Jay & The Americanos Fri

Classic Country 8:00 ⁄ No Cover

Tom Rigney & Flambeau Nov 9 Cajun Orkestra 8:00 Sun 10 Farewell Party! Nov Sat

Lauralee Brown

Sultry, Sassy Singer/ Songwriter 4:00 ⁄ No Cover

Matt Jaffe

Fri

Nov 15 Original, Compelling 8:00 ⁄ No Cover

Stompy Jones

Sat

Dance Party!

Nov 16 featuring Annette Moreno 8:00

Charley Paul ncho Nov 22 Honky Tonk Happiness Ra Debut! Fri

8:00 ⁄ No Cover

Nov 23 Johnny & June Forever: Sat

Rancho Debut

A Tribute to Johnny Cash & June Carter 8:00

Join Us!

Thursday, Nov 28, 12–7pm For Our Traditional

Thankgiving Dinner Fri

8th Annual Leftover’s Party

Sat

15th Annual “Holiday Party!”

Nov 29 The Mad Hannans 8:00 Nov 30 Bud E Luv

Vegas Comes To Nicasio 8:00 Reservations Advised

415.662.2219

On the Town Square, Nicasio www.ranchonicasio.com

GIVING BACK Marin’s Scott Mickelson produced the new benefit compilation album, ‘Blanket the Homeless.’

Musical Action

North Bay bands contribute to homeless benefit album BY CHARLIE SWANSON

T

wo years ago, North Bay musician and producer Scott Mickelson made headlines when he assembled and released After the Fire, Vol 1, a benefit compilation album that raised several thousand dollars for local fire-relief efforts.

Now he’s back with a similarly pressing cause, teaming up with Bay Area nonprofit organization Blanket the Homeless—which distributes blankets and care packages to unsheltered residents in San Francisco—to release a double-LP benefit album largely recorded in Mickelson’s Mill Valley studio. “Everybody knows about the homelessness in the Bay Area, and everyone wants to try to do something,” Mickelson says.

Jayms Ramirez

NORTH BAY BOH EMI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

30

The project with Blanket the Homeless began on the heels of the success of After the Fire, Vol 1, when Mickelson approached musician and organization co-founder Ken Newman, who Mickelson had been producing for. “He and I were wrapping up his first solo record and we got to talking,” Mickelson says. Together, they assembled a roster of popular bands to contribute to the record, first landing two-time Grammy winners Fantastic Negrito. “They were on tour and couldn’t come in to record, but they gave me the rights to use their song, ‘Working Poor,’” Mickelson says. From there, he was able to recruit 14 other acts, recording 13 bands in his studio for the Blanket the Homeless compilation. Bay Area–based contributors to the album include the Brothers Comatose recording a new stripped-down version of their song “Angeline,” Sonoma County folk-trio Rainbow Girls singing their song “American Dream” and Mother Hips’ frontman Tim Bluhm performing his tune “Clean Me Up.” Other artists on the album include the Stone Foxes, King Dream, Goodnight, Texas, Whiskerman, Marty O’Reilly & the Old Soul Orchestra, John Craigie, Tobias the Owl and both Mickelson and Newman, who each contributed a new song. The album caps off with a special, unreleased version of Con Brio’s “Body Language,” recorded live in Amsterdam. “Every artist came in open minded and gracious,” Mickelson says. “I didn’t ask artists to write songs about the homeless, I just wanted them to come in with something original and something they were excited to record.” This week, Blanket the Homeless get a release party in San Francisco, and confirmed performers include King Dream, Ben Morrison of Brothers Comatose, Shannon Koehler of Stone Foxes and Avi Vinocur of Goodnight, Texas. “I hope people show up,” Mickelson says. “It’s such a simple thing to do; come to a show, enjoy the music and help the homeless.” ‘Blanket the Homeless’ record-release party is Thursday, Nov. 7, at the Independent in San Francisco. 8pm. $15–$17. blanketthehomeless.org.


Concerts SONOMA Branford Marsalis Quartet

Jazz ensemble crosses stylistic boundaries and evokes a range of moods. Nov 9, 7:30pm. $35 and up. Green Music Center Weill Hall, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.

California Banjo Extravaganza

Eighth annual banjo and bluegrass event features allstar performers. Nov 10, 7pm. $25. Sebastopol Community Center Annex, 425 Morris St, Sebastopol, 707.823.1511.

Portland Cello Project

Premiere alt-classical group perform a night in homage to Radiohead and other alt-rock icons. Nov 11, 8:30pm. $13. Mystic Theatre & Music Hall, 23 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, 707.775.6048.

NAPA Blood, Sweat & Tears

Legendary jazz-rock band sits in for three nights of concerts. Nov 7-10. $55 and up. Blue Note Napa, 1030 Main St, Napa, 707.880.2300.

Robert Cray Band

Cray has been bridging the lines between blues, soul and R&B for the past four decades. Nov 9, 8pm. $45-$75. Uptown Theatre, 1350 Third St, Napa, 707.259.0123.

Clubs & Venues SONOMA 3 Disciples Brewing Taproom

Nov 8, John Rybak and friends. Nov 9, the King Must Die and Profits of Doom. 501 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.978.2459.

Aqus Cafe

Nov 8, Barry Bisson and friends. Nov 9, the Farallons. Nov 10, 2pm, Alan Early. 189 H St, Petaluma, 707.778.6060.

The Big Easy

Nov 7, Rancho Deluxe. Nov 8, Velvet Chamber and Fly by

Train. Nov 9, the Dorian Mode. Nov 13, Wednesday Night Big Band. 128 American Alley, Petaluma, 707.776.7163.

Bluewater Bistro

Nov 7, 5pm, Oaktown Gold. 21301 Heron Dr, Bodega Bay, 707.875.3513.

Coyote Sonoma

Nov 8, Domenic Bianco & the SoulShake. 44F Mill St, Healdsburg, 707.385.9133.

Crooked Goat Brewing Nov 9, 3pm, the Passengers. Nov 10, 3pm, Timothy O’Neil. 120 Morris St, Ste 120, Sebastopol, 707.827.3893.

Elephant in the Room Nov 7, Over Under. Nov 8, John Courage Trio. Nov 9, Steve Pile Trio. 177-A Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg, elephantintheroompub.com.

Flamingo Lounge

Nov 8, the Hots. Nov 9, Saturday Night Salsa. 2777 Fourth St, Santa Rosa, 707.545.8530.

Geyserville Gun Club Bar & Lounge Nov 9, Highway Poets. 21025 Geyserville Ave, Geyserville, 707.814.0036.

Green Music Center Schroeder Hall

Nov 8, SSU Symphonic Chorus and Concert Choir. Nov 10, 3pm, Nella. 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.

Murphy’s Irish Pub & Restaurant

Nov 7, John Beland. Nov 8, Hunka Hunka Hula Revue. Nov 9, O & the Riots. Nov 10, 4pm, David Gans. 464 First St E, Sonoma, 707.935.0660.

Nov 8, Cretan music concert with Ross Daly and Kelly Thoma. 3850 Doris Murphy Ct, Occidental, 707.874.9392.

The Phoenix Theater

Nov 8, Frolic with Dirty Rice and Brain Death. Nov 9, LoFi Satellites and 6 Speed Supernova. 201 Washington St, Petaluma, 707.762.3565.

Redwood Cafe

Nov 7, Soulshine Blues Band. Nov 8, Mr. Blackwell & the MBAs. Nov 10, Irish jam session. Nov 11, the Blues Defenders pro jam. 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.795.7868.

Reel & Brand

Rio Nido Roadhouse

Nov 9, 6:30pm, Carlos Herrera Latin Jazz Trio. 25 Matheson St, Healdsburg, 707.431.2800.

Lagunitas Tap Room

Nov 7, Nate Lopez. Nov 8, House of Mary. Nov 9, Shelby Ann. Nov 10, the Mutineers. 1280 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma, 707.778.8776.

Local Barrel

Nov 9, AltCity Band. 490 Mendocino Ave #104, Santa Rosa, 707.890.5433.

Main Street Bistro

Nov 7, Susan Sutton. Nov 8,

Free admission

Occidental Center for the Arts

HopMonk Sebastopol

Hotel Healdsburg

Pre-Party!

Nov 7, Tab Benoit with Whiskey Bayou Revue. Nov 8, Rodney Crowell with Joe Robinson. Nov 9, Corduroy and Longview. Nov 10, Alborosie & the Shengen Clan. Nov 13, Reckless Kelly. 23 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma, 707.775.6048.

Nov 8, Danish String Quartet. 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040. Nov 8, Moonalice. Nov 9, Sol Horizon. Nov 10, 6pm, Jesca Hoop. 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol, 707.829.7300.

present Warren Miller’s

Mystic Theatre & Music Hall

Nov 8, Celebration of Joni Mitchell featuring Kimberly Ford. Nov 9, Road Eleven. Nov 10, 3pm, T-Luke & the Tight Suits. 401 Grove St, Sonoma, 707.343.0044.

Green Music Center Weill Hall

and Ssu Snow Club

Nov 9, Justice Grown Harvest Hoedown with Dusty Green Bones Band. 14540 Canyon 2 Rd, Rio Nido, 707.869.0821.

Russian River Hall

Nov 9, An evening of the (twisted) songs of Tom Lehrer with the Totally Incorrect Cabaret Singers. 20347 Hwy 116, Monte Rio, 707.243.3184.

Sebastopol Community Church

Nov 9, Redwood Arts Council presents the Minetti Quartet. 1000 Gravenstein Hwy N, Sebastopol, redwoodarts.org.

Spancky’s Bar

Nov 9, Dead Again. 8201 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.664.0169. )

32

Winter starts with Warren Miller

We will show some of his daredevil movies. Enjoy a clip of the 2019 film “Timeless” HUGE RAFFLE GIVEAWAY— 3 tickets for $5 Tickets sales support SSU Snow Club.

Win new gear and get ready to shred this winter!

Prizes include:

• Film tickets for Nov. 23 Mystic Theatre, Petaluma • 1 pair of Head skis • 2 Helly Hansen jackets • WME PARTY PACK with DVDs, beanies, caps, t’s, hoodie, faceshields

rescheduled to Wed, Nov 13 5–7:30 Live music: Aqua Velvets at 4:20pm at Lagunitas Petaluma Tap Room 1280 N McDowell Blvd Petaluma

info 707.527.1200

31 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Calendar

Valtierra Latin Orchestra. Nov 9, Rhythm Drivers. Nov 10, Mac & Potter. Nov 13, Tumbleweed Soul. 16280 Main St, Guerneville, 707.869.0501.


Calendar ( 31

32

Starling Bar

NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 20 19 | BO H E M I AN.COM

Nov 9, Lo Cura. 19380 Hwy 12, Sonoma, 707.938.7442.

Twin Oaks Roadhouse Nov 7, Country Line Dancing. Nov 8, Hell and the High Water. 5745 Old Redwood Hwy, Penngrove, 707.795.5118.

NAPA Buster’s Southern Barbecue Nov 10, 2pm, Rob Watson and friends featuring Vernon Black. 1207 Foothill Blvd, Calistoga, 707.942.5605.

JaM Cellars Nov 8, the Good Tones. 1460 First St, Napa, 707.265.7577.

Roadhouse 29 Nov 8, Michelle Lambert. 3020 St Helena Hwy N, St Helena, 707.302.3777.

Taproom & Wine Bar Open Wed-Fri at 4PM & Sat-Sun at 12PM 44F Mill Street Healdsburg | 707.433.4444

Soul jah Family Band

11/15 Classic Reggae Covers

11/8

Domenic & Soulshake Reggae-Funk | 8PM | $5

Cellar presents 11/16 Laugh Comedy Competition at 7pm

11/9

The Fog Classic Rock | 8PM | $5

party band 11/16 konsept Soul, Funk, R&B Covers at 9:30pm

Black Light Dance Party DJ Dance Party | 9PM | No Cover Fat Chance Truckin’ Band Rock & Blues | 8PM | $5

11/22 Weekend at Bernies

11/15 11/16

Tonk Stumbleweeds 11/22 Honky Honky Tonk Rock ‘n Roll | 8PM | $5

Rock and R&B Covers

11/23 TROUBLE WITH MONKEYS Monkees Tribute

PEPPERLAND Beatles Tribute

60s Dance Night!

12/6 Monophonics Soul, Funk

You 1st Responders 11/23 Thank Benefit Featuring the Rhythm Drivers & The Pulsators Fundraiser | 6PM | $65

12/31 Soul, Funk, R&B Covers

JOOSE! Hard Rock Covers | 8PM | $5

1/25 when doves cry

12/6 12/7

Roem Baur Singer Songwriter | 8PM | $5

Plus! Karaoke Every Thursday Night 8-12

Tickets at: coyotesonoma.com

NYE with UB707 Aqua Nett

1/18 ‘80s Hair Metal and Beyond Prince Tribute

Bachata Thursdays • Salsa Sundays 2777 Fourth St • Santa Rosa 707.545.8530 • Flamingoresort.com

Patrick Martin

Celebrated sleight-of-hand magician performs a comedic stage show for all ages. Nov 10, 3pm. Free with admission. Charles M Schulz Museum, 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa, 707.579.4452.

Dance Evert B. Person Theater

Uptown Theatre

Raven Theater

Art Opening 11/8 the hots Rock Covers

The Laugh Center presents the Los Angeles-based comedian, impressionist, actor and director. Nov 8, 6:30pm. $20-$28. Charles Krug Winery, 2800 Main St, St Helena, crushersofcomedy.com.

Nov 8, Michele Korb. Nov 9, JourneyDay Rhorer. 1351 Main St, St Helena, 707.302.5130. Nov 8, Switchfoot & Their Fantastic Traveling Music Show. 1350 Third St, Napa, 707.259.0123.

Sonoma

Brent Pella

Nov 7-10, Fall Dance Concert, SSU dancers, performers and artists create and perform original student-created works. SSU, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park. 707.664.4246.

The Saint

Healdsburg’s Newest Music Venue!

Comedy

Arts Guild of Sonoma Nov 7-Dec 31, “Holiday Art Show,” one-of-a-kind works are on display and available to complete your gift giving. Reception, Nov 7 at 5:30pm. 140 E Napa St, Sonoma. 707.996.3115.

Hammerfriar Gallery

Nov 9, 7:30pm, Dancing with the Stars at the Raven, local celebs and professionals pair up for this audience-voted performance. 115 North St, Healdsburg. $10-$45. 707.433.3145.

Spreckels Performing Arts Center

Nov 9-10, The Holiday Gift, original full-length ballet opens the holiday season. 5409 Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park. $22 and up, 707.765.1771.

Events Cob to Code Fundraiser

Nov 9-Jan 25, “Formless Form IV,” exhibit by Ronald Y Nakasone explores the aesthetic and spiritual geography of the hand-written word. Reception, Nov 9 at 2pm. 132 Mill St, Ste 101, Healdsburg. 707.473.9600.

Living Earth Structures presents a fundraiser to help get low cost housing option approved with live music, film and presentation. Nov 11, 5:30pm. $20. Sebastopol Grange, 6000 Sebastopol Ave, Sebastopol, 707.320.3609.

Petaluma Mail Depot

Community Health Fair

Nov 7-30, “A Celebration of Creativity,” group show features 14 artists. Reception, Nov 7 at 6:30pm. 40 Fourth St, Petaluma. 707.762.8150.

Riverfront Art Gallery Nov 6-Jan 5, “Late Fall Show,” featured artists display vibrant works. Reception, Nov 9 at 5pm. 132 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. 707.775.4ART.

Event provides health screenings, community resources, fitness demos and healthy snacks. Nov 9, 8:30am. Free. Sonoma County Family YMCA, 1111 College Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.545.9622.

Ms. Latina Wine Country

Fifth annual event celebrates diversity and strength with

competitive categories and special presentations. Nov 9, 7pm. $35-$65. Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.546.3600.

Patchwork Show

Discover local craft and food makers at the inaugural event. Nov 10, 11am. Free. Sonoma County Fairgrounds, 1350 Bennett Valley Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.545.4200.

Peace & Justice Center Peacemakers Awards Celebrate the achievements of the awardees while enjoying a night of music and silent auction. Nov 9, 7pm. $15$20. Redwood Cafe, 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati, 707.795.7868.

Sonoma Art Walk

Enjoy music, art, poetry and dance while supporting local businesses. Nov 7, 5:30pm. Sonoma Plaza, First St E, Sonoma, 707.996.1090.

Warren Miller’s Timeless Pre-Party

See clips from the annual winter sports film series, enjoy live music from Aqua Velvets and win prizes and ski gear. Nov 13, 5pm. Free admission. Lagunitas Tap Room, 1280 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma, 707.778.8776.

The Washoe House 160-Year Anniversary

All-day party includes live music, games, beer, prizes and more. Nov 10. Free admission. Washoe House, 2840 Roblar Rd, Petaluma, 707.795.4544.

Winterblast

Annual winter festival features sofa parade, live music, local vendors, open art studios, beer, wine and more. Nov 9, 5pm. Free. SOFA Arts District, 312 South A St, Santa Rosa, 707.568.4204.

Field Trips Family Hike

Docent-led hike is good for all ages. Nov 11, 10am. Free; parking fees apply. Sugarloaf Ridge State Park, 2605 Adobe Canyon Rd, Kenwood, 707.833.5712.

Madrone Bird Walk

Walk through an expansive, hawk-rich region. Nov 9, 8am. Tolay Lake Regional Park, Cannon Lane, Petaluma, madroneaudubon.org.


HAPPY H O U R 3-7 M-F THURSDAY

OPEN MIC NIGHT: HOSTED BY RANDALL BURROWS 8-10 / no cover

SATURDAY

LOCURA (LATIN BAND FROM OAKLAND) 9-12 / $5 cover

THURSDAY

2ND THURSDAYS: THE SEAN CARSCADDEN TRIO 8-11 / no cover

11.07 11.09 11.14 FRIDAY

11.15

COUNTRY QUEER PRESENTS: LAVENDER COUNTRY AND "THE SECRET EMCHY SOCIETY"

8:30-11:30 / no cover SATURDAY

DEREK IRVING AND HIS BAND 8:30-11:30 / no cover

THURSDAY

LIVE BAND KARAOKE 8-10:30 / $5 cover

11.16 11.21

19380 CA-12 SONOMA CA 95476

707 938 7442 starlingsonoma.com

Your vision… my resources, dedication and integrity… Together, we can catch your dream.

OTTER SPOTTER The River Otter Ecology Project presents

Realtor Coldwell Banker

“River Otters on the Rise” on Thursday, Nov 7, at Laguna de Santa Rosa Environmental Center. See Lectures, pg 34.

Marvelous Maples Walks

Fall foliage walk celebrates Quarryhill’s collection of over 40 species of maple trees. Sat, Nov 9, 10am. Free with admission. Quarryhill Botanical Gardens, 12841 Hwy 12, Glen Ellen, 707.996.3166.

Medicine Walk for Times Like These

Join guides for an intentional and reflective all-day program. Pre-registration required. Nov 10, 9am. Bohemia Ecological Preserve, 8759 Bohemian Hwy, Occidental, landpaths.org.

Mushrooms of Armstrong Redwoods Field Seminar Sonoma County Mycological Association leads a walk and discussion of fungi found in the forest. Nov 8, 9am.

Armstrong Volunteer Center, 17000 Armstrong Woods Rd, Guerneville, stewardscr.org.

Osborn Mushroom Blitz Traverse the Osborn Preserve collecting as many fungal species as you can find. Nov 10, 10am. Free. Fairfield Osborn Preserve, 6543 Lichau Rd, Penngrove, 707.795.5069.

Whale Watch Volunteer Training Learn how to assist the public in viewing the annual Pacific Gray Whale migration on weekends January through June. Nov 9, 9:30am. Free. Bodega Bay Fire Station, 510 Hwy 1, Bodega, stewardscr.org.

Yoga & Mindful Walk Start with stretching at the Wolf House Ruins before a

walk in the park. Nov 9, 3pm. $15. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen, 707.938.5216.

Suzanne Wandrei I may also be available Eco Green Certified

for in-person visits at cell: 707.292.9414 Sonoma Roots Natural Medicine. www.suzannewandrei.com

Film CULT Film Series

Seminal concert film “Stop Making Sense” screens. Nov 7, 7pm. $10. Roxy Stadium 14 Cinemas, 85 Santa Rosa Ave, Santa Rosa, 707.525.8909.

In the Heat of the Night

Sociologist John Stover speaks before screening of the film about race and justice in the deep south of 1960s America. Nov 13, 6pm. $6. Petaluma Film Alliance, Carole L Ellis Auditorium, ) 680 Sonoma

34

VOTE For Sonoma & Napa’s Best

OctO 2 -T Dec E31 V

HELPING PEOPLE OF ALL AGES TO ACHIEVE AN OPTIMAL AND VIBRANT STATE OF WELL BEING

Primary Care Doctor with Specialties: • Hormone Balance • Autoimmunity • Gut Health • General Wellness • Health Optimization Available for virtual and phone visits, and home visits in the Napa area Schedule a free 15 minute consultation online or by phone To schedule a virtual or phone visit:

drjulimazi.com/appointments 707.401.2277 | drjulimazi.com

NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

Tom Reynolds

33


Calendar ( 33

34 N O RT H BAY BO H E M I AN | N OV E MB E R 6-1 2, 20 19 | B O HEMIAN.COM

Mountain Pkwy, Petaluma, petalumafilmalliance.org.

Napa Valley Film Festival

The ultimate film, food and wine experience features independent and studio features with celebrity guests galore. Nov 13-17. Various locations, Napa, nvff.org.

Theresa Sareo: Alive Again

New York-based singersongwriter and trauma survivor shares her story in documentary film and live talk. Nov 10, 3pm. Free. Lincoln Theater, 100 California Dr, Yountville, 707.944.9900.

Walking the Camino: Six Ways to Santiago

Film about a pilgrimage in Spain screens in fundraiser for Journey Center. Nov 8, 6pm. $20. Third Street Cinema Six, 620 Third St, Santa Rosa, 707.528.8770.

What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire?

Portrait of African-Americans in New Orleans is a passionate examination of cultural identity and social justice. Fri, Nov 8, 7pm and Sun, Nov 10, 4pm. Sonoma Film Institute, Warren Auditorium, SSU, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 707.664.2606.

Devil on a Bicycle, Circa 1971, Low-fired Ceramic Sculpture Ocumicho, Michoacán

Ayurvedic Indian Head Massage

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

HANDY JIM • carpentry/painting • seismic retrofit • structural work • stucco/concrete • gutter cleaning • roofing

FAR WEST RESTORATION & CONSTRUCTION 707.280.4891 • email: Kajunglejim@aol.com Jim Kennedy CA License #751689

• relief from tension headaches, & sinusitis • improves mobility in neck & shoulders

Margery Smith

Food & Drink Holiday Cookie Class CMT# 62066

707.536.1797 margerysmith.massagetherapy.com

Best Chiropractor A legacy of award-winning chiropractic care

Quality family chiropractic care for managing chronic and acute pain.

Jake Quihuis, DC

New Location next to Chase Bank 845 Fourth St, Santa Rosa • 707.523.9850 chiropracticcentersantarosa.com

Get ready for the holidays with trained pastry chef Jennifer Smith leading an afternoon of baking decorative holiday cookies in a gourmet kitchen. Reservations required. Nov 10, 11am. $110. Ackerman Heritage House, 608 Randolph St, Napa, 707.255.1836.

Napa Valley Wine Train Murder Mystery Tour

Speakeasy-themed theatrical experience aboard the train includes a multi-course gourmet dinner. Sat, Nov 9, 5:30pm. $216. Napa Valley Wine Train, 1275 McKinstry St, Napa, 800.427.4124.

Whiskey Wednesdays

Sample a different flight of whiskey every week. Wed. Goose & Gander, 1245 Spring St, St Helena, 707.967.8779.

Lectures

Long to Be Wild and Free” with Nathan Summers. 130 E Napa St, Sonoma 707.939.1779.

Decolonizing California History

Sebastopol Copperfield’s Books

Presentation is a benefit for the California Indian Museum & Cultural Center. Nov 8, 6:30pm. $10-$20. Christ Church United Methodist, 1717 Yulupa Ave, Santa Rosa. cimcc.org.

The Inner Path to Prosperity

Spiritually-inspired workshop for women offers effective practices for financial well-being. Nov 13, 10am. $47-$97. Collective, 961 Gravenstein Hwy S., Suite 130, Sebastopol, accesstoenrichment.com.

The Political Mind in 2020

Cognitive scientist and author George Lakoff talks about the frames that are defining the 2020 campaigns and our roles in expanding the conversation. Nov 10, 2pm. $20. Vintage House, 264 First St E, Sonoma, praxispeace.org.

River Otters on the Rise

Learn about River Otter Ecology Project’s monitoring, research and results. Preregistration required. Nov 7, 6:30pm. $14. Laguna de Santa Rosa Environmental Center, 900 Sanford Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.527.9277.

Readings CIA at Copia

Nov 10, 11am, “Eating My Way Through Baseball” with Barry Weinberg, includes wine and food. $25-$45. 500 First St, Napa 707.967.2530.

Napa Bookmine

Nov 8, 6pm, Poet Laureates on Social Justice, presented in conjunction with the Napa Center for Thought and Culture. 964 Pearl St, Napa 707.733.3199.

Napa Copperfield’s Books

Nov 8, 6pm, “The Herbal Kitchen” with Kami McBride. 3740 Bel Aire Plaza, Napa 707.252.8002.

Petaluma Copperfield’s Books

Nov 9, 7pm, “Dear America” with Jose Antonio Vargas. 140 Kentucky St, Petaluma 707.762.0563.

Readers’ Books

Nov 7, 7pm, “Primal: Why We

Nov 7, 7pm, “Thriving as an Empath” with Dr Judith Orloff. 138 N Main St, Sebastopol 707.823.2618.

Sonoma County Library Nov 13, 7pm, “Arequipa Sanatorium: Life in California’s Lung Resort for Women” with Lynn Downey. 211 E Street, Santa Rosa 707.545.0831.

Theater Between Riverside & Crazy Left Edge Theatre brings the Pulitzer Prize-winning play to their stage. Through Nov 10. $28-$42. Left Edge Studio Theatre, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa, 707.546.3600.

Boom Two students trapped in a subterranean research lab are all that’s left of humanity in this comedy. Through Nov 9. $15-$30. Main Stage West, 104 N Main St, Sebastopol, 707.823.0177.

Mrs. Krishnan’s Party Indian Ink Theatre Company presents a family comedy that bridges boundaries and cultures. Nov 7, 7:30pm. $25 and up. Green Music Center Weill Hall, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.

Wait Until Dark Classic edge-of-your-seat thriller plays out on the Monroe Stage. Through Nov 10. $25$29; $18 for all under 30. 6th Street Playhouse, 52 W Sixth St, Santa Rosa, 707.523.4185.

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. Inclusion of events in the print edition is at the editor’s discretion. Deadline is two weeks prior to desired publication date.


PLACE AN AD 707.527.1200

Astrology Classifieds

sales@bohemian.com

For the week of November 6

want to learn about cannabis? CANNABIS CURIOUS? CANNABIS CONFUSED? Ongoing classes 6 : 30–8 : 00pm, $10 2nd Thurs of the month SONOMA COUNTY HEALING ACADEMY

6741 Sebastopol Ave Sebastopol / for more info: www.sanasanacoaching. com/cannamedx

Russian Christmas Bazaar and Food Festival

Sat. Nov 9, 10-3; Sun. Nov 10, 11-3. Featuring Russian specialties (pieroshki, borscht), shish kebab, Eritrean foods, and homemade

desserts and baked goods to enjoy or take home. Docent tours of our beautiful church with our new iconostasis. Flavored vodka tastings. Christmas decorations, handicrafts, religious

items, gifts, jewelry, housewares, Russian lacquer and imports. Saints Peter & Paul Church, 850 St Olga Ct, Santa Rosa, 95407 (off Stony Point), 1/2 mile north of Todd Rd. Look for the golden domes!

Download the

Hope & Love Radio App

on iPhone, Google Play or listen on iTunes http://108.59.9.147:8236/stream

PLACE AN AD

Phone: 707.527.1200, Monday–Friday 8:30am–5:30pm Fax: 707.527.1288 Email: sales@ bohemian.com

&

Alternative Health Well-Being available for Safe Oxy, Roxy, Norco, Vicodin, Fentanyl and Other Opiate Withdrawal!

STACS

SUBOXONE Treatment and counseling services Confidential Program. 707.576.1919

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.

Muscular Masseur for Men Full body sensual massage by muscular bodybuilder. CMT. 7 days, 11am–11pm. Short notice okay. Jason. 707.892.0552.

.................................... ....................................

My Private Oasis

Sensual full body massage at my country cottage—discreet, clean and quiet. Private Santa Rosa location — New Client Special. Call Julia 707.490.4042.

Therapeutic and Sensual “Optional” Massage for men and women. Sebastopol. Ten years professional experience. Respectful, discrete. Shower available. Dan 707.332.7999 tshdan@yahoo.com

Massage for Men

I’m offering a full body massage in a safe, quiet, private space in Guerneville. Everybody likes and needs to be touched so why wait any longer? Very reasonable rates. CMT Call Tom at 707.799.3485 or tgl@sonic.net. ....................................

MR K’S RUBS

Sensual massage for men text to 707.591.1197 for info & rates

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Poet James Merrill

was ecstatic when he learned the Greek language. According to his biographer, he felt he could articulate his needs “with more force and clarity, with greater simplicity and less self-consciousness, than he ever could in his own language.” He concluded, “Freedom to be oneself is all very well; the greater freedom is not to be oneself.” Personally, I think that’s an exaggeration. I believe the freedom to be yourself is very, very important. But for you in the coming weeks, Taurus, the freedom to not be yourself could indeed be quite liberating. What might you do to stretch your capacities beyond what you’ve assumed is true about you? Are you willing to rebel against and transcend your previous self-conceptions?

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Musician Brian Eno made a deck of oracular cards called Oblique Strategies. Each card has a suggestion designed to trigger creative thinking about a project or process you’re working on. You Geminis might find it useful to call on Oblique Strategies right now, since you’re navigating your way through a phase of adjustment and rearrangement. The card I drew for you is “Honor thy error as hidden intention.” Here’s how I interpret it: An apparent lapse or misstep will actually be the result of your deeper mind guiding you to take a fruitful detour. CANCER (June 21-July 22): We devote a lot of energy to wishing and hoping about the meaningful joys we’d love to bring into our lives. And yet few of us have been trained in the best strategies for manifesting our wishes and hopes. That’s the bad news. The good news is that now is a favorable time for you to upgrade your skills at getting what you want. With that in mind, I present you with the simple but potent wisdom of author Maya Angelou: “Ask for what you want and be prepared to get it.” To flesh that out, I’ll add: Formulate a precise statement describing your heart’s yearning, and then work hard to make yourself ready for its fulfillment.

SUBOXONE

Full Body Sensual Massage

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries psychologist James Hillman said we keep “our images and fantasies at arm’s length because they are so full of love.” They’re also quite flammable, he added. They are always on the verge of catching fire, metaphorically speaking. That’s why many people wrap their love-filled images and fantasies in metaphorical asbestos: to prevent them from igniting a blaze in their psyches. In my astrological opinion, you Aries folks always have a mandate to use less asbestos than all the other signs—even none at all. That’s even truer than usual right now. Keep your images and fantasies extra close and raw and wild.

Swedish Massage

For Men by a male CMT. Coming from/going to Work? Shower & Towels available. Call Joe@ 707.228.6883 Also can do outcalls.. ....................................

Sensual Relaxation at its Finest Fun loving and playful masseuse offering full body sensual massage. Located near the Santa Rosa airport. Come let me pamper you. Shay 707.228.4878.

BY ROB BREZSNY

and honey, a rose garden, saltwater baked in the sun.” The coming days will be an excellent time to indulge in your own fantasies about the special fragrance you’d like to emanate. Moreover, I bet you’ll be energized by pinpointing a host of qualities you would like to serve as cornerstones of your identity: traits that embody and express your uniqueness.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Studies suggest

that on average each of us has a social network of about 250 people, of whom 120 we regard as a closer group of friendly acquaintances. But most of us have no more than 20 folks we trust, and only two or three whom we regard as confidants. I suspect that these numbers will be in flux for you during the next 12 months, Scorpio. I bet you’ll make more new friends than usual and will also expand your inner circle. On the other hand, I expect that some people who are now in your sphere will depart. Net result: stronger alliances and more collaboration.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I blame

and thank the Sagittarian part of me when I get brave and brazen enough to follow my strongest emotions where they want to lead me. I also blame and thank the Sagittarian part of me when I strip off my defense mechanisms and invite the world to regard my vulnerabilities as interesting and beautiful. I furthermore blame and thank the Sagittarian side of me on those occasions when I run three miles down the beach at dawn, hoping to thereby jolt loose the secrets I’ve been concealing from myself. I suspect the coming weeks will be a favorable time to blame and thank the Sagittarian part of you for similar experiences.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Persian polymath Avicenna (980–1037 C.E.) wrote 450 books on many topics, including medicine, philosophy, astronomy, geography, mathematics, theology and poetry. While young, he tried to study the Metaphysics of Aristotle, but had difficulty grasping it. Forty times he read the text, even committing it to memory. But he made little progress toward fathoming it. Years later, he was browsing at an outdoor market and found a brief, cheap book about the Metaphysics by an author named al-Farabi. He read it quickly, and for the first time understood Aristotle’s great work. He was so delighted he went out to the streets and gave away gifts to poor people. I foresee a comparable milestone for you, Capricorn: something that has eluded your comprehension will become clear, at least in part due to a lucky accident.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): What are the key parts of your life—the sources and influences that enable you to be your most soulful self? I urge you to nourish them intensely during the next three weeks. Next question: What are the marginally important parts of your life—the activities and proclivities that aren’t essential for your long-term success and happiness? I urge you to corral all the energy you give to those marginally important things, and instead pour it into what’s most important. Now is a crucial time in the evolution of your relationship with your primal fuels, your indispensable resources, your sustaining foundations.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In addition to being a key figure in Renaissance art, 15th-century Italian painter Filippo Lippi had a colorful life. According to legend, he was once held prisoner by Barbary pirates, but gained his freedom by drawing a riveting portrait of their leader. Inspired by the astrological factors affecting you right now, I’m fantasizing about the possibility of a liberating event arriving in your life. Maybe you’ll call on one of your skills in a dramatic way, thereby enhancing your leeway or generating a breakthrough or unleashing an opportunity. (Please also re-read your horoscope from last week.)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “When she spoke of beauty, he spoke of the fatty tissue supporting the epidermis,” wrote short story author Robert Musil. He was describing a conversation between a man and woman who were on different wavelengths. “When she mentioned love,” Musil continued, “he responded with the statistical curve that indicates the rise and fall in the annual birthrate.” Many of you Virgos have the flexibility to express yourself well on both of those wavelengths. But in the coming months, I hope you’ll emphasize the beauty and love wavelength rather than the fatty tissue and statistical curve wavelength. It’ll be an excellent strategy for getting the healing you need.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Stand high

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran blogger AnaSofia Cardelle was asked, “What is your signature perfume?” She said she hadn’t found one. But then she described how she would like to smell: “Somewhere between fresh and earthy: cinnamon

long enough and your lightning will come,” writes Piscean novelist William Gibson. He isn’t suggesting that we literally stand on top of a treeless hill in a thunderstorm and invite the lightning to shoot down through us. More realistically, I think he means that we should devotedly cultivate and discipline our highest forms of expression so that when inspiration finds us, we’ll be primed to receive and use its full power. That’s an excellent oracle for you.

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.

35 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 6-1 2, 2019 | BOH EMI A N.COM

&

FREE WILL

Marketplace


SONOMA

COUNTY STRONG Dear Oliver’s Market Customers,

We are saddened by the devastating losses our community has sustained, and hope that you and your loved ones are safe. As much as we try to be otherwise, we are still at a loss for words. Our hearts are breaking for our employees, our customers, and our communities who have lost so much. Our employees who are able have been working tirelessly to remain open and provide the community with food, water and a sense of normalcy. We continue to operate with limited locations, staff and resources, but are powering through to serve our customers to the best of our ability. The sense of community we are experiencing at this time is a beautiful counterpoint to all that is tragic right now. Our sense of community continues to rise to new heights. There is a long journey ahead, but we know that together we will persevere and be stronger than ever before.

We are Sonoma County Strong.

Real Community. 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.