Humboldt County, CA | FREE Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 Vol. XXXIII Issue northcoastjournal.com34 5 Greening the transportation grid 13 Fair food frenzy 16 Painted spectacle ‘Offensive’ comments, accusations of dishonesty fracture relationship between Planning Commission and local tribes By Thadeus Greenson BrokenTrust
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Aug. 25, 2022 • Volume XXXIII Issue 34 North Coast Journal www.northcoastjournal.comInc.ISSN1099-7571©Copyright2022 4 Mailbox 4 Poem Dear Deer 5 News Humboldt Moves to Overhaul Bus Fleet 8 NCJ Daily Online 9 On The Cover Broken Trust 13 On the Table What’s Good at the County Fair 14 Get Out! Rising up at the Klamath Salmon Festival 15 Fishing the North Coast Albacore Go Wide-Open Monday 16 Art Beat Tamar Atik’s Arcata Spectacle 17 Trinidad Arts Night Aug. 27, 6 to 9 p.m. 18 The Setlist Goodbye, August 20 Calendar 21 Home & Garden Service Directory 24 Screens I Love My Dad and The Forgiven Face Consequences 25 Workshops & Classes 25 Cartoon 29 Sudoku & Crossword 29 Field Notes Dolos No. 1972 Finds a New Home 30 Classifieds On the Cover A county stop work order has halted construction of local developer Travis Schneider’s new family home. Submitted Frank Gensaw (left) and Jon Luke Gensaw, both of Crescent City, managed the fire pit coals and the salmon skewers arranged around the heat. Read more on page 14. Photo by Mark Larson The North Coast Journal is a weekly newspaper serving Humboldt County. Circulation: 18,000 copies distributed FREE at more than 450 locations. Mail subscriptions: $39 / 52 issues. Single back issues mailed $2.50. Entire contents of the North Coast Journal are copyrighted. No article may be reprinted without publisher’s written permission. Printed on recycled paper with soy-based ink. CIRCULATION COUNCIL VERIFICATION MAIL/OFFICE 310 F St., Eureka, CA 95501 707 442-1400 FAX: 707 442-1401 www.northcoastjournal.com Press Releases newsroom@northcoastjournal.com Letters to the Editor letters@northcoastjournal.com Events/A&E calendar@northcoastjournal.com Music music@northcoastjournal.com Classified/Workshops classified@northcoastjournal.com CONTENTS PUBLISHER Melissa Sanderson melissa@northcoastjournal.com NEWS EDITOR Thadeus Greenson thad@northcoastjournal.com ARTS & FEATURES EDITOR Jennifer Fumiko Cahill jennifer@northcoastjournal.com DIGITAL EDITOR Kimberly Wear kim@northcoastjournal.com STAFF WRITERS Iridian Casarez iridian@northcoastjournal.com Linda Stansberry linda@northcoastjournal.com CALENDAR EDITOR Kali Cozyris calendar@northcoastjournal.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS John J. Bennett, Simona Carini, Wendy Chan, Barry Evans, Mike Kelly, Kenny Priest PRODUCTION MANAGER Holly Harvey holly@northcoastjournal.com GRAPHIC DESIGN/PRODUCTION Heidi Bazán Beltrán, Dave Brown, Rory Hubbard, Renée Thompson ncjads@northcoastjournal.com ADVERTISING MANAGER Kyle Windham kyle@northcoastjournal.com SENIOR ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Bryan Walker bryan@northcoastjournal.com ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Heather Luther heather@northcoastjournal.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Mark Boyd classified@northcoastjournal.com INSIDE SALES REPRESENTATIVE Trevor Lee trevor@northcoasjtournal.com BOOKKEEPER Deborah Henry billing@northcoastjournal.com OFFICE MANAGER/DISTRIBUTION Michelle Dickinson michelle@northcoastjournal.com WEDNESDAY & NIGHTSTHURSDAY Prime Beef Tri BurgerTriPrimeBurgerTip$16BeefTip$16Steelhead$18Steelhead$18FriedChicken$17FriedChicken$17 Entertainment Calendar AUG|SEPT 26 27 2 3 Noble Tobal Dj Chill Will Triple Junction Jimi Jeff & The Gypsy Band funattheheights.com | 1-800-684-2464 northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 3
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Please make your letter no more than 300 words and include your full name, Dear Deer Every day you trespass across my lawn eating a path through thick grasses I neglect to mow, and then you help yourself to the row of blackberries planted by no one I recall I know and now you bring your polka-dot twins who balance on hind foot tip toes to reach higher rows and then an almost inaudible click of the Captureslensabsences not there a moment ago — Nina Haedrich Terry Torgerson place of residence and phone number (we won’t print your number). Send it to letters@northcoastjournal.com. The dead line to have a letter considered for the upcoming edition is 10 a.m. Monday. lFortuna, CA. 95540 - 5:30p.m. 9:00a.m. - 3:30p.m.
Editor:This week’s edition con tained a cartoon comparing a person refusing vaccination with a person refusing to evacuate in a fire and a person refusing to obey the speed limit (Mailbox, Aug. 18). It was de meaning and hurtful to people because of a healthcare deci sion. I made this decision after agonizing thought and research. When I got COVID, I treated it with herbs, supplements and rest. I also quarantined. I came outWithoutfine. further debating the issue, I appeal to you to take it easy on me and a large portion of your readership. We don’t need more divisiveness at this time. Cathy Seitz, Smith River Write a Letter!
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he redwood curtain is poised to start lifting, at least a bit, courte sy of the Schatz Energy Lab and the Humboldt Transit Authority. If all goes as planned, by 2024, the HTA will be running state-of-the-art, hydrogen fuel cell electric buses to Ukiah. There, connections can be made to Men docino County’s transit system, and from there to the SMART railroad station in Sonoma County’s Cloverdale, from which passengers can access the entire Bay Area.
New fueling station, electric buses to bring zero-emission public transportation to North Coast By Elaine Weinreb newsroom@northcoastjournal.com NEWS Continued on page 7 » Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area SEEKING INFORMATION REGARDING THE
The fuel-cell project will also be paired with the EaRTH transit center planned for downtown Eureka, which seeks to provide badly-needed new housing with readily available transit. The buses will fuel up at the HTA corp yard and pick up passengers at the transit center. Approved by the Eu reka City Council in February, the concept is to transform the parking lot behind the Lost Coast Brewery & Cafe into a plaza between two multi-story buildings. The lower floors of the buildings will serve as a transportation station, not only for HTA but also for Greyhound and Amtrak buses, and possibly ridesharing services such as Lyft and Uber. The upper floors will contain rent-controlled apartments, which will be reserved for low-income residents, students and visiting medical personnel. The transit center, the new buses and the hydrogen fueling facility are all being paid for by the same grant and can be seen as three legs of a stool. The hope is that by having convenient public transpor tation paired with low-cost housing, the need for private cars will be diminished, moving Humboldt closer to meeting its state-mandated requirement to substan tially reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
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The projects will also allow HTA to continue operations after the California Air Resources Board’s ban on the sale of diesel-operated buses takes effect in 2030, while giving Humboldt residents low-cost links to Santa Rosa and points south.
Peter Lehman, one of the founders of the Schatz Energy Lab, has always been fascinated by the promise of hydrogen as a non-polluting fuel source. At an Aug. 15 seminar sponsored by a consortium of local environmental organizations, and attended by 55 members of the public, he described how this low-greenhousegas emitting fuel is going to power 11 new buses.Hydrogen is currently produced using natural gas, but in the future renewable energy promises to make hydrogen a zero-emissions fuel.
Paid for by a $38.7 million grant from the state’s Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program and $26.4 million from multiple state and private sources, HTA will build a hydrogen fueling station at its corporation yard on W Street in Eureka. The hydrogen will be used to power onboard fuel cells, which, paired with batteries, will be capa ble of running full-size buses up steep hills at 65 mph. Like super-powered Priuses, the buses will be powered with a combination of chemical energy and batteries to run a vehicle without burning gasoline.
Humboldt Moves to Overhaul Bus Fleet CARE TREATMENT RESIDENTS TIMBER RIDGE AT EUREKA
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“I’ve been working in renewable energy for 45 years,” said Lehman. “It’s been known for a long time that the planet is heating up — that’s just basic physics and chemistry — due largely to emissions of carbon dioxide, and that to stop it we need to get off fossil fuels.” But he said he was surprised at how quickly climate change has manifested.
“It’s a more dire emergency than what we imagined,” he said. “Transportation is going to be one of the hardest nuts to crack … it accounts for more than a third of our greenhouse gas emissions. ... We’ve got to get people out of cars and we’ve got to get cars that are running cleaner. … We’ve got to electrify transportation.”
HTA General Manager Greg Pratt had contacted Lehman, knowing that transit
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The hydrogen is classified as “gray” because it is produced by tweaking meth ane, a component of natural gas, releasing carbon dioxide as a by-product. If it were produced from electrolyzing water using renewable energy, it would be called “green,” but that option is not currently available on an industrial scale in Northern California. (Lehman hopes to transition to green hydrogen once it is available locally.)
A kilogram of hydrogen, Lehman explained, has about the same energy as a gallon of diesel. He anticipates the cost of a kilogram of hydrogen would be $9 or $10. A hydrogen bus gets 8 or 9 miles per kilogram, while a diesel bus gets 5 or 6 miles per gallon. So the efficiency of hydrogen is greater, as is the cost.
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 7 agencies all over California would be hus tling to purchase zero-emission vehicles before the end of the decade, and hoping to get ahead of the curve. Lehman said they decided to focus on fuel cell electric buses because they are a low-emission technology and a better fit for Humboldt than battery-operated elec tric buses, which only operate well in flat, urban settings with short routes — a far cry from the steep, remote hills of Loleta andFuelWesthaven.cellvehicles have a greater range than battery-operated vehicles, getting more than 350 miles on a tank full of hydrogen. And unlike battery-operated vehicles, they take just eight minutes to charge. With the enhanced range of the fuel cell, buses can make the 330-mile round trip between Eureka and Ukiah. (There are presently no opportunities to refuel en route.)
However, he added that HTA is also planning to hold onto its diesel buses for the time being, just in case. l Elaine Weinreb (she/her) is a freelance journalist. She tries to re-pay the state of California for giving her a degree in environmental studies and planning (Sonoma State University) at a time when tuition was still affordable.
A modern fuel cell is about 60-percent efficient, Lehman said, whereas a gasoline engine is about 20 percent efficient, with efficiency gauged by weighing how much useful energy is produced against how much energy is put in.
Other rural counties are also poised to benefit from the program. According to HTA’s grant application, “transit riders in adjoining northern counties have a similar service gap and they will also benefit from the new RCX [Redwood Coast Express] service. Through coordination with Red wood Coast Transit (Del Norte) and Trinity Transit, riders in those areas will also gain a convenient connection to the SMART train, Napa and the Bay Area.”
Pratt organized the transit agencies in a number of northern California counties into a group called the “Far North Transit Consortium.” CARB asked the consortium to put together a plan that would fund a network of hydrogen stations throughout northern California. Air Products identified Redding, Ukiah, Sacramento, Willow Creek and Santa Rosa as good locations for such stations, since they all link to main trans portation networks. If successful, much of northern California will eventually be connected by a network of zero-emission buses.Lehman assured his audience that despite the legacy of the exploding Hindenburg dirigible, hydrogen is no more dangerous than any other concentrated fuel source. It is also non-toxic and lighter than air, he said, so leaks disperse upward into the Askedatmosphere.aboutthedangers of local roads, Lehman said his major concern is that if the county’s main arteries are closed, whether due to wildfire, landslides or any thing else, hydrogen fuel would be unavail able, at least until there’s a local facility that can electrolyze hydrogen.
“We have plans for that by having a very large tank,” he said. “Hopefully we’ll be able to get through any road closure without having to shut the buses down.”
California, he said, has about 45 hydro gen stations, mostly in the Bay Area and the Los Angeles area. This will be the first north of the Bay Area, though another is planned for Santa Rosa. Only a few thousand fuel cell cars exist in California presently, Lehman said.
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Over the course of a decade, Lehman estimated the fleet of hydrogen buses would save about half a million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions.
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HTA borrowed a New Flyer fuel cell bus from AC Transit, which runs buses in Alameda and Contra Costa counties. Although there were many aspects of the New Flyer that Pratt liked, he realized it needed more improvements if it was going to work in Humboldt.
“The bus that New Flyer had available would not have made it,” Lehman said, “and New Flyer agreed to engineer a new bus with a larger fuel cell, a larger battery and more hydrogen storage. “ This new type of bus, Lehman noted, could be useful all over America, because many rural transit agencies face similar issues.Although Schatz operated a small scale electrolyzer for years at the Telonicher Marine Lab in Trinidad, using solar energy to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, HTA will get its hydrogen from a facility owned by Air Products and Chemicals, LLC, in Sacramento, which will also build the fueling station at the HTA corpLiquidyard.hydrogen is extremely cold — only a few degrees above absolute zero — so the fuel will be trucked into Eureka in cryogenic tanks. It will be stored at the HTA corp yard and transferred into buses as needed.“Thestation will also have ‘over the fence’ fueling that will be a retail hydro gen station” for other hydrogen vehicles, Lehman said, adding these fleets could include UPS, Caltrans vehicles and city of Eureka“Thevehicles.morefuel [HTA] can dispense, the less expensive it is per kilogram,” he said.
NEWS Continued from page 5
A hydrogen fuel cell electric bus on loan from AC Transit sits in front of College of the Redwoods. Sumbitted 949 West Del Norte Street, Eureka 443-7769 • qualitybodyworks.com
MouralherwaqhReclaims northcoastjournalncj_of_humboldt northcoastjournal.com/ncjdailyncjournalnewsletters northcoastjournal
‘A gleaming step’ In his press release, Canter points to the vision to come. “The enduring cultural landscape and return of Mouralherwaqh to the Wiyot people is one gleaming step toward the healing of the past that will shine over Wigi and the North Coast for generations to come.”
Planning for the site will be led by the Wiyot tribe and tribal staff with an initial goal of getting Wiyot citizens on the land to begin a visioning process. Restoration efforts will include removal of Scotch broom, pampas grass and English ivy. The tribe also plans to continue working with Cal Poly Humboldt. Students, faculty and staff from the Environmental Science and Management Department, the Native American Studies Department, the Food Sovereignty Lab and Traditional Ecological Knowledges Institute and the Indian Nat ural Resources, Science and Engineering Program will be involved in research and ecocultural restoration planning on such topics as food sovereignty, food propa gation, legal and financial considerations, water quality, wetland and forest resto ration and more. Humboldt Baykeeper will contribute to efforts to monitor and seek to improve water quality at the site.
With that, the attention turned to state representatives. The reclaiming of Mouralherwaqh is the first time that California has funded tribal acquisition of ancestral lands as a part of addressing climate change. In a press release about the project, Canter expressed hope it can serve as a model for how tribes, academia and non-governmental organizations can work with state agencies to facilitate the return of Indigenous lands to their original stewards. Such efforts, he said, benefit the environment and climate, “while also pro viding access to nature and environmental justice to the communities that have been historically excluded by settler-colonialism and the structures of privilege that they perpetuated.”Speakingat the celebration, California Natural Resource Agency (CRNA) Assistant Secretary for Tribal Affairs Geneva E. B.
Photo by Jennifer Savage
A Brush Dance performed by Wiyot dancers at the Mouralherwaqh land return.
FROM DAILY ONLINE
Tribal Chair Ted Hernandez called for the elders to sit as they began the ceremony to mark the reclaiming of Mouralherwaqh — “wolf’s house” — by the Wiyot Tribe. When open chairs remained, former Tribal Chair Cheryl Seidner teased, “I see some white-hairs out there!”
Speakers at the Aug. 19 event similarly emphasized looking at what the future couldCutchahold.Risling-Baldy, department chair of Native American Studies and co-direc tor of the Food Sovereignty Lab at Cal Poly Humboldt, noted that the school’s commitment to “uplift and support” op portunities for Indigenous tribes is unique among universities. “Land-back is a really powerful thing,” she said. “We are going to build what the next world is going to lookSeidnerlike.” marked the occasion with a “coming home” song, pausing to invite at tendees to sing along and aid the healing of the land. As the final note dissipated into the air, a heron launched through the sky above, adding its throaty croak to the mix.The healing theme continued as William Frank IV led several mostly young Wiyot outfitted in ceremonial regalia in a brush dance. After a “heavy dance” and a moment of silence for the people lost to the COVID-19 pandemic, a lighter mood prevailed with Frank and Hernandez ban tering between dances. A prototype for the future
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Coming home In the process of developing a climate change adaptation plan, Wiyot staff learned a common concern among tribal members is the potential loss of access to culturally important habitats — the need to conserve upland areas is ever more important as rising seas will flood low-ly ing areas around Wigi (Humboldt Bay) including Tuluwat, the site of an earlier historical reclamation by the tribe. In an episode of the EcoNews Report, Canter points out that Mouralherwaqh, the first forestland to be returned to the tribe, has both low-lying and upland habitat. “It’s a great opportunity for the tribe to really contribute to nature-based solutions by stewarding this property to allow for the migration of sea level rise and habitats inland.”
The program funds coastal projects that benefit environmental justice com munities and improve water quality. The path to successfully receiving funding arose through the Cal Poly Humboldt Sea Level Rise Institute, which is co-chaired by Natural Resource Director for the Wiyot Tribe Adam Canter and Cal Poly Humboldt Environmental Science and Management Professor Laurie Richmond. The reclaimed property provides the tribe with the op portunity to clean up degraded waterways and wetlands, and to utilize natural eco systems (aka “nature-based”) for sea level rise resilience measures.
Thompson supported that hope, highlight ing the organization’s shift toward better acknowledging indigenous stewardship across the state. “The attempted genocide not only affected people,” she said, “but also the plants and animals …. We are all suffering from that now.” Ancestral land return is a key component of environmen tal stewardship, Thompson continued, and one the state plans to continue through specifically allocating funds for “tribal nature-based solutions.”
Similarly, OPC Deputy Director Jenn Eckerle said that although the agency is excited for the climate resilience oppor tunities, “the most important part is the reconnecting of the land to the Wiyot for cultural practices and restoration. It’s been an incredible partnership.” She added, “We want it to be a model across the state.”
At the ceremony, with turkey vultures coasting on updrafts, salmon roasting on spits nearby and the promise of breaking bread together imminent, Chair Hernan dez was more succinct. “This is how we make change in today’s world,” he con cluded. “We’re going to bring the beauty back.”
Wiyot Tribe
8 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
— Jennifer Savage 08.20.22
he fog gave way to the sun late morning on Aug. 19 as dozens of people gathered around the po dium positioned in the meadow. Spruce trees and huckleberry bushes stood in the near distance as the scent of saltwater and highway traffic drifted up from the bay and road below.
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A months-long dispute over a stop-work order issued on the construction of a prominent local developer’s private home bubbled into public view at the Aug. 2 Humboldt County Planning Commission meeting. From the dais, commission Chair Alan Bongio said he’s “lost all trust” in two local tribal governments, while making some far-reaching comments about “Indians” that tribal leaders found “inappropriate” and “o ensive.”
ON THE COVER Continued on next page »
The Stop Work Order Schneider did not attend the Aug. 18 meeting, as he was away on a family vacation on the East Coast, but had Tina Christiansen, a local Realtor and member of the Humboldt Association of Realtors Board of Directors, read a letter on his behalf. In it, Schneider explained that he and his wife, both born and raised in Humboldt County, have a love and a nity for the area, have made their lives here and are simply looking to build a home for their family. Having begun investing in real estate at the age of 19, when he “purchased his first four-plex in Eureka,” according to a proposal submitted to build an RV park in 2017, the Schneiders at the time owned a civil engineering firm, as well as construction and property management companies, with a portfolio that then included “several” commercial buildings, three RV parks, 90 apartment units and “a land inventory in place to develop another 120Inunits.”August of 2017, the county approved the couple’s plans to build an 8,000-square-foot home, with a four-car garage and attached 1,000-square-foot cellar on the 3.5-acre parcel on Walker Point Road. The plans were conditioned on requirements that the project retain native blackberry thickets on the parcel, limit construction to areas on the property above a 40-foot threshold and prohibit removal of vegetation within a designated wetland protection area. The Schneiders obtained what’s known as an alternate owner building permit — a special permit that allows property owners to build homes with less stringent oversight if they plan to occupy them. It’s unclear from the record when the Schneiders broke ground on the house, but the project was well underway in December when, according to a sta report, “it was brought to the attention”
‘Offensive’ comments, accusations of dishonesty fracture relationship between Planning Commission and local tribes
The dispute centers around local developer Travis Schneider’s construction of his family home at the end of Walker Point Road near Fay Slough, south of the Indianola Cuto and east of U.S. Highway 101. Late last year, it was determined the 8,000-square-foot house already under construction has a slightly di erent footprint than what had been listed on an approved building permit plan, that Schneider had cleared brush in areas deemed ecologically and culturally sensitive, including one identified more than a century ago as a historical Wiyot village site, and cut an unpermitted temporary construction road on the property, all in violation of his coastal development permit. After a stop work order was issued, the county brought in three Wiyot area tribes — the Blue Lake Rancheria, the Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Rancheria and the Wiyot Tribe — to try to chart a path forward. It appears the parties were working in that direction after an Aug. 2 meeting that included representatives of Schneider, the three tribes, the Humboldt County Planning and Building Department and the California Coastal Commission. But it seems a consensus reportedly reached at the meeting was viewed in starkly different terms, with Schneider and county sta seeing it as a formal agreement, and the Wiyot Tribe and Blue Lake Rancheria viewing it as a framework, the details of which still needed to be negotiated and finalized.Thatapparent disconnect exploded at the Aug. 18 meeting, with a representative of Schneider’s saying the tribes had “lied” and Bongio decrying the two tribes and the California Coastal Commission for going “after one individual,” accusing the tribes of playing games, saying his trust in the tribes had been lost while intoning they were extorting Schneider. Bongio also warned the situation would set a precedent “like you wouldn’t believe.”
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A county stop-work order on construction of local developer Travis Schneider’s new family home has caused a deep fissure between the Humboldt County Planning Commission and local tribes.
“Nothing will happen in Humboldt County,” Bongio said during the meeting, calling the situation “the most egregious thing” he’s seen in 11 years on the commission. “You already do have to go before the Indians but it’s just going to have to be a whole new thing that everyone has to go through every time there’s a project — you name it, whatever it is. You’ll have to go before them and the Coastal Commission. This has went way too far.” Wiyot Tribal Chair and Cultural Director Ted Hernandez said his tribe has had a strong, respectful working relationship with the county Planning Department but he found Bongio’s comments deeply o ensive and openly wondered how the two governments could chart a path forward.“Ithink I’ve lost faith in the Humboldt County Planning Commission,” Hernandez said. “I’m still very upset and extremely ticked o at how the chairman handled his business. They forget they’re guests on Wiyot Land, it’s still Wiyot territory and we’ve never given up our rights on Wiyot land. … How do we heal this wound now? It’s a deep wound. To call the people of these lands ‘Indians?’ I’m sorry, we are the true citizens of this land and we have a name.”
By Thadeus Greenson thad@northcoastjournal.com
Broken Trust
According to Johnson’s presentation, the tribes jointly visited the construction site in February to assess the damage and begin the consultation process, which ultimately stretched months as various assessments were studied and the Blue Lake Rancheria asked for several time extensions, until July 26, when it and the Wiyot Tribe submitted a joint letter outlining various conditions for approving the project. The letter itself has not been made public, as it contains detailed information about the location of sensitive cultural sites, but a county sta report indicates it recommended at least nine mitigation measures. These included establishing a new (and marked) wetland setback area, increased consultations with tribes, tribal approval of a wetland restoration plan, installation of a fence to block o sensitive areas with a tribal monitor on site for construction, submittal of a site drainage plan and the presence of a tribal monitor during removal of the unpermitted access road cut into the site. Further, they requested the three Wiyot area tribes be given a conservation easement encompassing the archeological site and “associated wetland habitat” and that, at Schneider’s expense, a “controlled excavation and archeological data recovery” be conducted on a two-cubic meter portion of the archeological site at a maximum cost of $38,000. (The two tribes said this was requested “due to the fact” that an archeological damage assessment conducted at the site exposed a small portion of it to “erosional factors.” It’s also worth noting here that the Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Rancheria did not agree with this last request.)
The Meeting Early in the Aug. 18 meeting, Bongio A county sta report shows how the footprint of local developer Travis Schneider’s new family home, as well as a temporary road carved into the property, violate wetland setback provisions of his permit. Humboldt County Planning and Building
The Blue Lake Rancheria commented similarly: “It remains unclear how the revised conditions will be implemented, monitored and, if necessary, enforced. It is insu cient to defer the details of the conditions, and processes by which these revised conditions will be deployed, given the history of non-compliance and lack of oversight in this situation.”
In his Aug. 18 sta report, Planner Cli Johnson said the permit and condition violations had resulted in the removal of 440 square feet of native California blackberry from a single parameter wetland, with more than 52,000 square feet of native blackberry removal overall, as well as the removal of 1,250 square feet of “sensitive” habitat and multiple small trees. An archeologist brought in to assess impacts to the cultural site due to the use of heavy machinery to remove vegetation, however, found no impact to the integrity of the site’s scientific value or evidence any cultural material was damaged. The question then became how to correct the damage and make sure similar violations didn’t occur in the future.
When the parties met virtually Aug. 2, the Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Rancheria reportedly did not agree to the excavation request, asking instead that the site simply be capped to prevent any futureBraddamage.Johnson, a lawyer representing Schneider, said he then discussed the requests with his client, who agreed each of the requests was appropriate, after which he then penned a letter to Ford on Aug. 5 indicating Schneider would accept all the mitigation measures suggested in the Wiyot Tribe and Blue Lake Rancheria’s joint letter. County sta then assumed there was an accord and prepared a sta report for the Aug. 18 meeting that recommended the Planning Commission lift the stop work order after the mitigation measures requested by the tribes were implemented.But when the tribes saw the sta report and recommendations, they all felt more work needed to be done and submitted comments to that e ect. The Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Rancheria suggested it was on board with all proposed mitigation measures except the last one, asking that the $38,000 simply be put into an account while the tribes work together to determine the best course. The Wiyot Tribe and Blue Lake Rancheria, however, expressed deeper concerns in letters submitted shortly before the commission’s noon comment deadline on Aug. 17, saying the mitigation measures had hosts of details that still needed to be finalized. Specifically, they raised questions about who would fund monitoring e orts, how tribal input into restoration plans would be facilitated and incorporated, and exactly how the conservation easement would work and who exactly would hold it.
The Coastal Commission also weighed in shortly before the comment deadline came to a close, saying it remains concerned both permit violations and unpermitted development at the property are not “adequately resolved” by sta ’s recommendation, concluding: “We look forward to continuing our collaboration in order to achieve complete resolution of these egregious violations.”
The Consultations
“The Wiyot Tribe and other a ected tribes recommended nine mitigation measures, which sta concludes would be implemented in several conditions of approval,” Wiyot Tribal Administrator Michelle Vassel wrote in the tribe’s comment letter. “The description of conditions, however, is at such a high level of generality so as to make monitoring and enforcement of these conditions problematic. … These problems underscore the need for additional consultation as necessary to clarify these ambiguities and to ensure that the tribally-endorsed mitigation measures are in fact fully implemented.”
10 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com of the Planning Department that grading and ground disturbance had occurred in prohibited areas, potentially damaging “a known tribal cultural resource.” The county issued a stop work order Dec. 27, though work continued at the site for several weeks. In the letter read by Christiansen, Schneider said this was because he was out of town when the initial order was posted and then decided to continue construction work while he “sought clarity from the county,” despite having received six more certified stop work orders on Jan. 3. He said he eventually reached a “mutual agreement” with Planning Director John Ford that “we could continue work and meet in early February.” It’s unclear from the record when work actually stopped at the site, and Ford conceded at the Aug. 18 meeting that he believes the fact the initial order “wasn’t immediately followed” has “created some heartache.”
ON THE COVER Continued from previous page
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 11 Continued on next page » NOW OPEN NEW LOCATION BEST PRICES IN HUMBOLDT 1662 Myrtle Ave. SUITE A 707.442.2420Eureka MYRTLE AVE. AND TO THE LEFT OF OUR LOCATIONOLD UP ALLEYTHE M-F 10am-7pmSat 11am-6pmSun 11am-5pm 21+ only License No. C10-0000997-LIC HOURSNEW indicated he was using his discretion to move the issue of Schneider’s home con struction up the agenda, ahead of a permit amendment for Friends of the Dunes trail and habitat restoration work that has been pending for years (and was subsequently bumped to a future meeting) because Schneider was on a family vacation in New York and it would be earlier in the evening if he chose to participate (he did not) and at-large Commissioner Melanie McCavour would be joining the meeting from Mon treal, Canada, and also facing a significant time
After McCavour’s comments, Bongio asked her why the Wiyot Tribe, the Blue Lake Rancheria and the Coastal Commis sion all submitted comment letters shortly before the Aug. 17 deadline, while Bear River did not have a letter until the follow ing day, saying it was “puzzling” to him. “They’d made this agreement and then, all of a sudden at the 11th hour, these three letters show up. I mean, it can’t be coincidence. I’m sorry, I’m just going to say it the way it is,” Bongio said. “But what I don’t understand is if there are three Wiyot tribes that are having say in this, how come we get Bear River’s today? It just seemed odd to me.” McCavour responded that the tribe hadn’t been aware of the other letters. Hernandez and Vassel later told the Journal they took issue with the whole exchange, saying it seemed to some how impugn comments submitted prior to the commission’s deadline while giving preferential status to others filed late, with Vassel saying, “Her voice was lifted and oursImmediatelysuppressed.”after the exchange between Bongio and McCavour, Third Dis trict Commissioner Noah Levy made one of numerous comments from commission ers asserting that no one from the Wiyot Tribe or Blue Lake Rancheria was attending the meeting. Vassel says she attended the meeting virtually, as did two other tribal staffers and John Ramos from the Blue Lake Rancheria. She said she tried to raise her virtual hand multiple times to indicate to the commission that she was present on behalf of the Wiyot Tribe, but got no response until nearly three hours into the meeting, when Ford emailed her to say he saw her and ask if she wished to address the commission. She responded 30 min utes later indicating she simply wanted the commission to know the tribes were present but the Wiyot Tribe had “submit ted our comments via paper because this is our right.” (Vassel provided copies of the exchange to the Journal.)
Already off to an atypical start, rhetoric at the meeting really ramped up when Christensen addressed the commission on behalf of Schneider during public com ment, accusing the Wiyot Tribe and Blue Lake Rancheria of having lied during the Aug. 2 meeting before reading the letter forInSchneider.theletter, Schneider concedes he’s “not innocent in this matter,” but said he’d agreed to each and every mitigation request from the multiple tribes involved, other than declining to issue a formal apology. He said he was relieved when his attorney presented a formal agree ment Aug. 5, thinking it put an end to the matter, saying he was “gutted” when he saw the “coordinated emails” submitted Aug. 17 and watched tears roll down his children’s faces “at the realization they won’t have their new house.” He later in toned that certain parties involved in the issue want to see “our house demolished.”
Fifth District Commissioner Peggy O’Neill then chimed in to say she was offended that Christensen would call people liars, pointing out that the people representing tribes at the Aug. 2 meeting likely didn’t have full decision making autonomy, and could well have felt the agreement was solid only to have their elected superiors disagree.
“To call them liars or deceivers or whatever is really unfair, because they are employees and consultants, and they’re
It’s unclear why the entire commission seemed under the impression no one from the Wiyot Tribe or Blue lake Rancheria was in attendance. (Bongio declined a request to be interviewed for this story and McCa vour did not respond to a Journal email.)
Whatchange.Bongio did not mention then but quickly became apparent was that McCavour would not be participating in the meeting as a commissioner and would soon recuse herself, as she works as the historic preservation officer for the Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Ranche ria, and later addressed the commission during public comment in that capacity.
Having finished reading Schneider’s letter, Christensen doubled down on her pre vious assertion the Wiyot Tribe and Blue Lake Rancheria had reneged on a promise.
The Bear River Band of the Rohnerville Rancheria submitted written comments on the matter earlier that day (after the noon Aug. 17 deadline) she said, but it appeared they were accepted into the record anyway. McCavour’s relatively brief comments noted that the Rancheria “were not the initiators” of the matter pending before the commission, but agreed with most of the mitigation measures, the lone exception being the one to excavate a portion of the cultural site.
“We were told one thing and lied — it was lied to us,” she said.
Thadeus Greenson (he/him) is the Journal’s news editor. Reach him at 442-1400, extension 321, or thad@ northcoastjournal.com. Follow him on
12 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com ON THE COVER Continued from previous page • The 2022 Subaru Outback is a 2022 IIHS TOP SAFETY PICK+ (excludes Wilderness models). • Best Resale Value in its class for 3 years running, according to Kelley Blue Book.54 • 97% of Subaru Outback vehicles sold in the last 10 years are still on the road today, more than Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV4, or Hyundai Santa Fe.51 • NHTSA 5-Star Overall Safety Rating.55 • Best Resale Value in its class for 3 years running, according to Kelley Blue Book.54 • 97% of Subaru Crosstrek vehicles sold in the last 10 years are still on the road today, more than Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV4, or Jeep Compass.56 Based on Experian Automotive vehicles in operation vs. total new registrations for MY2012-2021 as of December 2020. Vehicle’s projected resale value is specific to the 2020-2021 model years. For more information, visit Kelley Blue Book’s KBB.com. Kelley Blue Book is a registered trademark of Kelley Blue Book Co., Inc. Special APR Financing available on new 2022 Subaru models now through August 31st, 2022 MRC/MRD NDD McCrea Subaru 1406 5th Street Eureka • www.mccreasubaru.com442-1741 HUMBOLDT BAY ROWING ASSOCIATION HBRA.org / 707-267-7976 / HumboldtBayRowingAssoc@gmail.com THANK YOU MURAL ARTIST BEN GOULART For our new boathouse mural! JUNIOR ROWERS —15-week Fall Seasonbegins August 29ADULT ROWING — call for info going to do the best job they can, but they don’t speak for their elected offi cials,” O’Neill said. Bongio countered that he’d been “fol lowing this thing very closely since it first happened.”“Idon’tlike using that word ‘liar’ either but sometimes the word fits and there may be some places in this that that word does fit,” Bongio said. “They came to an agreement — everyone came to an agreement — and then, using the word someone else used, reneged. I have a dif ferent term for it, but whatever. … This is very troubling to me. … I’ve lost all trust in the tribes in what I’ve watched. It’s going to take a lot to rebuild that for me.” Bongio later said he believes what hap pened is the tribes “never thought that Mr. Schneider would agree with all the 11 things that they asked.” “And when he did, they went, ‘Oh my God, we could have gotten more,’” he said, later expressing frustration commissioners couldn’t see the tribes’ July 26 letter that contained sensitive information about the locations of cultural artifacts “because that’s how the Indians play that game.”
“However, the rush to approval of inadequately detailed revised permit conditions, and inappropriate comments by members of the Planning Commission [in the Aug. 18 meeting], particularly the Chair Alan Bongio, leaves the tribe with a much lower confidence in the Planning Commission to adequately overcome its interests in this case and come to a fair, impartial resolution,” the Rancheria stated, adding it was still considering options but leaning “toward appeal of this matter to the California Coastal Commission.”
For their part, Vassel and Hernandez said they will have to turn to the Wiyot Tribal Council for direction, but both made clear they felt the Aug. 18 meeting had deeply hurt the relationship between the Planning Commission and the Wiyot Tribe.“If you hit someone in the face, they don’t want to play with you anymore,” Vassel said. “And I felt like that in the meeting, like, ‘Wow, they’re throwing punches.’”Hernandez was a bit more plain, saying he feels Bongio may have harmed the interests he was seemingly fighting for.
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“This chair, I feel he might have hurt discussions,” Hernandez said. “It’s very offensive what he said. I think the way the chair acted, it’s going to make this a lot more difficult.”
As to Bongio’s notion that there’s now some precedent set that development will have to go through local tribes for approval, well, there Hernandez doesn’t entirely“Yeah,disagree.it’sour land,” he said. “It’s our territory. But we’ll work with you.”
A motion to approve staff’s recom mendation failed 3-3, with Bongio, Fourth District Commissioner Mike Newman and Second District Commissioner Thomas Mulder voting in favor. Levy then pointed out that there appeared to be unresolved questions in the agreement sitting before the com mission, pointing to which tribe would hold the conservation easement as a good example. Additionally, he suggested that if the Coastal Commission — the entity that could hear an appeal of the matter — was asking for more time to work out details, it might behoove the applicant and his project to give the parties involved more time to do that.
At-large Commissioner Brian Mitch ell offered a similar take, saying he feels Schneider has “shown true remorse” and that he’d like to help him get the project finished, but made clear some of the rhet oric on display at the meeting made him uncomfortable.“Ipersonally am having a hard time get ting on board with some of the language and comments that are being made to ward our partners and trust agencies with which we have to work,” he said. Mitchell added that he’s witnessed “first-hand the folly of thinking you can ignore a Coastal Commission letter and just try and go do what you think is best. I’ve never seen it workTheout.”commission ultimately voted 5-1, with Bongio dissenting, to continue the matter for two weeks with the hopes of giving Schneider, the Wiyot Tribe and the Blue Lake Rancheria more time to reach a final accord. A few minutes later, as the meeting adjourned and its cameras cut away, one of Access Humboldt’s microphones picked up Bongio saying in a hushed voice, “That was a waste of my fucking time.”
The ‘More Difficult’ Path Speaking to the Journal days after the Planning Commission meeting, Vassel said she was completely shocked at the tribe’s treatment, saying it felt like “a show” and as though there was an effort to pit tribes against one another. Asked for comment, the Blue Lake Rancheria issued a brief statement assert ing that the “core issue here is noncom pliance with terms and conditions of building permits and other regulations,” and that the Rancheria was working in good faith to resolve the matter.
Pacific Wings, $18
The Hale ’Aina Caterers truck beside this tent looks a little upscale for a venue that regularly offers curly fries made with a potato affixed to a modified power drill. The wings and salads — salad at the fair, who knew? — on the menu are on the fancy side, too. Hit every button with the Chinese five spice, honey and soy marinated wings, flame grilled for a little smoke and char, then tossed with a sweet lemon-cilantro peanut sauce. The pile of eight or so drums and flats are flavorful and soft-skinned, the fat getting an extra boost from the vinegar and citrus in the accompanying slaw. Don’t despair at the phone number’s Hawaii area code — chef and owner Kanani Lincoln has moved the Pacific Rim cuisine operation to Humboldt.
The Lion’s Club’s tandem mini cookshacks all the way in the back of the food stall loop is an annual go-to. But take the advice of the woman at the register and up your game by getting the lamb burger with pepper jack cheese and grilled onions. Lettuce and tomato (very red and ripe tomato) are self-serve, but this one doesn’t need much in the way of condi ments, maybe a little salt and pepper. The browned edges of the bun and the flavor of the well-cooked ground lamb are won derful. Grab a picnic table in the adjoining garden and enjoy the pastoral bliss.
Eel River Valley residents might feel similarly enticed by a couple food trucks from up north: Big Island Kine has rolled southward to offer its poké bowls at the fairgrounds and the small but mighty Taqueria Martinez truck brings Oaxacan and Azteca burritos to town (“Taque ria Martinez Pulls Up,” Feb. 27, 2021).
By Jennifer Fumiko Cahill jennifer@northcoastjournal.com
Patches’ Pastries Churro waffle, $10
Lions Club lamb burger, $11
What’s Good at the County Fair
Patches’ joyful churro waffle. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill Wings with Pacific Rim pedigree. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill Cheese on a stick flies too close to the sun. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill T he dizzying labyrinth of a funnel cake will forever draw me in. A pastel tuft of cotton candy will always retain its magic. That these are only in reach for a cou ple weeks each year just raises their stock — absence makes the sweet tooth fonder.
ON THE TABLE
Cook’s Barbecue pulled pork sandwich $10 Did you come to play the ponies? Cook’s Barbecue has set up operations under the grandstands with burgers, dogs, barbecue beef sandwiches and the like for those tethered to the racetrack. The dark horse is the deceptively plain looking pulled pork on a picnic roll. If you want it saucy, you’ll have to apply barbecue and/ or hot sauce at the fixings table. But take a bite plain first to appreciate the simple flavor of salted pork cooked low and slow, a buttery nub of fat here and there — nothing showy, just a solid bet. Italian sandwich,sausage$12
Cheese on a stick, $7
Let’s address the deep-fried elephant in the room. If you dunk a batter-dipped something in a bubbling fryer basket, whether it’s an Oreo or a poker chip, it’s even money I’ll at least try it. But curios ity isn’t well rewarded with this hunk of American cheese under gritty, browned corn batter. It’s nearly identical but stouter than the standard corn dogs at the same stand in the center of the outdoor food court, but lift it from the paper tray and you’ll feel the stick moving freely in the molten core. The melted cheese tastes bland (how is a block of cheese not salty enough?) and clings to the teeth instead of melting into creaminess. Respect to bar mozzarella sticks and the above-men tioned fried cheese curds for nailing the texture and flavor formula.
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 13 roll, I would back you up.
Slip past the little red schoolhouse to Friendship Square and find Patches’ Pas tries in its newish home at the fairgrounds. It’ll be here after the fair but if it’s out of your regular commute, you might as well pop in. Anything from the bakery case (cookies, scones, muffins) or the mini fridge (pudding, wedges of cheesecake) will bring you joy. But the churro waffle is a whole celebration. Its crisp edges are lightly encrusted with cinnamon sugar and the springy, moist interior calls to mind a cake doughnut hot from the fryer. Whipped cream, almond slivers and lashings of caramelized dulce de leche sauce fill the waffle’s grooves and the dark, empty places in your soul. That last part, like the fair, is, in fact, fleeting. Savor it. l Share your tips about What’s Good with Jennifer Fumiko Cahill (she/her), arts and features editor at the Journal Reach her at 442-1400, extension 320, or jennifer@northcoastjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter @JFumikoCahill. Pulled pork at the races. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill
Fat Anne’s, too, has set up shop in the Turf Room with chicken sandwiches and fried cheese curds. But as for those carnival stalls, well, let us help you choose from among their ephemeral fare.
A classic iteration of this staple of New York street fairs and tri-state area pizza joints is not to be found in our county. That is the price of living amid dramatic coastlines, regal redwoods and the like: Nobody will fry you up a simple freaking Italian sausage with peppers and onions on a freaking Italian roll. But while the Ferris wheel turns, you can bear right at the gates and follow your nose to a Taylor Italian hot — grilled whole, not split, keeping it juicy beneath shiny, snappy skin — with flat-top fried onions and peppers on a Franz outdoor roll, which is a few subway stops away from the traditional bread but hey — if you brought your own
The event featured fresh, local wild salmon cooked on traditional stakes around a fire pit for lunch. There was a mix of new and familiar activities, starting with the Ney-puey Color Run at 10 a.m., followed by the annual parade down Klamath Boulevard. Floats included en tries from the Cultural Fire Management Council and Yurok Tribal Court, which promoted awareness of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous People movement. There was also live music by the Blue Rhythm Revue and the traditional Stick Game Tournament. In addition, there was an expanded kids’ fun zone, a petting zoo, a net auction, a smoked-salmon contest, an ax-throwing competition and a number of information tables and vendors. The Traditional Basket Weaver Demonstration featured technique examples and a wide variety of handcrafted cultural items made by professional weavers from the West Coast. The traditional Stick Game Tournament began with the youngest boys playing the fullcontact game that resembles a blend of lacrosse and wrestling. Participants compete tossing the “tossel” either up- or down-river with their sticks toward the goal line to score a point.
Phyllis Hunter, of the Mono Tribe and Tollhouse, California, demonstrated her weaving technique in making a cradle board.
Rising up at the Klamath Salmon Festival
One unusual bonus to the event was a 33-foot-long humpback whale and calf carving made out of an old-growth redwood log by wood-carver Tonu Shane Eagleton, of Oahu, who said he found the log at a mill site in Willits 15 years ago.
By Mark Larson getout@northcoastjournal.com
Yurok Tribal Court judges Bill Bowers and Abby Abinanti waved to the crowd from the Tribal Court parade entry that promoted awareness of the Justice for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People movement.
he 58th annual Klamath Salmon Festival got underway on the morning of Saturday, Aug. 20, after a two-year pandemic break. The usual Fogust low clouds soon cleared and, thankfully, the only smoke in the air was coming from the salmon barbecue pit — no wildfire smoke blew in from the nearby inland fires. The Yurok Tribe’s theme for this year was “Rising Up,” in recognition of the re cent reintroduction of the Prey-go-neesh, or California condor, in Yurok Country and the pending removal of the Klamath River dams. It was magical to see a large California condor replica perched on the parade entry vehicle of the Klamath Boys and Girls Club. I hope someday to see a real condor soaring over Klamath at this event, given the recent release of four of the endangered birds and more releases planned in the future.
T
l Mark Larson (he/him) is a retired Cal Poly Humboldt journalism professor and active freelance photographer who likes to walk.
Photo by Mark Larson
Photo by Mark Larson
GET OUT
14 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
In an event news release, Chairman of the Yurok Tribe Joseph James said, “With condors soaring over Yurok skies for the first time in more than a century and the soon-to-be-realized restoration of our river, we have many reasons to give thanks and celebrate. The reintroduction of the condor and dam removal represent real progress toward a brighter future.” See the full slideshow of photos at www.north coastjournal.com.
Photo by Mark Larson
Lower Klamath
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Kenny Priest operates Fishing the North Coast, a fishing guide service out of Humboldt specializing in salmon and steelhead. Find it on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and www.fishingthenorthcoast. com. For up-to-date fishing reports and North Coast river information, email kenny@fishingthenorthcoast.com.
With the tuna within striking distance, Tony Sepulveda of Shellback Sport Fishing put away the rockfish gear for the day and headed 27 miles northwest of Trinidad and found the tuna. “It was a flat ocean and conditions were perfect,” said Sepulveda. “We found a defined break, 64 degree water, great chlorophyll and the fish right where satellite images said they should be. The morning bite made me feel like we were well located but they were a touch reluctant. Bites came every few minutes but most were singles or doubles and they were a touch shy, favoring the long lines. We continued to box the area steadily picking away, and about 11 a.m. they came up in force. Lines would just hit the water and three to five rods would go o . Called it good at a touch after noon with 53 in the box.”
William Justesen, of Carlotta, holds an Albacore tuna caught Monday while fishing o of Trinidad. Photo courtesy of Eric Justesen/707 Sport Fishing Albacore MondayWide-OpenGo
By Kenny Priest fishing@northcoastjournal.com
FISHING THE NORTH COAST W hen the ocean conditions and water temperatures align, there’s always that chance at an epic day of tuna fishing. And Monday was just that day. It was a one-day weather window and those who jumped at the opportunity were rewarded with coolers full of tuna. This wasn’t a day about trying to come back to port with the highest total. This was all about how much space and ice do we have. And do I have enough strength left in me to possibly reel in another albacore. In other words, it was a pretty good day of fishing and the boats caught all they could handle. These types of days don’t come often but when they do, they’re extremely rewarding. Most of the fleet found the tuna just north of Trinidad, roughly 30 miles from Humboldt Bay. Scores ranged from 20 to 60, depending on the size of your boat and the strength of your crew. The fish were a good size, too, with just a few in the high teens and most averaging well over 20 pounds.
The water color continues to be an issue on the lower Klamath. Some adult kings and jacks were caught over the weekend, despite the water conditions. The salmon are starting to spread out from the Glen to Blue Creek, but the water clarity is definitely hampering the bite.
1001 Main St. in www.eelvalleyappliance.com707.725.6734Fortuna northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 15
The EurekaOceans: Like the majority of the fleet, Tim Klassen, of Reel Steel Sport Fishing, opted to chase tuna Monday. “We were a little south of the fleet roughly 25 miles from the entrance,” said Klassen. “Water conditions were perfect and the fish were coming fast. Most of the day we could only get one or two rods out without having a fish on. The fish are a really good grade. We only had a few in the high teens and the rest were well over 20 pounds. It sounded like all the boats caught as many as they wanted. There are a few salmon being caught straight out in 180 feet of water and the fish are holding right on the bottom. When conditions allow, the rockfish bite at the Cape is still really good. There’s lots of variety and some nice lings being caught.”
Anglers may monitor the quota status of open and closed sections of the Klamath and Trinity rivers by calling the Klamath information hotline at (800) 564-6479 Read the complete fishing roundup at www.northcoastjournal.com.
According to Dan Troxel, an environmental scientist on the Klamath River Project, only 44 adult salmon had been harvested from the State Route 96 bridge at Weitchpec to the Klamath mouth toward the quota of 1,060 for the week ending Aug. 19. Of those, 30 adults were caught at the spit area of the mouth. As of last Friday, 288 adults remained of the 318-adult sub-quota for the mouth.
Fall Quota Update
Trinidad Curt Wilson, of Wind Rose Charters, reports the rockfish action is cranking right along, with lots of black rockfish coming over the rails. “Between the Head and Patrick’s Point is still producing quality limits of black rockfish,” he said. “We made a couple trips out to Reading Rock and caught a nice variety of rockfish and some big lingcod. A few boats are going straight out and catching a few salmon each day. The fish are right on the bottom. The wind is expected to return later this week and into the weekend.”
l Collin Yeo (he/him) lives in Arcata, where his only contribution to public art were things that should have probably gotten him arrested as a teenager.
Atik notes that though labor-inten sive, the project was extremely gratifying and fun, and the public was very friendly and helpful, with Hensel’s Ace Hardware donating the paint and materials and the Rental Guys in Eureka providing extra days of use on the scissor lift for free. “The fact that it is a community-funded mural also makes it more special, and people came by and chatted all day. Everyone really seems to like it and I think it makes people happy.”Though Atik completed the project in July, she will be painting an additional connecting mural on another part of the building. She says she has hopes for more projects in the future and wants to make herself available as an artist for the people of Arcata and beyond. “I think public art is so important. It really can change the feel of a place,” she says. “I am a huge believer in brightening up and beautifying commu nity spaces, and making art accessible for everyone. Murals have the power to make such an impact, to inspire, and to send messages of hope, positivity and empow erment. I really want to continue to paint and bring more art to communities around theAndworld.”asI said before, I do love a spec tacle and it takes real guts to get up and create one of those on the side of a public facade. Atik’s mural is technically challeng ing, bright and beautiful. Here’s hoping that Tamar and others like her keep at it for the sake of the rest of us.
SpectacleArcataAtik’sTamar
“Honor the Land,” a mural by Tamar Atik, on the exterior of Global Village Gallery in Arcata. Photo by Collin Yeo
Tamar Atik was born in Israel 36 years ago and raised in England. She describes herself as nomadic, having spent 11 years in Mexico and Guatemala, and a self-taught painter who turned professional artist four years ago. A course in Italy and a year of study in Mexico City followed, and she painted murals in Mexico and Guatemala before inaugurating her piece in Arcata.
By Collin Yeo artbeat@northcoastjournal.com
Called “Honor the Land,” it is the largest mural she has ever painted. “A friend of mine owns the Global Village Gallery. I spotted the wall and wanted to paint a mural. He was keen, and so was the building’s owner, but there was no funding, so I started investigating what I needed to do,” she says. What happened next was a journey through the red tape of realizing an artistic vision. Atik discovered that a permit was required, and with it came the need for insurance, which was “costly.” Having no patronage or funding, word of mouth directed her to the Eureka-based non profit the Ink People and its Dream Maker Program supporting local creative projects.
“I applied to this program and pre sented my project to the board and got accepted. This meant that I would fundraise through them, and they would cover my insurance costs, and 15 percent of the money I raised would go to them,” explains Atik, who describes the organiza tion as helpful and supportive. “I’m happy to pay a portion of the fundraising to them too because they do fantastic work for creatives in the community.” Funding secured, Atik set herself to the work of prepping and painting the area that she had been Startingeyeing.onMay 30, she got five days of help to power wash, prime and paint the dark blue background. “So I was super-grateful for that help as it’s a huge job! We had a scissor lift paid for by the building owners — the lift saved so much time and I will definitely get one again for my next large project,” Atik says. To get the two coats she needed done in the two weeks she’d have the lift for, she worked from the top down. “I did the sky and the moons first, and then the clouds and sun set. Then I drew the deer out and painted them. For the mandala in the middle, I used a giant compass to sketch it.”
ART BEAT Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area REGIONALPERFECTOUTDOORLIFESTYLEFUNTRIPSFOOD&DRINKSHOPPINGSOUVENIRS90-DAYCALENDARMAPS FOR INFORMATIONADVERTISINGCALL: FIND IT ON ONLINE AND ON NEWSSTANDS ALL OVER HUMBOLDT 442-1400 x319 OUT NOW! 2022 EDITION CALENDAR / MAPS THRIFTING WITH A DIFFERENCE / LOGGER BAR REVIVAL OF MENUS + HUMBOLDTINSIDER.COM insider HUMBOLDT FUN, RIGHT NOW 16 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
I f you have spent any time in Arcata lately, you will have noticed a lot of changes, many of which cause no shortage of griping among the citizen ry. I’m talking about new construction and roadwork, and one of my own private gripes: address plaques with numerical fonts that summon visions of tiny SoCal neighborhoods, here in the Alaska of California. One addition to the town that should be uncontroversial and well-re ceived by the polis is the rapid expansion of public art, most notably murals — though without an accompanying festival as in Eureka (“Murals Under the Bridge,” Aug. 11, 2022). From basketball courts to cafes, colors and images are cropping up everywhere across the 95521, with the scuttlebutt saying more art is coming down the pipeline. This is probably a good thing, even if the quality or content of some of the pieces turns out to be bad. I say this because, like many folks out there, I secretly enjoy an eyesore, having been born with the genetic American urge to gawk at the big bright thing. I love a spectacle. One sunny June day, I was walking down I Street, looking at the uncanny mural gnomes in a state of muted horror when a spectacle (not an eyesore, though) caught my eye. Just up 10th Street, across from the Minor Theatre, a woman on a mechanical lift was painting a large mural on the side of Global Village Gallery.
V enues through town will feature a variety of art and music; activities include a skate park, games, fire spinning and face painting. At the end of the evening, Westhaven Center for the Arts presents a special music event from 8 to 10 p.m. with The Bayou Swamis at Trinidad Town Hall. Dancefloor/refreshments avail able ($5-$20 sliding scale). Masks strongly recommended. For info, call (707) 8342479. Hosted by Westhaven Center for the Arts and Community Arts Trinidad. More in info at www.trinidadarts.com.
THE LIGHTHOUSE GRILL 355 Main St. Antoinette “Toni” Magyar, acrylic on canvas. SAUNDERS PLAZA EAST: (Parking lot by Murphy’s Market). Music by Blue Rhythm Revue; face painting by Jade Bam boo; fire spinning act at 9 p.m. HEADIES PIZZA AND POUR 359 Main St. “What did we learn from the pachy derm?” Matt Brody, acrylic paintings.
FORBES AND ASSOCIATES - SARAH CORLISS 343 Main St. Matthew Dodge, sculpted photographs.
NightArtsTrinidad Aug. 27, 6 to
TRINIDAD COASTAL LAND TRUST: SIMMONS GALLERY 380 Janis Court. Featured Artists: TBA. TRINIDAD MUSEUM 400 Janis Court. Five rooms of art, culture, history and nat ural history. Music by Howdy Emerson.
TRINIDAD TOWN HALL 409 Trinity St. Memorial Lighthouse Benefit Art Show featuring original art, prints and photog raphy; meet artist Sol Hoyos and enjoy her exhibit of macrame art; music by The Bayou Swamis from 8 to 10 p.m. ($5-20 sliding scale).
MOONSTONE CROSSING 529 Trinity St. Kenneth Fletcher, works in oil, charcoal, pastel and mixed media.
p.m. ARTS NIGHTS northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 17
TRINIDAD SCHOOL PARKING LOT 300 Trinity St. Skate park/games. TRINIDAD ART CENTER 426 Trinity St. Susan Mayclin Stephenson and Reuben Mayes, paintings.
TRINIDAD CIVIC CLUB 409 Trinity St. Event information station. Crucifix col lection on display/sale, jewelry, lighthouse memorabilia and more; sweets for sale by Rabia O’Loren, benefits Doctors Without Borders; hot beverage sales benefit the Memorial Lighthouse Fund.
THE TRINIDAD EATERY TBA. l Woodwork by Kurt Hellmich at Trinidad Art Gallery. Submitted Artwork by Patricia Sundgren Smith at Trinidad Art Gallery. Submitted 9
TRINIDAD ART GALLERY 490 Trinity St. Reception for featured artists and mem bers Patricia Sundgren Smith (printmaking, painting, drawing and collage) and Kurt Hellmich (woodwork). Light refreshments.
18 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
aying out in my sunny backyard last weekend with my friend Chini and the two gray sister cats that make up my brood, I had a moment of pure summer idyll. It might have had something to do with practicing my pitch wind-up with a few yard apples, or the sheer blue of the sky divorced from too much wind or heat, but I found myself in the zone, blissed out and unbothered. Of course, this wasn’t built to last, and external stresses have since colluded with an internal disquiet to provoke my usual ambient state of muted being. But the point is I got there, somewhere around the third time I listened to Robyn Hitchcock and Emma Swift’s version of “The Ghost in You,” and planted my flag on the bright summit of that sweet day. I’m not very good at understanding other people and their motivations, but I do suspect that staking a claim to a nice memory, as it is unfolding, is one of those experiences that is both universal and sublime. People talk about FOMO (“fear of missing out”) but the big social events seem mostly designed for me to look for escape routes from all the fun. I might go to the fair this week, but I won’t be doing it with a large crew and a resulting explosion of Instagram posts. I do, however, experience a fear of missing a good memory, or a failure to take notice of a nice time while it’s happening. It’s not a nostalgia thing, it’s more like pointillism, another small dot of color added to a larger image that may become clear to me one day. Or might just look as inscrutable as sunspots and flotsam in the I hope that you have made some nice memories this month, this summer, this You have your choice of two regular, ongoing weekly shows tonight, both starting at 9 p.m. At the Miniplex, it’s one of two weekly karaoke shows, this one has a fun theme: Animal party. So dress up as a scorpion or a frog or something, I dunno. It’s Meanwhile,free.across the crab-infested saltlands and over into Eureka, Savage Henry Comedy Club presents Just Joshin’, the weekly showcase of comedian Josh Barnes. Not quite free but $5 is close enough.
Friday WHOMP Wednesday is dead, all hail WHOMP Friday. Or rather, a WHOMP productions electronic dance show at the Jam at 9:30 p.m. I have noticed fewer of these sorts of noisy, dayglo free-foralls this year, so ravey celebrants should rejoice: Your digital mass is back, for an evening, at least. Tonight’s beat curators will be Dalfin, JARS, Cassidy Blaze and Drinking Midnight ($15).
Saturday Speaking of big-sound dance-extravaganzas, it’s Soul Party over at Humbrews tonight at 9 p.m. ($5). This week’s theme is (according to DJ Red, whom I happily run into rather frequently during my Arcata perambulations) Geek-Out Freak-Out. A salute to the returning student body of whatever the state is currently calling the university in northeastern Arcata. With the return of said students, I would expect a higher than usual turnout compared to the regular summer crowd, so think about getting here early if you want
Goodbye, www.northcoast.coop/orders Our new house-made pasta is made with a few carefully chosen ingredients and shaped usingbronzetraditionaldies.
Pasta ALL New
Wednesday I’ve been pushing these Wednesday movie nights over at the Arcata Theatre Lounge lately since they’re a good choice for these sleepy, midweek summer slots. However, tonight’s feature is relevant to this column, as it’s a showing of Sun Ra’s 1974 film Space is the Place. In this hidden relic of Afrofuturist science fiction, Sun Ra’s Intergalactic Solar Arkestra provides the soundtrack to a story that is literally powered by music, as well as a naked critique of racist, capitalist structures. The movie starts at 7:30 p.m., with a pre-show raffle at 6 p.m., and admission is only $5, $9 if you want a poster.l Collin Yeo (he/him) lives in Arcata, where, in a devastating and tragic turn of events, he has found himselfmusicplayingagain.
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 19 to scratch that classic soul vinyl itch. I would like to scoot back an hour in time and mention that the Miniplex is hosting a Goth Night, for those of you who wish to dance to a slightly darker tune.
Unfortunately, no such muse has materialized, so you’re all on your own tonight.
Tonight’s musical revenants will be DJ Fauxvelvet, DJ Satanica and DJ Kill Despot. I am told that there will be a corpse paint booth set up, which I am guessing involves creating the iconic black and white patterns seen on certain black metal and darkwave artists, and not a lo cal mortuary worker trying to return the roses to a cold and lifeless canvas ($5).
Monday “Oh, for a muse of fire that would ascend/Thebrightest heaven of invention! A kingdom for a stage, princes to act, And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!”Oh,indeed.
The Irie Rockerz play Humboldt Brews on Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. Photo courtesy of the artists
OPEN DAILY Hours: 10 am - 5 pm Every Day trinidadartgallery.com FEATURED ARTIST GoldenCandlesBee www.humboldtshometownstore.com OPEN MON-SAT 9 - 5 & SUNDAY 10 - 4 394 MAIN FERNDALESTREET, beeswax candles SUBMIT your ONLINE or by E-MAIL northcoastjournal.com • calendar@northcoastjournal.com Print Deadline: Noon Thursday, the week before publication EventsCalendar
Sunday Septentrio Winery is throwing an all-day rock fest, starting at 1 p.m. Local Arcata acts War Möth, Insomnia Syn drome, Planet of Green and the garage band Cookers will all be joining Chico’s Furlough Fridays for a day of heavy, amplified string and drum tunes. That’s a total of five bands for only $5, which seems like a deal to me.
Tuesday For over two decades, weathering hiatuses and lineup changes, Sonoma County’s Groundation has been a touring roots reggae staple. Playing a sound that can only be created by tube amps, live drums, vocals, and horns, with none of the digital affectations associated with more modern styles of reggae and dance hall music, the group has carved out its niche by remaining on an all-analog sonic pathway. If that sounds like something you’re into, you can check ’em out at Humbrews tonight. 9:30 p.m. ($35, $30 advance). Local act Irie Rockerz opens.
Ferndale Town Clock Celebration. 11 a.m.-noon. Fern dale Museum, 515 Shaw Ave. Celebrate the clock’s 100th birthday with reminiscences by Guy Fieri and Ralph and Christina Mathes. Free. ferndalemuseum@gmail.com. (707) 786-4829. Humboldt County Fair. Humboldt County Fairgrounds, 1250 Fifth St., Ferndale. See Aug. 25 listing. FOR KIDS Kid’s Night at the Museum. 5:30-8 p.m. Redwood Dis covery Museum, 612 G St., Eureka. Drop off your 3.5-12 year old for interactive exhibits, science experiments, crafts and games, exploring the planetarium, playing in the water table or jumping into the soft blocks. $17-$20. info@discovery-museum.org. discovery-museum.org/ classesprograms.html. (707) 443-9694.
FOOD Garberville Farmers Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Garberville Town Square, Church Street. Fresh produce, eggs, meat, baked goods, nursery plants and starts, oysters, live music on the square, crafts and more.
Yep, Humboldt’s biggest beer festival is back, baby, offering unlimited samples of hundreds of different micro-brews in a swanky commemorative glass (don’t drop yours — you only get one), plus Indian tacos, hot dogs and sausages, barbecued wings, kettle corn, Mexican food and more to keep you steady. There’s also live music from Melange, The Beer Scouts and The Undercovers. Plus, vendor booths, swag and more. VIP ticket holders get in early to beat the crowds.
GARDEN Sea Goat Farm Garden Volunteer Opportunities. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Abbey of the Redwoods, 1450 Hiller Road, McKinleyville. Help with animal care, weeding, water ing, planting and occasional harvest help on Saturday mornings. Volunteers get free produce. flowerstone333@ gmail.com. (530) 205-5882. ETC Tabata. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. SoHum Health presents online classes with short, high intensity cardio workouts. Contact instructor Stephanie Finch by email for a link to the class. Free. sfinch40@ gmail.com. sohumhealth.com. Twice-Nice Sale. 12-6 p.m. Eureka Center for Spiritual Living, 239 Buhne St. Three rooms of clothing, household goods, office supplies, furniture, kitchen appliances, dishes, art supplies, camping gear, tools, collectibles, etc. (707) 443-5743. 27 Saturday ART Trinidad Arts Night. Last Saturday of every month, 6-9 p.m. Trinidad, Downtown. A town-wide event including venues, galleries, wine tasting, outdoor music, live art, fire dancing, kids activities and various performances throughout the night. Free.
Aug. 25 – Sep. 1, 2022 beverages, food vendors and live local music for humboldtmade.com/eureka-friday-night-market.dancing.
Volunteer Orientation Food for People. 3-4 p.m. Help fight hunger and improve nutrition in the community. Visit the website to be invited to a Zoom orientation. Free. volunteer@foodforpeople.org. foodforpeople. org/volunteering. (707) 445-3166 ext. 310. Willow Creek Farmers Market. 4-7 p.m. Veteran’s Park, 100 Kimtu Road, Willow Creek. Produce, fish and more, plus music and hot food vendors weekly through August. No pets except trained, ADA-certi fied service animals. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation. org. html.northcoastgrowersassociation.org/willowcreek.(707)441-9999.
EVENTS Eureka Friday Night Market. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Historic Old Town Eureka, Second Street. Farmers market, arts and craft vendors, a bar featuring Humboldt-produced Henderson Center, Henderson near F Street, Eureka. Freshest local produce, meat, fish, cheese, eggs, bread, flowers and more. Plus music and hot food vendors. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation.org. (707)coastgrowersassociation.org/hendersoncenter.html.north441-9999.
MEETINGS Ujima Parent Peer Support. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. For BIPOC families. See the HC Black Music and Arts Association Facebook page for more information. hcblackmusicnarts@gmail.com. Virtual Whiteness Accountability Space. 12-1 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. Community members who identify as white are invited to weekly conversa tions led by white facilitator from Equity Arcata. Email for the Zoom link. equityarcata@gmail.com. ETC Grand Opening Celebration. 6 p.m. Humboldt’s 25 Thursday BOOKS Beelzebub’s Tales To His Grandson Radio Hour. 10-11 p.m. The book will be read in its entirety on Humboldt Hot Air. This week’s reading: Episode 31: Chapter 39 (Part 3): The Holy Planet “Purgatory.” Free. rybopp@ sudenlink.net. HumboldtHotAir.org. (707) 826-7567. MUSIC Karaoke (Thirsty Bear Lounge). 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Bear River Casino Resort, 11 Bear Paws Way, Loleta. Come get your sing on. Free. bearrivercasino.com. Music in the Park. 6-8 p.m. Pierson Park, 1608 Pickett Road, McKinleyville. Summer concert series in the park. Live music, food trucks. Free. EVENTS Humboldt County Fair. Humboldt County Fairgrounds, 1250 Fifth St., Ferndale. Small-town Americana at its best. Enjoy horse races, entertainment, carnival rides, fair food, handicrafts, art, livestock contests, horti culture, animals and more. humboldtcountyfair.org.
20 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday,
MUSIC Anna “Banana” Hamilton. 5-8 p.m. Six Rivers Brew ery, Tasting Room & Restaurant, 1300 Central Ave., McKinleyville. Happy hour live blues on the patio. sixriversbrewery.com. Kenny Bowling. 9-midnight. Clam Beach Tavern, 4611 Central Ave., McKinleyville. Country music. Every Friday. Opera Alley Cats. 7-10 p.m. The SpeakEasy, 411 Opera Al ley, Eureka. Professional-level jazz twice a week with cool vibes and great people. Free. thespeakeasybar@yahoo. com. facebook.com/speakeasyeureka. (707) 444-2244. Sex Martian. 8 p.m. Blondies Food And Drink, 420 E. California Ave., Arcata. $5. blondiesfoodanddrink.com.
Kingfoot. Submitted Raise a glass in appreciation of our beautiful ocean and coastline at Toast to the Coast, a benefit for the Trinidad Coastal Land Trust, on Saturday, Aug. 27, from 3 to 8 p.m. at Septen trio Tasting Room ($15). The Nosh Food Truck will be serving up coastal-inspired food while you enjoy music from the Average Dad Band and Kingfoot, live painting by Tony Diaz and a silent auction stocked with local goods, art and experiences.
Submitted Hop (responsibly) ‘til you drop at Hops in Humboldt this Saturday, Aug. 27, from 2 to 6 p.m. at Rohner Park ($50, $25 non-drinker, $75 VIP, $100 Ultimate VIP).
McKinleyville Farmers Market. 3-6 p.m. Eureka Natural Foods, McKinleyville, 2165 Central Ave. Farm fresh produce, music and hot food vendors. Trained, ADA certified, service animals only. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrow ersassociation.org. mckinleyville.html.northcoastgrowersassociation.org/(707)441-9999.
Oyster pit crew from a past SOAR. Submitted All aboard — it’s time to SOAR. The Timber Heritage Association’s Salmon, Oysters, Ales & Rails BBQ is Saturday, Aug. 27, from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Timber Heritage Association out in Samoa. The annual fundraiser for the THA features a barbecued salmon and rockfish dinner for $30, with oysters, ales and wine available for additional purchase. Plus, live music by the Redwood Dixie Gators, speeder rides and historic Samoa shop tours until 4 p.m. Stop by, grab a plate of great eats, take a tour and a ride, and check out the Hit n Miss Engine displays. A $10 hot dog dinner is also available as well as take-out meals.
FOOD Food for People’s Free Produce Market - Eureka. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Bayshore Mall, 3300 Broadway, Eureka. Drive-thru event. foodforpeople.org. (707) 445-3166. Henderson Center Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
Calendar
DANCE Dancehall Choreo w/Mo Harper-Desir. 1-2:30 p.m. Redwood Park, top of 14th Street, Arcata. Learn tradi tional dancehall styles with hip hop and R&B adaptions led by West Indi queen Mo Harper-Desir. For all levels and ages. $5 suggested donation. Admin@Mohdcreates. com. mohdcreates.com/dance-fitness. MOVIES Psycho (1960). 7-10 p.m. Eureka Theater, 612 F St. Alfred Hitchcock’s classic thriller on the big screen. What more could you ask for, except for a good night’s sleep in a quaint motel ... Beer, wine, cider, cocktails, and other concessions available. Doors at 7 p.m. $8. info@eurekat heater.com. www.eureka-theater.org. (707) 442-2970. Robo-Cat Productions Presents: “Son Of The Batac ular”. 5-7 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. Celebrate the tragic tales of the bat-vampire creatures and their Hometown Store, 394 Main St., Ferndale. Celebrate the grand opening of Humboldt’s Hometown Store. humboldtshometownstore.com. Restorative Movement. 10:30-11:30 a.m. & 2-3 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. SoHum Health presents classes focused on strength and mobility (Tuesday), and on relaxation and breath work (Thursday). Contact instructor Ann Constantino for online orientation. $3$5 donation per class, no one is turned away for lack of funds. annconstantino@gmail.com. sohumhealth. org. (707) 923-3921.
26 Friday
THEATER A Midsummer Night’s Dream 8 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. Go on a surreal journey full of love, mischief and magic in one of Shake speare’s most beloved plays. $20, $18 for students and seniors. ncrt.net/midsummer-nights-dream.
H eads up, Humboldt: While the county’s masking man date has been lifted, Public Health is still strongly rec ommending masking indoors in public, social distancing and “avoiding crowds and poorly ventilated spaces.” COVID-19 is still with us, so be sure to check the protocols at event venues. Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
MUSIC The Bayou Swamis. 8-10 p.m. Trinidad Town Hall, 409 Trinity St. Hear Cajun two-steps and Zydeco stomps, swamp up classic swing tunes, country standards, and 1950s rockers with a splash of greasy, down-home orig inal music. Dance floor. Refreshments available. $5-$20 sliding. westhavenarts@gmail.com. Home Cookin’. 6-8 p.m. Mad River Brewing Company & Tap Room, 101 Taylor Way, Blue Lake. Home Cookin’ serves up a platter of tangy originals with a side of seasoned R&B. Free. www.madriverbrewing.com. (707) 668-4151. Los Amantes del Mañana. 8 p.m. Blondies Food And Drink, 420 E. California Ave., Arcata. blondies foodanddrink.com.
THEATER A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 8 p.m. North Coast Rep ertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See Aug. 26 listing. EVENTS Arcata Block Party Reloaded. 6 p.m.-1 a.m. Kinetic Sculpture Lab, Eighth and N streets, Arcata. Live bands, DJs, singers, dancers, fire performers, aerialists and a silent disco from 12 to 1 a.m. Plus art installations, live artists, bar, food and vendors, VIP lounge, cabanas and more. All ages. $18-$40. info@arcaneartistes.com. 207-6208.f5vHWGZe11uPx/arcata-block-fest-reloaded.vemos.io/-MLoivRPo0aPx8oeX3JK/arcane/-N9Z9iMtickets.(916)
Toast to the Coast. 3-8 p.m. Septentrio Tasting Room, 650 Sixth St., Arcata. Enjoy coastal-inspired food from The Nosh Food Truck, music, live painting by Tony Diaz and a silent auction stocked with local goods, art and experiences. A benefit for the Trinidad Coastal Land Trust. Music: 3:30 - 5:30 p.m. Average Dad Band, 6-8 p.m. Kingfoot. $15. FOOD Arcata Plaza Farmers Market. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. The North Coast Growers’ Association Farmers’ Market features local produce, food vendors, meats, plant starts and flowers every week. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation.org. 441-9999.coastgrowersassociation.org/arcataplaza.html.north(707)
appetite for the living with Robo-Cat Productions’ two-hour bat bonanza. Free. www.facebook.com/ events/2455085837984982.
Bayside Block Party. 2-7 p.m. Jacoby Creek Land Trust, 2182 Old Arcata Road, Bayside. Food, fun and festivities. Tour Jacoby Creek restoration work, enjoy wood-fired pizza and beverages, and dance to the Elderberry Rust String Band. Plus local arts and crafts vendors and a silent auction. Free. jacobycreeklt@gmail.com. jclandtrust.org. (707) 822-0900. Hops in Humboldt. 2-6 p.m. Rohner Park, 5 Park St., Fortuna. Humboldt’s biggest beer festival. Ticket price includes unlimited samples of micro-brews and a commemorative glass. Also, food, live music, vendor booths, swag and more. $50, $25 non-drinker, $75 VIP, $100 Ultimate VIP. friendlyfortuna.com. Hot August Nights. 2 p.m. Myers Flat Saloon, 12939 Myers Flat. Cruise down the Avenue of The Giants. Myers Flat Saloon serves classic 1950s food, cocktails and beer. Ages 21 and up. Prizes available and judging by local businesses.
Sea Goat Farmstand. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Abbey of the Red woods, 1450 Hiller Road, McKinleyville. Fresh veggies grown on site, local eggs and sourdough bread. Work from local artists and artisans. flowerstone333@gmail. com. (530) 205-5882.
Humboldt County Fair. Humboldt County Fairgrounds, 1250 Fifth St., Ferndale. See Aug. 25 listing. Salmon, Oysters, Ales & Rails BBQ. 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Timber Heritage Association, 930 Vance Ave., Samoa. A salmon and oyster barbecue fundraiser for the Timber Heritage Association. Live music, speeder rides, Hit n Miss Engine displays and tours of the Samoa Shops. Barbecue available for purchase. Samoa Speeder/Train Rides. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Timber Heritage Association, 930 Vance Ave., Samoa. Ride Humboldt’s historic rails with a scenic trip along the bay on Timber Heritage Association’s historic crew car rail speeder. Near the Samoa Cookhouse. 443-2957.org/ride-the-rails-on-a-historic-speeder-crew/.timberheritage.(707)
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MEETINGS Sistahood. 9:30-11 a.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. Continued on next
GARDEN Sea Goat Farm Garden Volunteer Opportunities. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Abbey of the Redwoods, 1450 Hiller Road, McKinleyville. See Aug. 26 listing. Sequoia Park Ivy League – Volunteer Work Day. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Sequoia Park, 3414 W St., Eureka. Help remove invasive ivy. Supplies provided. Meet by the fountain. jthomas@ci.eureka.ca.gov. facebook.com/ events/1202536557258910. (707) 382-6563.
(707) 443-4871 www.mid-citytoyota.com New 2022 IN STOCK NOW!! Tacomas in stock now, with more on the way. @northcoastjournal 22 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
SPORTS Adult Skate Night. Last Saturday of every month, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Fortuna Skating Rink, Rohner Park. 18 and older only. IDs checked at door. Alcohol and drug-free event. $5.50, includes skate rental. Drag Races. Samoa Drag Strip, Lincoln Avenue and New Navy Base Road. Details online. $10, free for 12 and under. samoadragstrip.com. Stock Car Racing. Redwood Acres Raceway, 3750 Harris St., Eureka. Details and ticket prices online. racintheacres.com/. ETC Fighting for Our Lives: An Action Conference on Reproductive Justice. 10 a.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. A national interactive Zoom event for activists and grassroots advocates to strategize to regain wom en’s and pregnant people’s rights to control their bodies. Register online. Free, donations of $5-$50 requested. tinyurl.com/2022WRD. Twice-Nice Sale. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Eureka Center for Spiri tual Living, 239 Buhne St. See Aug. 26 listing. Womxn’s Empowerment Self Defense Seminar. 4-6 p.m. Humboldt Jiu Jitsu, 1041 F St., Arcata. A holistic approach to self defense that includes verbal, mental and physical self-defense for womxn 13 and up taught by Danielle Cenotti of the Women’s National Martial Arts Federation. Sensitive or triggering topics may come up. $20, $15 students. info@humboldtjiujitsu.com. www. humboldtjiujitsu.com. (707) 822-6278.
THEATER A Midsummer Night’s Dream 2 p.m. North Coast Rep ertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See Aug. 26 listing. EVENTS Blue Lake Sunday Market. 1-5 p.m. Blue Lake, Off State Route 299, Exit 5. Farmers market, live music, vendors and a bar. Every Sunday through Sept. 25. Humboldt County Fair. Humboldt County Fairgrounds, 1250 Fifth St., Ferndale. See Aug. 25 listing. Trinidad Artisans Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Saunders Plaza, 353 Main St., Trinidad. Next to Murphy’s Market. Featuring local art and crafts, live music and barbecue. Free admission. FOOD Food Not Bombs. 4 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Free, hot food for everyone. Mostly vegan and organic and always delicious. Free. OUTDOORS Guided Tour of Fort Humboldt State Historic Park. 1-2 p.m. Fort Humboldt State Historic Park, 3431 Fort Ave., Eureka. See Aug. 27 listing. Seabirding Adventure with Kayak Trinidad and Red wood Region Audubon. 9 a.m.-noon. Kayak Trinidad, 1 Bay St. Join Redwood Region Audubon Society in partnership with Kayak Trinidad for a morning viewing local seabirds from a kayak. All kayaks and gear provided. Reservations required. $109. Andrew.RRAS@gmail.com. rras.org. (707) 329-0085. SPORTS Drag Races. Samoa Drag Strip, Lincoln Avenue and New Navy Base Road. See Aug. 27 listing.
29 Monday ART “Coffee House Moments”. Brenda Tuxford Gallery, 627 Third St., Eureka. A new community exhibition of artworks celebrating coffee. Participant artists include Yuliya Kinnunen, Cleo Carrino, Soph Kastel, Neveah Cox, Sophie Ell, Jan Ramsey, Loryn White, Claire MacKenzie, Emily Reinhart and Korinza Endsley. to to 6:00pm
For women teenagers and older on Zoom, to build healthy relationships and strengthen ties through validation and affirmation. Music from 9:30 a.m., open conversation from 9:45 a.m., meditation with the Sista Prayer Warriors from 10:45 a.m. OUTDOORS Audubon Guided Birding Tour w/Kathryn Wendel. 8:30-11 a.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary, South I Street. Bring binoculars and meet trip leader Wendel at the end of South I Street (Klopp Lake) for views of Humboldt Bay, easy-to-walk trails and diversity of birdlife. Free. rras.org. FOAM Marsh Tour. 2 p.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary, South I Street. Meet leader Katy Allen in the lobby of the Interpretive Center on South G Street for a 90-minute, rain-or-shine walk focusing on plants and/ or Marsh ecology. Masks are recommended inside the building, regardless of COVID vaccination status. Free. (707) 826-2359. Guided Tour of Fort Humboldt State Historic Park. 1-2 p.m. Fort Humboldt State Historic Park, 3431 Fort Ave., Eureka. Join interpreter William on an hour-long ADA-accessible walking tour of the 19th century mil itary outpost, focusing on its history, Euro-American colonists and Indigenous people. Rain cancels. Check North Coast Redwoods Facebook page for updates. Free. facebook.com/NorthCoastRedwoods. Historic Old Town Eureka Tours. 12-1:15 p.m. Clarke Historical Museum, Third and E streets, Eureka. Learn about the notable places and events that took place over the years. jthomas@ci.eureka.ca.gov. clarkemuse um.org. (707) 441-4080. Wigi Wetlands Volunteer Workday. 9-11 a.m. Wigi Wetlands, Behind the Bayshore Mall, Eureka. Help create bird-friendly native habitat and restore a section of the bay trail by removing invasive plants and trash. Meet in the lot directly behind Walmart. Tools, gloves and snacks provided. Please bring your own drinking water. Free. jeremy.cashen@yahoo.com. rras.org. (214) 605-7368.
7:00pm Saturday: 9:00am
28 Sunday MOVIES The Goonies (1985). 5-8:15 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Pre-show at 5 p.m. Movie at 6 p.m. Rated PG. All ages. Parental guidance suggested. Retro-gaming in the lobby. $8, $12 admission and poster. info@arcatathe atre.com. facebook.com/events/1009374683082588. (707) 613-3030. MUSIC Always on Sunday. 12-5 p.m. Fieldbrook Winery, 4241 Fieldbrook Road. Live music starts at 1:30. Wine flights, beer, appetizer boards for purchase. Wood-fired pizzas require an online reservation. fieldbrookwinery.com. Barking Dogma at the Blue Lake Art Market. 2-5 p.m. Dell’Arte Amphitheatre, 131 H St., Blue Lake. The eclectic progressive avant band Barking Dogma returns after a 25-year hiatus. Jazz Jam. 5 p.m. Blondies Food And Drink, 420 E. Califor nia Ave., Arcata. Live jam. blondiesfoodanddrink.com. Summer Concert Series. 2-4 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Enjoy live local bands and more. Free. arcatamainstreet@gmail.com. arcatamainstreet.com. (707) 822-4500.
CALENDAR Continued from previous page Guided Whale & Wildlife Tours of Trinidad Bay On Site Rentals at Big Lagoon County Park Kayak Instruction & Rolling Once in a lifetime experiences, seven days a week 707-329-0085 www.kayaktrinidad.com reservations@kayaktrinidad.com Mon - Fri: 8:30am
CEDS Roadshow - North East County (McKinleyville). 5:30-7 p.m. Azalea Hall, 1620 Pickett Road, McKinleyville. Give your insights on the Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy (CEDS) for Humboldt County. Free. drios@co.humboldt.ca.us. humboldtrising.com/. (707) 476-4809. Humboldt Cribbage Club Tournament. 6:15-9 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Weekly six-game cribbage tournament for experienced players. Inexperienced players may watch, learn and play on the side. Moose dinner available at 5:30 p.m. $3-$8. 31for14@ gmail.com. (707) 599-4605. ETC English Express: An English Language Class for Adults. Build English language confidence in ongoing online and in-person classes. All levels and first languages welcome. Join anytime. Pre-registration not required. Free. english expressempowered.com. (707) 443- 5021. Restorative Movement. 10:30-11:30 a.m. & 2-3 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 25 listing. 31 Wednesday ART Figure Drawing. 6-8:30 p.m. Blondies Food And Drink, 420 E. California Ave., Arcata. $5. blondiesfoodanddrink. com.
Ujima Parent Peer Support. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 25 listing. Virtual Whiteness Accountability Space. 12-1 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 25 listing. ETC Restorative Movement. 10:30-11:30 a.m. & 2-3 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 25 listing.
MUSIC Karaoke (Thirsty Bear Lounge). 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Bear River Casino Resort, 11 Bear Paws Way, Loleta. See Aug. 25 listing.
Heads Up … Dell’Arte International is seeking five ensemble members to perform and tour in its annual holiday show. Auditions are Aug. 25-Aug. 28. Sign up at forms. gle/4rrjWzqeLFEmWUNBA. For more info, contact Emma@dellarte.com or call and leave a message at (707) 668-5663 ext. 130.
FOR KIDS Storytime with Sunshine the Chicken and Ms. Sue. 11-11:30 a.m. Arcata Library, 500 Seventh St. In-person stories and songs for preschool children and their caregivers. Masks are optional. Ms. Sue will be wearing one. Free. humboldtgov.org/calendar.aspx?EID=7463. (707) 822-5954.
30 Tuesday MUSIC Cookies Presents: OhGeesy. 8 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Rap/Hip-hop. Doors at 7 p.m. All ages. $25, $100 Meet and Greet. arcatatheatre.com. Opera Alley Cats. 7-10 p.m. The SpeakEasy, 411 Opera Alley, Eureka. See Aug. 26 listing.
MEETINGS
KEET-TV seeks a diverse group of individuals to join its Community Advisory Board. Meetings are held quarterly on Zoom. Go to KEET.org to find the link at the bottom of the page. Become a volunteer at Hospice of Humboldt. For more information about becoming a volunteer or about services provided by Hospice of Humboldt, call (707) 267-9813 or visit hospiceofhumboldt.org.
July/August Art Show. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 569 S. G St. Watercolor paintings and ceramic tiles by Jody Bryan. Tim O’Reilly Memorial Art Exhibit. Upstairs Gallery, 1063 G Street, Arcata. Exhibit of the late Arcata artist’s work. Curated by friend and neighbor, Shoshanna. FOOD Miranda Farmers Market. 2-6 p.m. Miranda Market, 6685 Avenue of the Giants. Fresh produce, herbs and teas, eggs, plants and more. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassocia tion.org. (707) 441-9999. Volunteer Orientation Food for People. 3:30-4:30 p.m. See Aug. 25 listing. MEETINGS CEDS Roadshow - Eel River Valley. 5:30-7 p.m. River Lodge Conference Center, 1800 Riverwalk Drive, Fortuna. Give your insights on the Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy (CEDS) for Humboldt County. drios@co.humboldt.ca.us. humboldtrising.com. (707) 476-4809. ETC Homesharing Info Session. 9:30-10 a.m. and 1-1:30 p.m. This informational Zoom session will go over the steps and safeguards of Area 1 Agency on Aging’s matching process and the different types of homeshare partner ships. Email for the link. Free. homeshare@a1aa.org. a1aa. org/homesharing. (707) 442-3763. Humboldt Bounskee League. 6-8 p.m. Humboldt Brews, 856 10th St., Arcata. Weekly league nights. Purchase of any wood bounskee from Humbrews or the website includes one-month family membership for future events. All ages. Free. bounskee@gmail.com. bounskee.fun. (707) 601-9492. Tabata. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 26 listing.
Tim O’Reilly Memorial Art Exhibit. Redwood Raks World Dance Studio, 824 L St., Arcata. Exhibit of the late Arcata artist’s work. Curated by friend and neighbor, Shoshanna. redwoodraks.com.
FOOD Fortuna Farmers Market. 3-6 p.m. 10th and Main streets, Fortuna. Locally grown fruits, veggies and garden plants, plus arts and crafts, music and hot food vendors. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation. org. (707)northcoastgrowersassociation.org/fortuna.html.441-9999.
GARDEN Sea Goat Farm Garden Volunteer Opportunities. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Abbey of the Redwoods, 1450 Hiller Road, McKinleyville. See Aug. 26 listing. ETC Tabata. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. See Aug. 26 listing. 1 Thursday ART Art Night at the Sanctuary. First Thursday of every month, 4-7 p.m. The Sanctuary, 1301 J St., Arcata. Create with others freely or work on a guided project. Bring your own supplies or use what’s around to collage, paint, draw, make an art book, etc. $5-$20 suggested, no one turned away for lack of funds. sanctuaryarcata.org.
The Humboldt County Library seeks local artists of all skill levels and ages to participate in the Tiny Art Show. Pick up a Tiny Art Kit from the Eureka Library at 1313 Third St. For more information, call (707) 269-1910, email hcl@ co.humboldt.ca.us or visit humlib.org.
BOOKS On the Same Page Book Club. 5:30 p.m. Virtual World, Internet, Online. Online book club that meets on the first Wednesday of the month on Zoom. Sign up using the Google form at www.forms.gle/bAsjdQ7hKGqEgJKj7.
Old Town Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Old Town, F Street between First and Third streets, Eureka. Fresh local produce, eggs, bread, specialty sourdough donuts and more. Plus music and hot food vendors. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrow ersassociation.org. northcoastgrowersassociation.org/ oldtown.html. (707) 441-9999. Shelter Cove Farmers Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Mario’s Marina Bar, 533 Machi Road, Shelter Cove. Fresh pro duce, flowers, plant starts and more. Live music and hot food vendors. Market match for CalFresh EBT customers. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation. org. html.northcoastgrowersassociation.org/sheltercove.(707)441-9999.
COMEDY Comedy Humboldt Open Mic. First Thursday of every month, 8-10 p.m. Clam Beach Tavern, 4611 Central Ave., McKinleyville. Tell your jokes.
GARDEN Drop-In Volunteer Day. 1-4 p.m. Bayside Park Farm, 930 Old Arcata Road, Arcata. Get a taste of a farmer’s work growing vegetables, herbs and flowers. Come prepared for sunshine, cold, wet and working in the dirt. Bring a water bottle, snacks, closed toe shoes, long pants, sleeves and a sun hat. Free. baysideparkfarm@cityo farcata.org. cityofarcata.org/440/Bayside-Park-Farm. (707) 822-8184. MEETINGS
MOVIES Sci-Fi Night: Sun Ra’s Space is the Place (1974). 6-9 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Pre-show at 6 p.m. Free raffle at 7:35 p.m. Movie at 7:40 p.m. Rated R. All ages. Parental guidance suggested. Retro-Gaming in the lobby. $5, $9 admission and poster. info@arcatatheatre. com. facebook.com/events/4914850131954475. (707) 613-3030. MUSIC Bayside Ballads and Blues. 6-8 p.m. Clam Beach Tavern, 4611 Central Ave., McKinleyville. Every Wednesday. Hazzards Cure, Echo Death. 9:30 p.m.-2 a.m. The Shanty, 213 Third St., Eureka. Speed Doom metal. $5. (707) 444-2053.
FOOD Henderson Center Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Henderson Center, Henderson near F Street, Eureka. See Aug. 25 listing. McKinleyville Farmers Market. 3-6 p.m. Eureka Natural Foods, McKinleyville, 2165 Central Ave. See Aug. 25 listing. Volunteer Orientation Food for People. 3-4 p.m. See Aug. 25 listing.
The Humboldt Arts Council will be accepting entries for the 26th annual Junque Arte Competition and Exhi bition on Sept. 22 from noon to 5 p.m. at Morris Graves Museum of Art. Entry guidelines at the museum or at humboldtarts.org.
l THE NORTH COAST’S COMPLETE Wedding Guide 2018 FREE THE NORTH COAST’S COMPLETEWedding Guide 2019 FREE 8:33 THE NORTH COAST’S COMPLETE Wedding Guide THE NORTH COAST’S COMPLETEWedding Guidehumboldtinsider.com/weddingsThe2022 Wedding Guide is here now... Find it at wedding business retailers and ofBrowsethroughoutnewsstandsHumboldtCounty,andonline.throughsevenyears NCJ Wedding Guide stories and inspiration at northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 23
By John J. Bennett screens@northcoastjournal.com
TOP GUN: MAVERICK. Tom Cruise returns to the cockpit with a note-perfect work of pure energy that sidesteps thorny politics for the pure physicality and mental plasticity required of a modern fighter pilot. PG13. 137M. MILL CREEK. WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING. A girl who grew up alone in the swamp in North Carolina is embroiled in a murder. PG13. 125M. BROADWAY, FORTUNA. For showtimes call: Broadway Cinema (707) 443-3456; Fortuna Theatre (707) 7252121; Mill Creek Cinema 839-3456; Minor Theatre (707) 822-3456. Where I see myself in five years. I Love My Dad My Dad and
Acknowledging his wrongdoing, David is compelled by questionable custom to accompany the boy’s father Adbellah (Ismael Kanater) and well-meaning go-between Anouar (Saïd Taghmaoui) to their even more remote home to bury the body. Jo, left to her own devices, embraces the party, dallying with a shallowly mysterious Yank (Christopher Abbott). Both Henningers come to some long-overdue realizations that, under the sheltering sky, may or may not amount to much. R. 117M. AMAZON PRIME. ● John J. Bennett (he/him) is a movie nerd who loves a good car chase.
MINIONS: THE RISE OF GRU. Animated prequel with the chaotic little henchfolk. PG. 90M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK. NOPE. Strange things are afoot at a California ranch and Keke Palmer and Daniel Kaluuya witness them in this Jordan Peele sci-fi thriller. R. 135M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK, MINOR. ORPHAN: FIRST KILL. The horror prequel arrives in time for the haunted Victorian doll fashion moment. Share the skincare routine, Esther. Starring Isabelle Fuhrman. R. 99M. BROADWAY, FORTUNA.
SCREENS
24 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
PG13. 119M. BROADWAY. THREE THOUSAND YEARS OF LONGING. Tilda Swinton plays an academic who finds Idris Elba, a djinn, in a bottle and I guess has nothing left to wish for? R. 108M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK.
I Love
THE FORGIVEN. As intoned in an acidic, homophobic aside by central character David Henninger (Ralph Fiennes) — can’t really call him a protagonist, due both to his actions and the structure of the piece — North Africa has lost most of its suggested mid-20th century luster. This has not stopped his and his wife Jo’s (Jessica Chastain) friends Dickie (Matt Smith) and Dally (Caleb Landry Jones) from purchasing and renovating a remote Moroccan compound, to which the Henningers, among other American and Continental luminaries, have been invited for a debauched, grandiose, days-long party. Since the marriage Henninger is hardly a happy one and David is inclined to over-imbibing, tensions running high is the normal state of things. And when David strikes and kills a young Moroccan boy with their car on a desolate highway, the weekend takes on an even more uneasy, fatalisticWriter/directortimbre.
I LOVE MY DAD. Having recently entered into a misguided, increasingly heated exchange with parties who shall remain nameless (but for their frequent bylines in these pages) regarding the definition and origin of the phrase “milkshake duck,” while simultaneously engaging a Zoomer in spirited debate in order to better parse and decode the appeal of sites like 4Chan among a certain vocal and frequently problematic voting bloc, my distaste for the internet at large and for social media as its nastiest, most fetid microcosm, finds renewal. Of course, this creaky decrying is more a criticism of our species than our grandest, newest, most destructive organ of communication and, ostensibly, connection. Obviously, the internet is literally incredible — a tool and system beyond belief in its potential, much like the human mind. And much like our own minds, our collective understanding of it is minimal at best. And so, we muddle on in an awkward adolescence of ignorant brilliance, with access to everyone and everything, and precious few tools to mitigate or temper it. At best and worst, this parallelism of existence gives rise to an inchoate, lived magical realism, with anonymity and celebrity, adulation and shame conjoined into a new strain of addictive, discomfiting existence. Systems of belief, entire worlds, are conjurable from swipes and keystrokes.
Now, the apparently true story behind writer/director/star James Morosini’s (Threesomething, 2018) second feature, I Love My Dad, is a hopefully unique one but, like the best stories, in its specificity lies universality. Franklin (Morosini), emerging from residential treatment after an alluded-to suicide attempt, feels his interests are best served by, at least temporarily, cutting o contact with his mostly absent, usually dishonest dad, Chuck (Patton Owalt). Chuck, in turn, desperate as a drowning rat, co-opts the online identity of a charming diner server named Becca (Claudia Sulewski). As Becca, Chuck approaches, befriends and courts his own son, who, though initially skeptical, welcomes the opportunity to engage with someone thoughtful, attractive and friendly. (The kids call this “catfishing.”)
This, of course, unbeknownst to Franklin’s beleaguered mom, Diane (Amty Landecker). Chuck’s internecine ruse eventually encompasses his own burgeoning romantic relationship with Erica (Rachel Dratch) and his friendship with Jimmy (Lil Rel Howery) who, as the only one with full knowledge, serves as both comic relief and the voice of reason.Thisstory, plausible, gross and fantastical as it is, could easily make for a compelling, if cringe-inducing narrative on its own merits. And Morosini renders it as such, but it is in his understanding of the flexibility of his chosen medium that the movie begins to transcend the stu of its plot. As Franklin’s connection to his “girlfriend” deepens, reality becomes subtly permeable, transposing Becca and Chuck, playing our protagonist’s loneliness and fragility against his father’s, which manifests in, obviously, very di erent, perhaps unforgivable actions. I Love My Dad constructs a visual representation of the manifold truths, falsehoods, needs and desires of our relationship with the internet and each other — one that, in its delicate departures from the tangible, neatly encapsulates the ongoing, delusional reality of life in our enlightened dark age. R. 96M. AMAZON PRIME.
John Michael McDonaugh (The Guard, 2011; Calvary, 2014; War on Everyone, 2016), here adapting the novel by Lawrence Osborne, has not yet enjoyed the sort of adulation showered on his brother Martin. But I much prefer the former’s work. So, I was more than happy to participate in an awkwardly languid trip through the desert, both literally and in terms of the personal desolation and dubious morality of the movie’s characters.
The Forgiven ConsequencesFace
NOW PLAYING BEAST. Idris Elba stars as a widower who takes his kids on a family trip to the savanna, where they meet a very agro lion. R. 93M. BROADWAY, FORTUNA, MILL CREEK. BREAKING. John Boyega stars as a veteran struggling to adapt to civilian life. PG13. 103M. BROADWAY. BODIES, BODIES, BODIES. Rich kids playing a murder game in a big, fancy house. What could go wrong? Starring Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Lee Pace and Pete Davidson. R. 95M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK, MINOR. BULLET TRAIN. Five killers zip through Japan on the same rails. Starring Brad Pitt, Joey King, Sandra Bullock and Hiroyuki Sanada. R. 126M. BROADWAY, FORTUNA, MILL CREEK. DC LEAGUE OF SUPER-PETS. Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart and Kate McKinnon voice superheroes’ best friends. PG. 106M. FORTUNA, MILL CREEK. DRAGON BALL SUPER: SUPER HERO. The anime saga continues (dubbed or subtitled). PG13. 100M. FORTUNA, MILL CREEK, MINOR. THE INVITATION. A young woman (Nathalie Emmanuel) visits the estate of newly connected relatives only to discover they’re a bunch of bloodsuckers. PG13. 104M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK.
THOR: LOVE AND THUNDER. More Norse space-god action from the Marvel universe, with Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman doing couple-matchy capes.
Arts & Crafts FIREARTSCLASSES!POTTERY,GLASS,JEWELRY− ADULTS&KIDSCLASSES REGISTERNOWforFall Session.Sept11−Dec24.Signupat www.fireartsarcata.com.(707)826−1445 STAINEDGLASS October29−November19,2022 CallCollegeoftheRedwoodsCommunityEduca− tionat(707)476−4500. Dance/Music/Theater/Film BEGINNINGSTEELDRUMCLASSES Mondays6:15− 7:15.NextsessionsstartingSept.5th.Fridays1:30−3 ongoingmonthlyclasses.707−407−8998 panartsnetwork.comClassesheldatPanArts:1049 SamoaBlvd#CinArcata DANCEMIXFRIDAYS: Havefundancingto upbeat,eclecticmusic!15differentroutineseach class.Variedstylesincluding:Latin,hip−hop,indie, pop,jazz,country,throwbacks...Drop−ins welcome.Fridays10−11amRedwoodRaks/ Creamery824LSt,Arcata$0−5Questions? ellenweiss707@gmail.com HARPLESSONS: Allstyles.Beginnerswelcome. DavidPavlovich:831−234−1643(cell) Fitness SUNYI’SACADEMYOFTAEKWONDO. Classes forkids&adults,childcare,fitnessgym&more. TaeKwonDoMon−Fri5−6p.m.,6−7p.m.,Sat10−11 a.m.Comewatchorjoinaclass,1215GiuntoliLane, orvisitwww.sunyisarcata.com,825−0182.(F−1229) 50 and Better TAKEACLASSWITHOLLI. Anyonecantakean OLLIclass.JoinOLLItodayandgetthemember discountonclasses.Non−membersadd$25tothe classfeelisted.https://extended.humboldt.edu/ olli/olli−upcoming−courses(O−1229) Spiritual EVOLUTIONARYTAROT OngoingZoomclasses, privatementorshipsandreadings.CarolynAyres. 442−4240www.tarotofbecoming.com carolyn@tarotofbecoming.com(S−1229) SOTOZENMEDITATION Sundayprogramsand weekdaymeditationinArcatalocations;Wed eveningsinEureka,arcatazengroup.orgBeginners welcome,callfororientation.(707)826−1701 (S−1229) Therapy & Support ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS. Wecanhelp24/7, calltollfree1−844442−0711.(T−1229) SEX/PORNDAMAGINGYOURLIFE&RELATION− SHIPS? Confidentialhelpisavailable.707−499− 0205,saahumboldt@yahoo.com(T−1229) SMARTRECOVERY.ORGCALL707−267−7868 Vocational ADDITIONALONLINECLASSES Collegeofthe RedwoodsCommunityEducationandEd2GOhave partneredtoofferavarietyofshorttermand careercoursesinanonlineformat.Visithttps://w ww.redwoods.edu/communityed/Detail/ArtMID/ 17724/ArticleID/4916/Additional−Online−Classes CANNABISBUSINESSTRAINING OnlineJuly13− Oct.26,2022CallCollegeoftheRedwoods CommunityEducationat(707)476−4500. ELDTTHEORYONLY September12−October19, 2022CallCollegeoftheRedwoodsCommunity Educationat(707)476−4500. EMTREFRESHERCOURSE October27−November 6,2022CallCollegeoftheRedwoodsCommunity Educationat(707)476−4500. FREEAMERICANSIGNLANGUAGECLASSES: OnlineorFacetoFaceCallCollegeofthe RedwoodsAdultEducation(707)476−4500. FREECOMPUTERSKILLSCLASSES: OnlineorFace toFaceCallCollegeoftheRedwoodsAdult Education(707)476−4500. FREEENGLISHASASECONDLANGUAGE CLASSES: OnlineorFacetoFaceCallCollegeof theRedwoodsAdultEducation(707)476−4500. FREEHIGHSCHOOLEQUIVALENCY/GEDPREP: OnlineorFacetoFaceCallCollegeofthe RedwoodsAdultEducation(707)476−4500. FREELIVINGSKILLSFORADULTSW/ DISABILITIESCLASSES: CallCollegeofthe RedwoodsAdultEducation(707)476−4500. FREEWORKREADINESSCLASSES:ONLINE Call CollegeoftheRedwoodsAdultEducation(707) 476−4500. HOMEINSPECTIONCERTIFICATIONPROGRAM Visit:https://www.redwoods.edu/communityed/ Detail/ArtMID/17724/ArticleID/6231/Home− Inspection−Certification−Program INTERMEDIATEBOOKKEEPING October4− November22,2022CallCollegeoftheRedwoods CommunityEducationat(707)476−4500. INTROTOEQUINEASSISTEDTHERAPIES& SERVICES. Courseincludesexperientiallearning experienceswithDr.TerriJennings.$325.Course startsSept.11th. http://humboldt.edu/extended/equine MEDICALBILLING&CODINGONLINE October4, 2022−March2,2023CallCollegeoftheRedwoods CommunityEducationat(707)476−4500. NOTARY October11,2022CallCollegeofthe RedwoodsCommunityEducationat(707)476− 4500. PHARMACYTECHONLINE October4,2022− March18,20232023CallCollegeoftheRedwoods CommunityEducationat(707)476−4500. REALESTATEPROGRAMFACETOFACE Starts October3,2022CallCollegeoftheRedwoods CommunityEducationat(707)476−4500. SERVSAFECERTIFICATION October20,2022Call CollegeoftheRedwoodsCommunityEducationat (707)476−4500. TRUCKDRIVINGINFORMATIONALMEETINGS August23or25,2022CallCollegeofthe RedwoodsCommunityEducationat(707)476− 4500. Wellness & Bodywork AYURVEDICLIVINGSCHOOLTRAININGS w/Traci Webb&Guests.AyurvedaHealth&LifeCoach/ PractitionerTrainingstarts1/11/23,Ayurveda HerbalistTrainingstarts2/21/23.SeasonalSelf− CareRetreats:6/24&9/30,SeasonalDetoxes:July 12−26&Oct.4−18,HerbalRemediesMakingImmer− sions:7/10&9/25,www.ayurvedicliving.com (W−0930) SEPTEMBERMINDFULNESS4WEEKSERIES MindfulCommunication:Tuesdays7−9pm Learnhowtousemindfulnessandnonviolent communicationtofosterconnection. FoundationofMindfulness:Thursdays7−9pm Cultivatepresenceandclaritythoughvipassana meditation.Slidingscaleof$200−$250 registerathttps://www.rememberingtruenature.c om/upcoming−classes List your class – just $4 per line per issue! Deadline: Friday, 5pm. Place your online ad at classified.northcoastjournal.com or e-mail: classified@northcoastjournal.com Listings must be paid in advance by check, cash or Visa/MasterCard. Many classes require pre-registration. WORKSHOPS & CLASSES CARTOONS 442-1400 × northcoastjournal.comclassified@314YOURCLASSHERE Arts & DanceKidsComputerCraftsFitness&TeensLectures&Music Theatre & BodyworkWellnessSpiritualFilmSupportTherapy northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 25
nessas JenRiceConsults Humboldt
Eureka,CA95501 JenniferL.Rice
LEGAL NOTICES
ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− 240417thStreet 240417thStreet Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sJenniferRice,Owner ThisJuly6,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−319) 240417thStreet Eureka,CA95501 JenniferL.Rice 240417thStreet Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sJenniferRice,Owner ThisJuly6,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−319)
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that he County of Humboldt Housing Authority has developed it’s Agency Plan in compliance with the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998. A copy of the draft plan is available for review at www.eurekahumboldtha. org or by request. A public hearing for the purpose of receiving comments on the Agency Plan will be held on Wednesday, September 14, 2022 at 10:00am via Zoom. The Housing Authority will receive comments regarding the Agency Plan starting August 8, 2022 through the close of business on September 22, 2022. To request the Agency Plan and obtain zoom meeting information, please call (707) 443-4583 ext 219. The Housing Authority hours of operation are 9:00am – 4:30pm, Monday – Friday, alternating every other Friday an off day.
Theindependentadministration authoritywillbegrantedunlessan interestedpersonfilesanobjection tothepetitionandshowsgood causewhythecourtshouldnot granttheauthority.
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00439 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas TheGrottoEureka Humboldt 428GrottoStreet Eurkea,CA95501 PaulaAHarris 10269thStreet,C ($1,000). /sPaulaHarris,Owner ThisJuly6,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−322)
fornialaw. YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor
IFYOUOBJECTtothegrantingof thepetition,youshouldappearat thehearingandstateyourobjec− tionsorfilewrittenobjectionswith thecourtbeforethehearing.Your appearancemaybeinpersonorby yourattorney.
STATEMENT22−00438
26 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
THEPETITIONrequeststhedece− dent’swillandcodicils,ifany,be admittedtoprobate.Thewilland anycodicilsareavailableforexami− nationinthefilekeptbycourt.
IFYOUAREACREDITORora contingentcreditorofthedece− dent,youmustfileyourclaimwith thecourtandmailacopytothe personalrepresentativeappointed bythecourtwithinthelaterof either(1)fourmonthsfromthe dateoffirstissuanceofletterstoa generalpersonalrepresentative,as definedinsection58(b)oftheCali− forniaProbateCode,or(2)60days fromthedateofmailingor personaldeliverytoyouofanotice undersection9052oftheCalifornia ProbateCode.OtherCalifornia statutesandlegalauthoritymay affectyourrightsasacreditor.You maywanttoconsultwithan attorneyknowledgeableinCali− fornialaw. YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable fromthecourtclerk. SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe
THEPETITIONrequestsauthorityto administertheestateunderthe IndependentAdministrationof EstatesAct.(Thisauthoritywill allowthepersonalrepresentative totakemanyactionswithout obtainingcourtapproval.Before takingcertainveryimportant actions,however,thepersonal representativewillberequiredto givenoticetointerestedpersons unlesstheyhavewaivednoticeor consentedtotheproposedaction.)
default PUBLIC NOTICE COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT HOUSING AUTHORITY
AHEARINGonthepetitionwillbe heldonSeptember8,2022at1:31 p.m.attheSuperiorCourtofCali− fornia,CountyofHumboldt,825 FifthStreet,Eureka,inDept.:6. Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visithttps://www.humboldt.courts. ca.gov/
Noticeisherebygiventhatthe undersignedintendstosellthe personalpropertydescribedbelow toenforcealienonsaidproperty pursuanttosections21700−21717of theBusinessandProfessionsCode, section2328oftheUCCsection535 ofthePenalCodeandprovisionsof theCivilCode.Theundersignedwill sellatpublicsalebythecompeti− tivebiddingonthe27thdayof August2022at10:00amonthe premiseswherethesaidproperty hasbeenstoredandwhichis locatedattheMadRiverStorage Center,1400GlendaleDrive,McKin− leyville,CA,countyofHumboldt thefollowing: #115BryanGilmore #194KatieSmith #281CharlesKreuter #300ChelseaHuntzingerCarlson #333ChelseaHuntzingerCarlson #378JasonMiller #387CharlesKreuter Purchasesmustbepaidforatthe timeofsaleincashonly.Anyone interestedinattendingtheauction mustsigninpriorto10:00amon thedayoftheauction,noexcep− tions.Allpurchaseitemssoldas−is, where−is,andmustberemovedat thetimeofsale.Saleissubjectto cancellationintheeventofsettle− mentbetweentheownerandthe obligatedparty. Auctioneer:DavidJohnsonbond #9044453 Datedthis18thdayofAugustand 25thdayofAugust,2022 08/18,08/252022 leyville,CA,countyofHumboldt thefollowing: #115BryanGilmore #194KatieSmith #281CharlesKreuter #300ChelseaHuntzingerCarlson #333ChelseaHuntzingerCarlson #378JasonMiller #387CharlesKreuter Purchasesmustbepaidforatthe timeofsaleincashonly.Anyone interestedinattendingtheauction mustsigninpriorto10:00amon thedayoftheauction,noexcep− tions.Allpurchaseitemssoldas−is, where−is,andmustberemovedat thetimeofsale.Saleissubjectto cancellationintheeventofsettle− mentbetweentheownerandthe obligatedparty. Auctioneer:DavidJohnsonbond #9044453 Datedthis18thdayofAugustand 25thdayofAugust,2022 08/18,08/252022 FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00492 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas SorrelLeafHealingCenterInc. Humboldt 124IndianolaRd. Eureka,CA95503 LostCoastChildren’sResidential TreatmentCenterInc. CA4711910 3305RennerDr. Fortuna,CA95540 Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sRachaelAdair,Secretary ThisJuly27,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−318) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00491 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas EurekaChryslerDodgeJeepRam Humboldt 4320Broadway Eureka,CA95503−5740 4800NUSHwy101 Eureka,CA95503 EurekaMotors,Inc. CAC5132876 4800NUSHwy101 Eureka,CA95503 Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sRickHrdina,RickHrdina,Secre− tary ThisJuly26,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−323) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00478 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas MattGiacominiInsuranceServices Humboldt 780WildwoodAve. RioDell,CA95562 CMGFinancialServicesLLC CA20221410157 780WildwoodAve. RioDell,CA95562 Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sMatthewGiacomini,ChiefExec− utiveOfficer ThisJuly21,2022 statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sMatthewGiacomini,ChiefExec− utiveOfficer ThisJuly21,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/11,8/18,8/25,9/1(22−326) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00474 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas StainedGhost Humboldt 3546GlenSt. Eureka,CA95503 HollyMHilgenberg 3546GlenSt. Eureka,CA95503 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sHollyHilgenberg,Owner ThisJuly20,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−320) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00460 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas NoSides Humboldt 224PalmerBlvd. Fortuna,CA95540 LukeWVaughan 224PalmerBlvd. Fortuna,CA9550 MarkNVaughan 86014thSt. Fortuna,CA95540 Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME
JenRiceConsults Humboldt
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that he City of Eureka Housing Authority has developed it’s Agency Plan in compliance with the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998. A copy of the Agency Plan is available for review at www.eurekahumboldtha. org or by request. A public hearing for the purpose of receiving comments on the Agency Plan will be held on Wednesday, September 14, 2022 at 11:00am via Zoom. The Housing Authority will receive comments regarding the Agency Plan starting August 8, 2022 through the close of business on September 22, 2022. To request the Agency Plan and obtain zoom meeting information, please call (707) 443-4583 ext 219. The Housing Authority hours of operation are 9:00am – 4:30pm, Monday – Friday, alternating every other Friday an off day.
NOTICEOFPETITIONTO ADMINISTERESTATEOFArlene ElizabethRobergCASENO. PR2200240 Toallheirs,beneficiaries,creditors, contingentcreditorsandpersons whomayotherwisebeinterestedin thewillorestate,orboth,of ArleneElizabethRoberg APETITIONFORPROBATEhasbeen filedbyPetitioner,ElizabethRoberg −CrossandRichardRoberg IntheSuperiorCourtofCalifornia, CountyofHumboldt.Thepetition forprobaterequeststhatElizabeth Roberg−CrossandRichardRoberg beappointedaspersonalrepre− sentativetoadministertheestate ofthedecedent.
filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable fromthecourtclerk. ATTORNEYFORPETITIONER: DanielE.Cooper,Esq. Morrison,Morrison&CooperLaw Office 611ISt,SuiteA Eureka,CA95501 (707)443−8011 SUPERIORCOURTOFCALIFORNIA COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 8/18,8/25,9/1(22−336)
Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars
CITY OF EUREKA HOUSING AUTHORITY
default PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLICNOTICE anymaterialmatterpursuantto Fortuna,CA95540 Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sTerryLukeVaughan,Partner/ Owner ThisJuly13,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−317)
ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas 314intermedia Humboldt 732HiddenCreekRd. Arcata,CA95521 MichaelRohan 732HiddenCreekRd. Arcata,CA95521 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sMichaelRohan,Owner ThisAugust02,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/11,8/18,8/25,9/1(22−327)
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00504
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00502
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00531 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas FiestaCafeandCantina Humboldt 823BroadwaySt. Eureka,CA95501 850CrescentWay Arcata,CA95521 OscarAnguianoZamudio 850CrescentWay Arcata,CA95521 MarcusFierroH 850CrescentWay Arcata,CA95521 Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis Arcata,CA95521 MarcusFierroH 850CrescentWay Arcata,CA95521 Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sMarcusFierro,GeneralPartner ThisAugust17th,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−342) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00529 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas CreeksideStationB&B Humboldt 504ShawAve Ferndale,CA95536 POBox888 Ferndale,CA95536 JenniferAJones 504ShawAve Ferndale,CA95536 JohnPMiller 504ShawAve Ferndale,CA95536 Thebusinessisconductedbya MarriedCouple. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sJenniferJones,Owner ThisAugust15,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/18,8/25,9/1,9/8(22−341) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00521 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas KoolBeanzCoffeeandIceCream Humboldt 1338MyrtleAve. Eureka,CA95501 246415thSt. Eureka,CA95501 JosephS.Jacobs 246415thSt. Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbya MarriedCouple. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis Eureka,CA95501 JosephS.Jacobs 246415thSt. Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbya MarriedCouple. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sJosephSJacobs,Owner ThisAugust11,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/18,8/25,9/1,9/8(22−335) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00520 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas 101CPR Humboldt 2525LighthouseRd. Petrolia,CA95558 P.O.Box212 Petrolia,CA95558 TylerMSafier 2525LighthouseRd. Petrolia,CA95558 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sTylerSafier,BusinessOwner ThisJune07,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−346) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00519 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas PappusBotanicalConsulting Humboldt 1304SunsetAve. Arcata,CA95521 RobertMAnderson 1304SunsetAve. Arcata,CA95521 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas PappusBotanicalConsulting Humboldt 1304SunsetAve. Arcata,CA95521 RobertMAnderson 1304SunsetAve. Arcata,CA95521 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sRobertMAnderson,SolePropri− etor ThisAugust10,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/18,8/25,9/1,9/8(22−334) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00511 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas HumboldtHyCycle Humboldt 1302UnionSt Eureka,CA95501 GrowthChartSolutionsLLC CA202109110566 966HayesRd Mckinleyville,CA95519 Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sEricParchman,Managing Member ThisAugust04,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−345) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00510 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas Frankie'sNYBagels Humboldt 3750HarrisSt. Eureka,CA95503 BandBakeryLLC CA202251718293 2152AlderCanyonSt. Eureka,CA95503 Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sStevenABand,Member ThisAugust4,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/15,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−344)
ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas ArborLandscapes Humboldt 1205RussSt Eureka,CA95501 POBox4252 Arcata,CA95518 ShaneUSwanson 1205RussSt Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sShaneSwanson,Owner ThisAugust1,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/18,8/25,9/1,9/8(22−337) ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sRachaelAdair,Secretary ThisJuly27,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−318)
FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00535 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas MagnoliaEsthetics Humboldt 1100MainStreet,SuiteE Fortuna,CA95540 AprilAStephens 37911thStreet Fortuna,CA95540 Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sAprilStephens,Owner ThisAugust17,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−343) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22−00538 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas Rentor Humboldt 3109HSt. Eureka,CA95501 PPMInvestments,Inc CAA0556512 3109HSt. Eureka,CA95503 Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sDarusTrutna,President ThisAugust18,2022 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sDarusTrutna,President ThisAugust18,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−347) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00545 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas ScotiaLodge Humboldt 100MainSt. Scotia,CA95565 HumboldtBaySocialClubInc CA3980245 5245thStreet Eureka,CA95501 Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sJonO’conner,President ThisAugust22,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bytn,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−348) FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT22-00544 ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas CaliforniaHeating Humboldt 4935BoydRoad Arcata,CA95521 BESC,Inc. CA4094265 27801NorthHighway1 FortBragg,CA95437 Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable. Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000). /sTimTwomey,President ThisAugust22,2022 KELLYE.SANDERS bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 8/25,9/1,9/8,9/15(22−349) LEGALS?442-1400×314 Continued on next page » northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 27
Pursuant to Section 1771.1(a) of the California Labor Code, a contractor or subcontractor shall not be qualified to bid on, be listed in a bid proposal, subject to the requirements of Section 4104 of the Public Contract Code, or engage in the performance of any contract for public work, as defined in Sections 1770 et seq. of the Labor Code, unless currently registered and qualified to perform public work pursuant to Section 1725.5 of the Labor Code. It is not a violation of Section 1771.1(a) for an unregistered contractor to submit a bid that is authorized by Section 7029.1 of the Business and Professions Code or by Section 10164 or 20103.5 of the Public Contract Code, provided the contractor is registered to perform public work pursuant to Section 1725.5 at the time the contract is awarded.
DATED: CountyClerkKathyBy:ATTEST:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________HayesoftheBoardofSupervisors,ofHumboldt,StateofCalifornia SallyFrancesStewartGraham foradecreechangingnamesas follows: Presentname SallyFrancesStewartGraham toProposedName SallyFrancesStewart
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed bids are invited by the Department of Public Works of Humboldt County, a public body, corporate and politic, for the performance of all the work and the furnishing of all the labor, materials, supplies, tools, and equipment for the following project:
All Bids will be publicly opened and summary amounts read aloud. The officer whose duty it is to open the Bids will decide when the specified time for the opening of Bids has arrived.
Each Bid shall be submitted on the forms furnished by the County within the Bid Documents. All forms must be completed.EachBidshall be accompanied by one of the following forms of Bidder’s Security to with a certified check or a cashier’s check payable to the County, U.S. Government Bonds, or a Bid Bond executed by an admitted insurer authorized to issue surety bonds in the State of California (in the form set forth in said Contract Documents). The Bidder’s security shall be in the amount equal to at least ten percent (10%) of the Bid.
ORDERTOSHOWCAUSEFOR CHANGEOFNAMEPamela MaxwellCASENO.CV2201059 SUPERIORCOURT OFCALIFORNIA, COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 825FIFTHST. EUREKA,CA.95501 PETITIONOF: PamelaMaxwell foradecreechangingnamesas follows: Presentname BrandonHerchellWebsterDevlin toProposedName PrinceD’MiriMaxwellDevlin THECOURTORDERSthatall personsinterestedinthismatter appearbeforethiscourtatthe hearingindicatedbelowtoshow cause,ifany,whythepetitionfor changeofnameshouldnotbe granted.Anypersonobjectingto thenamechangesdescribedabove mustfileawrittenobjectionthat includesthereasonsfortheobjec− tionatleasttwocourtdaysbefore thematterisscheduledtobeheard andmustappearatthehearingto showcausewhythepetitionshould notbegranted.Ifnowrittenobjec− tionistimelyfiled,thecourtmay grantthepetitionwithouta hearing. NOTICEOFHEARING Date:Sept.9,2022 Time:1:45p.m.,Dept.4 Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visit https://www.humboldt.courts.ca.g ov/ SUPERIORCOURT OFCALIFORNIA, COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 825FIFTHSTREET EUREKA,CA95501 Date:June2,2022 Filed:June2,2022 /s/TimothyA.Canning JudgeoftheSuperiorCourt 8/4,8/11,8/18,8/25(22−324) ORDERTOSHOWCAUSEFOR CHANGEOFNAMESally FrancesStewartGrahamCASE NO.CV2201131 SUPERIORCOURT OFCALIFORNIA, COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 825FIFTHST. EUREKA,CA.95501 PETITIONOF:
All Bidders will be required to certify that they are eligible to submit a Bid on this project and that they are not listed either (1) on the Controller General’s List of Ineligible Bidders/Contractors, or (2) on the debarred list of the Labor Commissioner of the State of California.
The Contractor, and each subcontractor participating in the Project, shall be required to pay the prevailing wages as established by the Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Labor Statistics and Research, P.O. Box 420603, San Francisco, CA, Phone: (415) 703-4780.
8/11,8/18,8/25,9/1(22−325) LEGALS?LEGALS?NoticesPublicOther•SaleTrustee•EstateAdministertoPetition•BusinessFictitious•NoticesPublicCounty ×314442-1400•classified@northcoastjournal.comSubmit information via email Pleaseclassified@northcoastjournal.tocom,orbymailorinperson.submitphotosinJPGorPDFformat,ororiginalphotoscanbescannedatouroffice.The North Coast Journal prints each Thursday, 52 times a year. Deadline for obituary information is at 5 p.m. on the Sunday prior to publication date. We ObituariesPrint 310 F STREET, EUREKA, CA 95501 (707) 442-1400 • FAX (707) 442-1401 28 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com
Pursuant to the Contract Documents on file with the Department of Public Works of Humboldt County.
The successful Bidder will be required to furnish and pay for a satisfactory faithful performance bond and a satisfactory payment bond in the forms set forth in said Bid Documents.
A pre-bid meeting is scheduled for 9:00 a.m. Pacific Time, September 1, 2022 at the Garberville Veterans Hall building, 483 Conger Street, Garberville, California. Contract Documents, Plans and Specifications will be available on August 23, 2022.
In accordance with the provisions of Section 22300 of the Public contractors’ code, the Contractor may elect to receive 100% of payments due under the contract from time to time, without retention of any portion of the pay ment, by entering into an Escrow Agreement for Security Deposits In Lieu of Retention.
2. Deposit bid package into mail slot in the front door of Public Works, 1106 2nd Street, Eureka, CA.
3. Hand deliver bid package to Facilities Staff between 1:45pm and 2:00pm outside the building in the adjacent parking lot to the rear of the building at 1106 2nd Street, Eureka, CA.
DEMOLITION OF: GARBERVILLE VETERANS HALL, COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT PROJECT NUMBER: 162765
The attention of Bidders is directed to the fact that the work proposed herein to be done will be financed in whole or in part with State and County funds, and therefore all of the applicable State and County statutes, rulings and regulations will apply to such work.
1. Mail or use a delivery service to send bid package to Public Works at 1106 2nd Street, Eureka, CA.
In the performance of this contract, the Contractor will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment in accordance with the provisions of the California Fair Employment and Housing Act. (Government Code section 12900et seq.)
Plans and Specifications and other Contract Document forms will be available for examination upon prior arrange ment at the Department of Public Works, 1106 Second Street, Eureka, CA, 95501, Phone: (707) 445-7493. Plans will also be available at the Humboldt County Bid Opportunities website: https://humboldtgov.org/bids.aspx and for viewing at area plan centers. Complete sets may be obtained via prior arrangement from Humboldt County Public Works. Complete sets may be obtained upon advanced payment of $50.00 each, 100% of which shall be refunded upon the return of such sets unmarked and in good condition within ten (10) days after the bids are opened. Checks should be made payable to County of Humboldt.
NOTICEOFHEARING Date:Sept.16,2022 Time:1:45p.m.,Dept.4 Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visit https://www.humboldt.courts.ca.g ov/ SUPERIORCOURT OFCALIFORNIA, COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 825FIFTHSTREET EUREKA,CA95501 Date:June2,2022 Filed:June2,2022 /s/TimothyA.Canning JudgeoftheSuperiorCourt
Each Bid must be contained in a sealed envelope addressed as set forth in said Bid Documents, and delivered to the Humboldt County Public Works Building, 1106 2nd Street, Eureka, California at or before 2:00 P.M., Pacific Daylight Time, on September 13, 2022. Bids will be opened outside the building in the adjacent parking lot to the rear of the building. Bid packages may be delivered via the following methods:
The County reserves the right to reject any or all Bids or to waive any informalities in any Bid. No Bid shall be with drawn for a period of ninety (90) calendar days subsequent to the opening of Bids without the consent of the County.
The successful Bidder will be required to comply with all equal employment opportunity laws and regulations both at the time of award and throughout the duration of the Project.
This project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the Department of Industrial Relations.
The successful Bidder shall possess a valid Contractor’s license in good standing, with a classification of "B” (General Building Contractor) at the time the contract is awarded.
THECOURTORDERSthatall personsinterestedinthismatter appearbeforethiscourtatthe hearingindicatedbelowtoshow cause,ifany,whythepetitionfor changeofnameshouldnotbe granted.Anypersonobjectingto thenamechangesdescribedabove mustfileawrittenobjectionthat includesthereasonsfortheobjec− tionatleasttwocourtdaysbefore thematterisscheduledtobeheard andmustappearatthehearingto showcausewhythepetitionshould notbegranted.Ifnowrittenobjec− tionistimelyfiled,thecourtmay grantthepetitionwithouta hearing.
LEGAL NOTICES Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area
Dolos 1972 Finds a New Home By Barry Evans fieldnotes@northcoastjournal.com
No.
W ithout the dolosse, we wouldn’t have an entrance bar. We wouldn’t have com mercial fishing. We wouldn’t have sports fishing. We wouldn’t have ship traffic. We wouldn’t have any of that. That’s how important these [dolosse] are.” — Leroy Zerlang, Chair of the Hum boldt Harbor Safety Committee I bet you played jacks as a kid. I spent much of my youth trying to perfect my game of fivestones, as it’s called in the U.K., a game about as old as civilization. (See the inset photo, a 3,000-year-old carving from Carchemish in modern-day Syria, in which a couple of kids are shown with “knuck lebones.”) That’s the generic name, since the original jacks were made from the astragalus bone in a sheep’s hock, or ankle. If you squint, can see the visual connection between a toy jack and the newly arrived concrete thingy in Madaket Plaza. In 1963 in South Africa, harbor engineer Eric Merrifield and his draftsman Aubrey Kruger were trying to solve an erosion problem. The main breakwater of the East London harbor at the time consisted of 40-ton concrete slabs, many of which had shifted during a major storm. The pair came up with the idea of an anchor-shape that, rather than simply blocking the energy of waves, would dissipate the energy, deflecting it to the side. Better yet, a seawall built of dolosse (the Afrikaans plural for dolos, meaning ox knucklebone) is both interlocking but porous, and some what flexible, so heavy waves will cause them to get further entangled. In subse quent trials in South Africa, unreinforced concrete 20-ton dolosse held better than 40-ton reinforced concrete slabs. Merri field said later that they wanted “to design a block that did not break up or shift when struck by the sea; that was cheap; did not require precise placement; [and that could be] sprinkled like children’s jacks.” In East London, they found about 10,000 dolosse were needed per kilometer of coastline. Fifty years ago, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, facing a similar problem with the notoriously unstable entrance to Humboldt Bay, made the decision to try the same solution, even though it hadn’t been previously employed in the U.S. (Merrifield and Kruger had chosen not to patent their invention, so the design was freely available.) In 1972, the Corps placed an order with the Umpqua River Naviga tion Co. for nearly 5,000 42-ton dolosse. Within months, all the blocks had been placed in two layers on our north and south jetties, where they still protect the harbor entrance from Pacific storms. All, that is, except No. 1972 (to match the year), which was donated to the Eureka Chamber of Commerce, where it sat, in the chamber parking lot on Broadway, for 50 years. Until Aug. 15. Despite an earlier plan to demolish it to make way for a hotel on the site, local contractors — notably Kernan Construction, North Coast Fabricators and Zerlang Marine Services — pitched in and moved dolos No. 1972 to its new, permanent resting place on Madaket Plaza. Starting at 6 a.m., it was all over four hours later. You can now go and appreciate what, to an engineer’s eyes, is a thing of beauty and a tribute, per the original plaque, “To the seafaring men [sic] of Humboldt — past, present and future.”
Caption. Credit
FIELD NOTES
l Barry Evans (he/him, barryevans9@ yahoo.com) reckons he can still play a mean game of fivestones.
The “jacks” design of dolosse — H-shape with one leg turned 90 degrees — causes them to lock together more tightly under heavy wave action. On the morning of Aug. 15, local contractors moved dolos No. 1972 from Broadway to Madaket Plaza. Photo by Barry Evans Inset: a 3,000-year-old stone relief from Carchemish showing kids playing knucklebones, or jacks. Photo by Dosseman, via
Creative Commons CROSSWORD WilkLevinsonDavidby TO BE CONTINUED ANSWERS NEXT WEEK! WILKLEVINSONDAVID©2022 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 www.sudoku.com ACROSS 1. “Correct me ____ wrong 5. Comedian...” Margaret 14. Mont8. BeseechesBlanc, par 31. Things30. ____-advised28. Exam24. “The23. Caterer’s22. Have21. ____20. Two-time19. Kind17. Handyman’s16. Bad-mouths15. ____exempledeparfumaccessoryofjokeN.L.battingchampLeftychoyanotherbirthdaycontainerBigChill”actorforafuturepublicdefender,forshortyoucancrackwithoutdamagingthem 32. Mother of Beyoncé and 53. Nigerian49. Frank48. Opposite47. Feel44. “Me42. “Weekend,41. Social40. Former35. “This34. One33. GingerKnowlesSolange____mightsay“One,two,testing,testing”intoitisn’tover”...orwhat’sindicatedbythispuzzle’scircledlettersU.S.SenateminoritywhipJonreformerDorotheahereIcome!”andBobby____”(posthumous#1hitforJanisJoplin)badofplummetSinatraSchooloftheArtsco-foundertribe 54. Suffix with morph55. Energizer size 56. Duane 68. MLB67. After66. Gauge65. Scott64. University63. “Deal’s60. Emulated58. Short-term(drugstore____chain)govt.securitiesabookieoff”URLendingof“CharlesinCharge”taxplayoffevent DOWN 1. “Am ____ risk?” 2. Puts the pedal to the 3. Applemetalproductdiscontinued in 4. Anthony2017 or Ball of hoops, familiarly 5. Green with the 2010 hit “Forget You” 6. “2001: A Space Odyssey” computer 7. LGBTQ+ magazine since 9. Job8. Former1992hunter’s site 10. Short albums, briefly 11. Italian 37. One36. Scrutinizes34. Chex33. Knee29. Q27. “Hey,26. Assimilate25. Ventimiglia23. Final:21. “The18. “Having13. Scoffs12. Membercheeseofthe2020WorldSerieschampions(at)saidthat...”FreshPrinceof____-Air”Abbr.of“ThisIsUs”waityourturninline!”neighborinjurysite,forshort____(partyfood)of100inScrabble 38. Perfect self, 46. Pleasant-sounding45. Small44. Volcano43. To39. Hyperglycemiapsychoanalysisinsuffererand____inE.Sicilyjazzbandsrock?47. ActressdeArmasof“KnivesOut”50. Lessens,aspain51. Rainbow____52. WilliamShatner’s“____War”57. Bandthatwonthe1974EurovisionSongContest59. NewGuineaportfromwhichAmeliaEarhartleftonherlastflight60. What“X”mightmean61. PoetAmandaGorman’s“____toOurOcean”62. [Sendassistance!] © Puzzles by Pappocom 6 1 3 4 5 4 8 5 6 3 1 2 3 7 2 8 5 4 6 1 5 7 2 7 6 8 HARD #45 I W O J I M A C O B S I M T A K E S I T E N E T H Y S W A R M O F B E E S J A G Y A Y A L O T T O D O S L I C E O F B R E A D I N A C O M A F Y I P A T A G O N I A A B A S T A R O F B E T H L E H E M O E D E R A D I C A T E E G G I M P O S E S S T A T E O F B L I S S C H E A T D A Y I T A A R S S I D E O F B A C O N L E O A V E M A R L E N E P E P T A S S O B F E S T LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS TO SOBFEST CROSSWORD northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 29
30 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com EMPLOYMENT default The North Coast Journal is seeking Distribution Drivers Contact Michelle 707.442.1400 ext. michelle@northcoastjournal.com305 Must be personable, have a reliable vehicle, clean driving record and insurance. News box repair skills a plus. default Southern Trinity Health Service is taking applications for the open positions at the Scotia Location Clinical Support Manager We are seeking a self-motivated, quick learning, and career-minded individual seeking long-term employment. Please send resume to hr@sthsclinic.org or call (707) 764-5617 ext. 2110. default The Mattole Restoration Council, based in Petrolia, Humboldt County, California , has various job openings to join our Ecosystem Restoration Program team. For full Job announcements visit mattole.org PROJECT COORDINATOR � NATIVE PLANT MATERIALS Full-time, 2-3 year position $22-$28/hr D.O.E. plus full benefits PROJECT COORDINATORS � FOREST RESTORATION Full-time, 3 year position $24-$32/hr D.O.E. plus full benefits NURSERY ASSISTANT Full-time, 3 year position $18-$22/hr D.O.E. plus full benefits CREW LEADERS � FOREST THINNING Seasonal/Full-time, $25-$30/hr D.O.E. plus partial benefits SAWYERS, FIELD TECHNICIANS, LABORERS Seasonal/Full-time, $20-$28/hr D.O.E. plus partial benefits The North Coast Journal is hiring SALE REPS BASE SALARY + COMMISSION + BENEFITS Seeking full-time motivated individuals eager to develop and manage sales programs across print, web and mobile platforms. Apply by emailing your resume kyle@northcoastjournal.comto Hiring? Post your job opportunities in the Journal. 442-1400 northcoastjournal.com×314 Hiring? Post your job opportunities in the Journal. 442-1400 northcoastjournal.com×314
32 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com EMPLOYMENT default City of Arcata DEPUTY (STREETS/UTILITIES)DIRECTOR $84,927.98 - $105,811.25/yr. 4% Salary increase in July 2023 Apply online by 11:59pm, September 5, 2022. This position manages and supervises staff, programs and activities within the Streets, Water Distribution, Wastewater Collections, Central Garage and Water/ Wastewater Treatment Plant Divisions. An ideal candidate thrives in a multipriority environment; is established as a motivating and supportive leader; and successfully collaborates across internal departments and with outside agency partners. Apply or review the full job duties at: https://www.governmentjobs.com/careers/arcataca or contact 736 F Street, Arcata, (707) 822-5953. EOE default City of Arcata PAYROLLPERSONNEL/SPECIALIST $56,028.11 - $69,805.06/yr. 4% Salary increase in July 2023 Apply online by 11:59pm, August 28, 2022. Performs technical and specialized Personnel and Payroll duties, including compensation coordination, employee relations and processing and maintaining governmentjobs.com/careers/arcatacahttps://www. or 736 F Street, Arcata, (707) 822-5953. EOE default THE CITY OF PUBLIC WORKS TREATMENT PLANT OPERATOR I/II WASTEWATER TREATMENTAND WATER TREATMENT $3,490 - $4,687/MO *Base salary will increase by 2% in 2023with another increase of 5% in 2024. Benefits include free family Zoo membership, free family Adorni Center membership, free enrollment at Little Saplings Preschool for employee children and more! The City of Eureka is currently accepting applications for two (2) full-time Treatment Plant Operators to join our team at the Wastewater Treatment Plant and Water Treatment Plant. Duties include monitoring plant operations equipment and processes to ensure compliance with environmental and public health standards, including monitoring and making adjustments as needed to optimize efficiency. This position requires working on weekends and holidays, and may occasionally require working evenings. For more information and to apply online, please visit our website at www.ci.eureka.ca.gov. Final filing date is at 5:00 p.m. on Monday, August 29, 2022. EOE ESSENTIALCAREGIVERS NeededtohelpElderly VisitingAngels 707−442−8001 CAREGIVERSNEEDEDNOW! Workfromthecomfortofyour home.Weareseekingcaringpeoplewithabedroomtospareto helpsupportadultswithspecialneeds.Receiveongoingtraining andsupportandamonthlystipendof$1200−$4000+amonth.Call Ritaformoreinformationat707−442−4500ext205orvisit www.mentorswanted.comtolearnmore. SOCIALSERVICESASSISTANT P/T,yearround.Underthedirec− tionoftheHealthandHumanServicesDirector,theSocialService AssistantwillassisttheHealthandHumanServicesdirectorto provideservicestoTribalfamilies.Transportingclientstoappoint− ments,assistingEldersinandoutofvehicles,scheduling,delivering meals,boxes,andsuppliestoelders,openingtheHHSoffice, settingupandcleaningupforHealthandHumanServicesevents, workshops,groupsetc.HighschooldiplomaorGEDrequired. PossessavalidCaliforniaDriver’sLicense,automobileinsurance andbe25yearsold.Mustworkwellwithotherstaffandbecour− teoustoTribalmembersandvisitors.Mustbeabletocompletea backgroundcheck,DOJfingerprintingandTBtestbeforebeginning work.Mustbefoodhandlertrained.www.wiyot.us YOUTHPROGRAMMANAGER Regular,F/T,Salary:$20/hr.the ProgramManagerisresponsibleforplanning,coordination,and implementationofactivitiesattheWiyotYouthPrograms.This includesaddressingthedevelopmentalneeds,interests,andchar− acteristicsofyouthbasedupontheassessmentofneedsandinter− estsofyouthandthecommunity.Activitiesshallstrivetorelate tothefivecoreareasofYouthProgramming.Otherduties assigned.Experience/EducationRequired:Bachelor’sDegreein EarlyChildhoodEducation,ChildDevelopment,ElementaryEduca− tionorSpecialEducationorrelatedfields.Twoyearsofexperience workingwithyouthinaleadershipposition.Demonstratedexperi− enceinplanning,developing,andimplementingactivitiesthat providesocialenrichmentandpersonaldevelopment.Mustbe abletocompleteabackgroundcheck,DOJfingerprintingand Tuberculosistestbeforebeginningwork.Pre−employmentdrug testingrequired.Full−timepositionsofferexcellentbenefits:paid vacation/sickleave,16paidholidays,health,dental,lifeinsurance andmatchedprofitsharing.Openuntilfilled.Pleasegoto www.wiyot.usforcompletejobdescription.ContactOperations ManagerforanapplicationandsubmittoWiyotTribe1000Wiyot Dr.Loleta,CA95551www.wiyot.us SOCIALWORKADVOCATE FTinLoleta,CA.Advocating,coordinatingandguidingclients improvingwellbeing.RequiresaBAw/experienceinSWor relatedfields.Salarystartsat$3200/mo.excellentbenefits. Visitwww.wiyot.usforanapplicationandafulljobdescriptionor contactHRat(707)733−5055www.wiyot.us DISHGAMUPROJECTMANAGER FTinLoleta,theDishgamuProjectManagerisresponsibleforplan− ning,coordination,andimplementationofactivities.Planand organizeDishgamuprograms,Promoteandmarketprogramsto thecommunity,ProvideadministrativesupporttotheDirector. Knowledgeofbuildingtrades,jobdevelopment,constructionand landacquisitionisrequired.Twoyearsofexperienceworkingina leadershipposition.Eligibleforbenefits.Three−monthproba− tionaryperiod.ContactHRat707−733−5055torequestfulljob descriptionandapplication.www.wiyot.us Hiring? 442-1400 × northcoastjournal.com314
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 33 Continued on next page » default HUMBOLDT COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT (HCSD) ACCTG CUSTOMERCLERK/SERVICEREPI HCSD is seeking a fulltime individual to perform a full range of specialized clerical, bookkeeping, and data processing procedures related to utility billing, customer service, accounts receivable, and accounts payable. This is a 5-step position starting at $3,032/mo. + benefits. To be considered for this position, complete and submit an HCSD Job Application form with cover letter. FINAL APPLICATION DATE: Sep 16, 2022. Position remains open until filled. Visit our website org/employment-human-resourceshttp://humboldtcsd.for required application form and additional info or obtain at our offices located at 5055 Walnut Drive in Cutten. default THE CITY OF PUBLIC WORKS UTILITY SYSTEMS OPERATOR I/II WASTEWATER COLLECTIONS AND WATER DISTRIBUTION DIVISIONS $3,035 - $4,076 per month **Base salary will increase by 2% in 2023 with another increase of 5% in 2024. Plus excellent benefits including free family Zoo membership, free family Adorni Center membership, free enrollment at Little Saplings Preschool for employee children and more! Current vacancies in both the Water Distribution Division and the Wastewater Collection Division. This position performs a variety of semi-skilled labor in the construction, maintenance and repair of City infrastructures. Desirable qualifications include a combination of education (equivalent to graduation from high school) and at least 1 year of experience related to area of assignment. For a full job description and required qualifications, please visit our website at www.ci.eureka.ca.gov to apply. Applications will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, August 31st, 2022. EOE default K’ima: w Medical Center an entity of the Hoopa Valley Tribe, is seeking applicants for the following positions: WELLNESS COORDINATOR FT REGULAR ($20.00-$23.00 PER HOUR) DEADLINE TO APPLY IS AUGUST 29, 2022 BY 5PM. DIABETES COORDINATOR FT REGULAR ($30.00 PER HOUR DOE) DEADLINE TO APPLY IS AUGUST 29, 2022 BY 5PM. A/P & FILE CLERK PT REGULAR ($15.00-$16.50 PER HOUR M-F 8AM-12PM) – DEADLINE TO APPLY IS AUGUST 29, 2022 BY 5PM. HOUSEKEEPER FT REGULAR ($15.00 PER HOUR) HUMAN RESOURCES SPECIALIST – FT REGULAR PATIENT BENEFITS-REGISTRATION CLERK FT/REGULAR VAN DRIVER FT/REGULAR ($15.50 PER HR. START) DESK TECHNICIAN (2 POSITIONS) - FT/REGULAR OUTREACH & PREVENTION – FT REGULAR ($20.40 PER HOUR) PARAMEDIC – FT REGULAR EMT – FT REGULAR GRANT WRITER & PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS FT/REGULAR ($29.00-36.00 PER HOUR DOE) DENTAL HYGIENIST FT/REGULAR ($39.00-43.00 DOE) PHYSICIAN FT/REGULAR MEDICAL DIRECTOR FT/REGULAR MENTAL HEALTH CLINICIAN FT/REGULAR MAT RN CARE MANAGER FT/REGULAR All positions above are Open Until Filled unless otherwise stated. For an application, job description, and additional information, contact: K’ima:w Medical Center, Human Resources, PO Box 1288, Hoopa, CA, 95546 or call 530-625-4261 or email: apply@ kimaw.org for a job description and application. You can also check our website listings for details at kimaw.org. Resume and CV are not accepted without a signed application. PLACE YOUR JOB LISTINGS CLASSIFIEDS.NORTHCOASTJOURNAL.COM Place Ad NCJ will be closed Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 5th Please submit your copy by NOON Friday, Sept. 2nd for the Sept. 8th issue.
34 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • northcoastjournal.com Miscellaneous BIGGUY,LITTLEPICKUP Smallcleanupsandhauls. Eurekaarea.Reasonable rates.CallOddJobMikeat 707−497−9990. DREAMQUESTTHRIFT STORESMALLAPPLIANCE SALE: ALL1/2PRICE! Whereyourshopping dollarssupportlocalyouth. SeniorDiscountTuesdays& Spin’n’WinWednesdays! (530)629−3006.August24− 27. PAYINGTOPCA$HFORMEN’S SPORTWATCHES! Rolex, Breitling,Omega,PatekPhilippe, Heuer,Daytona,GMT, SubmarinerandSpeedmaster. Call888−320−1052 TRAINONLINETODO MEDICALBILLING! Becomea MedicalOfficeProfessional onlineatCTI!GetTrained,Certi− fied&readytoworkinmonths! Call866−243−5931.(M−F8am− 6pmET).Computerwith internetisrequired. WRITING CONSULTANT/EDITOR. Fiction,nonfiction,poetry. DanLevinson,MA,MFA. (707)443−8373. www.ZevLev.com default Auto Service ROCKCHIP? Windshieldrepair isourspecialty. Foremergencyservice CALLGLASWELDER 442−GLAS(4527) humboldtwindshield repair.com Home Repair 2GUYS&ATRUCK. Carpentry,Landscaping, JunkRemoval,CleanUp, Moving.Althoughwehave beeninbusinessfor25 years,wedonotcarrya contractorslicense. Call845−3087 Lodging defaultHUMBOLDT PLAZA APTS. Opening soon available for HUD Sec. 8 Waiting Lists for 2, 3 & 4 bedroom Apts. Annual Income Limits: 1 pers. $24,500, 2 pers. $28,000; 3 pers. $31,500; 4 pers. $34,950; 5 pers. $37,750; 6 pers. $40,550; 7 pers. $43,350; 8 pers. $46,150 Hearing impaired: TDD Ph# 1-800-735-2922ApplyatOffice: 2575 Alliance Rd. Bldg. 9 Arcata, 8am-12pm & 1-4pm, M-F (707) 822-4104 Other Professionals CIRCUSNATUREPRESENTS A.O’KAYCLOWN &NANINATURE JugglingJesters &WizardsofPlay Performancesforallages. MagicalAdventures withcircusgames andtoys.Festivals, Events&Parties. (707)499−5628 www.circusnature.com REAL ESTATE / FOR SALEMARKETPLACE MARKETPLACE BODY MIND SPIRIT HIGHEREDUCATIONFOR SPIRITUALUNFOLDMENT. Bachelors,Masters,D.D./ Ph.D.,distancelearning, UniversityofMetaphysical Sciences.Bringingprofes− sionalismtometaphysics. (707)822−2111 metaphysicsuniversity.com HEALINGARTSGUIDE NOWACCEPTINGSUBMIS− SIONS AttentionWholisitic Practitioners!Joinusinthe nextissueoftheHealing ArtsGuide.Placeyouradby 8/27/22andreceivean earlybirddiscount.Contact Hannah(707)683−2316 Info@wholisticheartbeat.coBuild to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area Lawn Care Service $35/hour 2 minimumhour Riding & cordless mowers, both with baggers Dump runs • Weed eating Hedge trimming Call Corey 707-382-2698 FEATURED LISTING Call Broker Owner Jeremy Stanfield at Landmark Real Estate (707) 725-2852 LIC# 01339550 $580,000 115 Loma Vista Dr Fortuna CA Acreage Near Fortuna - Gated entry, covered front porch, dining area, 3 bed, 2 bath, approx. 1000 sq. ft., laundry room with sink, spacious deck area, RV parking, barn, fenced pasture, approx. 6 ¼ acres, 2nd unit potential, MFG home. MSL# 262117 Sylvia Garlick #00814886 • Broker GRI/Owner 1629 Central Ave. • McKinleyville • 707-839-1521 • mingtreesylvia@yahoo.com ■ McKinleyville GREAT EAST MCKINLEYVILLE LOCATION WITH ROOM FOR ALL YOUR TOYS! Custom home on over ¼ acre, with an oversized garage and room for RV or boat parking along both sides of the home. 3br, 2bth and the kitchen has been beautifully remodeled with a large island and breakfast bar, stainless steel appliances and granite slab counters. Open floor plan with cathedral ceilings in the living room, a cozy wood stove, and French doors leading to the spacious southfacing back deck, great for sunny summer BBQ’s! Hickory wood floors, redwood lap siding, separate laundry room, cathedral ceilings, french doors off the primary bedroom, and more. Central McKinleyville location just up the street from shopping, Pierson Park, restaurants, and The Club gym. Call for the details or your private showing today! MLS# 26260 New Listing $695,000 default Home & improvementgardenexpertsonpage21. Cleaning CLARITYWINDOW CLEANING Servicesavailable. CallJulie(707)839−1518 SEABREEZECLEANING Home/OfficeCleaning− 30yrsExperience−Licensed− Bonded.CallNancyfor details.(707)834−2898 mauibeach63@gmail.com Computer & Internet Macintosh BusinessConsultingComputerforandIndividuals Hardware/MemoryTroubleshootingUpgradesSetupAssistance/TrainingPurchaseAdvice 707-826-1806 macsmist@gmail.com YOUR coastjournal.comclassified@northHEREAD Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area northcoasttickets.com Local tickets. One place. Our platform is free to event creators. Work with the team you trust, who cares about your business or organization and the success of the Humboldt county atMelissaContactarea.Sanderson707-498-8370or melissa@northcoastjournal.com Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area northcoasttickets.com Local tickets. One place. Our atMelissaContactcountysuccessorcarestheeventplatformcreators.teamyouaboutorganizationofthearea.Sanderson707-498-8370 melissa@northcoastjournal.com Build to edge of the document Margins are just a safe area northcoasttickets.com Local tickets. One place. Our platform is free to event creators. Work with the team you trust, who cares about your business or organization and the success of the Humboldt county atMelissaContactarea.Sanderson707-498-8370or melissa@northcoastjournal.com
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 35 CharlieTripodi LandOwner/Agent BRE #01332697 707.476.0435 Kyla Nored Owner/Broker BRE #01930997 707.834.7979 DavenportBarbara Associate Broker BRE# 01066670 707.498.6364 AshleeCook Realtor BRE# 02070276 707.601.6702 WillcuttMike Realtor BRE # 02084041 916.798.2107
HYDESVILLE – LAND/PROPERTY - $199,000 Come see this beautiful lot with amazing views. Endless potential! The barn is 576 square feet and can be converted into a tiny home while building your dream house. Imagine waking up to these killer views everyday. Power and water are at the street. Septic still needs to be developed. OMC!
860 D STREET, ARCATA - $566,000 Amazing investment opportunity centrally located just 5 blocks from Cal Poly Humboldt and a short walk to the Plaza! Fantastic income potential with 5 bedrooms, bonus room, and 2 bathrooms. Lower floor enjoys the signature 1930’s high ceilings, plenty of sunlight, new exterior paint and roof!
HIOUCHI – LAND/PROPERTY – $923,000 Stunning ±113 acre property w/ views of the Siskiyou Mountains! Property features a mix of flats, slopes, saddles, and ridgetops, and has a variety of trees. With easy access from Highway 199, wide rocked roads, and water available nearby or by drilling a well, look no further for your dream property!
WEAVERVILLE – LAND/PROPERTY - $94,000 Undeveloped, mostly steep ±40 acre parcel with top the of the world mountain views! Property is conveniently located just off Highway 299, only 10 minutes west of Weaverville.
REDUCED PRICE!
MANILA – LAND/PROPERTY - $219,000 Undeveloped ±3.34 acre beachfront property adjacent to public coastal dunes and beach. Gated road access. Power runs through a portion of the property. Manila Community Services District water and sewer available. Owner may carry!
RIO DELL – CULTIVATION PROPERTY - $1,300,000 ±7.75 Acre turn-key cannabis farm currently permitted for 32k sq. ft. of mixed light cultivation space, explore the possibility of expansion under Rio Dell’s farmer friendly ordinance with NO CAP on permit size! Enjoy privacy and the comforts of in town living including a 4/3.5 home, PG&E, community water, and 2 story garage.
SALYER – LAND/PROPERTY - $550,000
BURNT RANCH – LAND/PROPERTY - $399,000 ±54 Acre mountain retreat ready for your improvements! Property features several useable landings, pasture, streams, gravel roads throughout, and deeded spring access. Existing structures include a 560 sq. ft. cabin, 12’x28’ shop, 16’x32’ barn, and several outbuildings.
BLOCKSBURG – HOME ON ACREAGE - $349,000 Premium hunting property perched high on a ridgetop with expansive views of the local mountains! Property boasts a newly drilled well & water system, end of the road privacy, beautiful rolling meadows and a 1,000 sq. ft. open concept cabin. Sustainable living at its finest with plenty of space for gardening, animals, and great solar energy potential!
WILLOW CREEK – LAND/PROPERTY – $75,000 ±1.79 Acre lot in a desirable area in Willow Creek! Surrounded by trees, with sloping terraces of land, the possibilities are endless. Community water/ no septic and close to USFS land.
One of a kind ±160 acre property conveniently located off South Fork Road. Enjoy beautiful views, lush meadows, a mixture of fir and oak timber, and two creeks running though the parcel. Property is surrounded by Forest Service offering privacy and seclusion.