OC TOBE R 3 - OC TOBE R 10, 2019 • VOL . 3 4, NO. 11 • W W W.N E W T I M E S S LO.C OM • S A N L U I S OB I S P O C O U N T Y ’S N E W S A ND E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY
Dragon boating for survival [16], violence prevention starts at the root [18], connecting through cancer [23], and a clothing swap that cares [24] BY NEW TIMES STAFF
Contents
October 3 - October 10, 2019 VOLUME 34, NUMBER 11
Editor’s note
This week cover
Breast cancer survivors paddle the dragon ...................................... 16 Domestic Violence organizations push for prevention ........................ 18 Cancer survivors connect through shared experience ............23 Clothing swap donates to domestic violence shelters.............24
news
Dust mitigation on hold thanks to State Parks .................. 4
opinion
We need to get big business off the Board of Supes .............................. 10
arts
GALLERY: Inspired to show climate change....................... 44 WRITING: Central Coast Writers Conference................ 46
flavor
BEER AND WINE: Beer meets wine in Rosalie ........................................52
O
ctober brings us many things. Colder nights, fall leaves, and Halloween. But it’s also a month that shines a light on what we should be paying attention to year round: breast cancer and domestic violence. This year, in New Times’ Awareness Issue, Assistant Editor Peter Johnson writes CAMARADERIE Paddlers about how dragon boat racing is helping some celebrate after completing a women with breast cancer [16] , dragon boat I speak with RISE and Stand Strong about practice race in Morro Bay on programs meant to get at the root of domestic Sept. 28. violence [18] , Staff Writer Karen Garcia talks with cancer survivors about connecting with another [23] , and Clothing Swap founder Asia Croson tells Staff Writer Kasey Bubnash about how the event benefits domestic violence victims [24] . You can also read about why a workshop on Oceano Dunes dust mitigation got canceled [4] ; an exhibit at Cuesta College that highlights what life will look like as sea levels rise [44] ; the best writers conference in California [46] ; and a beer-wine hybrid brought to you by North County beverage crafters [52].
cover photo by Jayson Mellom cover design by Alex Zuniga
Every week news
music
News ............................. 4 Viewer Discretion............7 Strokes .......................... 9
Starkey......................... 36 Live music listings........ 36
opinion Hodin ............................ 10 This Modern World ....... 10 Letters ...........................11 Sound off ...................... 13 Rhetoric & Reason ....... 13 Shredder ....................... 15
art Artifacts ....................... 44 Split Screen...................47 Reviews and Times ......47
the rest Open Houses .............. 56 Classifieds.....................57 Brezsny’s Astrology..... 63
Events calendar Hot Dates .................. 26 Special Events ........... 26 Arts ............................ 26 Culture & Lifestyle ......31 Food & Drink ............. 34 Music ......................... 36
Camillia Lanham editor
Squash that centerpiece! [34]
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For more information, contact Natalie Fernandez at (805) 503-9976 or email moffoundation@gmail.com 2 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
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News
October 3 - 10, 2019
➤ Strokes & Plugs [9]
What the county’s talking about this week
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Tom Falconer, Barbara Alvis, Kevin Reed, Dennis Flately, Edward Barnett, Vanessa Dias New Times is published every Thursday for your enjoyment and distributed to more than 100,000 readers in San Luis Obispo County. New Times is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. The contents of New Times are copyrighted by New Times, and may not be reproduced without specific written permission from the publishers. We welcome contributions and suggestions. Accompany any submissions with a self-addressed stamped envelope. We cannot assume responsibility for unsolicited submissions. All letters received become the property of the publishers. Opinions expressed in byline material are not necessarily those of New Times. New Times is available on microfilm at the SLO City-County Library, and through Proquest Company, 789 E Eisenhower Pkwy., Ann Arbor, MI 48106, as part of the Alternative Press Project. Subscriptions to New Times are $156 per year. Because a product or service is advertised in New Times does not necessarily mean we endorse its use. We hope readers will use their own good judgment in choosing products most beneficial to their well-being. Our purpose: to present news and issues of importance to our readers; to reflect honestly the unique spirit of the region; and to be a complete, current, and accurate guide to arts and entertainment on the Central Coast, leading the community in a positive direction consistent with its past. ©2019 New Times
Oceano Dunes workshop canceled after issues with State Parks’ dust reduction plan
T
he San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) recently canceled a public workshop on dust mitigation at the Oceano Dunes, citing California State Parks’ failure to complete an adequate work plan for mitigation efforts in the park. The workshop, which was planned for Oct. 1, was initially scheduled so community members would have an opportunity to look over and discuss State Parks’ plan for reducing dust emissions in the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area. State Parks is required to submit such a report to the APCD and its Science Advisory Group annually as part of a legal order the agencies agreed to several months ago requiring State Parks to cut dust emissions in Oceano by 50 percent by 2023. While State Parks did submit two drafts of an annual work plan for 2019—the first on the Aug. 1 deadline, and a revised version was completed by Sept. 13—both were rejected by the APCD and its Science Advisory Group. Jimmy Paulding, an Arroyo Grande City Council member and APCD board member, said both rejected reports outlined dust reduction strategies that were “woefully inadequate” and fell way short of what needs to be done to improve air quality near the park. “From plan to plan, we see this lack of willingness to work in good faith,” Paulding said of State Parks, “to get the job done.” Instead of working to make Oceano a safe place for locals and wildlife, Paulding said State Parks has consistently obstructed and slowed the dust mitigation process at nearly every level, a complaint brought up by a number of Central Coast residents and commissioners at a California Coastal Commission meeting in July. There, the Coastal Commission considered imposing regulations that would have limited off-highway vehicle riding in some portions of the Oceano Dunes, activities that are thought to increase potentially dangerous
WeekendWeather Weather
A•A•N
MEMBER, NATIONAL NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION
DUNES DRAMA Hundreds of people from across the state attended a California Coastal Commission meeting in San Luis Obispo on July 11, where commissioners considered a recommendation to limit offhighway vehicle riding in the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area.
dust particles emitted by the park that travel to neighboring communities. The proposed conditions were reluctantly voted down by the Coastal Commission after hours of impassioned public comment and State Parks Director Lisa Mangat’s repeated promises to work in good faith to reduce dust emissions. After that meeting, Paulding said he had some restored hope that State Parks would do its part to improve the situation in Oceano, hope that he said is now lost. With no approved plan to discuss, APCD Officer Gary Willey said he was forced to cancel the public workshop. Willey’s next objective is to schedule an APCD hearing on where to go next. The district could either have an informational hearing on a State Parks work plan, if one is submitted and approved, “or we’ll have a hearing that considers taking other action.” APCD’s hearing board could decide to change
the legal order under which the dust mitigation process is currently operating. The board, Willey said, could choose to make the process much more stringent and difficult for State Parks to adhere to. In a statement emailed to New Times, State Parks officials said that despite the Oct. 1 workshop cancellation, the agency remains committed to developing a “mutually acceptable” draft work plan and working with the APCD. State Parks outlined a number of ongoing dust reduction strategies at Oceano, including more than 100 acres of land that have been fenced off to riding, increased wind fencing, and plant installations. Officials said additional dust treatments are being analyzed. “We look forward to our continued discussions with the Air Pollution Control District,” the statement reads, “and to new dust mitigation efforts.” Δ —Kasey Bubnash
Forced out, Grand View tenants ask Paso for help
“The impact that this causes on the city is going to be significant,” he continued, “because when somebody becomes homeless, you’re going to see their children start to have truancy problems, crime rates go up, you have increased hospitalization, and you have less productivity because people can no longer work.” The attorneys wanted the City Council to put the issue on its agenda for the next meeting. The city declined the request, for now, waiting until after a public meeting between local organizations, Peoples’ Self-Help Housing and the Housing Authority of San Luis Obispo (HASLO), and the tenants takes place. The meeting, put together by Assistant City Manager Sarah Johnson-Rios, is slated for Oct. 9 from 5 to 8 p.m. at 80 Cary St. in Paso, a HASLO location.
Microclimate Weather Forecast
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Night and morning offshore winds with breezy onshore afternoon winds will keep skies clear and high temps on the warm side.
4 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
On the heels of a SLO County Superior Court judge’s ruling to allow the Grand View Apartment owners to go out of business and evict their tenants, the soon-to-be former residents are requesting aid from the city of Paso Robles. At the Oct. 1 Paso Robles City Council meeting, public comment began with the tenants’ attorneys asking the city to help their clients in any way it can. “Your city is facing a humanitarian crisis on its hands caused by some greedy out-of-town landlords who have held Grand View for every dime it was worth while not maintaining the apartments. The crisis is going to fall on your working poor,” said Allen Hutkin, co-counsel for the tenants.
NEWS continued page 7
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Do you think Pismo’s new regulations on some businesses is fair? m Yes, downtown is being taken over by sleazy shops. m No, why are they discriminating against some businesses? m I don’t go to Pismo for the shops, just the ocean. m There should be regulations for all businesses, not some
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News NEWS from page 4
Grand View is made up of six buildings containing 55 units of one- to threebedroom apartments, almost all of which are occupied by families—some with small children—and seniors. In May, a few tenants sought the help of the SLO Legal Assistance Foundation to file a class action complaint against the owners of the complex—Ebrahim and Fahimeh Madadi—for slum conditions. Tenants were granted a temporary restraining order that prevented the landlords from collecting rent, evicting the tenants, or retaliation against the tenants, and for the landlords to begin making the apartments habitable. In August, the landlords announced a decision to go out of business rather than fix the apartments, and they planned to evict the tenants and sell the property. SLO County Superior Court Judge Ginger Garrett agreed to allow the landlords to follow through with their plan. “We tried to get as much time for the tenants as possible, but the court ruled that depending on how long the tenants lived there, they have 60 or 90 days to find somewhere else to live,” SLO Legal Assistance Foundation legal director Stephanie Barclay said at the Oct. 1 meeting. Barclay gave the council a glimpse of one family who would be affected by the judge’s ruling. She said Beatrice and Raul live in the complex with their three sons: 3-year-old Marcos, 10-year-old Saul, and 11-year-old Pedro. Marcus has autism, and he lights up when he plays with his toy horses or puts on his cowboy hat and boots. He wants to be a cowboy when he grows up, Barclay said. Pedro attends George H. Flamson Middle School, and Saul attends Bauer Speck Elementary School. They both run track in their schools. The father of these boys has worked at J. Lohr Vineyards and Wines for seven years picking grapes and working on irrigation. The mother works in Paso Robles as well. “They’ve been looking for another place to live, but haven’t found anything,” Barclay said. —Karen Garcia
Affordable housing project lands in Pismo Beach instead of at Hillside
The controversy over Hillside Church in Grover Beach—and a low-income housing and homeless services facility that was proposed for the location—appears to be coming to an end. Peoples’ Self-Help Housing and 5Cities Homeless Coalition announced on Oct. 1 that they had secured another property where they will provide the permanent and supportive housing facilities that were originally proposed at Hillside. The new property, located at 855 N. 4th St. in Pismo Beach, cost more than $2 million and will hold a community center, fulltime on-site property management, and about 50 units of affordable housing—10 to 15 of which will be used for youth in transition, according to Peoples’ Self-Help Housing President and CEO John Fowler. The project was approved unanimously by the Pismo Beach City Council on Sept. 17, and Fowler said the necessary redesign and remodel work will likely
VIEWER DISCRETION take about three years to complete. “I think this is going to go smoothly,” Fowler told New Times, “and hopefully quickly.” The new property is part of a larger plan, headed by Peoples’ SelfHelp Housing and 5Cities Homeless Coalition, to expand homeless services in SLO County, which is being funded by the California Homeless Emergency Aid Program Grant. The full expansion— including new office space for 5Cities, affordable and transitional housing, an an emergency warming center—was initially planned for the Hillside Church property in Grover Beach. But neighborhood opposition to the project, followed by litigation over the church’s ownership, put the plans in limbo. After 5Cities secured office space at 100 South St. in Grover Beach in August, and with the new property for housing in Pismo, Fowler said Peoples’ Self-Help Housing plans to officially cancel escrow on Hillside soon. All that remains unresolved in the project, he said, is finding a location for a new warming center. Although the warming center isn’t a part of and won’t be funded by the California Homeless Emergency Aid Program, Fowler said it’s needed, and the search for the right location is on. “We’re hoping we can find a site the community will embrace,” Fowler said, adding that with cold weather on its way, he’s hoping to find property soon. “Time is of the essence here.” —Kasey Bubnash
The Groves on 41 rallies support to keep its sign
A decorative water tower created to advertise The Groves on 41, a motherand-daughter-run olive farm, has caused enough controversy that SLO County said the sign might have to be removed. Although the county has had ongoing issues with the sign since 2016, more than 1,000 people signed a petition on care2. com in support of saving the farm’s sign. “We are at the point where all we want is for this to go away. We want to go on and not lose our sign if we don’t have to,” said Karen Tallent, mother and Groves on 41 owner. Issues began, Tallent said, when she installed an air conditioning unit in her barn specifically for olive oil storage—the perishable item needs to be kept at 62 degrees. “We didn’t get a permit for it because we didn’t know it was needed. So we got cited for having air conditioning that was not permitted,” she said. When a code enforcement officer went to the property to inspect the barn in question, he noticed the water tower structure that she had put up months before. Tallent said that before she put up the water tower sign made by her son-in-law,
by Jayson Mellom
she called the SLO County Planning and Building Department to make sure it was OK to construct, and she got approval. But the code enforcement officer said he wanted an “as-built”—a revised drawing submitted by a contractor upon completion of a project—for the sign. Tallent said she complied. Trevor Keith, SLO County’s Planning and Building director, said this started when the department received a code compliance complaint about the water tank sign on Sept. 28, 2016. “Upon further inspection, department staff determined that the water tank sign was in fact an unpermitted structure and was located within the front setback of the property,” Keith told New Times via email. “This investigation further found that unpermitted modification had been made to the agricultural storage barn on the property, and that the converted barn structure was being used as an unpermitted events facility.” Currently, the department states that the sign doesn’t conform with county setback requirements or state building code requirements, and it also doesn’t meet wind load requirements. “If it blows over onto Highway 41, it would create a potentially dangerous situation, risking harm to anyone traveling on Highway 41 in this area,” he said. On mutiple occasions, the department has provided Tallent with options to advertise within guidelines set by the county’s land use ordinance, Keith said. Options include an application for a conditional use permit to request a modification of ordinance requirements, which would include a hearing before the Planning Commission. Another option would allow Tallent to relocate the structure to meet the required 25-foot setback from the property line, or she could replace the water tank with a sign that doesn’t require a building permit. The Groves on 41 also has the option of removing the sign. Tallent said she has lost several thousand dollars trying to make her sign and barn compliant with the county—she doesn’t believe it’s fair to spend more on a conditional use permit. She said she
can’t move the sign farther away from the highway because it will interfere with mechanical harvesting—plus the sign is cemented into the ground with rebar. “To the extent legally and reasonably possible, our department tries to be flexible to the implementation and interpretation of the rules as they are written, in order to account for people’s unique situations and respective property rights,” Keith said. “That being said, the Department of Planning and Building staff including myself, as the director, do not have the authority to arbitrarily change existing regulations.” —Karen Garcia
SLOPD officer reassigned after fatal dog shooting
A San Luis Obispo police officer who shot and killed a dog in its owners’ driveway on Sept. 26 has been taken off his patrol beat while the department further investigates the incident, SLOPD Chief Deanna Cantrell said on Oct. 2. SLOPD Officer Joshua Walsh fatally shot Bubbs, a 7-year-old pit bull-boxer mix, during an encounter that the dog’s owners have decried as “avoidable,” “unnecessary,” and “dangerous.” Walsh shot Bubbs twice in front of his owners Nick Regalia and Riley Manford’s house—reportedly fearing for his safety as police responded to a call about a possible burglary. Bubbs was rushed into emergency surgery, but hours later succumbed to the gunshot wounds. In an emailed statement to New Times on Oct. 2, Cantrell called the incident “a tragic situation” and said she “understands and shares” the community’s concerns. SLOPD is reviewing the shooting, which was recorded on Walsh’s body camera, and Cantrell will determine if Walsh “acted appropriately under the law and totality of the circumstances,” she said. “We take every discharge of a firearm seriously, therefore, the officer has been placed on administrative reassignment NEWS continued page 8
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 7
News NEWS from page 7
while this incident is under investigation,” Cantrell said. “This was a tragic situation for the family and our officers, and we are sorry for the family’s loss.” Cantrell noted that state law and SLOPD policy allows officers to use “objectively reasonable force” when necessary to protect themselves, and added that the investigation and any discipline handed out as a result will be confidential. Regalia and Manford claim that Walsh’s use of force in the situation was unnecessary and unreasonable. They plan to file a lawsuit against the city. “My dog didn’t need to die,” Regalia, 33, told New Times. The couple was home on Sept. 26 around 11 a.m. when two SLOPD officers came up their driveway toward the backunit house on the 600 block of Santa Rosa Street. A neighbor reportedly had called in a potential burglary at the home—a false alarm, according to Regalia. He and Manford had been fixing a broken window at the house, which triggered the call. “A window was broken. My girlfriend and I were fixing the outside window,” he said. As the officers approached the house, Bubbs, who was outside untethered, started barking at them. Bubbs spent many of his days out on the house’s front patio, Regalia said, and he had no history of violence. “He just chills in the yard all day. Everybody knows him,” Regalia said.
While one of the officers appeared unfazed by Bubbs, Walsh drew his gun, according to Regalia. As the dog approached the officers, Walsh ordered Manford to gain control of the dog. “He’s pointing the gun at the dog telling her to go into the line of fire and grab the dog, so she was hesitant,” Regalia said. When Bubbs came a few feet from Walsh, he fired three shots, hitting the dog with two. Bubbs ran back into the house, bleeding, and Regalia said he wrapped him in a blanket and rushed him to an animal hospital. After several hours (and $8,000 worth) of emergency surgery, Bubbs was put down. Regalia and Manford believe that the SLOPD’s actions in the moment were unjustified and irresponsible. Regalia said he’s pursuing litigation against the city because “I don’t want this to happen to someone else.” “It doesn’t bring my dog back,” he said. In the wake of the shooting, a GoFundMe page launched to help the couple pay for Bubbs’ emergency vet bills. A recently formed change.org petition also calls for Walsh’s termination. It had 543 signatures at press time. “It’s no wonder people are scared of cops,” Regalia said. “It was just totally avoidable and excessive. To be that scared of dogs? Hit him with your baton or mace him or something. “The police force is just so quick to pull out their guns,” he continued. “There are 10 people living here. It’s dangerous as hell. Something’s got to change.” ∆ —Peter Johnson
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News
Strokes&Plugs
BY KAREN GARCIA
Help by design A riana Lovato was raised on the Central Coast by Persian immigrant parents. “I was first-generation born here, and very early, on it was instilled in us that you should be one of the four top professionals. You know, a dentist, lawyer, doctor, or engineer,” Lovato said. Her parents wanted her to be successful, and while she and her brother desired that as well, Lovato yearned to find her own path to success. She followed a creative path of interior design, earning her associate degree at the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising (FIDM) and her bachelor’s degree in business from the University of LaVerne, working as an assistant designer for five years, starting her own business, and winning several awards in her field. “I was very drawn to interior design, and I kind of just paid attention to the ways spaces made you feel,” Lovato said. Lovato’s business is called Honeycomb Home Design, and for the record, her parents are very proud of her successes thus far. Honeycomb is a boutique interior design studio that specializes in kitchen and bath design, furnishings, remodels, and new construction. Aside from meeting with her clients and understanding their vision for a room or
a home, Lovato said she enjoys being onsite as construction begins so she can help work through inevitable issues that arise. “That’s what I think makes us a little bit different. We’re not your typical decorator, and we’re not just picking out throw pillows and area rugs. It’s a little bit more than that,” she said. As part of being a local business owner, Lovato is always looking for ways to give back to her community. She was recently inspired to donate her time and skills to creating spaces for children with disabilities after working with a client whose son—with cerebral palsy—wasn’t too happy to move into his parents’ new home. “He kept mentioning that the house didn’t feel like his home,” she said. The scope of work that Lovato and her team were working on at the time was a kitchen remodel, so they weren’t working on any other rooms in the home. She wanted to do something for him to make their new home feel comfortable. Lovato gathered other designers and tradespeople in the area to raise enough funds to redecorate his room, paint it, and put motorized windows in. “He was so surprised and happy, he couldn’t stop smiling,” she said. This project was the first of its kind that she had been part of, and it’s
PHOTO COURTESY OF HONEYCOMB HOME DESIGN
Fast fact
FOR YOU Central Coast native Ariana Lovato has a passion for creating environments tailored to her clients’ specific needs.
something that she wants to continue doing. The initiative is now called Honeycomb Gives Back, and she’s looking for candidates who are in need of a room makeover. If anyone in the community wishes to nominate their own child or someone else who would benefit from a remodel, Lovato wants to hear from them. She also wants to give back to young adults who are figuring out their own
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• Paso Robles High School Student Tyler Schimke is the winner of the 2019 JB Dewar Tractor Restoration Program. With this accomplishment, he has advanced to compete in the Delo National Tractor Restoration Program in Indianapolis. This is Schimke’s 10th year of participating in the program. He took first place at the California MidState Fair for his 1945 Farmall tractor. A portion of the national competition includes a public vote for favorite video, so community members are encouraged to cast their votes for Schimke before Oct. 26. To watch his video and cast your vote, visit delotrcvoting.com/voting. To learn more about the JB Dewar and its youth programs visit jbdewar.com. ∆ Staff Writer Karen Garcia wrote this week’s Strokes and Plugs. Send tidbits to strokes@newtimesslo.com.
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paths to success. Lovato said she would advise networking with people in their respective fields so that they can have mentors later on. “They’re people in the industry that I’ve either worked with in the past or perhaps they’re just business owners that I look up to and I continually call on them for support or words of advice,” she said. To learn more about Honeycomb and its services or how to get in touch with Lovato about Honeycomb Gives Back, visit honeycombhomedesign.com.
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www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 9
Opinion
➤ Letters [11] ➤ Rhetoric & Reason [13] ➤ Sound off [13] ➤ Shredder [15]
Commentary
BY DAN COOK
Beware the shark Leaders who don’t listen to voters could take a bite out of your way of life
W
e live in a beautiful part of the world, with open spaces everywhere, mountains and lakes, rivers and valleys. Sometimes as I drive along our (mostly) open roads, looking at the clouds and tree-covered landscapes, I just marvel at the beauty that God and nature have given us here. Economically, we are also doing well, with many well-to-do retirees moving here to enjoy our mild climate and easy lifestyles. Linked to everything, of course, is the growth of the wine (and recently brewing) industry; though not without problems, they have brought significant wealth and improved opportunities to this area. Overall, it’s much better to be in an improving situation rather than a declining one (see the Rust Belt states with their loss of manufacturing). It is important to have smart, honest leadership to protect this wonderful area we all call home, now and in the future. This is a very important topic—don’t take it lightly, or someone or some group will try their best to take some of it away from you. Just because you’re doing OK now, and you think your family is secure, doesn’t mean there aren’t greedier people/ bigger businesses lurking and planning how to improve their situation at the cost of yours. As the saying goes, there’s always a bigger shark in the ocean,
HODIN
waiting for an opportunity to munch you. The current San Luis Obispo County Board of Supervisors majority has been favoring its big business/big donor friends now for some time, and many of the rest of us are at risk because of this. For example, the groundwater situation in the Paso Basin, and elsewhere, has been largely ignored for years. The supervisors have known that the basin was being annually over-pumped by more than 2,400 acre-feet of water (that’s a lot of water, folks) for many, many years, and they largely ignored the issue to the great benefit of big business corporate wineries that were sucking the ground dry by inefficient overhead watering of thousands of acres of new grapes. It wasn’t until about 2014, under the pressure of state mandates and hundreds of local individuals’ wells going dry, that current supervisors were forced to come up with a water management plan. Many areas have unique water situations, and each area was supposed to develop its own plan and pay those costs. But the board, against the advice of the county Farm Bureau, the Paso Robles Wine Country Alliance, and county staff, decided not to do this, but rather make the general taxpayers (that’s you and me) pay for those studies. So, an approximately $6 million liability was taken off the books of the big wineries and given to the general taxpayer. And that, my friends, is an example of the big shark mentioned above munching on your foot/wallet. Good leadership is important. Without it, we all are at risk of losing our wonderful way of life. Leaders are supposed to listen to their voters and
Russell Hodin
10 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
protect us from big business that really doesn’t give a hoot about our world; they only want to make maximum shortterm profits that benefit out-of-area corporations. Do you think a corporation that has drilled a thousand-foot-plus-deep well—at a cost of a million bucks—and is sucking water out of multiple aquifers really cares about your normal-depth home well that just went dry? Not likely. And here’s a second example of those sharks a-munching: The town of Santa Margarita is very strongly against a proposed new quarry due to the estimate that 273 semi-trucks per day (that’s one every two minutes) will be going down their main street. Fifth District Supervisor Debbie Arnold rolled right over the residents/voters and supported that quarry. Per the Sept. 5 New Times story about
school. There are already trucks in and out of the town. ... I really believe that it was a compatible use.’” Of course there are already trucks in and out of town. It’s the addition of 273 more trucks per day that folks object to, and wouldn’t you? But Arnold doesn’t listen to her voters; she listens to big business/big donors. And there we go again, everyone. Do you feel that big shark nibbling at your way of life again? We need to change the attitude of the Board of Supervisors, away from protecting the big business/big donors and back to what they should be doing, which is improving and protecting life for all of us. We face serious issues ahead, some of which are wildfires, drought, climate change, and new industries. We need leaders who can look to the future to find innovative solutions, not dictators who protect their friends and ideology at the expense of the rest of us. I’ve known Ellen Beraud for years and found her to be an experienced, smart,
We face serious issues ahead, some of which are wildfires, drought, climate change, and new industries. We need leaders who can look to the future to find innovative solutions … the supervisors 5th District election: “On the quarry project—which has since been revived and whose application is currently on hold at the county—Arnold said, ‘I personally do not think the impact on the neighbors would have been that great, and I say that including myself. I come into work on Highway 58, and often drop my grandchildren at the Santa Margarita
and honest leader. She has served as the Atascadero mayor and a council member, raised her family here, and would be an excellent addition to the Board of Supervisors. She will study the issues and listen to voters, balancing the good of the community with that of business COMMENTARY continued page 11
Opinion COMMENTARY from page 10
interests. I highly recommend you think clearly about the upcoming elections, as the direction our leaders take will have serious ramifications for all of us. ∆ Dan Cook writes about county politics from Atascadero. Send comments through the editor at clanham@newtimesslo.com or write a response for publication and email it to letters@newtimesslo.com.
#DefundHate: Why we must act
Judaism teaches that everyone is entitled to dignity and honor. One of our most cherished values is to welcome the stranger, especially those fleeing for their survival—because as Jews, we know what it’s like to run from terror and violence, over and over again. Today it is easy to feel overwhelmed by the enormity of the plight of immigrants to the United States. As of July 2019, 24 immigrants, including seven children, had died while being held in detention centers along our southern border. These asylum-seekers are dying due to inhumane conditions and substandard medical care, while a for-profit prison industry continues to explode, raking in billions in profits from their contracts with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). No one should profit from the pain and suffering of others. ICE has turned a blind eye to the abusive conditions confronting thousands of immigrants
Letters
This Week’s Online Poll VOTE AT WWW.NEWTIMESSLO.COM
A SLO County judge ruled that the owners of Grand View Apartments can go out of business and evict their tenants. What do you think about that?
37% It’s awful. The owners were slumlords, and the judge gave them an easy way out. 33% Sad but not surprised. Welcome to renting in SLO County! 20% Not shedding tears. They’ll just have to find a new apartment like the rest of us. 10% Good decision. The tenants could’ve fixed the apartments themselves. 81 Votes
who are being held in private jails without having been convicted of a crime. Although there were multiple serious health and safety infringements, ICE did not impose any penalties for these conditions and avoided enforcing inmate facility requirements. According to the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general, “ICE does not adequately hold detention facility contractors accountable for not meeting performance standards.” The good news is that organizations nationwide have come together to speak out and act in opposition to these atrocities. Bend the Arc is a proud member of the Defund Hate coalition led by Detention Watch Network, United We Dream, and other immigrant-led partners speaking up for immigrant rights. So far, the coalition
has successfully blocked more than $5 billion in funding for border militarization and immigrant detention. The federal budget will be voted on soon and appropriations for ICE and CBP (Customs and Border Protection) will be made. We are encouraging our elected officials to pass a budget that cuts the funding for agencies that separate families, put children in cages, and terrorize and kill immigrants. In the face of a harsh and punitive immigration policy, Jews are mobilizing to advocate for just and compassionate policies toward migrants. What can you do? Locally, Bend the Arc: SLO is organizing a #DefundHate rally on Sunday, Oct. 6, from 1 to 3 p.m. in front of the San Luis Obispo County courthouse, 1050 Monterey St. This rally is one of more than 30 similar public events being held around the country during the week between the Jewish holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur to highlight the injustices of current immigration policies. Speak up, speak out, let your elected officials know that human lives are important and every person needs to be treated with respect and dignity … even as they try to enter our country to find a place where their lives are safe and where their children can thrive. Susan Dressler, Barry Price, Sari Dworkin, Elie Axelroth Bend the Arc SLO
Join the Medicare for All movement
All has—neighbor by neighbor, conversation by conversation—grown support to more than 70 percent of Americans. That number, combined with new leadership and a new Medicare for All caucus in the U.S. House of Representatives, means that now is an unprecedented time to change health care in America. Now is the time to change health care so that all Americans can receive affordable and equitable health care. U.S. Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Seattle) has introduced a new Medicare for All bill in the House of Representatives, HR 1384, and we need to call our lawmakers to ask them to sign on as co-sponsors. It only takes a moment and it’s a way you can let your representative know that this matters to you. Join us! Call your congressional representatives and demand that they cosponsor the Medicare for All Act. Show up at your local Medicare for All organizing party (medicare4all.org/actions)! We need major change to our existing system. One that will make it value people over profits. Let’s stand together to win Medicare for All! Susan Quinones San Luis Obispo
Democracy in action
In the 40 years that I’ve been following the actions of Morro Bay City Hall, it has been at times disheartening, frustrating, anguishing, enraging, and enough (nearly) to drive one crazy, but it has all been an unforgettable experience because of the people I’ve come to know who fight
The grassroots movement for Medicare for
LETTERS continued page 12
Saturday, October 5th 1:00 - 5:00pm
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SLO COAST WINE’S PREMIER EVENT OF THE FALL
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Opinion
Arroyo Grande Beer Feast beer & Food festival
LETTERS from page 11
for justice, fairness, equal treatment, rational governing, and that elusive concept called democracy. The city’s sewer plant is being moved to within a half a mile of the Morro Bay National Estuary! The plant with its highly pressurized system is being built on a creek, allowing spills to have direct access to the estuary via Chorro Creek. In addition, the back of the bay, the closest part of the water body to the sewer plant, is also a designated Marine Protected Area. Picture that disaster waiting to happen. The unpressurized California Men’s Colony wastewater plant has leaked many times. To protect this sensitive and valuable estuary, a referendum petition was circulated to repeal the pre-zoning for the new sewer plant site. Residents collected 1,100-plus signatures in 11 days; that’s an average of 100 signatures a day. Imagine the number we would have reached if we had collected the full 30 days! The public is crying out. For the Morro Bay city manager to state without hesitation or qualification that the city will persist in moving forward—ignoring the will of the voters— is the attitude that defines what has been wrong with the entire five-year process and the current City Council majority. Nancy Bast Morro Bay
OCT 12, 2019 Heritage Square Park in the Village of Arroyo Grande. Enjoy craft beer, food samples, and great music in the park!
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There are many good reasons to impeach President Donald Trump, but the one I find most compelling that’s never mentioned is his commitment to obstruct any progress that would help fight the inevitable, currently occurring, climate change crisis. He and his appointees, many of them former fossil fuel industry lobbyists, have done their best to roll back all regulations that might help that crisis, from fighting emission standards set by the state of California to opening up previously offlimits land for logging. He has expunged the mention of climate change in government documents and made disastrous appointees to cabinet positions, as well as firing or retiring scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The list of his attempts to destroy President Barack Obama’s laudable environmental achievements are endless. I call him “The Destroyer in Chief” (opposing serious gun control regulation adds to this title). In all this, he is aided and abetted by most Republicans who are spineless and have done nothing to deal with climate change or to pass serious gun control regulations. Impeach! Judith Bernstein Arroyo Grande
letters
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Opinion
Rhetoric&Reason
BY AMY HEWES
Earth calling “How dare you. You have stolen my dreams and my childhood. … People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. … For more than 30 years, the science has been crystal clear. How dare you look away.” —Greta Thunberg to the U.N. General Assembly
R
ecently, a grocery clerk packing my bags gently complained that it was kind of a pain for him to open the string bags I use for produce. I appreciated his care in making sure that he wasn’t putting ripe mangoes underneath a six-pack of La Croix, but I said I was trying to reduce my use of plastic bags, which increase our carbon/ fossil fuel footprint. He said, “Well, that’s admirable, but it’s fantasy to think we can affect climate change.” This kind of thinking is not only selffulfilling; it’s also a roadmap to despair, cynicism, and inaction. It’s so much easier to deny the truth of climate change, evade responsibility, and in so doing, rob our children of their future, as Greta Thunberg so effectively articulated in her speech to the U.N. last month. Make no mistake. We are beyond climate change—we are in a spiraling climate crisis. This is not hysteria, not specious theory, no leftist plot. The recent report from the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change tells us that we have only 11 more years before the chain reaction of global warming becomes irreversible. We do not have to accept that we will need to spend an estimated $685 million here in SLO County to hold back rising seas. That extreme heat and drought will cause tens of millions to migrate, and we’ll see food shortages, poisoned oceans, and climate plagues. The problem is huge, but to change the trajectory toward certain disaster for the Earth, we cannot give in to fear, helplessness, depression, and apocalypse fatigue. The planet pleads with us to join Greta and the global and local armies of people mobilizing to take action. Who are they? So many it’s hard to count. If you go to even one local climate action meeting, you will have the opportunity to connect with neighbors who share your sense of urgency.
At the Rise for Climate town hall in San Luis Obispo on Sept. 25, for instance, I met Charles Varni of the SLO Surfrider Foundation; Carmen Bouquin of the Sunrise Movement; David Baldwin of the Plumber & Steamfitters Union; Eric Veium, SLO Climate Coalition Task Force chair; Chris Read, SLO city sustainability director; Rita Casaverde of the Climate Reality Project; and Paul Deis, retired emergency and disaster manager. All knowledgeable, all articulate, all responding to what Varni says is our cosmic call to action. The Sunrise Movement is one of the groups sending out a clarion call. It’s an inspiring, youth-led organization building an army to make climate change an urgent priority. “We are ordinary young people,” the movement’s website states, “who are scared about what the climate crisis means for the people and places we love.” Take Bouquin, a student at Cuesta College. She recalls growing up surrounded by majestic beauty in New Mexico, but depression set in when she recognized the threat to our fragile ecosystem. Her climate anxiety led to her participation in the Measure G campaign to ban fracking in SLO County. “Taking action gave me hope,” Carmen said to me. “I went to my first Sunrise action last year in Sacramento, when we demanded that Gov. Brown halt fossil fuel projects.” Bouquin feels empowered by youth engagement, which brings energy, passion, and a platform for leadership development. When you hear Bouquin talk about the intersection between social and climate justice, you know you’re listening to a leader: “When transitioning to carbon neutrality, we need to make sure we are looking at solutions that help low-income, vulnerable communities,” she writes via email. “Everyone needs access to affordable housing, health care, healthy food, transportation, and safe and clean jobs. All these issues are intertwined.” Emmet Arries is another young SLO climate justice warrior. “I will live with the impacts of the climate crisis my whole life,” he wrote to me. “I see climate activist work as nothing short of preventing international instability due to people fighting over a dwindling resource
pool. I will not be the generation who is complacent in our own destruction.” Then there’s Erin Pearse, a Cal Poly math professor and advisor to the newly formed campus Sunrise Club. Waking to the reality of climate crisis led to depression and outrage. But he found agency in a simple outlet. Inspired by the Extinction Rebellion, whose U.K. members glued themselves to the podium in Parliament, Pearse made signs and carried them around as a oneman protest. “Instead of people responding like I was a crazy person, I got the thumbs-up, and I immediately felt cheered. That simple act contributed to our social and political will to make transformative change,” he said.
Do you want to feel isolated and angry about climate change, or do you want to feel empowered and hopeful? Follow your curiosity, check out the groups taking local action, attend one meeting. For starters, go to: sunrisemovement.org, carbonfreeslo.org, and climaterealityproject.org. As the Sunrise Movement states, “Together, we will change this country and this world, sure as the sun rises each morning.” Please: Let’s heed the Earth’s calling. Δ Amy Hewes is actively involved in grassroots political action. Send comments through the editor at clanham@ newtimesslo.com.
Sound off New Times readers took to Facebook to share their thoughts on our Sept. 26 news story, “Judge rules in favor of Grand View owners, tenants will have to leave.”
Chaos Ends. Recovery Begins Restori ng Hope. Reb uildi ng Lives.
(805) 202-3440 | thehaven.com www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 13
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14 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
Opinion
The Shredder
Do dogs’ lives matter?
I
t was like the Wild West on the 600 block of Santa Rosa Street last Thursday, Sept. 26. Bullets were ricocheting off the driveway as San Luis Obipso Police Officer Joshua Walsh discharged his service weapon toward an apartment building. What was going on? Was there a kidnapping, an amber alert, a dangerous criminal firing back at Walsh and his responding partner Officer Larry Edwards? Why would an officer need to fire three rounds in a residential area, just a block from the San Luis Obispo Police Department? It was because of a dog. Bubbs was shot on his own property for barking at police who showed up for a non-existent burglary. The 7-year-old pit bull-boxer mix was well known and liked in his neighborhood. He was even chill with the mail carrier. Now he’s dead, and his owners— Nick Regalia and Riley Manford—are stuck with an $8,000 vet bill. Where’s John Wick when you need him, amirite? The fictional assassin played by Keanu Reeves came out of retirement after a Russian mobster killed his dog in John Wick (2014), going on a revenge spree. I’ll be surprised if Barney Fife, er, I mean Walsh, even loses his job. Not that we’ll ever find out what happens to Walsh—as SLOPD Chief Deanna Cantrell said, all of that disciplinary stuff is confidential.
Regalia, who works nights, was sleeping at 11 a.m. when Walsh and Edwards responded to a call of a broken window and burglary. Manford went out to ask the officers what they were doing there, informed them there wasn’t a burglary, but Walsh—gun drawn and pointed at Bubbs—was yelling at Manford to control her barking dog. He shot three times, striking Bubbs twice while one errant shot skidded off the driveway. Is this proper police procedure? Is that something we’ll get to know, Cantrell? Police Capt. Jeff Smith said if an officer thinks the dog is an immediate threat, they can shoot it. Um, what about the officer’s baton, Taser, or Mace? You know, nonlethal means in the middle of a residential area. “That’s the reason why we have laws to keep dogs on leash and tethered,” Smith told New Times. “We’ve had several dog bites and even fatal dog bites. ... You never know if a dog is friendly or not.” How would you be spinning this if that third errant shot had gone through an apartment wall and killed or injured a resident, eh? Or if a bullet had hit Manford as she was getting her dog? Manford said she was afraid to reach out and grab her dog because Walsh was pointing his gun at Bubbs, and she didn’t want to get shot. Which, I’ve got to say, is totally understandable. Why didn’t Edwards, Walsh’s partner, have
his weapon drawn? Did he not feel the “immediate threat” that apparently caused Walsh to shoot Bubbs, or is Edwards a normal human being who could see Bubbs was just barking to protect his property and owner from two people walking up his driveway uninvited? Let’s lay it out here: If a mail carrier can make do with Mace to deal with aggressive dogs, you’d think a trained police officer could, too. Take Walsh’s gun, fire him, and pay Regalia and Manford’s vet bill. And some mandatory training on using nonlethal force to subdue a dog (or, you know, a human)? This whole incident was unnecessary bullshit. And speaking of bullshit, that’s what the residents of Grand View Apartments are wading through as they try to find new housing after Judge Ginger Garrett ruled that the complex’s slumlords, er, I mean landlords— Ebrahim and Fahimeh Madadi—could “go out of business” rather than make their Grand Poo Apartment (yeah, I said it) complex habitable. Hmm. So they got away with running a dump for years, collecting rents and never doing maintenance, and now they’re allowed to evict their tenants, sell off their property, and make fixing it up the
new owner’s problem, eh? Meanwhile, the nearly 200 residents can hit the bricks. Paso’s vacancy rate is less than 2 percent, meaning that housing is tighter than the Madadis’ grasp on their purse strings. How are 54 families going to find new housing at a reasonable price? Any way you slice it, the city of Paso Robles will feel the pain along with Grand View’s residents. There’ll be more homelessness, more police calls, less productivity due to missed work, and more school truancy. How can any of this be fair? Why aren’t there laws that hold property owners accountable? The Madadis should forfeit their apartment complex to the city, and a group like HASLO (The Housing Authority of San Luis Obispo) or Peoples’ Self-Help Housing should be allowed to step in and renovate Grand View and keep these families under their roofs. I know—that’s way too logical a solution. Let’s face it: “Problem-solving” and “government agencies” too often seem like oxymoronic terms. For Grand View’s residents, just as they’re approaching Thanksgiving and Christmas, they’re about to feel firsthand the failure of local government. Ho-ho-ho. ∆ The Shredder doesn’t care what people think of it, but it wants dogs to like it. Send ideas and comments to shredder@ newtimesslo.com.
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THE AWARENESS ISSUE IN THE SAME BOAT The Central Coast Dragon Boating Association offers several boat trainings and activities each week in Morro Bay, for a range of skill levels. The nonprofit was founded in 2007 by a group of breast cancer survivors, and it’s grown to more than 100 members today.
BY PET E R J OH N SO N
Paddling for life T
he boat jolts forward faster and faster with each unified stroke. In repetitive, synchronized motions, about a dozen paddlers plunge their oars into the calm morning waters of Morro Bay at the same moment, propelling this 40-foot canoe rapidly along the estuary. At full speed, the vessel feels almost like it’s hovering above the water, the sheer collective will of its tenacious paddlers seemingly defying gravity. Achieving this feeling is one of the goals of dragon boating, an ancient Chinese sport requiring strength, concentration, and teamwork— all traits that going through cancer requires as well. On this Saturday morning, Sept. 28, most of the dragon boat paddlers out on the bay are women who’ve either battled or are still battling breast cancer. Their twice-per-week ritual of training together—in this case, training for competitive races—is a life-affirming escape for them. Each boat member, seated two per row, holds her own paddle, but they move the boat as one. “The minute you step on the boat, you’re a team,” said Miki Gillman of Atascadero, president of the Central Coast Dragon Boating Association (CCDBA) and a breast cancer survivor. “The empowerment comes from moving that boat, and moving it fast.”
PHOTOS BY JAYSON MELLOM
SMILE AND PADDLE Miki Gillman (left) enjoys herself at a dragon boat practice on Morro Bay. A breast cancer survivor, Gillman is the president of the Central Coast Dragon Boating Association.
Local breast cancer survivors find community, competitive outlet in dragon boating
This particular CCDBA team is well-acquainted with hauling ass on a dragon boat. Last summer, in Hungary, the team took home a gold medal at an international dragon boat festival. This summer, they will travel to France for another competition, with even more paddlers in tow this time. The CCDBA competes in races throughout the year in California, winning the gold at a festival in Long Beach last July. “It was just epic,” Gillman said of the team’s past year. “I think it’s a testament to our training and dedication to practicing. We work hard, and we try to be in the best physical shape we can.” For SurviveOars, as they’re called in the CCDBA, staying in good shape can be “a matter of life and death,” according to Gillman. “Because a lot of us have had some very terrifying cancers, we want to just be in the best shape we can be,” she said. “When you’re feeling half dead from treatment and whatnot, you don’t like that feeling. You want to feel healthy again.” CCDBA SurviveOars aren’t alone in their attraction to dragon boating. The sport has worldwide appeal among cancer-surviving communities, due to its proven medical benefits. In the mid-’90s, a Canadian doctor’s research debunked the long-held theory that women with breast cancer should refrain from strenuous exercise. It found, instead, that the opposite was true, and that dragon boating was a particularly beneficial activity that could even help stave off lymphedema. “It was found that repetitive, strenuous upper body exercise was actually much more conducive to healing and strengthening after having surgery,” said Gail Riley of Morro Bay, a survivor and one of the nonprofit’s founding members in 2007. There are several elements of dragon boating that can prove healing to people going through cancer, CCDBA members said. For one, the serene setting on the bay helps connect paddlers with the outdoors and nature. “When we get there at 8:30 a.m., there’s nobody out on the bay except for the animals—the otters, birds, sea lions, and harbor seals,” Gillman said. “It’s just magic. It’s really special.” Dragon boating also fosters a strong sense of team and community. As far as competitive sports go, dragon boating is the ultimate team game. And for many women who participate, Riley said, it’s their first time playing one. “That’s the one consistent comment that I hear from people who are just in love with the sport,” Riley said. “When you’re in the boat, there is no emphasis on, ‘Well, here’s our star paddler.’ You are only as good as how the team all fits together.” “Timing is incredibly important,” Gillman added. “What you want is all the paddles to hit the water at the same time.”
SURVIVEOARS Many of the women who participate in dragon boating on the Central Coast are breast cancer survivors. A popular sport for cancer survivors worldwide, it offers proven medical benefits for those who partake.
Dragon boating’s inherent sense of unity helps forge deep bonds among CCDBA teammates. For them, the boat is their shared place to push their bodies, to triumph, to grieve, and to support one another through the trials of cancer. If a member goes through a recurrence of their cancer, they rally around them in support. If she’s feeling too sick to paddle, they encourage her to join anyway, to go along for the ride, and feel their love and support “We all have a level of understanding that’s deeper than just anybody, because we’ve all been through it,” Gillman said. “We have had people who have been very sick, and some of our people have actually died.” When a CCDBA member “paddles on,” as they say, the group memorializes them each time in a ritual done out on the bay. “We take the boats out and each person has a flower and we spend some time together talking about the person,” Gillman said. “It’s very moving. When we’re done talking we throw the flowers into the water. And then it’s very special when we paddle away and watch what happens to the flowers and how they arrange themselves.” Those paddlers always remain in the spirit of the group, Gillman said. Their names are etched in plaques that are affixed inside the dragon boats or on benches at the docks. “They’re still a part of us,” she said. “We all learn from each other. We learn from other peoples’ journeys, and we all support each other.”’ After forming 12 years ago as a small group of breast cancer survivors, the CCDBA is more than 100 members strong today. Over the years, donors have helped supply the nonprofit with three dragon boats, which are made DRAGON BOATING continued page 23
‘We all have a level of understanding that’s deeper than just anybody, because we’ve all been through it.’ —Miki Gillman of Atascadero, president of the Central Coast Dragon Boating Association (CCDBA) and breast cancer survivor
16 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
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THE AWARENESS ISSUE BY CA M I LLI A L A N H A M
The root of violence Stand Strong and RISE focus on domestic and intimate partner violence prevention
D
omestic violence isn’t just a women’s issue. It’s not just a progressive issue, either. It’s a pervasive one. Statistics from the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence indicate it’s an issue that’s most likely affected more than one of the people you are close to: 1 in 3 women and 1 in 4 men have experienced some sort of domestic violence by an intimate partner. But those are just statistics. When you put faces with the numbers, it changes the way you see the issue, Marisa Balmana said. Balmana started as a volunteer for RISE (Respect, Inspire, Support, Empower), a San Luis Obispo County nonprofit that provides crisis intervention and treatment services to survivors of sexual assault, before becoming its volunteer coordinator. For four years, she prepped clients for direct services, worked the crisis line, and walked with clients into police interviews. “When you start seeing faces, and it’s way more frequent than you think it would be,” Balmana said. “Chances are it is part of your world and you don’t even know it. It’s affecting people in your world in some capacity.”
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October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Learn more about what’s happening to get the word out this month, how you can help, and where you can find help if you need it, by visiting riseslo.org and standstrongnow.org.
As she learned more about intimate partner violence and how to define an unhealthy relationship, she said that she started to realize that physical and emotional abuse is so normalized in our culture that most people don’t understand what a healthy relationship is or what a healthy sex life looks like. And as the people who were close to her started to understand what she did for a living, she said, more and more people came forward to talk to her. Family members and friends, many of whom she never knew were experiencing or had experienced violence and unhealthy relationships, felt safe around her. “It’s so much more expansive than even what you see directly on the job. You hear a lot of the nitty-gritty on the crisis line and in the police interviews,” Balmana said. “It takes a lot of strength and courage to be there with somebody in those moments, and it’s very needed.” Although she no longer works with people in their moments of crisis, she
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PREVENTION COMMITTEE RISE’s Close to Home Community Organizing Team is spearheaded by a committee made up of 24 volunteers who range from 14 to 43 years of age.
found another way to give to the cause that she’s passionate about—the Close to Home Community Organizing Team. RISE is spearheading Close to Home with the help of California Department of Public Health funding. The fouryear program that started this year is designed to engage the community to search for the root causes of sexual and intimate partner violence and work together to come up with potential prevention measures. “It just feels a little more tangible in terms of making a difference for me. It’s more on the hopeful side of things,” Balmana said. “Close to Home is so important because it’s sort of giving
things a definition and making it easier to talk about.” Making gender and intimate partner violence easier to talk about is key to prevention work, according to Janae Sargent, the education program manager at RISE. It helps in that search for the root cause of violence, which Sargent said is essential in searching for prevention measures that work.
Getting the word out
RISE and Stand Strong, formerly known as the Women’s Shelter Program, are working in tandem on programs DOMESTIC VIOLENCE continued page 20
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THE AWARENESS ISSUE DOMESTIC VIOLENCE from page 18
that reach out to people from all over the community in an effort to build consensus on where violence comes from and how to prevent it. But before they can help facilitate prevention work, Sargent said, they need the community on board with the fact that the problem exists in the first place. That includes conducting surveys, interviewing community members, and working with local students and athletes. “People need to make the real connection about why it’s important to prevent gender-based violence,” Sargent said. “We want to show the community that this is a community issue.” That’s at least in part why San Luis Obispo High School sophomore Stella McSween volunteered to become one of the 24 members of the Close to Home Community Organizing Team. She helped put out the recent Close to Home community survey by attending events such as the Downtown SLO Farmers’ Market and works on the initiative’s social media accounts. “I believe that even if it’s not talked about as much in a small community like San Luis Obispo that sexual assault and domestic violence happen,” McSween said. “It’s a subject with a lot of stigma ... and I believe that it will cause less stigma around the subject.” The organizing team developed the community survey to gauge how residents feel about violence and discrimination in San Luis Obispo, how they define it, and what they know about the services
available. Using the information gathered on the survey, the team is starting to conduct more in-depth interviews with some of the residents who filled out a survey to talk about their answers to the questions and brainstorm prevention measures that are specific to the community. Eventually, the goal is to come up with solutions developed by San Luis Obispo residents for San Luis Obispo residents. Stand Strong is doing similar survey work with a small cross section of leaders in the community to gauge how much people know about intimate partner violence in the community, and how willing they are to learn more about it, the services that are available and how it can be prevented. Sheridan Riolo, Stand Strong’s prevention coordinator, said SLO received a “readiness” score based on the interviews she’s already conducted. The city landed somewhere in the middle. “People are vaguely aware of the services available ... and the issue itself,” Riolo said. “A lot of people were vaguely uncomfortable taking the survey.” As people get more comfortable talking about the issue, the thought is that they will become more willing to see the issue for what it is and to discuss ways to prevent it.
Starts with a leader
Over the last five or six weeks, for 20 minutes before every practice, the SLO County Junior Roller Derby Team has engaged in discussions about things like bullying, gender roles, and what healthy relationships look like as part of Stand Strong’s Athletes as Leaders program.
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Usually, such talks consist of watching a short YouTube video about whatever the topic is and then the skaters start talking, coach Marina Penna said. The group of kids ranges from 4 to 17 years of age, so not everyone can talk about everything together, but the skaters have also talked about ideas of beauty, stereotypes, and positions of power. Penna said most of the parents have been very supportive of it, and the ones who don’t want their skater involved just show up a little later to practice. As a sex educator and a domestic violence peer counselor with Stand Strong, Penna said when she first heard about the program she thought it would be fantastic to do with the skaters. Coaching, for her and SLOCO Junior Roller Derby, isn’t just about teaching kids how to skate and having a good time. It’s important to make them better people and give them the tools they need to go out and create the society they want to live in. “It really gives the students a chance to think critically and deeply about topics that are important in their lives and things they are experiencing, but they might not get education about it in school or another setting,” Penna said. “I’m really hoping that they take away some sense of empowerment and feeling that as an athlete and as a leader and as a young person in the world, they have the ability to speak up when they need to and when they feel it’s right. “And that sense of self that they can do that,” she continued, “and they can stand up for the right thing, even if they are the only one who’s standing up to say ‘this is wrong.’”
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And that is exactly the point, said Riolo, who works with coaches through the Athletes as Leaders program and its compatriot the Coaching Boys into Men program. Athletes as Leaders is in its first season and is geared toward female athletes (although the roller derby team consists of a mix of gender identities, Penna said), and Coaching Boys into Men is entering its second season. Because athletes are seen as leaders in the social system at most schools, working with athletes could impact the culture at a school—and Riolo said the results so far are promising. The goal of the programs is to increase student athletes’ knowledge about consent, intimate partner violence, and healthy relationships; increase their intentions to intervene in a situation where discrimination or violence might be present; and a decrease in negative bystander behavior (which might encourage discrimination or violence). It’s a way of potentially preventing intimate partner violence before it starts. Stand Strong worked with more than 65 athletes in the spring—including those on the Mission Prep High School baseball and volleyball teams—and is collaborating with the Nipomo High School football team on the Coaching Boys into Men program this season. “We saw increases where we were supposed to see increases and decreases where we were supposed to see them,” Riolo said. “We’re hoping to kind of encapsulate as many people who we can who have change-making power.” Δ
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THE AWARENESS ISSUE BY K A RE N GA RC I A
Cancer connections Local cancer survivors band together to provide information and support via phone calls with community members experiencing cancer
C
ancer can be a lonely disease. It often leaves a person feeling overwhelmed with all the symptoms and side effects of treatment as well as the constant doctor visits. But support is only a phone call away with the efforts of Cancer Connections of San Luis Obispo. Established in 2005, the all-volunteer group takes calls from individuals experiencing cancer at any stage of their illness to provide words of encouragement, share their experiences, or offer recommendations to other organizations. Elaine Gardiner founded Cancer Connections after undergoing her own battle with ovarian cancer in 1997. “When I was first diagnosed I thought, ‘Gee, I’d like to talk to somebody who has had this.’ But of course I didn’t know a soul,” she said. Instead, Gardiner got support from a friend who had survived breast cancer. While it wasn’t the same type of cancer, she said having someone to talk to who understood what she was going through helped her feel better about how to approach her illness. So Gardiner went along the path of the disease. She took half a year off from teaching elementary school, had a hysterectomy and six rounds of chemotherapy, lost all of her hair and had
more surgery. When that journey was over, she said she was ready to give back to others who struggle with cancer. “A lot of us who have dealt with cancer have had, this is going to sound crazy, so many blessings. From the people we’ve met to the people that have helped us and do so much to care for us,” she said. The Cancer Connections group has grown from about five friends who are all cancer survivors to 50 members. It starts with a phone call that gets picked up by Gardiner, who has a home office and a private line for Cancer Connections. The calls are always confidential, and once the person on the other end explains their situation and the help they’re looking for, Gardiner connects them with one of her members. One of those next connections could be with Seema Benson. She’s a breast cancer survivor and has been with the group from the beginning. She said she believed the group was a good alternative to what little support services were available at the time. “I had gone to a support group, and I came back very disappointed because it was really more about people telling you what you should and shouldn’t do,” Benson said.
PHOTO BY JAYSON MELLOM
DRAGON BOATING from page 16
PADDLING TOGETHER Margaret Stone (left) and Missy Bullaro paddle with their teammates in Morro Bay at a Sept. 28 Central Coast Dragon Boating Association practice.
in and shipped from China. Its first boat came thanks to funding from a local oncology group; its second was donated by a team member who passed away and wrote the donation into her will (they named it after her—Joanna’s Joy); and the most recent boat came last year courtesy of a paddler’s local company. Having three boats allows the CCDBA to broaden its horizons as an organization. Now, each week, it offers a busy schedule of dragon boat trainings and activities designed for virtually
When connected with a member, she said, the caller can ask questions about what they’ve gone through or how certain medications have affected them. The group can’t help with legal or medical questions, but its members can point callers in the right direction. Benson said she personally feels that it’s a gift to be able to be there for others by sharing her experience and knowledge. “First of all it’s scary to call someone because you’re pretty much bearing your soul, and it’s just such a scary diagnosis. But by being able to call someone from the comfort of your home instead of going to a meeting might be the right option for some,” she said. Cancer Connections is also available for family members or friends who have someone in their life who has been diagnosed with cancer. People who know a friend or have a family member with cancer Benson said, often feel helpless or want to learn how they can help. The group is completely volunteer run, so it doesn’t fundraise for itself or raise funds for other organizations with similar goals. The members don’t need to raise money for the effort because almost all of the members are part of another organization that does just that, Gardiner said. Cancer Connections’ Bob Voglin, who was diagnosed with throat cancer 15 years ago, is one of those supporters. His wife saw an ad in the paper about the group, and he decided to join. Not only is Voglin connecting with other individuals who are experiencing anybody—man, woman, young, old, etc.—interested in the sport. Last year, it welcomed a college team into the mix, with Cal Poly and Cuesta students who paddle out together each weekend. “We’ve really tried to encourage other people who want to join us,” Riley said. “We’re trying to give opportunity for anyone else who would like to benefit and participate in the sport.” For Riley, the teams’ diversity is what’s become most fulfilling about the venture she helped start. “It’s just such a draw for me, personally, this wonderful group that has become such
LINK-UP WITH RESOURCES ◗ To connect with a Cancer Connections member, call (805) 235-2997. To learn more about its services or read about the members, visit cancerconnectionsslo.org. ◗ Surfing for Hope is hosting the annual Longboard Surf Contest on Oct. 12, starting at 7 a.m. The event is open to all ages and includes a variety of divisions. ◗ The Cancer Resource Health Fair will also be held on Oct. 12, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., featuring businesses and local groups providing support, education, and help. From 5 to 8 p.m., the Gala Dinner and Auction is at the Willow Kitchen in the Seacrest Hotel. For more information, visit surfingforhope.org.
the disease, but he’s raising money for hospitals and organizations that help those individuals combat it. Voglin is the founder of Surfing for Hope, a longboard surfing competition that takes place in Pismo Beach. In addition to the competition, there’s also a resource fair and musical entertainment. The funds raised go toward the Cancer Resource Center, Cancer Support Community, Mission of Hope, and Arroyo Grande Hospital’s Cancer Center. The organization gives back in other ways, including partnering with the SeaCrest OceanFront Hotel to teach children whose guardians or family members are dealing with the disease how to surf. “I feel like I’m one of the luckiest people in the world. I know cancer was very challenging for me, but I feel it was part of my path in life. And I think it propelled me into wanting to be more serviceoriented with Cancer Connections. That was certainly the bond of why I wanted to do that,” he said. Δ Staff writer Karen Garcia can be reached at kgarcia@newtimesslo.com. dear friends,” Riley said. “The group is very eclectic in age, in profession, and just who the participants are, and I love that.” For Gillman, it all goes back to the powerful, exhilarating feeling of “moving that boat, and moving it fast.” “It’s an incredible upper body workout; it works all of you,” she said. “When you have cancer you feel beaten down. ... When you can feel empowered physically, that’s what it’s all about. That’s really what we need. That’s part of the healing.” Δ Assistant Editor Peter Johnson can be reached at pjohnson@newtimesslo.com.
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Tuesday, and Friday. The schedule on Monday and Friday is somewhat flexible. If you’re interested, please send your résumé and examples of your work to: NTMG Advertising Designer Job New Times Attn: Cindy Rucker 1010 Marsh Street San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 Or email your résumé and a link to your portfolio to: designerjob@newtimesslo.com 2540 Skyway Drive, Santa Maria · SantaMariaSun.com www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 23
THE AWARENESS ISSUE BY K A S E Y B U B N A SH
Clothing for a new life
Clothing Swap and other donations help domestic violence survivors rebuild
PHOTO COURTESY OF ASIA CROSON
PILES OF CLOTHES Asia Croson, founder of the Clothing Swap and Drive, sits among bags of clothes left over after one day-long swap event. The event’s remaining garments are donated to Stand Strong and other charities.
3
OCTOBER
members in need in a simple but effective way. “You really are at a loss when you have no money and no time, and you want to do something for your community,” Croson said. The Clothing Swap makes it easy to do just that—for pretty much everyone but Croson, that is. To her, each swap means days and days of work, first organizing 20 to 30 volunteers, taking in and going through hundreds of bags of clothes before and during the event, and then deciding which clothes should go to which local charities the day after. There are typically so many leftover garments that not all of them can go to Stand Strong, Croson said, but that’s her top-priority recipient and was the first to partner up with the Clothing Swap. Croson landed on Stand Strong originally because she wanted the leftover clothes to go back to women locally. Most people know someone who’s been in some kind of abusive relationship, she said, whether physical or emotional, and a lot of times the victims of those situations grab what they can and leave without much else. Stand Strong doesn’t have the space to store clothes or the staff to go through them, however, so donations from the Clothing Swap go to United Voluntary Services (UVS) Thrift Store, which then gives Stand Strong clients vouchers to come into the store and get clothes free of charge. That CLOTHING SWAP continued page 25
SWAP, DONATE, OR BOTH!
The next Clothing Swap and Drive will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Oct. 12 at iFixit at 1330 Monterey St. For more information, visit asiacroson.com/events/clothing-swap-fall2018-6x9xl-xf459. Cal Poly is also hosting a drive to benefit local crisis shelters that will run until Oct. 26 at noon. Only new or unused items, gift cards, or cash donations will be accepted. Donations can be left in a collection box in the Women’s and Gender Studies Department office in building 47, room 25H. For more information visit wgs.calpoly.edu/ community-crisis-shelter-donation-drive.
UNIQUE EVENTS CELEBRATING THE 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF SIDEWAYS THE MOVIE!
PHOTOS BY MERRIE WALLACE
18–20
A
sia Croson was a college student when she started swapping clothes with her friends and classmates instead of buying new ones. It was sometime around 2009. Croson was attending school at Cal Poly, and she was broke, busy, and didn’t really have the resources to shop every time it was necessary. But she noticed that some of her friends were interested in old things hanging in her closet that she didn’t want anymore, and vice versa. So, she thought, “Why don’t we trade?” It started small—just a few friends digging through each other’s unwanted garb in Croson’s apartment—but over the years, its popularity grew among other college students and eventually non-student residents. A few years later, Croson partnered with some Cal Poly sororities to help run the event, and soon more than 200 people were filtering in and out of her tiny downtown apartment four times a year. That’s when Croson decided the event needed to become “more of an operation,” and the Clothing Swap and Drive as we know it today was born. Now, nearly a decade after Croson first considered trading clothes, the Clothing Swap is an allday event hosted four days a year at iFixit and attracts roughly 600 participants. If you bring clothes you don’t want, you can take anything you want home. Whatever gets left behind—usually more than 100 bags of clothes—Croson and her team of volunteers analyze, organize, and donate to Stand Strong, an organization that works to support the survivors of domestic and intimate partner violence, partly by providing shelter space, advocacy, and financial help for those leaving domestic violence situations. “It’s such a win-win,” Croson told New Times. Swapping clothes instead of buying new ones helps the environment, Croson said, and people who attend have a chance to spruce up their closets, save money, and help other community
Congratulations to Our Winners! Champions – Accuair 'Fist Pistols' 2nd Place – ES Aero 'Game of Throws' 3rd Place – LH Group 'Ripper Magoos' “Gucci” Award – Silvertrac Athletics
PRESENTED BY
FEATURED EVENTS WEEKEND KICKOFF
SIDEWAYS SHUTTLE TOUR
GRAND TASTING
Kick off the Sideways Fest 15 year anniversary celebration weekend with a special “Sideways” Movie Experience under the stars at the Solvang Festival Theatre. Wine Tasting, Q&A panel with Sideways personalities and a screening of the movie Sideways.
Hop on our Shuttle and experience the Sideways Tour first hand! Visit some of Miles’ and Jack’s weekend haunts, taste wine and enjoy great photo ops with the Sideways Saab at filming locations including Sideways Inn, Peake Ranch, Hitching Post II, Ostrich Land and the Solvang Restaurant!
Sample from over 40 Sta. Rita Hills and Santa Barbara County Wineries and local craft beers. Food truck court, live entertainment, Sideways activites, a Merlot tasting and more. Must be 21+ to enter.
Friday, Oct. 18 | 6-10pm Solvang Festival Theater
Saturday, Oct. 19 | 11am-5pm Sideways Inn, Buellton
Special Thanks to Our Sponsors
Sunday, Oct. 20 | 12-4pm River View Park, Buellton
For tickets visit Sidewaysfest.com SPONSORED BY
24 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
SLObigs.org
CLOTHING SWAP from page 24
indirect donation process was born out of both necessity and Stand Strong’s broader goal of empowering survivors of domestic violence, according to Executive Director Kirsten Rambo. “We’re not here to decide what you need for you,” Rambo said. “Because that’s been such a hallmark of the abuse they’ve been through.” Domestic violence is incredibly complex and often includes deep-seated manipulation, isolation, and multiple forms of abuse, according to Rambo. When one person in a relationship repeatedly and systematically uses abuse to gain and maintain power over another—and it happens over a long period of time—the victim is typically pretty deep in before he or she realizes how truly bad the situation is. Abusers often isolate their partners from family, friends, and co-workers. Financial abuse is common, Rambo said, and abusers can make it difficult for their partners to hold jobs by harassing them at work until they’re fired. It’s not uncommon for abusers to take out credit cards in their victims’ names and ruin their credit, Rambo said, force them to hand over any money they do have, or support them financially so they feel they don’t have the means to leave. People who come to Stand Strong looking for help typically don’t have much more than the clothes on their backs, Rambo said. They don’t have anyone to go to, they often don’t have much money, and they need help rebuilding credit, getting jobs, and securing housing. For these survivors, the opportunity to pick out clothing for themselves and their children at a thrift store can help them regain a sense of worth. Donations from events like the Clothing Swap are endlessly helpful to Stand Strong clients, Rambo said. Clothes, food, toiletries, baby wipes, and especially gift cards and gas cards, all make a huge difference in the lives of domestic violence survivors. “The folks we serve are trying to rebuild their lives after this trauma,” Rambo said. “[Donations] can make the difference between someone getting a job interview or not.” Δ Staff Writer Kasey Bubnash can be reached at kbubnash@newtimesslo.com.
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A PROGRAM OF: A PROGRAM
OF:
PHOTO COURTESY OF ASIA CROSON
Award-Winning community Journalism Right heRe on the central coAst SHOES! This is just a small portion of the clothes available at one Clothing Swap and Drive. The local event started small but now attracts hundreds of participants.
Free. eveRy thursdaY. san Luis obispo county’s news & enteRtainment Weekly · newtimesslo.com www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 25
OCT. 3 – OCT. 10 2019
RUFF CROWD
The 2019 Wiener Dog and Small Dog Races take place at Sunken Gardens in Atascadero on Saturday, Oct. 5, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Proceeds of this annual Colony Days tradition will benefit Heilmann Dog Park. Entry to participate in the race is $20 per dog. This event also includes a dog costume contest, which dogs can participate in for free. Visit heilmanndogpark.com to find out more. —Caleb Wiseblood PHOTO COURTESY OF HEILMANN DOG PARK
SPECIAL EVENTS
food, and more. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $3-$5. 805-5481894. SLORRM.com. San Luis Obispo Railroad Museum, 1940 Santa Barbara Ave, San Luis Obispo.
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
THE UNIVERSE OF GALAXIES TALK UC Santa Cruz
38TH ANNUAL MORRO BAY HARBOR FESTIVAL This family-friendly festival features an Oktoberfest beer garden, Oyster Eating and Hawaiian Shirt contests, live music, and more. Oct. 5, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. and Oct. 6, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. $7. 805-772-1155. mbhf.com. Embarcadero Morro Bay, 714 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
CAMBRIA SCARECROW FESTIVAL A communitywide event with hundreds of scarecrows bowling, bathing, painting, pedaling, fishing, and fl ying through Cambria, San Simeon, and Harmony. Through Oct. 31 Free; special events may vary. 805-395-2399. cambriascarecrows.com. Cambria Scarecrow Fest, Citywide, Cambria.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL Enjoy ice cream, camaraderie, and participating in Living History at Spooner Ranch House with the Central Coast State Parks Association and the Harmony Valley Creamery. Oct. 5, 1-4 p.m. Free. 805-528-0513. Montaña de Oro, 3550 Pecho Valley Rd, Los Osos. SENIOR HEALTH FAIR Seniors are invited to attend a free Health Fair presented by Los Osos Cares. Features health related exhibits, demonstrations, and activities. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. 805-592-2701. losososcares.com. South Bay Community Center, 2180 Palisades Ave, Los Osos. WATERFRONT MARKET MORRO BAY This event is free to the public and family and pet friendly. Oct. 5, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. and Oct. 6, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. 805-4029437. Giovanni’s Fish Market, 1001 Front St., Morro Bay. NORTH SLO COU NT Y
ATASCADERO COLONY DAYS The Colony Days celebration includes a day-long festival, a parade, Tent City re-enactment, dog races, and more. Oct. 5, 7 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. colonydays.org/. Sunken Gardens, 6505 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
THE HAUNT IN ATASCADERO This haunted house attraction functions through more than 90 actors, make-up artists, and technicians. Show times vary throughout the month. Check site for full schedule. Oct. 4-31 thehauntinatascadero.com/. The Haunt, 5805 El Camino Real, Atascadero, 805-221-5084.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
CENTRAL COAST RAILROAD FESTIVAL Features a railroad swap meet, the model railroad, guest speakers,
astrophysics department chair Raja Guha Thakurta will discuss how the materials that compose human beings and other life forms were synthesized inside the Sun’s ancestral stars. Oct. 9, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Spanos Theatre, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7113.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
2019 WELLNESS FAIR This event showcases health, finance, leisure, fi tness, personal safety, and business services for adults over the age of 50. Oct. 9, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. 805-489-1488. southcountychambers. com/50-expo. South County Regional Center, 800 W. Branch, Arroyo Grande.
FIVE CITIES REPAIR CAFE Handy volunteers fi x broken items for free at Exploration Station in Grover Beach. Bring an item you can carry in (with replacement part, if known). Clothing, jewelry, small appliances, furniture, tools, bikes and PCs. Oct. 6, 1-5 p.m. Free. repaircafe-groverbeach-5cities.org. Exploration Station, 867 Ramona Ave, Grover Beach, 805 473 1421.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
DIMENSIONS IN DANCE 2019 A varied dance concert of guests artists and student works ranging from ballet to jazz, modern, hip hop, tap, and folklórico dance. Oct. 10, 7-9 p.m., Thursdays-Saturdays, 7-9 p.m., Oct. 11, 7-9 p.m., Oct. 12, 2-4 & 7-9 p.m. and Oct. 13, 2-4 p.m. through Oct. 10 $17. hancockcollege. edu/dance/performances.php. Allan Hancock College, 800 S. College Drive, Santa Maria.
S A N TA Y N E Z VA L L E Y
24TH ANNUAL CHUMASH INTERTRIBAL POW-WOW This event is open to the public and will include dance
contest, drum contest, arts and crafts, and more. Oct. 5 and Oct. 6 $5 parking; $35 camping. solvangusa. com. Live Oak Camp, Highway 154, Santa Ynez.
FUNDRAISERS NORTH SLO COU NT Y
2019 WIENER DOG AND SMALL DOG RACES The pet costume contest follows the races. Proceeds benefi t Heilmann Dog Park of Atascadero. See website for details. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $20 per dog to participate in race; costume contest is free. heilmanndogpark.com/. Sunken Gardens, 6505 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
SUNDAY BINGO Atascadero Elks Bingo is played on the first Sunday of every month. The public is welcome. Oct. 6, 12-4 p.m. $15. 805-466-3557. Atascadero Elks Lodge, 1516 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
16TH ANNUAL BINGO TO BEAT CANCER Proceeds will benefi t SLO Noor Medical Clinic and Cancer Support Community. Oct. 5 $45. my805tix. com. SLO Elks Lodge, 222 Elks Lane, San Luis Obispo.
PANCAKES STACK UP TO DOLLARS FOR WOMEN’S EDUCATION The American Association of University Women (AAUW) and Bay Osos Kiwanis Club will join forces. Proceeds will be used for scholarships and educational opportunities for women. Oct. 5, 8-11 a.m. $10 adults; $5 children under 10. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Hall, 2201 Lawton Ave., San Luis Obispo.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
AG LIBRARY BOOK SALE Bimonthly book sale to raise money for library programs and projects. Subjects from A to Z. Friends of the Library gain early entrance at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 12, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Arroyo Grande Library, 800 W. Branch, Arroyo Grande, 473-7164, slolibrary.org.
New Times and the Sun now share their community listings for a complete Central Coast calendar running from SLO County through northern Santa Barbara County. Submit events online by logging in with your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account at newtimesslo.com. You may also email calendar@ newtimesslo.com. Deadline is one week before the issue date on Thursdays. Submissions are subject to editing and approval. Contact Calendar Editor Caleb Wiseblood directly at cwiseblood@newtimesslo.com.
26 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
INDEX Special Events ..........[26] Arts ............................[26] Culture & Lifestyle....... [31] Food & Drink..............[34] Music .........................[36]
ZACH ELLIOTT MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUNDRAISER Enjoy the Melodrama’s performance of Drac in the Saddle while supporting the Zach Elliott Memorial Scholarship, given annually to a Nipomo High School student who shares Zach’s love of the performing arts and passion for helping others. Oct. 3, 7-9:30 p.m. $35. 805-748-7182. americanmelodrama.com/. Great American Melodrama, 1863 Front St., Oceano.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
DONATIONS FOR VETERANS’ STAND DOWN Accepting all new items including towels, blankets, clothes, diapers, trash bags, and more. Located at Gate 5 off of W. Stowell. Wednesdays, 12-2 p.m. through Oct. 16 Free. 805-364-8402. Santa Maria Fairpark, 937 S. Thornburg St., Santa Maria.
HOLIDAY EVENTS S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
ZOMBIE GLOW RUN Proceeds benefi t injured or sick shelter animals. Features walk/run options, live music, food, and more. Oct. 12, 5-8 p.m. $25. 805-260-2386. sbcanimalcare.org/zombie-glow-run. Santa Maria Animal Center, 548 W. Foster Road, Santa Maria.
ARTS CLASSES & WORKSHOPS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
AFRICAN DANCE Enjoy instruction to the beat of live drumming. Wednesdays, 6:30-8 p.m. $10 drop in. 805459-6317. afrodance.net/. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay.
BEGINNING SOCIAL BALLROOM DANCE Learn beginning east coast swing, foxtrot and cha cha too. Tuesdays, 7:15-8 p.m. $100; $185 per couple. 805225-1728. debonairedancers.com. FitnessWorks, 500 Quintana Rd., Morro Bay.
CREATIVITY Held every Wednesday unless other events/ classes conflict. Informal and open to the public. Bring your art work, in any medium, and join others working in various mediums. Bring your own lunch. Wednesdays, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
CREATIVITY GROUP Enjoy a creative experience each Wednesday, unless other events/classes conflict. ARTS continued page 28
WHITEOUT VS.
F R I DAY, O C T. 1 1 @ 7 P M M OT T AT H L E T I C S C E N T E R
WEAR WHITE! HISPANIC HERITAGE NIGHT WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9 @ 7 PM S P A N O S S TA D I U M VISIT
FREE WHITE CAL POLY SHIRTS
FOR THE FIRST 500 FANS!
FREE “SOMOS MUSTANGS” SCARVES
VS.
FOR THE FIRST 750 FANS! UC DAVIS
GoPoly.com/tickets
TO P U R C HAS E TI C KE TS TODAY!
Rockin’ R Winery 10th Anniversary Celebration (OPEN TO R-FAN CLUB AND THE PUBLIC)
Saturday, October 5th Featuring
Crooked Eye Tommy (Danceable Rock and Blues)
with special guests Joe Hertler & The Rainbow Seekers
crookedeyetommy.com
(Modern Psychedlic Pop)
NO HOST Food & Beverage Service from 11:30am; Doors @ 7pm; Show 8–11pm
SLO Brew Rock 855 Aerovista Lane, SLO · (805) 543-1843
Spanos Theatre - SLO October 4th 7pm October 5th & 6th 2pm Buy Tickets Now - Buy Tickets Now
joehertler.com
Tickets: $10 + fees in advance · $15 at door · available @ ticketweb.com Brought to you by Rockin’ R Winery and Ineffable Music rockinrwinery.com · ineffablemusic.com
SAVE THE DATE www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 27
ARTS from page 26
FREE YOUR INNER ARTIST Women veterans are
Bring your art work, in any medium, and join others. Wednesdays, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
MEET THE MASTERS: CHILDREN’S ART CLASSES For students K-6. Oct. 12, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. and Oct. 13, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. $20 per session; preregistration is required. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
OLD WORLD OIL PAINTING AND DRAWING
invited to to join Joy Danley and Carlota Santa Cruz for a special workshop to free your inner artist. Oct. 6, 6-9 p.m. Free. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
MIXING COLORS TO GET THE COLOR YOU WANT
fun to new heights on aerial silks. All levels welcome. Wednesdays, 7-8:15 p.m. Varies; see site for details. 805-549-6417. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., San Luis Obispo.
AERIAL SILKS SKILLS: 18+ Learn to fly with grace in
This class focuses on the techniques of mixing color and the properties of color that will give us the colors we want. Oct. 7, 9 a.m.-noon $45. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
this mixed level silks class. Geared toward those familiar with climbing, straddle-ups, foot locks, and hip keys on aerial silks. Tuesdays, 5:30-6:45 p.m. Varies. 805-549-6417. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., San Luis Obispo.
PASO ROBLES ART ASSOCIATION PHOTO GUILD
BELLYDANCE CLASSES Come learn
This bi-weekly class that includes drawing technique and progresses through limited palette to full palette. All levels of ability and experience are welcome. First Monday of every month, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. through Nov. 18 $35 for MBAA members; $40 for non-members. 805234-6941. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
Learn, interact, and share with a diverse community of photographers. Meets through yellow back door on Railroad St. Second Tuesday of every month, 7-9 p.m. through Dec. 31 No fee. pasoroblesartassociation.org/guilds/. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles, 238-9800.
PAINT PARTY No artistic experience necessary. All materials and supplies provided. Outside food and drinks welcome. Saturdays, 7-9:30 p.m. $40. 805-772-9095. foreverstoked.com/paintparty.html. Forever Stoked, 1164 Quintana Rd., Morro Bay.
share ideas, and provide friendly critiques. Oct. 8, 9 a.m.-noon $5/Free for PRAA members. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
PRAA SPLASHING PAINT WITH THE PAINTERS’ GUILD Painters of every media meet and paint together,
CABARET SINGING AND PERFORMANCE CLASS
necklaces, or four coasters. Instructor will bring a huge assortment of shells, colored beach glass, and baubles to create your project. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-noon $30-$85. 805-286-5993. creativemetime.com. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
ACTING CLASSES Film & TV Acting Classes for all ages and skill levels. Optional showcases for major Hollywood talent agents & casting directors. 10:30 am -8:45 pm (Sundays only). Varies per class. 310-910-1228. actorsedge. com. Mission Cinemas, 1025 Monterey St., SLO.
SUCCULENT PUMPKIN WORKSHOP Enjoy attaching
AERIAL HOOP Dance, spin and develop strength
DATE NIGHT POTTERY Guests can enjoy sharing wine,
moss and succulents to the top of an orange pumpkin for a long lasting seasonal decoration. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-noon $45. 805-927-4747. cambrianursery.com/ event/workshop-succulent-pumpkin/. Cambria Nursery & Florist, 2801 Eton Rd, Cambria.
ZEN DOODLE ADULT COLORING BOOK GROUP Relax and unwind with adult coloring books. No experience necessary. Fridays, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. 805772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
DRAWING FOR TEENS WITH LURY NORRIS This in-depth drawing class with Lury Norris offers teens an introduction to drawing. Students learn and practice drawing basics by study of shading and values Oct. 5, 3-5 p.m. $200. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
and grace on the lyra, an aerial hoop apparatus. All levels welcome. Mondays, 5:30-6:45 p.m. Varies. 805549-6417. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., San Luis Obispo.
AERIAL SILK SKILLS Learn to fly with grace in this mixed level aerial silks class. Geared toward those familiar with climbing, straddle-ups, foot locks, and hip keys on aerial silks. Thursdays, 7-8:15 p.m. Varies. 805-549-6417. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., San Luis Obispo.
AERIAL SILK SKILLS: ALL AGES Learn to fly with grace in this mixed level aerial silks class. Geared toward those familiar with climbing, straddle-ups, foot locks, and hip keys on aerial silks. Saturdays, 10:15-11:45 a.m. Varies. 805-549-6417. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., San Luis Obispo.
AERIAL SILKS FUNDAMENTALS AND BASICS Elevate dance, gymnastics, acrobatics, fitness, and
MUSICAL IMPROV CLASS Taught by Sabrina Pratt and Ryan Lloyd. First Monday of every month, 6-8 p.m. through Oct. 28 $150 for all 6 weeks. Tigerlily Salon Studio, 659 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo, 805-541-9911, tigerlilysalon.com. PACIFIC HORIZON CHORUS WELCOMES WOMEN SINGERS Visit site or come by in person to see if these music lessons are right for you. Tuesdays, 6:30-9 p.m. 805441-1405. pacifichorizon.org. SLO United Methodist Church, 1515 Fredericks St., San Luis Obispo.
traditional middle eastern dance to modern fusion styles. The fundamental movements are taught, along with the POLE FITNESS Learn the basics or OCT. 3 – OCT. 10 drum rhythms, veil work, zills, and other master new skills on static or spinning 2019 props. The classes are taught by Jenna pole at this all-levels pole fitness class. Mitchell. Tuesdays, 6-7 p.m. and Tuesdays, Mondays, 7-8:15 p.m. $25-$30 for a drop-in; Thursdays, 5:30-6:30 p.m. $12 drop-in; $45 check site for more details. 805-549-6417. monthly. 805-550-8192. worldrhythmandmotion.com. levityacademy.com. Levity Academy, 207 Suburban Rd., World Rhythm and Motion Studio, 3422 Miguelito Ct., San Luis Obispo. Studio #3, San Luis Obispo. SATURDAY ART WORKSHOP FOR KIDS: “BELIEVE
Learn the art of singing in a Cabaret style and setting. Find your key and style with a skilled accompanist. You may start anytime during the semester. Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m. $185 for 12 week class or $20 per night as a drop-in student. 805-772-2812. cuesta.edu/ communityprograms. Cuesta College, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo.
RESIN WORKSHOP Choose from a frame, two
com/groupclasses. Music Motive, 3440 S Higuera St Suite 130, San Luis Obispo.
throwing pots on the wheel, and more. Fridays, Saturdays, 6-8 p.m. $65 per person (includes clay, glazing, and firing). 805-896-6197. Anam Cre Pottery Studio, 1243 Monterey St, San Luis Obispo, anamcre.com.
DYNAMIC FIGURE DRAWING: 10 ESSENTIAL CONCEPTS & TECHNIQUES WITH DAVID LIMRITE Learn 10 essential concepts and techniques to create dynamic, emotional and expressive figure drawings and paintings. Working from a live model, students will put these into practice to create their own dynamic figure drawings. All paint media also welcome. Oct. 4-6, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. $335 members, $355 general. 805-5438562. sloma.org/. San Luis Obispo Museum of Art, 1010 Broad St., San Luis Obispo.
GUITAR GROUP CLASS: LEVEL II This 10-week class is designed to get you from the beginning stage to an intermediate level of playing. Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. through Nov. 13 Varies. 8052421586. fluentguitar.
IN YOUR DREAMS” Each student will create their own unique canvas to take home. Saturdays $55. 805-6101821. keshetlavoux.com. Keshet Lavoux, 165 Grand Ave, San Luis Obispo.
SEA GLASS HAMMERED WIRE JEWELRY Learn fun techniques to create a one-of-a-kind jewelry set. Oct. 7, 6-8 p.m. $52. 805-549-1222. creativemetime.com. San Luis Coastal Adult School, 1500 Lizzie St., San Luis Obispo. SLO NIGHTWRITERS MONTHLY MEETING: PUBLIC WELCOME The organization’s goal is to provide a venue for SLO County writers to connect. Features a variety of guest speakers. Second Tuesday of every month, 6:30-8:30 p.m. $5 for guests; free with membership. slonightwriters.org. United Church of Christ (Congregational) of San Luis Obispo, 11245 Los Osos Valley Rd., San Luis Obispo, 805-544-1373.
TRULY BEGINNING DRAWING WITH LURY NORRIS Learn, step by step, how to tap into your natural ability to see and use visual strategies like an artist. Oct. 12, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. and Oct. 13, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. $130 members, $145 general; includes all materials. 805-543-8562. sloma.org/. San Luis Obispo Museum of Art, 1010 Broad St., San Luis Obispo.
UKULELE GROUP CLASS: LEVEL II This 10-week class is designed to get you from the beginning stage ARTS continued page 29
NOW IN PASO ROBLES ALL TICKETS. ONE PLACE.
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We have expanded our offices in Paso Robles
17 STRONG benefit concert featuring mark mackay & charlie McNeal
Open: Monday-Friday 8:30 am - 5:30 pm
1035 Vine Street, Suite A Phone: 805.543.7969
SAT., OCTOBER 12 4–11:30pm Blast 825 Brewery TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
MY805TIX.COM
Does your organization sell tickets? Get more exposure and sell more tickets with a local media partner. Call 546-8208 for more info. 28 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
Providing non-profit mental health counseling since 1968.
Locations in San Luis Obispo, Paso Robles, Grover Beach, Santa Maria and Cambria General information: director@cccslo.com
ARTS from page 28 to an intermediate level of playing. Emphasis will be on learning to play with others, start improvising, learning new chords, how to play in any key, and understanding music to learn songs faster. Mondays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. through Nov. 18 $120-$150. 805-242-1586. fluentguitar. com/groupclasses. Music Motive, 3440 S Higuera St Suite 130, San Luis Obispo.
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AFTER-SCHOOL ART WORKSHOP (AGES 5-6) Each session will cover different mediums and subjects. Registration is required prior to attendance. Mondays, 3:15-4:45 p.m. $100. 805-668-2125. lila.community. LilA Creative Community, 1147 East Grand Ave. Suite 101, Arroyo Grande.
AFTER-SCHOOL ART WORKSHOPS (AGES 7-12) 2-5 week sessions available. Register online, call, or email to reserve. Tuesdays, 3:15-4:45 p.m. $50-$120 per session. 805-668-2125. lila.community/ lilacreativecommunityworkshops/schedules/new-afterschool-workshops. LilA Creative Community, 1147 East Grand Ave. Suite 101, Arroyo Grande.
DRUM MAKING Drum making with Julie Johnson. Second Saturday of every month, 12-4 p.m. $250. 805674-4277. Halcyon Store Post Office, 936 S. Halcyon Rd., Arroyo Grande.
OPEN STUDIO FOR HOMESCHOOLED CHILDREN Includes drawing, painting, sewing, weaving, mixed media, printmaking, and 3-dimensional building in a safe, noncompetitive environment. Fridays, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. $20 per hour. 805-668-2125. LilA Creative Community, 1147 East Grand Ave. Suite 101, Arroyo Grande, lila.community.
PLAY EXPLORE CREATE 2 Includes drawing, pastel, watercolor, tempera, collage, printmaking, sewing, and building. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9-10:30 a.m. & 1:30-3 p.m. $20. 805-668-2125. lila.community. LilA Creative Community, 1147 East Grand Ave. Suite 101, Arroyo Grande. TEEN’S OPEN STUDIO: TEEN COMIC CREATION GROUP Teens will collaborate on developing characters, comic strips, backdrops, or 3D models. Thursdays,
3:15-4:45 p.m. $20. 805-668-2125. lila.community/. LilA Creative Community, 1147 East Grand Ave. Suite 101, Arroyo Grande.
SPECIAL ART EVENTS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
BY THE SEA: NEW PHOTOGRAPHY AND WATERCOLORS BY PATTI EVERETT Features new photography and watercolors by Patti Everett. Fresh views of local beaches and oceans in sublime colors, mood, and texture. Oct. 6, 1-3 p.m. Free. 805-9952049. cayucosart.org. Cayucos Community Art Gallery, 10 Cayucos Dr., Cayucos.
MANHATTAN SHORT FILM FESTIVAL: MORRO BAY Features short films from around the world. This festival is happening at 400+ venues worldwide. Oct. 3, 1-2 p.m. Free. 805-781-1215. slolibrary.org. Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay.
POETRY/SPOKEN WORD HOSTED BY MARY ANNE ANDERSON Special Guest interview with host Mary Anne Anderson and features reading, followed by open mic. First Thursday of every month, 7-9 p.m. Free. 831-277-4028. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Hall, 786 Arlington, Cambria.
org. Atascadero Library, 6555 Capistrano, Atascadero.
SECOND SUNDAY AT SEVEN Featuring Angie Boissevain and PC Lowe. Open poetry reading follows. Oct. 13, 7-9 p.m. Free. 805-772-2880. Coalesce Garden Chapel, 845 Main St., Morro Bay.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
ART AFTER DARK SLO Unites visual, literary, and performing artists with the community and participating venues. Visit site for full list of programs and events. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. 805-544-9251. artsobispo. org. SLO County, Countywide, San Luis Obispo.
INVERSE PERFORMANCE: JIBADE-KHALIL HUFFMAN AND SHERYL TUTTLE ROSS For this special event generously sponsored by the Coastal Awakening, visual and performance artist Jibade-Khalil Huffman takes part in a talk-back on the intersection of his work with scholar Sheryl Tuttle Ross’ writings and research. Oct. 3, 7-9 p.m. Free. 805-546-3202. Harold J. Miossi Gallery, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo, cuesta. edu/student/campuslife/artgallery/.
OPEN STUDIOS ART TOUR 2019 Presented by ARTS Obispo. Various artists and studios participate. Visit site for more info. Oct. 12-20 artsobispo.org. San Luis Obispo, Citywide, SLO.
STEVE KELLOGG: A RETROSPECTIVE An art reception. Appetizers available and wine for sale. Oct. 4, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. 805-927-8190. Cambria Center for the Arts, 1350 Main St., Cambria.
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ART AFTER DARK PASO Unites visual, literary, and performing artists with the community and participating venues. Visit site for full list of programs and events. First Saturday of every month, 6-9 p.m. 805-544-9251. artsobispo. org. Participating locations, Paso Robles, City-wide. PEOPLE AND PLACES: A PHOTOGRAPHIC JOURNEY THROUGH TIME Eight local photographers demonstrate how photography connects us to other people, places and time periods. Mondays-Saturdays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. through Nov. 30 Free. 805-461-6161. slolibrary.
PHOTO COURTESY OF TRACEY MONTELONGO
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ART IN THE PARK AT DINOSAUR CAVES Features original art and handmade crafts created by local artists, food, live music, and more. First Sunday of every month, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. through Dec. 1 Free. 805-704-7083. artintheparkshellbeach.com. Dinosaur Caves Park, 2701 Price St, Pismo Beach.
FASHIONS FOR A PURPOSE Fashions by White House, Black Market, Adore, and Cage Oct. 12 Monarch Club, 1645 Trilogy Pkway., Nipomo, 805-343-9459. MANHATTAN SHORT FILM FESTIVAL: NIPOMO This festival is happening at 400+ venues worldwide. Oct. 5, 1:30-2:30 p.m. Free. 805-781-1215. slolibrary. org. Nipomo Library, 918 W. Tefft, Nipomo.
TIPSY GYPSIES LIVE Oct. 12 Point San Luis Lighthouse, 1 Lighthouse Rd., Avila Beach.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
POETRY NIGHT AT CORE WINERY Monthly poetry group with two featured poets and open readings. Check CORE Winery Facebook page for details or schedule changes. Second Saturday of every month, 7:30 p.m. Free. 805-937-1600. corewine.com. CORE Winery, 105 W Clark Ave., Orcutt.
EXHIBITS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
DAVID KREITZER: FINE ART OPEN STUDIOS Featuring water, landscape, figure, fantasy and floral works. Collectors of Kreitzer’s works include Howard and Roberta Ahmanson, Michael Douglas, Ray Bradbury, Robert Takken, and Jane Hind. Sundays, 12-6 p.m. Varies. 805-234-2048. kreitzerArt.com. Kreitzer Fine Art and Voice Studios, 1442 12th St., Los Osos.
SHARK TALE
The Shell Beach Library hosts its Sharks and Tide Pools workshop on Wednesday, Oct. 9, from 4 to 5 p.m. All ages are welcome to this class to learn about sharks as well as the plants and animals you can find in local tide pools. Admission is free and no registration is required. Call (805) 773-2263 or visit slolibrary.org for more info. —C.W.
MBAA 2019 ANNUAL JURIED EXHIBIT This event is a collective of exceptional paintings and includes internationally acclaimed artists. Award-winning artist Dennis Curry serves as judge. Also featured is the threedimensional art of Guyla Amyx. Through Oct. 28, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay. MORRO BAY FRIDAY ARTWALK A self-guided tour that takes place every second Friday of the month. Guests can enjoy refreshments, trolley rides, and more. Second Friday of every month, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805-7722504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
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2019 NORTH COUNTY STAFF ART To kick off the school year, the new SLOCOE Gallery presents a showcase of the talent that teaches their students everyday. Through Nov. 3, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-2389800. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles, studiosonthepark.org.
CALIFORNIA IMPRESSIONISTS: THE MASTERS AND THE GREATS THEY INSPIRE With an aim to connect the great and timeless legacy of historic California Plein Air art to the 21st Century, Studios on the Park presents this exhibit. Oct. 3-Nov. 17, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
HARVEST HUES Award-winning photographers Deb Hofstetter and Dean Crawford Jr. bring the colors of harvest on the Central Coast to Studio 4. Through Nov. 30, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark. org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles. SEVEN UP: NEW WORK BY 7 ARTISTS New work by 7 artists: Michael Messina, Jane Russell, Kabe Russell, Cynthia Kevorkian, Dennis Jackson, Denise Schryver, and Marie Ramey. ongoing Varies. 805-466-3684. ärt/, 5806 Traffic Way, Atascadero.
SHERYL KNIGHT Through Oct. 31 Park Street Gallery, 1320 Park Street, Paso Robles, 805-286-4430, parkstreetgallery.com.
WINTER IS COMING Frosty-themed artwork is on display in the Paso Robles Art Association gallery through October. Oct. 3-30, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-2389800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine St., Paso Robles.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
THE ART OF MIKE AND ROSEMARY BAUER: CENTRAL COAST VISIONS Features colorful, impressionistic representations of Central Coast landscapes. Oct. 4-Nov. 1, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Free. 805594-1220. HumanKind Fair Trade, 982 Monterey Street, San Luis Obispo.
BRUSHSTROKES 2019 A California-wide, juried exhibition sponsored by The Painters Group and SLOMA, that showcases 52 paintings in a variety of styles and subject matter. Juror: Jerry McLaughlin. MondaysSundays. through Oct. 27 Free. 805-543-8562. sloma. org. San Luis Obispo Museum of Art, 1010 Broad St., San Luis Obispo. CLOSING RECEPTION AND PANEL: WOMEN AND POWER IN CALIFORNIA Join us for a closing reception for Julie Heffernan’s As the Waters Rise and subsequent panel conversation on Women and Power in California. Oct. 11, 5-7 p.m. Free. 805-546-3202. Harold J. Miossi Gallery, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo, cuesta. edu/student/campuslife/artgallery/.
CYNTHIA MEYER: LOCAL COLOR Enjoy landscape, light, and architecture captured on a sunny day in SLO. ongoing, 6-9 p.m. Free. 805-210-8687. secretslo.com. Sauer-Adams Adobe, 964 Chorro St., San Luis Obispo. KIDS’ EYE VIEW 2019 Celebrating the prowess of the younger artists in our community, this annual Kids’ Eye View showcases selected artwork created by 5-year-olds to teenagers. Through Oct. 27, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. 805543-8562. sloma.org. San Luis Obispo Museum of Art, 1010 Broad St., San Luis Obispo. SUE DUNKER: COASTAL COLORS Art expresses emotional content with bright and intense colors. Through Nov. 28 805-542-9000. Frame Works, 339 Marsh St, San Luis Obispo, sloart.com.
UNDER THE SEA: ART SHOW RECEPTION The Ambiance Tribe of Live Oak music Festival 2019 will be showing a selection of this year’s work for the month of October. Oct. 4, 6-9 p.m. Art prices vary. 805-541ARTS continued page 31
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 29
Tickets on sale now at My805Tix.com and at our official Box Office at Boo Boo Records in SLO Suppo ing local journalism, one ticket at a time. Cracker & Peter Case FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 Morro Bay Harbor Festival
The Haunting of Hill House OCTOBER 4–20 Klein Dance A s Studio
Bingo to Beat Cancer SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 Elk’s Lodge of San Luis Obispo
Author in the Spotlight: An Evening with Lisa See THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3 Pavilion on the Lake
Tent City A er Dark Conce FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 Tent City in Sunken Gardens
Scarecrows on Photo Parade: A Workshop in Photography SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 San Simeon Lodge Restaurant
Anthony Smith at the Castle SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 Tooth & Nail Winery
Tribute to Kathy Ma ea TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 Morro Bay Wine Seller
NAWBO Presents: 2nd Annual SPEAK OUT THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 Mindbody
Fall Succulent Pumpkin Workshop FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 Talley Vineyards
The Rocky Horror Picture Show FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 Dana Adobe Cultural Center
Beer Feast Festival SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Heritage Square Park
Swinging Through the Sixties SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Fundraiser for SLO Master Chorale
Sunset Wines & Full Moon Vines SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Doce Robles Winery & Vineyard
Morro Bay WILD SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Wildlife Rehabilitation Center
Backyard Taco Brawl SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13 Tooth & Nail Winery
Beer Yoga SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13 Naughty Oak Brewing Co.
MY805TIX BOX OFFICE IS NOW OPEN
Get your tickets online or at Boo Boo Records, the official Box Office for My805Tix events! Boo Boo’s is located at 978 Monterey Street in SLO.
The Young Dubliners SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Sea Pines Golf Reso
A Benefit Conce for 17 Strong Mark Mckay & Charlie McNeal SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 Blast 825 Brewery, Orcu
Castle Dinner Series THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17 Tooth & Nail Winery
Cheese + Charcuterie 101 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17 Cass Winery
Blendfest 101 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 Hoyt Family Vineyards
War of the Worlds OCTOBER 18-20 By the Sea Productions
Pig Roast Winemaker Dinner FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 CASS Winery
Oktobe est SLO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Pouring Productions
Evening in Greece SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 SLO Veterans Hall
Romantic Cello with Hilary Clark and Dmitriy Cogan SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Trinity United Methodist Church
Restless Hea SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Rava Wines + Events
Cambria Octobe est: Beer, Brat and Mug Package SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Cambria Scarecrow Festival Fundraiser
Harvest Festival-Carnaval! SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Robe Hall Winery
2019 Grape Stomp & Tacos SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 CASS Winery
A Breast Exposé The Breast Kept Secret SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 Fair Oaks Theater
Kenny Lee Lewis’ “The Big One” 65th Bi hday Bash Ba lyz Bash in Conce SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 D’ Anbino Tasting Room
Bingo Blast SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 Elwin Mussel Senior Center
Lucky Stiff Musical SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 Santa Maria Civic Theatre
Between Worlds: Autumn Serenade SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 United Methodist Church
Cooking + Cra ing with Beer SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 Monterey St. Market
Call them at 805-541-0657.
Interested in selling tickets with My805Tix? Contact us for a demo today! info@My805Tix.com
30 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
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ARTS from page 29
PHOTO COURTESY OF CREATIVE ME TIME
MORRO BAY WILD Enjoy a virtual tour and
5888. linnaeas.com/. Linnaea’s Cafe, 1110 Garden St., San Luis Obispo.
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FROM ARTISTS, FOR ARTISTS, BY ARTISTS Featuring fine art oils and pastels from Corynn Wolf, acrylics from Ryan Adams, and works from various mediums by Marc Wolf ongoing Free. 805-7736563. Puffers of Pismo, 781 Price St., Pismo Beach, puffersofpismo.com/.
WORLD WAR II EXHIBIT An exhibit to honor Veterans of World War II featuring paintings by Milford Zornes and Millard Sheets, who were official artists for the U.S. military in the China-Burma-India theatre of war. Through Nov. 11, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $5, free for DANA members and children under 12. (805) 929-5679. DANA Adobe Cultural Center, 671 S. Oakglen Ave., Nipomo, danaadobe.org.
CALLS FOR ARTISTS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
CALL FOR ARTISTS: 2019 ANNUAL WINTER FAIRE AND JURIED CRAFT SHOW Become part of a collective of exceptional paintings, photography and fine crafts, spanning a variety of artistic mediums from traditional to contemporary. Through Oct. 29, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. $5-$10 per entry. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay. org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
CALL TO ARTISTS Now accepting proposals for solo and group art exhibits in established gallery. Through Dec. 30 805-542-9000. Frame Works, 339 Marsh St, San Luis Obispo, sloart.com.
STAGE NORTH SLO COU NT Y
NICK OFFERMAN: ALL RISE Award-winning actor, writer, woodworker, and comedian Nick Offerman will be hitting the road for the first time since 2017, with his brand-new live show, All Rise. Oct. 12, 8-10 p.m. $41.75-$61.75. 805-286-3680. vinaroblesamphitheatre. com/concerts/2019/nick-offerman. Vina Robles Amphitheatre, 3800 Mill Rd., Paso Robles.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
THE FANTASTICKS An acclaimed musical fable about love and loss that manages to be nostalgic and universal at the same time. Wednesdays-Saturdays, 7-9 p.m. and Saturdays, Sundays, 2-4 p.m. through Oct. 13 $20-$39. 805-786-2440. slorep.org/shows/the-fantasticks/. San Luis Obispo Repertory Theatre, 888 Morro St., San Luis Obispo. COMEDY NIGHT AT 7 SISTERS Enjoy live standup comedy from local and touring comics with locally brewed beverages. Second Saturday of every month, 7-9 p.m. $5 suggested donation. 805-868-7133. 7Sisters Brewing Company, 181 Tank Farm Rd. Suite 110, San Luis Obispo, 7SistersBrewing.com.
INTRO TO IMPROV COMEDY CLASSES All intro courses taught by CCCT owner, Sabrina Pratt. Wednesdays, 6-8 p.m. $225 for all 6 weeks. 805-2423109. centralcoastcomedytheater.com. Tigerlily Salon Studio, 659 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo. SLO COMEDY Features new performers every month. Food and drinks available. Arrive early to ensure a good seat. Second Saturday of every month, 7-9 p.m. Suggested donation $5. 805768-7133. 7Sisters Brewing Company, 181 Tank Farm Rd. Suite 110, San Luis Obispo, 7SistersBrewing.com.
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STUDIO OF PERFORMING ARTS: THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW Sweethearts Janet and Brad stumble upon the flirtatious mad scientist, Dr. Frank-N-Furter’s, bizarre abode during his annual Transylvanian science convention. Audience participation is expected. For ages 18 and over only. Oct. 11, 8-10 p.m. and Oct. 12, 8-10 p.m. $25; $5 prop bag. 805-9295679. danaadobe.org. DANA Adobe Cultural Center, 671 S. Oakglen Ave., Nipomo.
DRAC IN THE SADDLE AGAIN: A VAMPIRE’S WESTERN The un-dead Dracula of Transylvania (Jeff Salsbury), hops on the stagecoach to Tombstone, Arizona where he meets a cast of crazy characters. Wednesdays-Saturdays, 7-9:30 p.m. through Nov. 17 $23-$26. 805-489-2499. americanmelodrama.com. Great American Melodrama, 1863 Front St., Oceano.
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE LECTURES & LEARNING NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
E-DEVICE HELP Please sign up in advance. Thursdays, 8:30-10 a.m. Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay.
TOASTMASTERS WEEKLY MEETING A meeting for those who wish to improve their communication skills and lose their fear of public speaking. Thursdays, 6:30-7:45 a.m. SLO County Government Center, 1055 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo, 805-544-6654.
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LECTURE ABOUT SUBMARINES IN US NAVY A lecture entitled “The United States
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Submarine Force in Today’s World”. Oct. 9, 6:308 p.m. Free. 805-203-5219. Cambria Veterans Memorial Hall, 1000 Main Street, Cambria.
NIPOMO SENIOR CENTER The center is open five days a week; closed on weekends and holidays. Mondays-Fridays, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 805-929-1615. Nipomo Senior Center, 200 E. Dana St., Nipomo.
MORRO BAY METAPHYSICIANS Explore the history of metaphysics with a different topic each week. Led by Tobey White Heart Crockett. Fridays, 12-1 p.m. $10-$20 suggested donation. 805-772-2880. facebook. com/groups/MBMetaphysicians. Coalesce Garden Chapel, 845 Main St., Morro Bay.
SUPPORT GROUPS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
CO-DEPENDENTS ANONYMOUS MEETING CoDependents Anonymous (CoDA) is a 12-step recovery program for anyone who desires to have healthy and loving relationships with themselves and others. Saturdays, 1-2:15 p.m. Free. 805-203-5875. Cambria Connection, 1069 Main St., Cambria.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
CITIZENSHIP CLASS To prepare for the citizenship exam. No registration required. Tuesdays, 5-6 p.m. Free. 805781-5783. slolibrary.org. San Luis Obispo Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo.
OCT. 3 – OCT. 10 2019
DEATH CAFE: LET’S TALK IT OVER An open discussion on staying fully engaged in life while exploring death and dying. With Dr. Denise LaRosa and co-facilitated by Paul Johnson. Hosted by Wilshire Hospice’s Center for Grief Education and Healing. First Monday of every month, 3:30-5 p.m. deathcafe.com/ deathcafe/8253/. Nautical Bean Coffee House, 2010 Parker St, San Luis Obispo, 805-439-4683.
DISCUSSING GRIEF Join us in a safe space to share
SEA FOR YOURSELF
Creative Me Time hosts its next Sea Glass Jewelry workshop at the San Luis Coastal Adult School on Monday, Oct. 7, from 6 to 8 p.m. This class covers different techniques to create a jewelry set using sea glass and hammered wire. Admission is $52. Visit creativemetime.com to find out more. —C.W.
FREE ADOPTION INFORMATION SESSION Free sessions on adoption information at our San Luis Obispo office located at 1540 Marsh Street, Ste 130. The FCCA has placed over 5,100 waiting children into forever families since 1983. First Thursday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Free. 805-542-9084. fcadoptions.org. Family Connections Christian Adoptions, 1540 Marsh St. #130, San Luis Obispo.
WONDER CONFERENCE Two days surrounded by like-minded community, hands-on training, and enriching workshops with space to reflect. Oct. 10, 6 p.m. and Oct. 11-12, 9:15 a.m. $35-$255. 805-5488700. donate.sloclassical.org/wonder-conference. SLO Classical Academy, 165 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo.
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POINT SLO LIGHTHOUSE TOURS Docents lead guests on a one-hour tour of the historic site, the buildings, and up to the Lighthouse tower. Please arrive 15 minutes early. All proceeds go directly toward the site’s restoration. Wednesdays, 12 & 1 p.m. and Saturdays, 12, 1 & 2 p.m. $17-$22. 805-540-5771. pointsanluislighthouse.org. Point San Luis Lighthouse, 1 Lighthouse Rd., Avila Beach. TOURS FOR PADDLERS A special tour for visitors who come by ocean. Paddlers will need to clean sand from their feet and dry themselves before the tour so not to damage the antique flooring. Saturdays, 10-10:45 a.m. $6.49. 805-540-5771. Point San Luis Lighthouse, 1 Lighthouse Rd., Avila Beach.
CLUBS & MEETINGS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
SOCRATES: WEEKLY DISCUSSION A weekly
Wednesdays, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805-544-6366. Facebook. com/CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
FREE-FOR-ALL MOVIE NIGHTS Each meeting, a movie is selected from a wide variety of GLBT films. Second Friday of every month, 7-10 p.m. Free. galacc.org. GALA Center Gallery, 1060 Palm St., San Luis Obispo.
FRIDAY NIGHT MAGIC AT CAPTAIN NEMO Refreshments available on site for purchase. Fridays, 5-8 p.m. 4 Booster Buy In. 805-544-6366. Facebook.com/ CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
GALA Q YOUTH GROUP This group serves gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender youth (ages 13 through 18). Thursdays, 6-8 p.m. 805-541-4252. galacc.org. GALA Center Gallery, 1060 Palm St., San Luis Obispo.
HOME SHARE SLO COFFEE CHAT An informal gathering to talk about home sharing. Second Wednesday of every month, 10:30 a.m.-noon Free. 805-215-5474. homeshareslo.org. Panera Bread, 299 Madonna Rd., San Luis Obispo.
MAGIC: THE GATHERING AT CAPTAIN NEMO Magic: The Gathering (Standard/Type 2). Refreshments available on site for purchase. Mondays, 5-8 p.m. 2 Boost Buy In. 805-544-6366. Facebook.com/ CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
MAH JONGG AT THE MONDAY CLUB Come enjoy a fun and friendly game of Mah Jongg at the Historic Monday Club. Beginners are welcome. Mondays, 2-5 p.m. $5. 805-541-0594. themondayclubslo.org. The Monday Club, 1815 Monterey St, San Luis Obispo. MINIATURE GAMING AT CAPTAIN NEMO
discussion group to discuss current and interesting topics. Politics and religion are not discussed. Wednesdays, 10 a.m.-noon Free. coalescebookstore. com. Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St., Morro Bay, 805-772-2880.
Refreshments available on site for purchase. Please park in reserved spaces. Thursdays, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805-5446366. Facebook.com/CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
SURFSIDE TENNIS CLUB Saturdays, 9 a.m. Free the first month; $30 per year afterwards. surfsidetennisclub. teamopolis.com. Morro Bay High School, 235 Atascadero Rd., Morro Bay, 805-771-1845.
card games, and more. Bring any games you’d like. Refreshments available on site for purchase. Please park in Reserved spaces. Sundays, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. and Saturdays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. 805-544-6366. facebook.com/pg/CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
BOARD GAME NIGHT AT CAPTAIN NEMO Refreshments available on site for purchase. Tuesdays, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805-544-6366. Facebook.com/ CaptainNemoGames. Captain Nemo Games, 563 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
BOOK DISCUSSION New book every month. Second Thursday of every month, 10:30 a.m.-noon Free. 805539-9374. slolibrary.org. San Luis Obispo Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo. DEBTORS ANONYMOUS MEETING A 12-step program for people having problems with money and debt. Mondays, 5:30-6:30 p.m. First Presbyterian Church of San Luis Obispo, 981 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo, 805-543-5451, fpcslo.org.
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS AT CAPTAIN NEMO Refreshments available on site for purchase.
SLO TABLE TENNIS All ages and skill levels welcome. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 7-10 p.m. and Sundays, 4-7 p.m. Free. 805-215-4963. Ludwick Community Center, 864 Santa Rosa, San Luis Obispo.
walk-thru of our the clinic and grounds and meet a wildlife ambassador. Oct. 12, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $25. 805-748-7425. pacificwildlifecare. org/morro-bay-wild/. Pacific Wildlife Care, 1387 Main St, Morro Bay.
OPEN GAMING AT CAPTAIN NEMO Board games,
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Meets at various locations in SLO County: Arroyo Grande, Oceano, San Luis Obispo, Morro Bay, Cambria, Atascadero, and Paso Robles. No dues/fees. Mondays-Sundays, 6-7 p.m. Free. oacentralcoast.org. San Luis Obispo, Citywide, SLO.
RAINBOW CONNECTION GROUP This group serves gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender youth (ages 18 through 26). Meets every Thursday (except the the third of the month). Thursdays, 6-8 p.m. 805-541-4252. galacc. org. GALA Center Gallery, 1060 Palm St., San Luis Obispo.
SLO CHESS Anyone is welcome to come and play. New players encouraged. Saturday’s games take place in Morro Bay, at the “big board” on the Embarcadero. Thursdays, 6:30-9 p.m. and Saturdays, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. through Oct. 5 Free. 805-540-0470. Target, Los Osos Valley Rd., San Luis Obispo.
you journey through the grieving process. With grief comes mourning; and while mourning brings healing, it’s important to have support and understanding while you are experiencing your loss. Second Tuesday of every month, 3-4:30 p.m. 0.00. 805-269-0141. Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St., Morro Bay, coalescebookstore.com/.
GRANDPARENTS SUPPORT GROUP Facilitated by Branden Kay with Family Ties. Fridays, 9-11 a.m. Free. 805-592-2701. losososcares.com. Grandparents Support Group, 800 Manzanita Drive, Room 18, Los Osos. NORTH SLO COU NT Y
GENERAL GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP (NORTH COUNTY) A support group for those grieving the death of a loved one. This group provides the opportunity to connect with individuals in a similar situation. Drop-ins welcome. Wednesdays, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. 805-5442266. hospiceslo.org/support-groups/general-griefsupport-group-0. Hospice SLO County: North County Office, 517 13th St., Paso Robles.
NAMI FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP Hosted by NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness). A free and confidential group of families helping families who have a loved one living with mental health challenges. First Monday of every month, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. 805-6748009. Life House, 5850 West Mall Rd., Atascadero.
NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUP MEETING A meeting for those who know or have known a feeling of desperation concerning the addiction of a loved one. Fridays, 12-1 p.m. and Tuesdays, 6-7 p.m. Free. 805-2215523. The Redeemer Lutheran Church, 4500 El Camino Real, Atascadero. SAN LUIS OBISPO
#METOO: DROP-IN SUPPORT GROUP FOR WOMEN These monthly support groups are for adult women who have experienced sexual harassment or sexual abuse. The focus of the group is to create a safe place for participants to share, be connected with local resources, and get support in the healing process. First Tuesday, Friday of every month, 12-1 p.m. RISE, 51 Zaca Ln., Ste. 100, San Luis Obispo, 805-226-5400.
CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP This group is appropriate for; caregivers, family members, and friends who are experiencing anticipated loss of someone close to them nearing death, and the complex emotions that may emerge. Second Wednesday of every month, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. https://www.wilshirehospicecc.org/grief-workshopsand-education/. Wilshire Center for Grief Education and Healing, 285 South Street Ste. M, San Luis Obispo. CHILD LOSS SUPPORT GROUP Hospice SLO County is offering this support group for those grieving the loss of a child. Drop-ins welcome. Thursdays, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo.org/support-groups. Hospice SLO County, 1304 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo.
FAMILY CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP A support group for those who are caring for a loved one, no matter the diagnosis. Drop-ins welcome. Every other Friday, 2:30-4 p.m. Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo.org. Hospice SLO County, 1304 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo.
FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP A free support group for those who suffer from Fibromyalgia. Second Saturday of every month, 11 a.m.-noon Free. 805-5436236. ccfibro.com. San Luis Obispo Library, 995 Palm St., San Luis Obispo. HEALING DEPRESSION SUPPORT GROUP A safe place for anyone dealing with depression who would like to receive support from others. Mondays, 6-7 p.m. Free. 805-528-3194. Hope House Wellness Center, 1306 Nipomo Street, San Luis Obispo. NAR-ANON: LET IT BEGIN WITH ME Nar-Anon is a support group for those who are affected by someone else’s addiction. Tuesdays 805-458-7655.
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE continued page 32
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 31
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE from page 31
2019 Central Coast Railroad Festival
naranoncentralca.org/meetings/meeting-list/. San Luis Obispo, Citywide, SLO.
RESOLVE GENERAL INFERTILITY SUPPORT GROUP Support for those suffering through the trauma
The San Luis Obispo Railroad Museum will host the annual Central Coast Railroad Festival on October 4, 5 and 6, 2019 to celebrate the rich history of trains and tracks on the Central Coast. Several locations throughout the region will be open with displays and more all weekend.
RAILROAD MUSEUM OPEN SATURDAY ONLY:
•Amazing Model Railroad Tour •Railroad Swap Meet •Kids Activities
•Historic Railroad Equipment •Food and Beverages are by Railroad BBQ
MUSEUM OPEN OCTOBER 5, 2019
OCTOBER 4, 5 & 6, 2019
10AM TO 4 PM
of infertility. A peer led group through RESOLVE, the national infertility association. Second Wednesday of every month, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. 619-807-7006. Downtown SLO, Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
GENERAL GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP (SOUTH COUNTY) Hospice SLO County is offering this support group for those grieving the death of a loved one. Held in the Church Care Center. Drop-ins welcome. Tuesdays, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo.org. New Life Pismo, 990 James Way, Pismo Beach.
SPOUSE AND PARTNER LOSS SUPPORT GROUP (SOUTH COUNTY) A Hospice SLO support group for those grieving the loss of a partner or spouse. Held in Room 16. Drop-ins welcome. Thursdays, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo.org. New Life Pismo, 990 James Way, Pismo Beach.
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y skills. Call to sign up. Thursdays, 8:30-10 a.m. Free. 805-7726394. Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
SEWING CAFE CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS Sewing Cafe offers various classes and workshop. Call for full schedule. ongoing Sewing Cafe, 541 Five Cities Dr., Pismo Beach, 805-295-6585.
MIND & BODY NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
CARDIO BARRE Barre is a combination of pilates, yoga, and ballet barre technique. In each energizing and targeted workout, guests use the barre and exercise equipment to sculpt, slim, and stretch their bodies. Tuesdays, Sundays, 5:30-6:30 p.m. through Aug. 30 $18; $80 for 5 classes. 805-215-4565. omnistudiomb. com. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay.
CHAIR YOGA Tuesdays, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay.
GIVE PEACE A CHANCE: SOUNDBATH, REIKI, AND GUIDED CRYSTAL MEDITATION A deeply relaxing meditative experience featuring a Universal Peace crystal grid, guided meditation, sound bath, and Reiki. Oct. 9, 5:30-7 p.m. $45. 805-772-1100. boho-moon.com/book-online/give-peace-a-chance. Ruby Dragon, 875 Main St. Unit C, Morro Bay.
HEALTHY BACK 101 Learn an easy pattern of moves and poses designed to produce strength and flexibility so you can live freely, without pain. Oct. 6, 10-11:30 a.m. $15. 415-516-5214. Bayside Martial Arts, 1200 2nd St., Los Osos.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
BREWASANA AT 7SISTERS A light hearted vinyasa flow with Robyn paired with a beer of your choice. First Sunday of every month, 10:30 a.m. $15. 805-868-7133. 7Sisters Brewing Company, 181 Tank Farm Rd. Suite 110, San Luis Obispo, 7SistersBrewing.com.
HEART RHYTHMS DRUM CIRCLE Follow the leader for a two-hour session of drumming. This month drum circle is open to the public, however space is limited. First Friday of every month, 5-7 p.m. through Nov. 1 Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo.org/workshops/heartrhythms-drum-circle. Hospice SLO County, 1304 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo. METABOLIC (TOTAL BODY) CONDITIONING In this interval training class, boost your metabolism through a circuit of free weights, body weight, the TRX suspension training system, and more. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 8:05-9:05 a.m. through Dec. 14 $95. 805-549-1222. San Luis Coastal Adult School, 1500 Lizzie St., San Luis Obispo, ae.slcusd.org/.
STRENGTH FOR 50+ AT SUNNYSIDE SCHOOL
CREATE & LEARN BASIC COMPUTER HELP Come to learn basic computer
Visit www.CCRRF.com for details and schedule
and to calm the nervous system. Thursdays, 6-7 p.m. through Feb. 27 $18 drop in; discounted for members. 805-215-4565. omnistudiomb.com. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay.
Designed specifically for the older adult. Use your own bodyweight, dumbbells, exercise balls, and the TRX suspension training system in this class to create flexibility, strength, and the ability to move freely and without pain. Mondays, Wednesdays, 9:20-10:20 a.m. through Dec. 14 $88. 805-549-1222. San Luis Coastal Adult School, 1500 Lizzie St., San Luis Obispo, ae.slcusd.org/.
STRENGTH TRAINING FOR 50+ Designed specifically for older adults, this class incorporates the TRX suspension training system, exercise balls, and dumbbells to create a safe and effective way to gain strength, improve balance, and increase your flexibility. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9:10-10:10 a.m. through Dec. 14 $95. 805-549-1222. San Luis Coastal Adult School, 1500 Lizzie St., San Luis Obispo, ae.slcusd.org/.
ZUMBA Zumba is a family friendly class at the SLO YMCA, appropriate for ages 8 and over. MondaysWednesdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Included with Y Membership. 805-543-8235. sloymca.org. SLO County YMCA, 1020 Southwood Dr, San Luis Obispo.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
SILVER SNEAKERS ZUMBA Appropriate for all ages and fitness levels. An easy-to-follow dance fitness class. Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, 9-10 a.m. Free for members; $6 to drop-in. 805-441-7932. Oceano Community Center, 1425 19th St., Oceano, adulted. luciamarschools.org.
WATER EXERCISE FOR ALL AGES These classes help relieve joint pain, enhance your breathing, and increase your range of motion. Mondays, Wednesdays,
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE continued page 33 IMAGE COURTESY OF ROSEMARY BAUER
HEATED BARRE A combination of pilates, yoga, and ballet barre technique. Sundays, 10:30-11:30 a.m. through June 7 $18 drop in; discounted for members. 805-215-4565. omnistudiomb.com. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay.
OCT. 3 – OCT. 10 2019
KICKBOXING WITH A PURPOSE CLASSES This 6-week series will focus on developing and strengthening both the body and the mind. Tuesdays, 3:30-4:45 p.m. $125. 805-704-9711. fromtherootsuphealing.com/ offerings.html. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay.
MOVEMENT FLOW Incorporates yoga, active and resistance stretching, and more. Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, 6:30-7:30 a.m. 805-776-3676. studiofitnessmorrobay. com. Studio Fitness, 349 Quintana, Morro Bay.
QI GONG CLASS Qi Gong is an ancient and powerful system for physical health and spiritual development. Join certified instructor Devin Wallace for this outdoors class. Please call to register. Fridays, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Suggested donation $10. 805-709-2227. Tidelands Park, South end of Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
TAI CHI AND QI GONG BASICS Learn the essentials of breathing and postures and combine them for a moving meditation. Private classes also offered. Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays-Saturdays, 8-9 a.m. Varies. 805-701-7397. Morro Bay Martial Arts, 850 Shasta, Morro Bay. YIN YOGA AND ESSENTIAL OILS Yin style involves surrendering into poses and exploring them for longer periods of time in order to let go of tension stored in the body
32 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
ROLLER COASTAL
HumanKind Fair Trade in SLO hosts an Art After Dark reception for featured artists Mike and Rosemary Bauer on Friday, Oct. 4, from 6 to 9 p.m. The exhibit features a collection of Central Coast landscapes and will remain on display through Friday, Nov. 1. Admission is free. Call (805) 5941220 or visit rmartstudios.com to find out more. —C.W.
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE from page 32
RIDE THE BUS
LOS OSOS OAKS, ANCIENT FOREST WALK Shaded stroll from the Reserve parking lot (.7 miles east of South Bay Boulevard), through magnificent ancient oaks. Oct. 6, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. 805-7722694. Los Osos Oaks State Reserve, 1801 Los Osos Valley Rd., Los Osos.
WHITE’S POINT VISTAS Half mile steep walk to the top for an outstanding view of the estuary and bay, home to hundreds of marine and land animals. Oct. 5, 11-11:45 a.m. and Oct. 12, 11-11:45 a.m. Free. 805772-2694. Morro Bay Museum of Natural History, 20 State Park Rd., Morro Bay.
October 7-11, 2019
DURING
SAN LUIS OBISPO
CHUMASH CULTURE SHARE Celebrate local
culture and connection with plants. Oct. 4, 2-7 p.m. Sliding price: $25-$55. 805-541-1400. slobg.org. San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden, 3450 Dairy Creek Rd., San Luis Obispo.
SPORTS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
MORRO BAY MARTIAL ARTS: WORLD CHAMPION INSTRUCTION Offering adult and youth classes in kickboxing, boxing, judo, Jiu Jitsu, MMA, Tai Chi, Qi Gong, and self defense. ongoing 805-701-7397. Morro Bay Martial Arts, 850 Shasta, Morro Bay.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
JUNIOR PICKLEBALL Come join the junior pickleball class with certified coach Janice Mundee. For ages 8-15. Tuesdays, 3:30-4:30 p.m. through Nov. 4 Free. (805) 434-9605. ttrtennis.com/pickleball. Templeton Tennis Ranch, 345 Championship Ln., Templeton.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
CAL POLY FOOTBALL VS MONTANA STATE The Mustangs take on Montana State in the annual Hall of Fame Game at Spanos Stadium. Oct. 5, 5 p.m. gopoly. com/. Alex G. Spanos Stadium, 1 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7297.
CAL POLY MEN’S SOCCER VS. UC DAVIS Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month with the Mustangs as they take on UC Davis. Oct. 9, 7 p.m. gopoly. com/. Alex G. Spanos Stadium, 1 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7297.
CAL POLY VOLLEYBALL VS UC DAVIS It’s a Double-Up Saturday, so show your ticket to the football game against Montana State and you’ll get free admission to the volleyball match. Oct. 5, 7 p.m. gopoly.com/. Mott Athletics Center, 1 Grand Ave, San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7297. CAL POLY VOLLEYBALL VS UC RIVERSIDE It’s Youth Night at Mott Athletics Center, so all kids ages 13 and under receive free admission and can get autographs from the Mustangs after the match. Oct. 4, 7 p.m. gopoly.com/. Mott Athletics Center, 1 Grand Ave, San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7297.
FREE
NO fare required
WEEk
hike from the end of Pecho Road (Coon Creek parking lot). Follow the creek to the end of the trail, cross 6 bridges along the way. Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free. 805-528-0513. Montaña de Oro, 3550 Pecho Valley Rd, Los Osos.
SHARE
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
HIKE COON CREEK OUT AND BACK Active 5 mile
RIDE
OUTDOORS
FOR
Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. 805-481-6399. 5 Cities Swim School, 425 Traffic Way, Arroyo Grande, 5citiesswimschool.com.
2 0 1 9 Pledge to take action today rideshare .org/rsw
CAL POLY WOMEN’S SOCCER VS. LBSU The first 250 fans get a free scarf for the Big West Conference opener against Long Beach State. Oct. 3, 7 p.m. gopoly.com/. Alex G. Spanos Stadium, 1 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo, 805-756-7297.
HOPE FOR EVERYONE
KIDS & FAMILY NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
BILINGUAL STORYTIME/ CUENTOS BILINGÜES Children and their families are invited to listen to tales in English and Spanish. Wednesdays, 3:30-4 p.m. Free. 805-927-4336. slolibrary.org. Cambria Library, 1043 Main St., Cambria.
EVERY SUNDAY AT 10:30 AM
FAMILY MOVIE WEDNESDAYS Come enjoy seeing a free, family movie once a month. All ages welcome. Second Wednesday of every month, 2 p.m. Free. 805995-3312. Cayucos Library, 310 B. St., Cayucos.
KIDS HIP HOP Focus placed on basic rhythm comprehension and beginner hip hop moves including rocks, bounces, grooves, and moving on the floor. Wednesdays, 3:30-4:30 p.m. through Jan. 1 $60 per month. 805-215-4565. omniyogastudio.com. Omni Studio, 698 Morro Bay Blvd, Morro Bay. CULTURE & LIFESTYLE continued page 34
An anthology of 14 science fiction short stories written by H.W. Moss Cover illustration by Steve Moss
682 PALM STREET SAN LUIS OBISPO, CA
Published by
NetNovels.com
V I SI T W W W.SLO C I T Y.C H UR C H F O R DE TAI L S www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 33
PHOTO COURTESY OF ZEST IT UP
CULTURE & LIFESTYLE from page 33
Every Saturday 2:30-5:30 p.m., year round, rain or shine. Delightful mix of local farm fresh products, baked goods, crafts, and art from more than 30 vendors. Saturdays, 2:30-5:30 p.m. Morro Bay Main Street Farmers Market, Main St and Morro Bay Boulevard, Morro Bay, 928-350-5960, facebook.com/ MorroBayMainStreetFarmersMarket/.
Berkeley the dog. Wednesdays, 3 p.m. Free. 805-5281862. Los Osos Library, 2075 Palisades Ave., Los Osos. Come read to Karly the Dog. Second Friday of every month, 4-5 p.m. Free. 805-772-6394. Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay.
YOUTH SELF DEFENSE AND AWARENESS Learn the basics of mixed martial arts. For ages 7 and up. Mondays, Wednesdays, 5:15-6 p.m. 805 701 7397. Morro Bay Martial Arts, 850 Shasta, Morro Bay.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
ATASCADERO FARMERS MARKET Visit site for info on featured music artists and chefs. Wednesdays, 3-6 p.m. Free. visitatascadero.com. Sunken Gardens, 6505 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
AIKIDO FOR KIDS AGE 4-13 AIKI-MITES (age 4-6) class is 3pm on Tuesdays. AIKI-KIDS (age 7-13) classes are Tuesdays/Thursdays at 4pm. Call to observe or pre-register. Tuesdays, Thursdays $50-$75 monthly. 805-544-8866. aikidosanluisobispo.com. Budo Ryu, 3536 South Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
CAMBRIA FARMERS MARKET Fridays, 2:30-5:30 p.m. Free. 805-395-6659. cambriafarmersmarket.com. Cambria Veterans Memorial Hall, 1000 Main Street, Cambria.
PASO ROBLES FARMERS MARKET Tuesdays, 9-11:30 a.m. northcountyfarmersmarkets.com. Paso Robles Farmers Market, Spring and 11th St., Paso Robles.
CENTRAL COAST RAILROAD FESTIVAL Celebrates the rich history of trains and tracks along the Central Coast. Event features a railroad swap meet, a model railroad for kids to operate, food, and more. Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $3 and $5. 805-548-1984. SLORRM.com. San Luis Obispo Railroad Museum, 1940 Santa Barbara Ave, San Luis Obispo.
TEMPLETON FARMERS MARKET Saturdays, 9 a.m.12:30 p.m. northcountyfarmersmarkets.com. Templeton Park, 550 Crocker St., Templeton. SAN LUIS OBISPO
FARMERS MARKET Farmers Market in SLO is the
DRAMA AND IMAGINATIVE PLAY CLASS: AGES 5-8 Sing, dance, play games, and create stories and
largest Farmers Market in California. Thursdays, 6:10-9 p.m. Downtown SLO, Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
characters. Saturdays, 11-11:45 a.m. $120 for 10 weeks. 805-709-0761. pyjamadrama.com/us. SLO Movement Arts Center, 2074 Parker St., San Luis Obispo.
POTTERY CLASSES AND PAINTING POTS Kids are welcome to come and learn various ways of working with clay, including sculpting, slab building, and throwing onto the pottery wheel. Tuesdays, Thursdays, 3:30-5 p.m. $30. 805-896-6197. anamcre.com. Anam Cre Pottery Studio, 1243 Monterey St, San Luis Obispo.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
BLESSING OF THE ANIMALS Join Dana Adobe at the Dana Adobe Cultural Center as Father Miguel from St. Joseph’s Church in Nipomo blesses your pets in the Cultural Center’s North Courtyard. This event is a non-denominational event. Oct. 5, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. 805-929-5679. signupgenius.com/ go/8050B4DA4AA2EA7FE3-blessing. DANA Adobe Cultural Center, 671 S. Oakglen Ave., Nipomo.
SLO FARMERS MARKET Hosts over 60 vendors.
IMAGINATIVE PLAY PARENTING Join Sara Zepeda, LMFT, and Sarah Rijnen of Pyjama Drama for a parenting series that will help you learn to connect with your kids. Oct. 7, 10-11:15 a.m. Free. 805-473-7161. Arroyo Grande Library, 800 W. Branch, Arroyo Grande, slolibrary.org.
SHARKS AND TIDE POOLS Join us to learn about the amazing life of sharks and what you can find in the local tide pools of our county. Oct. 9, 4-5 p.m. Free. 805-7732263. Shell Beach Library, 230 Leeward Ave, Shell Beach, slolibrary.org/index.php/about/locations/shell-beach-library.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
NEON NIGHTS AT ROCKIN’ JUMP Fridays, Saturdays, 8-10 p.m. 805-266-7080. Santa Maria Town Center, 142 Town Center East, Santa Maria.
SPIRITUAL NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
COME TOGETHER Features crafts, activities, a shared meal, and more. Second Wednesday of every month, 5-7 p.m. 805-772-7644. Estero Bay UMC, 3000 Hemlock, Morro Bay. DR. STEPHEN LLOYD-MOFFETT: HOW TECHNOLOGY IS CHANGING SPIRITUALITY Dr. Lloyd-Moffett, Professor of Religious Studies at Cal Poly in SLO, will be presenting a thought-provoking sermon at the Unitarian Universalist Community of Cambria. Oct. 6, 10-11 a.m. Free. 805-395-4055. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Hall, 786 Arlington, Cambria.
FIRST SATURDAY SERIES: LANDSCAPES OF GRACE Rev. Susan Plucker presents an overview of Alexander Shaia’s approach to the gospels as four spiritual movements. Oct. 5, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free. 805-528-0654. stbenslososos.org/event-items/firstsaturday-landscapes-of-grace/. St. Benedict’s Church, 2220 Snowy Egret Ln., Los Osos.
TIMBER HAWKEYE “BUDDHIST BOOT CAMP” DISCUSSION Join Timber Hawkeye for a free discussion and Q&A about ways to lead a simple and uncomplicated life. First Saturday of every month, 5-6 p.m. Free. 805-395-4055. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Hall, 786 Arlington, Cambria.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
THE ART OF MEDITATION Learn how to begin and
Saturdays, 8-10:45 a.m. World Market Parking Lot, 2650 Main St., San Luis Obispo.
PUMPED FOR PUMPKINS
Zest it Up hosts Sip and Pick: Succulent Pumpkin Carving Pop-Up at Talley Vineyards in Arroyo Grande on Friday, Oct. 11, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Comfy shoes are recommended as guests will head out into Talley’s fields to gather their own pumpkins before carving them into planters for succulent arrangements. Tickets are $18 and available in advance at my805tix.com. Visit zestitup.com to find out more. —C.W.
sustain a meditation practice or deepen an existing practice with Elizabeth Aires, author of The Art of Silence. Oct. 3, 6:30-7:30 p.m. $20. 805-238-4413. earthtonesgifts.com/. EarthTone Gifts, Gallery, and Center for Healing, 13319 Park St., Paso Robles.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
GRANDPARENTS DAY WITH TRAILWALKS During the Dana Adobe Cultural Center’s monthly trail walk, trained volunteers lead a group along the woodland trails that extend along the Rancho. Oct. 13, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. 805-929-5679. signupgenius.com/ go/8050B4DA4AA2EA7FE3-blessing. DANA Adobe Cultural Center, 671 S. Oakglen Ave., Nipomo.
Farmers Market, Santa Maria and 2nd St., Los Osos.
MORRO BAY MAIN STREET FARMER MARKET
PAWS TO READ Children are welcome to come read to
ASK SABRINA 30 years of Tarot reading experience. Open Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday in SLO County and Thursday and Sunday in South SLO County. ongoing 805-441-4707. asksabrina.com. Private Location, TBA, San Luis Obispo. THRIVING WITH A CHRONIC CONDITION Explore various supportive and positive practices. Second Friday of every month, 10:30 a.m.-noon Donations accepted. 805-439-2757. https:RuthCherryPhD.com. Unity Church, 1130 Orcutt, San Luis Obispo.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
CHANNELING With Mike Smith. Receive channeled messages from spirit guides and love ones. Second Saturday of every month, 6:30-7:30 p.m. $35. 805-489 -2432. Halcyon Store Post Office, 936 S. Halcyon Rd., Arroyo Grande. DRUM MEDICINE JOURNEY With Julie Jensen. Every third Monday, 6:30-8 p.m. $30. 805-489-2432. Halcyon Store Post Office, 936 S. Halcyon Rd., Arroyo Grande.
LGBTIQ+ BUDDHIST MEDITATION GROUP Second Wednesday of every month, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Optional donation. whiteheronsangha.org. White Heron Sangha Meditation Center, 6615 Bay Laurel Place, Avila Beach.
VOLUNTEERS
Seeking volunteers to provide foster homes for foster kittens or cats with special needs. The Feline Network pays for food, litter, and any medications needed. Volunteers also needed to help with humanely trapping and transporting feral cats for spay/neuter. ongoing 805-549-9228. felinenetwork.org. San Luis Obispo, Citywide, SLO.
HOSPICE SLO COUNTY VOLUNTEER TRAINING Preregistration required. In-Home Volunteers assist individuals with a life-limiting illness and their families by providing caregiver respite, practical assistance, emotional support, companionship, and comfort. Thursdays, 1-6 p.m. Free. 805-544-2266. hospiceslo. org/workshops. Hospice SLO County, 1304 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo.
LOAN CLOSET ASSOCIATE The Riso Family Loan Closet offers short-term use of durable medical equipment to people who are in the healing and recovery process. Volunteer Position: Associate accepts donations, sanitizes and checks-out equipment, and answers phone. Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 805-547-7025. Wilshire Community Services, 285 South St. Suite J, San Luis Obispo, wilshirecommunityservices.org.
ART CENTER MORRO BAY Seeking volunteers to be docents and/or organize art programs. Mondays-Sundays, 12-4 p.m. Free. 805-772-2504. artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
STATE PARKS DOCENT TRAINING Docent training for Morro Bay and Monatana de Oro State Parks will occur on October 5, 12, 26 (all 3 dates required). Oct. 5, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. and Oct. 12, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 805-772-2694. Morro Bay Museum of Natural History, 20 State Park Rd., Morro Bay. SWAP ELFIN FOREST WORK PARTY Help the SWAP Weed Warriors with weeding, trail trimming, and erosion control. First Saturday of every month, 9 a.m.-noon 805-528-0392. El Moro Elfin Forest Natural Area, 1100 15th St., Los Osos. SAN LUIS OBISPO
CENTRAL COAST HOSPICE VOLUNTEER TRAINING FALL 2019 Central Coast Hospice is seeking volunteers to provide 2-4 hours a week to hospice patients and their families. Fridays. through Oct. 18 Free. 805-540-6020. Central Coast Home Health and Hospice, 253 Granada, San Luis Obispo.
FELINE NETWORK OF THE CENTRAL COAST
34 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
ARROYO GRANDE FARMERS MARKET Includes produce, artists and musicians. Saturdays, 12-2:25 p.m. Arroyo Grande Farmers Market, Olohan Alley, Arroyo Grande.
EVENTS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT GOURMET PIZZA Spend an evening outdoors while enjoying delicious wood-fired pizza and yard games. Fridays, 4-7 p.m. $19.95 for adults; $12.95 for kids. 805-927-4200. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, cambriapineslodge.com.
HAPPY HOUR: BROKEN EARTH WINERY Join us after work on Wednesdays for Happy Hour with special by the glass pricing. Wednesdays, 5-7 p.m. 805-2392562. brokenearthwinery.com/events/Happy-Hour. Broken Earth Winery, 1650 Ramada Dr, Paso Robles. NORTH SLO COU NT Y
ANNUAL HARVEST DINNER A special harvest dinner and pick-up party. Oct. 5, 6-10 p.m. 805-239-0930. kazzit. com/event/annual-harvest-dinner-at-hammersky.html. HammerSky Vineyards, 7725 Vineyard Drive, Paso Robles.
DAILY HAPPY HOUR AT THE NAUTICAL COWBOY
MEALS ON WHEELS Meals on Wheels, San Luis
Enjoy happy hour specials at this Central Coast steak and seafood house. ongoing, 4-6 p.m. 805-461-5100. thecarlton.com/dining/the-nautical-cowboy. The Nautical Cowboy, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
Obispo, needs noon time drivers. Must have own car to deliver prepared meals. Mondays-Fridays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 805-235-8870. San Luis Obispo, Citywide, SLO.
SENIOR SPECIALS Seniors ages 55+ save 15% every Tuesday. Tuesdays, 4-9 p.m. 805-461-5100. The Nautical Cowboy, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
SLO REP SEEKING VOLUNTEER BARTENDERS Must be 21 or over. All volunteers receive complimentary tickets. Email volunteer@slorep.org for more info. ongoing slorep.org. San Luis Obispo Repertory Theatre, 888 Morro St., San Luis Obispo, 805-786-2440.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
SLO TUESDAY FARMERS’ MARKET Tuesdays, 2:30-5:30 p.m. Free. Farm Supply, 224 Tank Farm Rd., San Luis Obispo.
CASA INFO SESSION Learn about volunteer opportunities at CASA of SLO County. Become an advocate for an abused or neglected infant, toddler, child or teen, or a mentor for a young adult leaving foster care. Training provided. Or join the CASA Guild. Please RSVP. Oct. 9, 6:30-7:30 p.m. 805-541-6542. Starbucks, 581 Tefft St., Nipomo.
CASA VOLUNTEER TRAINING Volunteer to help a child who has been abused or neglected in SLO County. To learn more, visit www.slocasa.org. Potential volunteers are encouraged to attend an Info Session. Application and interview required before training. Oct. 7, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. and Oct. 9, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 805-541-6542. Grace Bible Church, 100 Rodeo Dr., Arroyo Grande.
FOOD & DRINK FARMERS MARKETS NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
BAYWOOD FARMERS MARKET Mondays, 2-4:30 p.m. northcountyfarmersmarkets.com. Baywood
SAN LUIS OBISPO
ALL DAY HAPPY HOUR AT LUNA RED Enjoy $6 bites, sangria, draft beer, house wine, and spirits. Thursdays, 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. 805-640-5243. lunaredslo.com/menus/. Luna Red, 1023 Chorro St., San Luis Obispo.
THE BLACK GLASS CHALLENGE AT CROMA VERA Test your blind tasting skills. Winners get their names listed on the front board and posted to social media. Fridays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. $12. 805-946-1685. cromavera.com/events/. Croma Vera Wines, 3592 Broad St., Ste. 106, San Luis Obispo.
FARMSLO PRESENTS BOUNTY OF THE HARVEST BENEFIT DINNER FarmSLO, a program of Slow Money SLO, announces Bounty of the Harvest, a benefit dinner to support small, local farms. Oct. 5, 5-7:30 p.m. $75$100. SlowMoneySLO.org. Tiber Canyon Ranch, 280 W Ormonde Rd, San Luis Obispo, (805) 781-0827.
MONTHLY PANCAKE BREAKFAST Enjoy pancakes, eggs, bacon, and juice and meet new and old friends. Proceeds support local non-profits like Edna4H, RISE SLO, and the hall’s Raise the Solar Roof project. First Sunday of every month, 8-11 a.m. through Dec. 2 $7. 805-543-0639. SLO Guild Hall, 2880 Broad St., San Luis Obispo, sloguildhall.com.
SLO PRODUCE EXCHANGE Gathering twice a month for neighbors to exchange excess fruit, veggies, baked goods, plants, crafts, etc. First Saturday of every month, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. 818-489-7085. Natural Food Co-op, 2494 Victoria Ave., San Luis Obispo. ∆
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805.203.3131 CaseyHosman.com Broker-Associate DRE-01351028
Annual Harvest Festival! Saturday, October 12 11am-4pm Free Admission!
Featuring Indigo Jazz Quartet 12:30-3:30 Soups from Soto’s True Earth Market Crepes and Wraps from The Spot Local wine, beer and root beer floats Unique gift vendors, kids’ crafts, watercolorist Cambria Historical Museum 2251 Center St. at Burton Drive
(805) 927-1442 cambriahistoricalsociety.com
DECOR GIFTS COLLECTIBLES
So Much More Than a Christmas Store
Home For The Holidays
New hours: 11am-4pm 683 Main St. Ste. B (805) 203-5663 • Cambria West Village
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Follow us on Twitter! @NewTimesSLO
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Mixing the Old with the New Home and Garden Decor 2024 Main · Cambria cambriagardenshed.com
Open 7 days a week 10am–5pm Clothing | Jewelry | Cards | Gifts | Books
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IN THE GARDEN SHED COURTYARD - CAMBRIA
2024 Main Street • 805.909.9022 oceanheirestatecompany.com
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 35
Music
➤ DJ/Dance [42] ➤ Karaoke/Open mic [42]
Strictly Starkey
BY GLEN STARKEY
Case and Cracker
PHOTO COURTESY OF BRADFORD JONES
The Morro Bay Harbor Festival goes big!
T
he Morro Bay Harbor Festival, this Friday, Oct. 4 through Sunday, Oct. 6, has really outdone itself this year on the entertainment! As usual, there’s all-day music and fun on Saturday and Sunday, but the weekend event begins with a Friday night Sunset Rhythm Kickoff Concert featuring Peter Case and Cracker (doors at 5:30 p.m.; 16-and-older; $30 at my805tix.com), at 895 Napa Ave., suite A3. Alcohol will be available for those 21 and older; and food’s available from The Greasy Weiner, Giovanni’s Fish Market, and Templeton Greek Food. Case, a New Yorker, traveled west and got his start in 1976 with The Nerves in San Francisco, where their song “Hanging on the Telephone” was covered by Blondie. The Nerves went on to tour the U.S. and open for the Ramones and Mink DeVille and play co-bills with The Nuns and Devo. After they broke up in 1978, Case formed The Plimsouls in 1979—best known for their 1982 megahit “A Million Miles Away,” which was included in Valley Girl (1983), starring Nicholas Cage and Deborah Foreman. His musical bona fides now well established, Case went on to a long solo career that’s generated some awesome radio hits such as “Old Blue Car,” “Put Down The Gun,” “Let Me Fall,” and others. He’s also known as a mesmerizing raconteur who weaves amazing stories in between his rock, blues, and folk tunes. He starts at 6:30 p.m. Cracker, which grew from the ranks of Camper Van Beethoven, formed in 1991 with lead singer David Lowery and guitarist Johnny Hickman. Their biggest success came early on with the release of the gold-selling Kerosene Hat, which included the singles “Low” and “Euro-
Trash Girl.” Their first single, “Teen Angst (What the World Needs Now)” remains one of my favorite modern rock songs! They have an infectious rock/ punk/grunge/psychedelic/country/blues/ folk sound. They take the stage at 8 p.m. On Saturday, you can hear Jasper & Jade, Truth About Seafood, Zongo All-Stars, Burning James and the Funky Flames, Meet the Foppers, The Narrow Bridge Band, and Cadillac Angels, not to mention you can witness Giovanni’s Oyster Eating Contest (2:30 p.m.) and bring the tykes to Tim Costa’s Drums for Kids (1: 45 p.m.). On Sunday, check out Tim Jackson;, Dulcie Taylor; Back Pages Band; Chris Farmer, a Beach Boys and Eagles tribute act; the Cuesta Jazz Combo; Bear Market Riot; Kindel Silva; and Sovereign Vine, plus see the Hawaiian shirt contest (3 p.m.). Lots of fun, lots of food, and lots of stuff for the whole family! Park at Morro Rock and take the trolley to the Embarcadero!
LIVE MUSIC
dulcietaylor.com. Celia’s, ll88 Los Osos Valley Road, Los Osos.
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
ANDY SCOTT LIVE Wednesdays, 8-11 p.m. Free. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, 805927-4200, cambriapineslodge.com.
BANJERDAN LIVE Tuesdays, 3 p.m. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, 805-927-4200, cambriapineslodge.com.
BLACK JOE LEWIS W/THE CHARITIES Austin, Texas-based Black Joe Lewis is a contemporary singer and guitarist with a bent toward vintage blues, soul, and R&B. Oct. 5, 8-11 p.m. $18. The Siren, 900 Main St., Morro Bay, 805-225-1312, thesirenmorrobay.com/.
BOBBY MALONE LIVE Saturdays, 3-6 p.m. Free. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, 805927-4200, cambriapineslodge.com.
DULCIE TAYLOR AND FRIENDS Enjoy live music, food, drink, festival activities, and more. Oct. 6, 121:30 p.m. Varies. 800-366-6043. mbhf.com/. Morro Bay Harbor Festival, 1210 Embarcadero Street, Morro Bay.
DULCIE TAYLOR AND FRIENDS LIVE Oct. 4, 5-8 p.m. Free; food and drink for purchase. 805-528-5711.
KEROSENE KINGS Cracker headlines (with Peter Case) the Sunset Rhythm Kickoff Concert on Oct. 4, as part of the Morro Bay Harbor Festival. PHOTO COURTESY OF BEAR MARKET RIOT
ROCK THE TENT! Power-folk duo Bear Market Riot plays a multiband show at Atascadero’s Tent City After Dark on Oct. 4, part of the city’s Colony Days celebration.
Meanwhile in A-Town …
If you’re not up for the Harbor Fest, Atascadero’s got its own thing going on this Friday night with Tent City After Dark featuring Moonshiner Collective, Arthur Watership, and Bear Market Riot on Friday, Oct. 4 (doors at 5 p.m.; $20 presale at my805tix.com; $25 at the door). Food and drink will be available for purchase. The event is a fundraiser for the city’s Atascadero Colony celebration, on Saturday, Oct. 5, in which the 1916 tent city that started A-Town is recreated, complete with actors in period costumes in Sunken Gardens! Friday’s show will be emceed by the trio Bremen Town, who’ll kick off the music
HACKENSAW BOYS W/BEAR MARKET RIOT For almost two decades, Hackensaw Boys have plowed the asphalt bringing their raw, gritty American vernacular sounds to the music halls and streets across the world. Oct. 6, 7-10 p.m. $12. The Siren, 900 Main St., Morro Bay, 805-225-1312, thesirenmorrobay.com/.
JIMBO MATHUS’ INCINERATOR Mathus is an
before introducing Bear Market Riot, who’ll perform their percussive, raucous songs, with harmony vocals. They’re three-time Best Band winners in the New Times Best Of Readers’ Poll!
Up next it’s Arthur Watership and their ethereal, contemplative, but always arresting and unique melodious songs. They’re New Times Music Award winners!
4200, cambriapineslodge.com.
Water, 699 Embarcadero #7, Morro Bay, windowsmb.com/.
MARCUS DIMAGGIO AT TWIN COYOTES WINERY Come by and sip luscious Twin Coyotes wine while singer/songwriter Marcus DiMaggio presents a great mix of acoustic 60’s and 70’s classics, folk, soul, R&B, and originals. Oct. 4, 4:30-6:30 p.m. $10 wine tasting; wine, cheese for purchase. 805-927-9800. twincoyotes.com/. Twin Coyotes Winery, 2020 Main St., Cambria.
American singer-songwriter and guitarist. Oct. 8, 7-10 p.m. $10. The Siren, 900 Main St., Morro Bay, 805225-1312, thesirenmorrobay.com/.
MARCUS DIMAGGIO LIVE Fridays, 3-6 p.m. Free. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, 805927-4200, cambriapineslodge.com.
JON STEPHENS LIVE Thursdays, 5 p.m. Free. 805-
SUNSET RHYTHM KICKOFF CONCERT FT. PETER CASE AND CRACKER Food and beverages
927-0175. lascambritas.com. Las Cambritas, 2336 Main Street, Cambria.
LIVE MUSIC AT OLD CAYUCOS TAVERN Fridays, Saturdays Free. 805-995-3209. oldcayucostavern.com. Old Cayucos Tavern & Cardroom, 130 N Ocean Ave, Cayucos.
LIVE MUSIC AT STAX Thursdays, Sundays, 6-8 p.m. Free. 805-772-5055. staxwine.com. Stax Wine Bar & Bistro, 1099 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
LOUIE ORTEGA LIVE Tuesdays, 8-11 p.m. Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, 805-927-
36 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
will be available to purchase during the show. Oct. 4, 6 p.m. $30. 805-772-1155. mbhf.com. Embarcadero Morro Bay, 714 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
THE TEARAWAYS (FEAT. CLEM BURKE OF BLONDIE) This group combines touches of the Ramones,
Clash, and Blondie. Oct. 3, 7-10:30 p.m. $10. The Siren, 900 Main St., Morro Bay, 805-225-1312, thesirenmorrobay. com/.
TED WISE LIVE A subtle acoustic backdrop to
complement wining, dining and coastal lifestyle. Oct. 4, 6-9 p.m. Free. 559-361-5144. Windows On The
STARKEY continued page 38
TED WISE: GUITAR AND VOCALS A subtle acoustic OCT. 3 – OCT. 10 backdrop to complement 2019 wining, dining, and coastal lifestyle. First Thursday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Free. 559 -361 -5144. reverbnation. com/tedwiseguitarandvocals. Stax Wine Bar & Bistro, 1099 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
ADAM LEVINE AND JUDY PHILBIN Levine and Philbin perform live jazz. Thursdays, 7-9 p.m. Free. 805238-2834. labellasera.com. Enoteca Restaurant and Bar, 206 Alexa Ct., Paso Robles.
ART AFTER DARK PASO Studios on the Park celebrates Art After Dark Paso, a fun tradition of art, wine, and live music-filled evenings at the start of every month Oct. 5, 6-9 p.m. Free. 805-238-9800. studiosonthepark.org. Studios on the Park, 1130 Pine
MUSIC LISTINGS continued page 39
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2019
SUMMER CONCERT SERIES FEATURING Central Coast bands, BBQ, and beer on our outdoor patio from 12-4pm
Music
Strictly Starkey
PHOTO COURTESY OF MICHAEL NESMITH
PHOTO COURTESY OF SALIM GARCIA
HERE HE COMES The Fremont Theater hosts former The Monkees member Michael Nesmith and the First National Band on Oct. 5.
GET WEIRD Psychedelic indie rockers, Crumb, play the Madonna Inn Expo Center on Oct. 6.
OCTOBER
5th Juke Box Heroes 6th Rough House 12th Noach Tangeras 13th The Band Wood
Moonshiner Collective, featuring multi-instrumentalist Dan Curcio, will headline the show with their diverse folk, rock, and Americana sounds “Tent City After Dark is a one-of-akind experience here on the Central Coast,” Atascadero Colony Days board member Candice Hubbard said in press materials. “You get to spend the evening enjoying music among the historical tents and under the bright stars. I can’t wait to see the amazing bands this year.”
Hey, hey he (was) a Monkee!
Call for Reservations 805-927-4502
www.raggedpointinn.com
ALL TICKETS. ONE PLACE.
ON SALE NOW!
BINGO TO BEAT CANCER
with Myrne and Ramzoid.
STARKEY from page 36
The Fremont Theater hosts former The Monkees member Michael Nesmith and the First National Band on Saturday, Oct. 5 (doors at 7 p.m.; all ages; $42.56 to $66.02 at Boo Boo Records or fremontslo.com). Unlike his compatriots—Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork, and Davy Jones—Nesmith came into what was essentially the first “boy band” already a skilled musician and songwriter, and from the start, he composed and produced some of the recordings for the TV series (1966-68). The Monkees disbanded in 1971, and by then, the other members had developed some musical skills, but Nesmith has remained the most talented of the group, composing “Different Drum,” a hit for Linda Ronstadt with the Stone Poneys, as well as the top-40 hit “Joanne,” with his own group the First National Band. Also at the Fremont this week, see James Garner’s Tribute to Johnny Cash on Sunday, Oct. 6 (doors at 6 p.m., show at 7; $27.31 to $50.77 at Boo Boo’s and fremontslo.com). “Folsom Prison Blues,” “Ring of Fire,” “I Walk the Line”— you’ll hear the early hits! Electronica artist Manila Killa appears at the Fremont next Thursday, Oct. 10 (doors at 8 p.m.; all ages; $27.31 general or $85.96 VIP meet-and-greet),
Trip rock
Indie rockers Crumb play a Numbskull and Good Medicine Presents show at the Madonna Expo Center this Sunday, Oct. 6 (doors at 6 p.m.; all ages; $18 presale at eventbrite.com or $20 at the door). Check out their inventive and super weird video for “Locket” online! You’ll feel like you’re on LSD! Crumb is a collaboration between Brooklyn-based musicians Lila Ramani (guitar, vocals), Brian Aronow (synth, keys, sax), Jesse Brotter (bass), and Jonathan Gilad (drums), who formed in 2016 to develop Ramani’s songs that she wrote in high school and college. After two EPs, they just released Jinx, their first full-length—a dizzying blend of psych-rock and jazz. Very cool! Divino Nino and Shormey open the show. You can still get tickets for the Numbskull and Good Medicine show featuring Dead Kennedys at the Madonna Inn Expo Center this Thursday, Oct. 3 (5:30 p.m.; all ages; $26 presale at Boo Boo’s and eventbrite.com or $30 at the door), with The Living End, Good Riddance, and 88 Fingers Louie opening. Singer-songwriter and guitar wizard Billy Strings plays BarrelHouse Brewing on Thursday, Oct. 3 (6 p.m.; all ages; $20 presale at Boo Boo’s and eventbrite.com), touring in support of his new album, Home. The International Bluegrass Music Association just named Strings New Artist of the Year. You’ve never seen high velocity flatpicking like this before! A lot of his dates have been selling out, but last I checked, tickets were still available. Dead Man’s Party, a tribute to Oingo Boingo, plays The Siren on Friday, Oct. 4 (doors at 7:30 p.m.; 21-and-older; $20 presale at Boo Boo’s and eventbrite.com or $25 at the door). This octet re-creates the manic energy, theatrics, and crazy rhythms of Danny Elfman’s group.
PHOTO COURTESY OF EMILY BUTLER
Rockin’ R at SLO Brew Rock If you like great music and great wine—I know, who doesn’t, right?—the place to be this Saturday, Oct. 5, is the SLO Brew Rock Event Center, where Rockin’ R Winery will celebrate its 10th anniversary (7 p.m.; 18-and-older; $10 presale at slobrew.com or $15 at the door). Started by singer-songwriter and entrepreneur Dean DiSandro, who started making wine in his garage in 2001 while still running an Orange County software development company, he bought eastside Paso Robles property in 2006, officially opening his tiny tasting room in 2009. Rockin’ R doesn’t distribute their wines, which are sold exclusively through the R-Fan Club and at their tasting room Union Road Wine Trail just east of downtown Robles. They’re “100 percent varietals and proprietary blends without adherence to snobby rules of convention, thus their motto, ‘F-the Rulz, R-Wines Rock!’” according to DiSandro, whose wines are named musiccentric titles such as Bohemian Rhapsody, Ax’L Rosé, Nirvana, King Crimson, and Jailhouse Rock. The party features opening act psychedelic pop group Joe Hertler & The Rainbow Seekers followed by the gritty blues rock of headliners Crooked Eye Tommy, who is also releasing a new album at the show. Also this week at SLO Brew rock, check out Texas singer-songwriter Hayes Carll on Friday, Oct. 4 (9 p.m.; 18-andolder; $22 at slobrew.com). Niger-based musician Mdou Moctar appears on Monday, Oct. 7 (8 p.m.; 18-and-older; $16 at slobrew.com). If you want to witness some contemporary Saharan music, here’s your chance. Special guests Matt Nice and The Derls open the show. STARKEY continued page 40
PHOTO COURTESY OF JOE HERTLER & THE RAINBOW SEEKERS
SAT., OCTOBER 5 San Luis Obispo Elk’s Lodge #322 Presented by:
CENTRAL COAST WOMEN’S LEAGUE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT
MY805TIX.COM
Does your organization sell tickets? Get more exposure and sell more tickets with a local media partner. Call 546-8208 for more info. 38 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
FLYING FLATPICKER Singer-songwriter and guitar wizard Billy Strings plays BarrelHouse Brewing on Oct. 3.
LET’S PARTY! Psychedelic pop group Joe Hertler & The Rainbow Seekers plays a two-band party for Rockin’ R Winery’s 10th anniversary celebration, on Oct. 5, in the SLO Brew Rock Event Center.
Music
Hot Dates PHOTO COURTESY OF THE SLO COUNTY JAZZ FEDERATION
MUSIC LISTINGS from page 36 St., Paso Robles.
DJ SPARX
THE BELMORES LIVE Singer-songwriterstorytellers. Oct. 11, 6-9 p.m. 805-461-5100. The Nautical Cowboy, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero. CREEKSIDE CONCERT SERIES Join us on the first Saturday of each month for our Creekside Concert Series. Oct. 5, 5-7 p.m. Free. 805-226-9060. changalawinery.com. Changala Winery, 3770 Willow Creek Rd., Paso Robles.
DULCIE TAYLOR AND GEORGE NAUFUL Oct.
OCT 6 • 1–5PM
5, 6-9 p.m. No cover; food and drink for purchase. dulcietaylor.com. The Carlton Hotel, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero, 805 461-5100.
101 NORTH
FIRST SUNDAY JAM SESH First Sunday of every month, 4-6 p.m. 805-400-5293. Bristol’s Cider House, 3220 El Camino Real, Atascadero, bristolscider.com/.
LIVE MUSIC AT ASUNCION RIDGE Fridays, Saturdays, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805-237-1425. asuncionridge.com. Asuncion Ridge, 725 12th St., Paso Robles.
PETER FRAMPTON FINALE: THE FAREWELL TOUR Legendary guitarist Peter Frampton will
OCT 12 • 8PM–MIDNIGHT
perform, presented by SiriusXM. The tour will feature special guest Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening, as well as Julian Frampton. Oct. 3, 7-9 p.m. $66$136. 805-286-3680. vinaroblesamphitheatre.com/ concerts/2019/peter-frampton-finale. Vina Robles Amphitheatre, 3800 Mill Rd., Paso Robles.
SWEET LEAF
PINT NIGHT MUSIC AT SWEET SPRINGS SALOON Features local bands and beer specials. Thursdays, 6 p.m.-midnight 805-439-0969. sweetspringssaloon.com. Sweet Springs Saloon, 990 Los Osos Valley Rd., Los Osos.
THE REAL BLUES JAM NORTH All Blues musicians, regardless of experience, are welcome to join this jam session. Hosted by Ted Waterhouse with Bruce Willard and Dean Giles. Thursdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m. $5 donation/musicians exempt. 805-704-5116. danbino.com. D’anbino Vineyards and Cellars, 710 Pine St, Paso Robles.
ROBERT VESNAVER LIVE Oct. 4, 6-9 p.m. 805461-5100. The Nautical Cowboy, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
SATURDAY LIVE Live music every Saturday afternoon. Wine and lunch offerings available for purchase. Saturdays, 1-4 p.m. Free. 805-227-4812. vinarobles.com. Vina Robles Winery, 3700 Mill Rd., Paso Robles. SATURDAY LIVE FEAT. KENNY TAYLOR Oct. 5, 12-3 p.m. Complimentary; wine and bistro service available for purchase. 805-227-4812. vinarobles. com/. Vina Robles Winery, 3700 Mill Rd., Paso Robles. SONGWRITERS AT PLAY Presented by Steve Key. Different acts every weekend. Sundays, 1-4 p.m. Free. 805- 226-8881. sculpterra.com. Sculpterra Winery, 5015 Linne Rd., Paso Robles.
SUMMER CONCERTS SERIES: BEAR MARKET RIOT Features food for purchase by Paso Catering
Co. Oct. 5, 5-7 p.m. Free. 805-226-9060. Changala Winery, 3770 Willow Creek Rd., Paso Robles, changalawinery.com.
SUNSET WINES AND FULL MOON VINES Hop on a hayride and enjoy dinner and dancing under the full moon. Oct. 12, 5-8 p.m. $30. 805-227-4766. docerobleswinery.com/event. Doce Robles Winery, 2023 Twelve Oaks Dr., Paso Robles. TENNESSEE JIMMY AND FRIENDS LIVE Tennessee Jimmy and Friends specialize in classic country-folk. Oct. 12, 6-9 p.m. 805-461-5100. The Nautical Cowboy, 6005 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
VERN SANDERS LIVE This jazz pianist covers songs from the Great American Songbook. Sundays, 5-8 p.m. 805-238-2834. Enoteca Restaurant and Bar, 206 Alexa Ct., Paso Robles, labellasera.com/enotecarestaurant.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
12TH ANNUAL CUESTA ACOUSTIC GUITAR CONCERT Features local favorites and recording artists Tim Pacheco, Martin Paris, Samuel Shalhoub, and Jennifer Martin, with special guest Doug Young. Enjoy blues, folk, and other genres. Oct. 12, 7:30-9 p.m. $15 general/$10 students and seniors. 805-5463100. Cuesta College Cultural and Performing Arts Center, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo, cuesta.edu.
BROWN BAG CONCERT First Friday of every month, 12-1 p.m. Free. 805-543-5451. fpcslo.org. First Presbyterian Church of San Luis Obispo, 981 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo.
CABARET SINGING AND PERFORMANCE
OCT 13 • 1–5PM
ALL-STAR BAND
The SLO County Jazz Federation presents Dave Becker and his All-Star Sextet at Unity Concert Hall on Saturday, Oct. 12, from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. This jazz concert takes place in celebration of Art Blakey’s 100th birthday. Tickets range from $10 to $25 and are available in advance at my805tix.com. Visit slojazz.org for more info. —Caleb Wiseblood CLASS Come improve your vocal skills so that
St., San Luis Obispo.
you have more fun singing cabaret, Broadway, and karaoke. Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m. $145 for 8 weeks; $20 to drop-in. 805-400-5335. Cabaret805. com. Cuesta College, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo.
THE MANY COLORS OF SPIRITUALS WITH DIANE WHITE-CLAYTON Guest artist Diane White-
CAL POLY FACULTY LECTURE-RECITAL ON SCHUMANN’S ‘MYRTHEN’ Join Katherine Arthur, soprano; Paul Woodring, piano; and Emma Levine, lecturer; in an exploration and performance of Robert Schumann’s “Myrthen Lieder,“ Op. 25. Oct. 12, 3 p.m. $5 at the door. 805-756-2406. music.calpoly.edu/ calendar/. Cal Poly Davidson Music Center, Room 218, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo.
GYPSY JAZZ NIGHT With the Gypsy All Stars: Laurel Mitchel (vocals), Daniel Cimo (violin), James Gallardo, Ben Arthur, and Toan Chau. Every other Thursday, 9:30-11:30 p.m. Barrelhouse Brewing Co. Speakeasy, 1033 Chorro St., San Luis Obispo, 805-296-1128, barrelhousebrewing.com. HAYES CARLL LIVE Oct. 4 $22. 805-543-1843. ticketweb.com. SLO Brew Rock, 855 Aerovista Pl., San Luis Obispo.
JAMES GARNER’S TRIBUTE TO JOHNNY CASH Oct. 6, 6-10 p.m. fremontslo.com/james-garnerstribute-to-johnny-cash. The Fremont Theater, 1035 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo, 805-546-8600.
JAZZ VESPERS CONCERT Jazz Vespers returns to the historic, newly solar powered, air conditioned sanctuary of The First Presbyterian Church of SLO. Jazz provided by Bruce Forman and Ron McCarley. Oct. 6, 4 p.m. Donations appreciated. 805-543-5451. fpcslo.org. First Presbyterian Church of San Luis Obispo, 981 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo. LIVE MUSIC AND FROG AND PEACH Enjoy live music and craft beer seven nights a week. ongoing Complimentary admission. Frog and Peach Pub, 728 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo, 805-595-4764, frogandpeachpub.com.
LIVE MUSIC AT MOTHER’S TAVERN Fridays, 7:30-10:30 p.m. Free. 805-541-8733. motherstavern. com. Mother’s Tavern, 725 Higuera St, San Luis Obispo.
MANILA KILLA Manila Killa will be live in downtown
SLO. Oct. 10, 8-11 p.m. $17-$72. 805-546-8600. fremontslo.com. The Fremont Theater, 1035 Monterey
Clayton, soprano, pianist and composer, will present a musical journey of Afro-American spirituals as they made their way from the plantation to the concert stage. Oct. 3, 7:30 p.m. $5 at the door. 805-7562406. music.calpoly.edu/calendar/. Cal Poly Davidson Music Center, Room 218, Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo.
Great Food Good Times Live Music
359 Grand Ave. Grover Beach
805-489-3639 THU 10/3
Country Music Night with Johnny Douglas 5–8pm
SAT 10/5
Juke Joint Jammers
live in downtown SLO. Oct. 5, 7-11 p.m. $35-$55. 805-329-5725. fremontslo.com/michael-nesmith. The Fremont Theater, 1035 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo.
TUES 10/8
Sweet T’s One Man Caravan
NOCHE CALIENTE Fridays, 10 p.m.-2 a.m. 805-541-
wed 10/9
MDOU MOCTAR Mdou Moctar will be live. Oct. 7, 7 p.m. $14.40- $18. 805-543-1843. ticketweb.com. SLO Brew Rock, 855 Aerovista Pl., San Luis Obispo.
MICHAEL NESMITH LIVE Michael Nesmith will be
096. slograd.com. The Graduate, 990 Industrial Way, San Luis Obispo.
ROCKIN’ R WINERY 10TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Enjoy 2 live bands, foods, craft beer,
and R-award winning boutique wines. Oct. 5, 7-11 p.m. $10. 805-835-8529. rockinrwinery.com/. SLO Brew Rock, 855 Aerovista Pl., San Luis Obispo.
ROCKTOBERFEST Dust off those lederhosen and dirndls, the tradition of Rocktoberfest returns to SLO Brew Rock. Oct. 11, 4-10 p.m. Free entry. slobrew. com/. SLO Brew Rock, 855 Aerovista Pl., San Luis Obispo, 209-417-7748. SOUTH PACIFIC AT BROWN BAG Maestro Brian
5–8pm Hump Day Karaoke 9pm-1am Karaoke Sunday too!
GAME Night! Tues and Thur 9pm to close
Classic Nintendo games, Cornhole, Darts & board games! Grab your buddies and come on by for drink specials and laughs!
No-Limit Fun!
Asher Alhadeff and OperaSLO brings the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical to the SLOPAC stage. Oct. 4, 12-12:45 p.m. Free. 805-543-5451. fpcslo.org. First Presbyterian Church of San Luis Obispo, 981 Marsh St., San Luis Obispo.
SUNDAY SERENADE Features a different acoustic act each week. Sundays, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Bang The Drum Brewery, 950 Orcutt Road, San Luis Obispo, 242-8372, bangthedrumbrewery.com/.
SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
ACOUSTIC SUNDAYS Sundays, 3-6 p.m. Seaventure Restaurant, 100 Oceanview Ave, Pismo
4th & Grand Ave, Grover Beach
(805) 474-8500
Play responsibly: 800 gambler. No purchase necessary. *Seated players do not have to play live game. gega #’s 000962, 0001044, 000957
MUSIC LISTINGS continued page 40
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 39
Music STARKEY from page 38
Strictly Starkey PHOTO COURTESY OF PETER FRAMPTON
Amicis, 156 S. Broadway, Orcutt, 805-631-0496, vinoetamicis.com.
‘Do You Feel Like We Do’
SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Live acts include Back Bay Betty, The Jill Knight Band, Crisptones, Drive-In Romeos, Unfinished Business, and Sound Investment. Through Oct. 4 Trilogy at Monarch Dunes, 1640 Trilogy Pkwy, Nipomo, (805) 621-7838.
Innovative “talking guitar” master Peter Frampton plays the Vina Robles Amphitheatre on Thursday, Oct. 3 (7 p.m.; all ages; $66 to $136 at vinaroblesamphitheatre.com). Frampton’s string of hits is impressive! “Nowhere’s Too Far for My Baby,” “Show Me the Way,” “(I’ll Give You) Money,” “It’s a Plain Shame,” “Dig What I Say,” “Apple of Your Eye,” “White Sugar,” “Baby I Love Your Way,” “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”—the man could do no wrong in the ’70s and ’80s! The tour will feature special guest Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening, as well as Julian Frampton. ∆ Keep up with New Times Senior Staff Writer Glen Starkey via Twitter at twitter.com/glenstarkey, friend him at facebook.com/glenstarkey, or contact him at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
MUSIC LISTINGS from page 39 Beach, 805-779-1779, seaventure.com.
ARROYO GRANDE BEER FEAST Enjoy craft beers from 33 Breweries and food samples from 15 Restaurants. Also features various live music acts. Oct. 12, 2-6 p.m. $65 advance/$75 door; $25 designated driver (food only). 805-473-2250. commingly.com/agvillageevents/events/detail/beerfeast-festival-1/929083. Heritage Square Park, 201 Nelson St., Arroyo Grande.
BLUES MASTERS JAM Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Figueroa Mountain Brewing Co, AG, 1462 E. Grand Ave., Arroyo Grande, 805-474-8525, figmtnbrew.com/.
BRANCH ST. BOOGIE W/THE CLIFFNOTES For the eighth year in a row, The Cliffnotes become Village People for one night only. Oct. 4, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Free. 805-489-9099. branchstreetdeli.com. Branch Street Deli, 203 E. Branch St., Arroyo Grande.
FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE MUSIC Enjoy live music and food on the patio. Fridays, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Free. 805489-9099. branchstreeetdeli.com. Branch Street Deli, 203 E. Branch St., Arroyo Grande.
LIDO LIVE Live music at Lido at Dolphin Bay. Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, 5-8 p.m. Free. 805773-8900. thedolphinbay.com/lido. Lido Restaurant at Dolphin Bay, 2727 Shell Beach Rd., Pismo Beach. LIVE MUSIC AT PUFFERS Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Free. 805-773-6563. puffersofpismo.com. Puffers of Pismo, 781 Price St., Pismo Beach. LIVE MUSIC AT SCOTTY’S Enjoy live music from local artists, cocktails, and food. Fridays, 6-9 p.m. Scotty’s Bar and Grill, 750 Price Street, Pismo Beach, 805-773-1922, scottysbarpismo.com. MUSIC ON THE MESA: CYPRESS RIDGE PAVILION Bring lawn chairs or blankets. Food and drink will be available for purchase (including beer, wine, and mixed drinks). Sundays, 1:30-4 p.m. through Oct. 27 Free. 805-474-7979. cypressridge.com/ music. Cypress Ridge Pavilion, 1050 Cypress Ridge Pkwy, Arroyo Grande.
WEDNESDAYS: LIVE MUSIC Enjoy live music in the fireplace room. Wednesdays, 6-9 p.m. Seaventure Restaurant, 100 Oceanview Ave, Pismo Beach, 805779-1779, seaventure.com.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
ALL FOR REAL WITH SARAH JACKSON First Saturday of every month, 7:30-11:30 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977. CIMARRÓN: JOROPO MUSIC AND DANCE FROM THE PLAINS OF THE ORINOCO RIVER Cimarrón’s powerful Joropo music achieves a unique blend of Andalusian, Indigenous American, and African roots. The ensemble includes a four-stringed cuatro, harp, maracas, Peruvian-flamenco cajón, Brazilian surdo, and Afro-Colombian tambura. Oct. 12, 7-8 p.m. Free. 805-343-2455. facebook.com/VivaelArteSB/. Guadalupe City Hall, 918 Obispo St., Guadalupe.
40 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
SWINGING INTO FALL The Santa Maria Valley Sr. Club presents this dance concert with Riptide Big Band and vocalists Liz Douglas and Bob Nations. Grant funding provided from Community Foundation of SLO County. Oct. 13, 1:30-4 p.m. Free. 775-8135186. RiptideBB.com. Elwin Mussell Senior Center, 510 Park Ave., Santa Maria.
L O M P O C/ VA N D E N B E R G
SIP MUSIC CLUB Pairing music and local wine with 4 seasonal releases each calendar year. Price includes 3 VIP access tickets to each SipMusic event, and 1 album and 1 bottle of premium wine every 3 months. ongoing $40. Lompoc Wine Factory, 321 N. D St., Lompoc, 805-243-8398, lompocwinefactory. com.
COME ALIVE Talking guitar master Peter Frampton plays the Vina Robles Amphitheatre on Oct. 3.
CONNER CHERLAND LIVE Oct. 4, 7-10 p.m. Vino et Amicis, 156 S. Broadway, Orcutt, 805-631-0496, vinoetamicis.com. FOXEN SECOND SUNDAYS: LIVE MUSIC AND FOOD TRUCK Every second Sunday of every month, Foxen will have live music and a food truck on property. Second Sunday of every month, 12:30-3:30 p.m. Free admission. 805-937-4251. foxenvineyard. com. Foxen Winery & Vineyard, 7600 Foxen Canyon Rd., Santa Maria.
GLORIA MANTOOTH AND SOUL FYAH Second Saturday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977.
GOSPEL BRUNCH WITH BROTHA FRANK First Sunday of every month, 2-5 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977.
HAVANA NIGHTS Enjoy live music acts, including Victor Valencia and others. Fridays, 7-9 p.m. Cubanissimo Cuban Coffee House, 4869 S. Bradley Rd., Orcutt.
JOE DADDY AND THE SUMTHINGS LIVE Oct. 4,
TOM BROSSEAU LIVE Randall Sena and The Rad Shadows open at 7 p.m. Oct. 5, 8 p.m. Lompoc Wine Factory, 321 N. D St., Lompoc, 805-243-8398, lompocwinefactory.com. S A N TA Y N E Z VA L L E Y
CLINT BLACK: STILL ‘KILLIN’ TIME 30TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR Country music superstar Clint Black returns to Solvang Festival Theater in a fundraising concert for this historic outdoor venue. Clint is celebrating the 30th anniversary of his legendary album, “Killin’ Time”, while the theater is celebrating its 45th birthday. Oct. 3, 8-10 p.m. $65$155. 805-686-1789. solvangfestivaltheater.org/. Solvang Festival Theater, 420 2nd St., Solvang.
COCOBILLI LIVE Food and drinks available for
purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 13, 4:30 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern. com/entertainment.html.
THE DYLAN ORTEGA BAND As part of KRAZy Country Honky-Tonk Thursday. Thursdays, 7 p.m. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 805-686-4785, mavericksaloon.org.
FIRST FRIDAY ‘80S NIGHT Featuring the Molly Ringwald Project. First Friday of every month, 8:30-11:30 p.m. $10 after 8 p.m. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 805-686-4785, mavericksaloon.org.
FRANKIE VALLI AND THE FOUR SEASONS LIVE The resort is a 21-and-up venue. Oct. 11
10 p.m. Blast 825 Brewery, 241 S Broadway St., Ste. 101, Orcutt, 805-934-3777, rooneysirishpub.net.
chumashcasino.com. Chumash Casino Resort, 3400 E. Highway 246, Santa Ynez, 800-248-6274.
LIVE MUSIC AT COSTA DE ORO Enjoy live music
IAN JONES LIVE Food and drinks available for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 5, 1-4 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern. com/entertainment.html.
and complimentary appetizers every week. Thursdays, Fridays, 5-7 p.m. and Saturdays, 3-5 p.m. Free. Costa De Oro Winery, 1331 S. Nicholson Ave., Santa Maria, 805-922-1468, cdowinery.com.
LIVE MUSIC AT MOXIE CAFE Enjoy live music from local artists, food, and drinks. ThursdaysSaturdays, 5-8 p.m. Free admission. moxiecafe.com/ music/. Moxie Cafe, 1317 W. McCoy Ln., Santa Maria, 805-361-2900.
LIVE MUSIC AT NAUGHTY OAK Enjoy a different musical act and food vendor every Friday evening. Fridays, 5:30 p.m. Free admission. Naughty Oak Brewing Co., 165 S Broadway St Ste 102, Orcutt, 805287-9663, naughtyoak.com.
LIVE MUSIC AT O’SULLIVAN’S Featuring live entertainment from local and touring alternative, indie, rock, punk, reggae, ska, alt-country, and other left-of-center musicians several times throughout each month. ongoing Free. O’Sullivan’s Pub, 633 E. Main St., Santa Maria, 805-925-0658, osullivanspub.net.
NATHAN CLAY LIVE Oct. 5, 7 p.m. Blast 825 Brewery, 241 S Broadway St., Ste. 101, Orcutt, 805934-3777, rooneysirishpub.net.
OPERA SANTA BARBARA: NOONTIME OPERA The program features members of the Chrisman Studio Artist Residency Program performing selections from Madame Butterfly by Giacomo Puccini. Seating is limited and offered on a first come, first serve basis. Oct. 7, 12-1 p.m. 805-925-0994-8562. Santa Maria Public Library, 421 S. McClelland St., Santa Maria.
SANTERIA LIVE Oct. 4, 7 p.m. Naughty Oak Brewing Co., 165 S Broadway St Ste 102, Orcutt, 805287-9663, naughtyoak.com. SHERELL JANE LIVE Oct. 5, 7 p.m. Vino et
LIVE MUSIC ON THE PATIO Local acts perform every Saturday. Saturdays, 5-8 p.m. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 805-6864785, mavericksaloon.org. PARADISE ROAD LIVE Food and drinks available
for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 12, 5-8 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern. com/entertainment.html.
ROGER LEN SMITH BAND LIVE Food and drinks available for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 4, 6 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern.com/entertainment.html.
SALTY STRINGS LIVE Food and drinks available
for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 5, 5-8 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern. com/entertainment.html.
SEAN WIGGINS LIVE Food and drinks available for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Oct. 6, 4:30 p.m. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern. com/entertainment.html. SUNDAY ROUND-UP Enjoy live music on the patio and special menu offerings every Sunday morning. Sundays, 11 a.m. Free. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 805-686-4785, mavericksaloon.org.
MUSIC LISTINGS continued page 42
FORTY. “Back in 1979, I didn’t call myself a pioneer. I wasn’t yet known as the ‘Godfather’ of Paso Robles. I just wanted to find the best untamed land in California and to create a fantastic bottle of wine.”
EBERLEWINERY.COM • 805.238.9607 Located at Highway 46 East, just 3.5 miles east of Paso Robles, California
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 41
Music
Hot Dates
MUSIC LISTINGS from page 40
TOM BALL AND KENNY SULTAN LIVE Enjoy a blend of guitar and harmonica blues, and rags, and good time music. Food and drinks available for purchase. No outside food or drinks allowed. Sundays, 1:15-4 p.m. Free. Cold Spring Tavern, 5995 Stagecoach Rd., Santa Barbara, 805-967-0066, coldspringtavern.com/entertainment.html.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
Brian Reeves. Singles and couples from all levels of experience are welcome. Mondays, Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. $10-$15. 888-395-4965. atownballroom. com. Atascadero Agricultural Hall, 5035 Palma Ave., Atascadero.
DANCE LESSON AND DANCE PARTY Come learn a variety of ballroom, swing, and Latin dances. Followed by a potluck dance party. Sundays, 5-7:30 p.m. $10. 888-395-4965. atownballroom.com/. Atascadero Agricultural Hall, 5035 Palma Ave., Atascadero. DANCE LESSONS WITH CAMMIE AND BRIAN Come learn a variety of ballroom, swing, and latin dances. Mondays, Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. $10. 888-3954965. atownballroom.com/. Atascadero Agricultural Hall, 5035 Palma Ave., Atascadero.
SUNDAY DANCE PARTIES A weekly dance party that includes free dance lessons. Sundays, 6-8 p.m. Free; $5 on DJ nights. 888-395-4965. Atascadero Agricultural Hall, 5035 Palma Ave., Atascadero. SAN LUIS OBISPO
COUNTRY NIGHT Thursdays, 8 p.m.-2 a.m. 805541-096. slograd.com. The Graduate, 990 Industrial Way, San Luis Obispo. LA MILONGUITA W/ DANIEL ARIAS: TANGO CLASS AND DANCE All levels welcome. Second Saturday of every month, 7-10:30 p.m. through Dec. 14 $10 class; $7 dance. 805-762-4688. facebook. com/Milongas.805/. SLO Guild Hall, 2880 Broad St., San Luis Obispo.
LUNA NOCHE: SLO’S NEWEST LATE NIGHT Every Friday and Saturday night, Luna Red will transform into Luna Noche, an alluring late night series full of eclectic music and dancing. Fridays, Saturdays, 10 p.m.-1 a.m. through Dec. 28 lunaredslo.com/lunanoche/. Luna Red, 1023 Chorro St., San Luis Obispo, 540-5243.
South 65
Thu 10/3
9pm1AM
FRI 10/4
9pm1:30am
FRI
3pm7:30Pm
ROCK OF AGES
9pm1:30am
the probes rock of ages
3pm7:30Pm 9pm1AM
TOMMY LEE NUNES Johnny Punches Project
MON 10/7
7:30pm11:30pm
JOHNNY PUNCHES PROJECT
TUES 10/8
7:30pm11:30pm
SAT 10/5 SUN 10/6
Farmer’s Market food is welcome inside
JAWZ KARAOKE
4
7:30pm11:30pm
The Goners
ZUMBA AT THE Y Zumba fuses hypnotic Latin rhythms and easy-to-follow moves to create a dynamic fitness program. Mondays-Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. sloymca.org/Classes. SLO County YMCA, 1020 Southwood Dr, San Luis Obispo, 805-543-8235. SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
NORTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
FAMILY FRIENDLY OPEN MIC An open mic for all ages hosted by Professor Matt Saxking Tuttle. Fridays, Saturdays, 5-7 p.m. Free. San Simeon Lodge Restaurant, 9520 Castillo Drive, San Simeon.
OPEN MIC WITH MATT SAXKING TUTTLE All ages and skill levels welcome. Saturdays, 5-8 p.m. through April 16 Free. 916-694-9466. San Simeon Lodge Lounge, 9520 Castillo Dr., San Simeon. UNCORK THE MIC Producer of Uncork the Mic, Michelle Morrow presents a featured singer/ songwriter each Monday evening. The event is an unconventional open mic session with a unique format. Email uncorkthemic@gmail.com to sign up. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, 6-8 p.m. Free. 805 772 5055. staxwinebar.com/events2/. Stax Wine Bar & Bistro, 1099 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
UNCORK THE MIC: AN UNCONVENTIONAL OPEN MIC SESSION Hosted by Michelle Morrow. This session features a singer/songwriter/musician each week. To be featured on Uncork the Mic, email uncorkthemic@gmail.com. Mondays-Sundays, 6-8 p.m. Free. 805-772-5055. Staxwine.com. Stax Wine Bar & Bistro, 1099 Embarcadero, Morro Bay.
NORTH SLO COU NT Y
OPEN MIC/ KARAOKE NIGHT Open mic performers will include local winemakers and musical acts. Bring your own snacks. Second Friday of every month, 5:30-9 p.m. Free. 805-237-2389. darkstarcellars.com. Dark Star Cellars, 2985 Anderson Rd., Paso Robles.
SAN LUIS OBISPO
KARAOKE NIGHT SUNDAYS AT BUFFALO PUB AND GRILL Sundays, 8 p.m. Free. 805-544-5155. Buffalo Pub And Grill, 717 Higuera St., San Luis Obispo.
OPEN MIC NIGHT AT 7SISTERS For musicians, poets, and comedians. Family-friendly. Performers get a free beer. Sundays, 5-7 p.m. Free. 805-8687133. 7sistersbrewing.com/calendar. 7Sisters Brewing Company, 181 Tank Farm Rd. Suite 110, San Luis Obispo. SOUTH COAST SLO COU NT Y
FRONT ROW KARAOKE Thursdays, 9 p.m. 7731010. Harry’s Night Club And Beach Bar, 690 Cypress St., Pismo Beach, harryspismobeach.com.
DJ CAMOTE Thursdays, 5 p.m. Harry’s Night Club And Beach Bar, 690 Cypress St., Pismo Beach, 805773-1010, harryspismobeach.com.
JAWZ KARAOKE Thursdays, 9 p.m. Harry’s Night
SUN
Devin Welsh
DJ DRUMZ AT MONGO’S Fridays Free. 805-489-
KARAOKE WITH DJ SAM Sundays Mongo’s Saloon, 359 W. Grand Ave., Grover Beach, 805-489-3639.
MON
Frog’s Open Jam
5
6 7
TUES
8 9
Quel Bordel Funk Zoo You
10 Jake Nielsen’s Triple Threat THUR
WED 10/9
SALSA Dance lesson is 7 to 8 p.m. Social dance is 8 to 10 p.m. Second Sunday of every month, 7-10 p.m. Bang The Drum Brewery, 950 Orcutt Road, San Luis Obispo, 242-8372, bangthedrumbrewery.com/.
KARAOKE/OPEN MIC
Imagery Machine
SAT
WED
The Goners
Kyle Smith Band
S A N TA Y N E Z VA L L E Y Thursdays, 6 p.m. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez, 805-686-4785, mavericksaloon.org.
BALLROOM DANCE LESSONS WITH A-TOWN BALLROOM Dance lessons with Cammie Velci and
3 Walter Salas-Humara/
today’s and yesterday’s hits. No cover charge. Bring your dancing shoes. Thursdays, 9 p.m.-2:30 a.m. Free. 805-478-3980. DJ’s Saloon, 724 E Ocean Ave., Lompoc.
KRAZY COUNTRY HONKY-TONK THURSDAY
DJ/DANCE
THUR
L O M P O C/ VA N D E N B E R G
THIRSTY THURSDAYS WITH DJ VEGA Playing
Farmer’s Market food is welcome inside
3639. mongossaloon.com. Mongo’s Saloon, 359 W. Grand Ave., Grover Beach.
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
805 NIGHTS For ages 21-and-over only. Come enjoy dancing to your favorite music videos. Fridays, Saturdays, 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Free. 805-219-0977. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe.
KARAOKE WITH DJ RICARDO Thursdays, 9-11:30
Saturdays, 9 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977.
KARAOKE WITH YSABEL Wednesdays, 6-8 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977.
HULA DANCING Thursdays, 6:30 p.m. 805-5986772. Oasis Senior Center, 420 Soares Ave., Orcutt. LINE DANCING Mondays, 6:30-9 p.m. $5. 805-3101827. Oasis Senior Center, 420 Soares Ave., Orcutt.
www.FROGANDPEACHPUB.com
R ANDY L ATIN PART Y MIX Fridays, 9:30 p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805 219 - 0977.
42 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
p.m. Anthony’s, 859 Guadalupe St, Guadalupe, 805-219-0977. p.m. spotoneventservices.com. Blast 825 Brewery, 241 S Broadway St., Ste. 101, Orcutt, 805-934-3777.
7 NIGHTS A WEEK! 728 HIGUERA ST. DOWNTOWN SLO
S A N TA M A R I A VA L L E Y/ L O S A L A M O S
KARAOKE WITH DJ RANDY Fridays, 6:30-8:30
DJ VEGA: OLD SCHOOL AND PARTY MIX
NIGHTLIFE AT RANCHO BOWL Enjoy DJ’s 6 nights a week in the Rancho Bar and Lounge. For ages 21-and-over. Tuesdays-Sundays, 9 p.m. Free. 805-9252405. ranchobowl.com/nightlife. Rancho Bowl, 128 E Donovan Rd., Santa Maria.
CRAFT BEER & LIVE MUSIC
Club And Beach Bar, 690 Cypress St., Pismo Beach, 805-773-1010, harryspismobeach.com.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT KARAOKE Guests are welcome to take the stage and sing. Wednesdays, 9 p.m.-1:30 a.m. 805-863-8292. Louie B’s, 213 E. Main St., Santa Maria. S A N TA Y N E Z VA L L E Y
KARAOKE AT SOLVANG BREW Thursdays Free. Solvang Brewing Company, 1547 Mission Dr., Solvang, 805-688-2337. OPEN MIC NIGHT AT SOLVANG BREW Wednesdays Free. Solvang Brewing Company, 1547 Mission Dr., Solvang, 805-688-2337. ∆
20% OFF
*
*OCT 131 IN STORE ONLY A portion of the proceeds benefit breast cancer research & awareness.
PA C I F I C C O N S E R VAT O R Y T H E AT R E
A spectacular er adventure und the sea!
PISMO COAST PLAZA 535 FIVE CITIES DRIVE PISMO BEACH 8057735373
PROUD SUPPORTERS OF
Open Mon–Sat 9:30–5:30 · Sun 11–4
MUSIC BY ALAN MENKEN | BOOK BY DOUG WRIGHT | LYRICS BY HOWARD ASHMAN & GLENN SLATER
November 7 - December 22 Marian Theatre
exhibitions brushstrokes
TICKETS 805-922-8313 | PCPA.ORG
juried exhibition: ca painters
GROUPS* 805 -928 -7731 x.4 150
kids’ eye view
*12 OR MORE
celebrating young artists
bruce miller
sculpture and photography
coastal awakening
paintings by ned long
calls for entry
craftart market 2019 + more
concert 10/19, 2 pm
1930s jazz w/big sirs of swing
halloween party 10/25, 7 pm
tech-tacular superstitions 1-night-only digital art event tickets at sloma.org
bruce miller
free admission. open 11–5, closed tuesdays 1010 broad street west end of the Mission Plaza
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Dr. Wendy Weiss www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 43
Arts
➤ Writing [46] ➤ Film [47] ➤ Get Out! [51]
Gallery
Artifacts Painting our future BY MALEA MARTIN
Morro Bay Art Association presents Meet the Masters series Meet the Masters, a new children’s workshop series hosted by the Morro Bay Art Association, begins at Art Center Morro Bay with its first class, Meet Yoyoi Kusama, on Sunday, Oct. 13, at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. These new, ongoing arts classes are designed for students in kindergarten through sixth grade and are led by instructor Mandy Covish. Participants of the series’ first course will learn about Kusama, a famous Japanese artist who’s nicknamed the Princess of Dots. Participants will then create their own polka dot portraits, inspired by Kusama’s style, using oil pastels, watercolors, and tissue paper. The workshop is offered from 9 a.m. to noon for kindergarten through second grade, and from 1 to 4 p.m. for third through sixth grade. Parents are required to accompany participants of the first session. Admission is $20. Preregistration is required by calling (805) 772-2504 or visiting artcentermorrobay.org. Art Center Morro Bay is located at 835 Main St., Morro Bay.
SLO Library holds second annual Comix Fair The second annual San Luis Obispo Comix Fair takes place at the SLO Library on Saturday, Oct. 12, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Costumes are encouraged, and all ages are welcome at this family-friendly comic book convention. The event features panels with local artists, including Irene Flores and Dan Parsons, and a manga exhibition. Admission is free. The library is located at 995 Palm St., SLO. Call (805) 7815991 or visit slolibrary.org for more details.
Dana Adobe hosts Rocky Horror Picture Show production
Grover Beach’s Studio of the Performing Arts presents its production of The Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Dana Adobe Cultural Center on Friday, Oct. 11, and Saturday, Oct. 12. Both performances start at 8 p.m., with doors opening at 7 p.m. This cult-classic musical centers on sweethearts Brad and Janet, who stumble into a mad scientist’s home during a storm. Audience participation is encouraged, and prop bags for participants cost $5. Admission is $20 for club members and $25 for non-members. Tickets are available in advance at my805tix.com. The Dana Adobe Cultural Center is located at 671 S. Oak Glen Ave., Nipomo. Call (805) 9295679 or visit danaadobe.org to find out more. ∆ —Caleb Wiseblood
IMAGE COURTESY OF JULIE HEFFERNAN
As the Waters Rise exhibit at Cuesta College encourages viewers to change how they treat our planet
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ainter Julie Heffernan told New Times that her work is often compared to that of Hieronymus Bosch. For those who haven’t dabbled in art history, Bosch was one of the most notable painters among the Early Netherlandish Renaissance. Chances are high that you’ve seen The Garden of Earthly Delights in a history book. Despite the notoriety of the artist she is likened to, Heffernan says she doesn’t quite agree with the comparison. Even so, to have one’s work so often compared to that of a 15th century artistic genius at least shows that Heffernan’s work is wholly unique among her contemporaries. Painted on canvases that could fill a wall—whose exhibition As the Waters Rise is on display at the Harold J. Miossi Art Gallery until Oct. 11—Heffernan’s pieces feel at once antiquated and of the now. At a quick glance, the grand and intricate scenes she renders look like whimsical wonderlands that might have paired well with a centuries-old fairy tale. But with a closer look at the details, the viewer can begin to see the subtle but persistent nuances that hide in the literal nooks and crannies that Heffernan paints. “I am firmly devoted to imagery that seems familiar, so that anybody from any different walk of life can recognize something in my work that relates to their own life,” the Brooklyn-based artist said. “But then when they look closer, they’ll see that everything’s been kind of shuffled to take you to a different way
On display
Julie Heffernan’s As the Waters Rise exhibition at the Harold J. Miossi Art Gallery will be on display until Oct. 11. For more information about the artist, visit her website at julieheffernan.net.
of reading that familiarity: so, defamiliarizing the familiar.” Her 66-by-68-inch piece titled Self Portrait with Red Tent—part of the current display at Miossi Gallery—looks like an idyllic children’s book scene at first: an unnaturally aquamarine-colored body of water; knobby trees with delicately hanging branches; a staircase carved into a hillside, leading somewhere beyond the canvas’ edge. But with a closer look, the image that first feels so familiar begins to reveal its unexpected, even unsettling details: a skinny metal pipe dumping green sewage into the water; orange traffic cones dispersed throughout the landscape; a man who appears to be drowning beneath a majestic tent structure covered by a red curtain. Right as the viewer starts to feel comfortable, we are jolted into awareness of a notquite-right reality. For Heffernan, that disturbing reality is climate change, or as she opts to call it, “the climate catastrophe.” “It’s no longer just something as anodyne, harmless as climate ‘change,’” she said. “This is serious stuff.” Before making its way to San Luis Obispo, the collection was slated to go to states that have experienced major flooding
PHOTO COURTESY OF EMMA SAPERSTEIN
LEADING THE NEXT GENERATION Artist Julie Heffernan speaks to a Cuesta College class in her Miossi Art Gallery exhibition, As the Waters Rise.
44 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
WATERS RISING Julie Heffernan’s painting, Self Portrait with Red Tent, reflects on beautiful and serene environments that are ruined by human touch.
catastrophes, particularly those states that tend to go red during election season. Right before the collection opened at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, a superstorm and massive flooding forced residents to “drag all their worldly goods out to the sidewalk,” Heffernan said, making her exhibition painfully timely. “Several of the paintings are depicting how we are going to manage when the waters rise,” she said. “We can’t just throw a lot of money at the problem. ... We have to rethink everything.” Though Heffernan has had a long and illustrious career since receiving her MFA from Yale University in 1985, it is only in recent years that her work became decidedly political. “It was basically after Hurricane Sandy that I decided to change my work and focus on the climate situation,” she said. “That was the first show that was entirely devoted to looking at the climate catastrophe and addressing it head-on.” Other recent exhibitions, Heffernan said, have sought to empower women, especially in light of the #MeToo movement. But Heffernan emphasized that she wants her more politically driven work to do more than inspire unproductive outrage. “It became really important not
to just make work about oil spills or heaping scorn on ExxonMobil,” she said. Rather, she hopes her work will create a lasting momentum and inspire viewers to think long term “about how they’re going to situate themselves differently, how they’re going to get along in different habitats, how they’re going to basically change their lives ... to divest their own living circumstances from these harmful components of our contemporary life.” Though Heffernan often finds her initial inspiration from issues like climate change or women’s rights, she says her actual painting process comes down to “letting the painting tell me what to do.” “It’s as though the painting kind of pre-exists, and it just needs you to bring it into real existence,” she said. “You make a billion choices, but only one of them is the right one—and what does it mean to be right under such circumstances? I’ve spent a life testing that, and if I follow what it dictates, almost invariably an interesting world that fascinates me and surprises me will show up.” ∆ Arts Writer Malea Martin is fighting climate change. Send arts story tips to mmartin@newtimesslo.com.
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CAMBRIA CENTER FOR THE ARTS THEATRE
NOV 1-24
Fri-Sat 7:00pm Sun 2:00pm
TICKETS: 222 Elks Lane, SLO
(805) 543-0322
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RADIO PLAY
DEC 21-22 www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 45
PE R FOR M I NG ARTS presents
Arts
Writing
PHOTO BY MALEA MARTIN
OCTOBER
ACOUSTIC GUITAR CONCERT Saturday, October 12 | 7:30 pm Mainstage
FALL CHOIR CONCERT
Friday, October 18 | 7:30pm St. Timothy’s Catholic Church in Morro Bay
CUESTA JAZZ & ROYAL GARDEN SWING ORCHESTRA
Saturday, October 19 | 7:30 pm Sunday, October 20 | 3:00 pm Experimental Theater CUESTA DRAMA Saskatoon Saskatchewan’s Loyal Order of Moose Players present:
MYSTERY OF THE LOOSE MOOSE by Corky St. Clair Mainstage October 24, 25, 26, 27, 31 November1, 2, and 3. See website for show times.
ALL SHOWS $10 STUDENTS $ 15 GENERAL ADMISSIONS
IT’S OUR 10 TH ANNIVERSARY! ANNUAL BENEFIT CONCERT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2019 EVENT STARTS AT NOON
|
DOORS OPEN AT 2pm
Join us for an afternoon of performances, local food and drinks, and raffle prizes.
BOOK YOUR SEATS BEFORE THEY ARE GONE!
Skip the line, BUY ONLINE!
TICKETS.CUESTA.EDU Box Office: (805) 546-3198 (Only open one hour prior to showtime)
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OPENING NIGHT Wendy Thies Sell (left) moderates the opening “Creativity Under Pressure” discussion with (from left to right) Monica Piper, Phil Cousineau, Ricky Roxburgh, Linda Aronson, Ross Brown, and Donald H. Hewitt as panelists.
BY MALEA MARTIN
PHOTO COURTESY OF MEAGAN FRIBERG
Best in the West Central Coast Writers Conference celebrated its 35th year of bringing writers from across the globe together in SLO
V
oted the best writers conference in California this year by The Writer magazine, the Central Coast Writers Conference (CCWC) celebrated its 35th year in San Luis Obispo from Sept. 26 to 28. “It was started by a Cuesta professor called Lillian Dean,” Conference Director Teri Bayus told New Times about the annual event held at Cuesta College. “Writers are solitary people, and [Dean] felt that they needed to come together.” More than three decades later, the CCWC has grown from one day of classes to a full-fledged, three-day conference that features keynote addresses, question-and-answer sessions, workshops, panels, master classes, and networking opportunities. Over her five-year tenure as conference director, Bayus has implemented changes that work to keep CCWC in the contemporary, which no doubt contributed to its 2019 win as the best California writers conference. “I hired almost the entire staff off of Twitter,” Bayus said. Her social media savvy brought in some of the most notable individuals in the industry. Bayus also emphasized her global outreach to bring the best to the West. “When I took over, I very much did an outreach to everywhere,” she said. A few of the conference’s most notable people included Monica Piper, a stand-up comedian and the creative mind behind Rugrats, who taught a workshop and gave a hilarious, stand-up style closing keynote; Ricky Roxburgh, a Disney staff writer, who led a “How to Write a 10 Minute Movie” workshop aimed at teens; and Linda Aronson, whose “New Structures
46 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
Get writing
For more info about the Central Coast Writers Conference, check out facebook.com/ CentralCoastWritersConference.
LEARNING WITH A LAUGH Attendees enjoy a session at the 2019 Central Coast Writers Conference, which was recently named the best of its kind in California by The Writer Magazine.
for New Audiences” class typically fills up in minutes when it’s offered at acclaimed international writers conferences. While many writers and teachers came from outside the Central Coast—some as far as Australia—to enjoy the three days of collaborative learning, local talent was nowhere near forgotten. Laure-Anne Bosselaar, Santa Barbara’s poet laureate and winner of a prestigious Pushcart Prize for poetry, led poetry workshops and spoke on panel sessions. “The faculty and the students mix with such democratic enthusiasm,” Bosselaar told New Times after leading a compelling workshop that taught students how to engage an audience while reading their own work. “Classes are full of hungry, curious, avid listeners,” she continued. “You feel that you are here to exchange talent [with students] instead of teach.” Bosselaar added that Bayus instilled a particular spirit in her role as conference director, something she hasn’t encountered at other writing conferences. “I’ve been to many conferences where there is a hierarchy, even among the faculty,” Bosselaar said. “This is not the case in this conference.” For Bayus, it all comes back to accessibility. “I wanted to make it so that every single person who wanted to come could come, that there was no barrier of entry
to anybody,” Bayus said of her approach. By securing grants and sponsorships, Bayus sought to assist those who could not afford the full price of the conference. “The only barrier to entry they would have is their own fear, and we were trying very hard to get rid of that, too,” she said. In addition to the 112 classes that the weekend offered, the conference also provided a valuable opportunity to attendees to collaborate outside the classroom that can prove just as transformative. “The reason that writing conferences work, but specifically this one, [is] it’s more about hanging out with other writers, talking about where you’re stuck and what you’re doing. Nobody else but writers sit around and play with imaginary friends all day long,” Bayus said with a laugh. “We try to build a network and a community.” New additions to the conference this year included a pitching session with writing industry leaders for students, and preconference webinars for the teachers. The conference also introduced audio recordings of all 112 classes. The MP3 files will be made available for a small fee online. ∆ Arts Writer Malea Martin is feeling motivated to write. Send arts story tips to mmartin@newtimesslo.com.
Arts
Split Screen PHOTOS COURTESY OF EAGLE ROCK ENTERTAINMENT
Cool but flawed
S
tanley Nelson (Freedom Riders) directs this documentary about horn player, band leader, and jazz icon Miles Davis, told through archival photos, home movies shot by Davis and his contemporaries, his manuscripts and paintings, and interviews with experts and those who knew him. (115 min.) Glen “Complicated” is perhaps the best adjective to describe Miles Davis. He faced racism, addiction, and his own relentless anger, but he still created some of the most beautiful music of the ’50s and ’60s. In his late career and foray into electric music, his experimentation laid the groundwork for the house, hiphop, and electronica styles. This elegiac cradle-to-grave biopic is informative, entertaining, and often sublime. It’s not afraid to show Davis’ dark side—his heroin and cocaine use, his occasional mistreatment of women, and the chip he carried on his shoulder. Actor Carl Lumbly supplies Davis’ raspy voice, reading from his personal manuscripts. It creates a very revealing and personal examination of Davis, and it’s bolstered by interviews with jazz luminaries such as Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Quincy Jones, and Wayne Shorter. We also hear
MILES DAVIS: BIRTH OF THE COOL What’s it rated? Not rated What’s it worth, Anna? Matinee What’s it worth, Glen? Full price Where’s it showing? The Palm
from some of Davis’ wives and lovers such as Juliette Gréco and Frances Taylor. Through it all is the music. I’ve always been a big fan of his earlier work, but watching this documentary gave me insight into Davis’ constant drive to move forward, to push the music further, and to work with other really talented musicians and give them the space they need to create. It’s pretty incredible that director Nelson managed to compress five decades of creativity into two hours. Anna Lumbly did a fantastic job as the voice of Davis, and the archival footage along with interviews of everyone from musicians to childhood friends to lovers made for a dynamic trip through the troubled yet immensely talented life of the jazz legend. I didn’t know a whole lot of his work toward the end of his life; similarly, I have always been partial to his earlier recordings like Kind of Blue and Sketches of Spain. What was clear is that Davis suffocated in stagnation—
HAPPY TIMES Davis and his wife, the dancer Frances Taylor, enjoy the good times … until he lost her due to his temper and jealousy.
At the
GENIUS Miles Davis’ extraordinary life and career are explored through archival materials, contemporary interviews, and his recordings and performances.
he was always interested in the next project, not the ones before. His son Erin reveals that his father never kept any of his old albums around the house. He had no interest in what had already been done. He was a man with many faults, but also a magnetism and unending wealth of talent. Women swooned for him, musicians wanted to be him—he was the definition of cool. Being raised in a wealthy family didn’t shield Davis from the racism in St. Louis where he was raised, another chip on his shoulder he would carry through his life and that would lead to problems with police later on. This film really did span his life, a whole look at a life both blessed and tortured—and that soundtrack isn’t bad either. Glen You mention Davis’ run-in with the police. That was clearly an especially vexing situation for him. He was smoking a cigarette outside a music club, his name on the marquee behind him, when a white police officer told him to move along. As Davis was explaining that he was performing inside, another white officer hit him over the head. He was taken to the police station. The photos from this episode are amazing! The look on Davis’ face—bewilderment mixed with rage—are unforgettable. No wonder he had so much animosity toward American society. We also discover that his first trip to Paris was life changing. American institutional racism was nowhere to be found there, and he was treated with respect and celebrated for his talent.
Movies
Editor’s note: Listings for Bay Theater—(805) 772-2444—were not available at press time.
ABOMINABLE What’s it rated? PG What’s it worth? Rent it Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Galaxy, Park, Stadium 10 Jill Culton and Todd Wilderman have had their hands in animated/fantasy films such as Monsters Inc. and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, respectively, in the writers’ room or the visual department. The two have now come together for the first time as a director-duo to create DreamWorks’ Abominable where Chloe Bennet is the voice of Yi, a young girl who goes on an epic adventure across China to take a yeti back to its home on Mount Everest.
I’ve heard that DreamWorks has been called Pixar’s redheaded stepsister because its films just don’t quite reach the magnitude of Toy Story, Coco, Cars, or Up —you get the idea. I will admit they have had some fan favorites such as Shrek, the Wallace and Gromit franchise, Madagascar, or The Road to El Dorado, but similar to many of the animation movies that come out of DreamWorks, Abominable just falls a little flat. The film opens up when a playful and very furry yeti breaks out of a laboratory and into a busy city in China. These first few scenes are done from a first-person perspective, so it feels like the audience is breaking out of confinement and running into oncoming traffic—the first and last time the filmmakers use this visual storytelling effect. The creature takes refuge on an apartment
rooftop where he can see a brightly lit billboard with a Mount Everest photo. The rooftop is also a refuge for Yi, a young teenager who avoids her family and works odd jobs to save up for a trip across China that her late father had planned for them. The yeti and Yi meet, and after an initial startle, Yi decides she’s going to help the creature escape from a doctor and a villainous animal collector from the lab— and return him to his home. Yi’s childhood friends Peng (Albert Tsai) and Jin (Tenzing Norgay Trainor) join the escapees on their journey. Of course the adventure has it ups and downs, separations, and glimmer of magic. It turns out that the yeti they decided to name Everest can magically communicate with nature, causing a dandelion to grow 10 times its normal size, getting the group out of the villain’s grasp.
Davis’ life could have ended early on several occasions. His drug use was prodigious. However, he also managed to bounce back, to reinvent himself, and to make new music. He had a terrible temper. He was incredibly cool and poised. His talent was undeniable. He punched his wife in the face. He was an inventive painter. He seemed like a poor excuse for a father. He was a genius. Complicated. Very complicated. Anna He definitely could be a difficult person to be around, and he came near death many times because of his addictions, yet you still hear love and devotion from those closest to him as they share intimate stories, both triumphant and tragic. He was complicated but loved by those around him. Director Nelson was able to pull together a well-rounded group of those who surrounded Davis. Wives, girlfriends, musicians, and children, neighborhood pals—they all speak to the genius and the terrible temper behind the trumpet. Because it spanned such a wide amount of time, the film felt a little long for me personally, but I’m glad the filmmakers chose to cover his lifetime as a whole, not just the good (or bad) years. Anyone with an appreciation for both jazz and Davis’ contributions to the genre are sure to eat up the rich story presented on the screen. You hit the nail on the head— he’s one complicated character. ∆ Split Screen is written by Senior Staff Writer Glen Starkey and his wife, Anna. Comment at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
REVIEW SCORING FULL PRICE .... It’s worth the price of an evening showing MATINEE ........ Save a few bucks, catch an afternoon showing RENT IT .......... It’s worth a rental STREAM IT ..... Wait ’til Netflix has it NOTHING ........ Don’t waste your time What this animated film has going for it is the scenery that the creative team has designed from the spectacular fields of blooming flowers to the snowy mountaintops of Everest. But the story has been done more times than I can count. You know, greedy adults who want to exploit natural habitats for their own benefit and innocent young children who want to preserve them. Not to mention the coming-of-age plot after losing a parent. There are plenty of animated films that have used these plot lines successfully; Abominable didn’t really do it justice. The script wasn’t groundbreaking either, as a lot of the jokes were oneliners that didn’t even make the kids in my audience erupt in laughter. (97 min.) —Karen Garcia MOVIES continued page 48
PHOTO COURTESY OF DREAMWORKS ANIMATION
EVEREST HERE WE COME After discovering a magical Yeti on a rooftop, a group of three friends work together to return him to Mount Everest, in Abominable.
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 47
Arts
PHOTO COURTESY OF ANNAPURNA PICTURES
WHO YOU GONNA CALL? On its 35th anniversary, classic 1984 comedy Ghostbusters—starring (left to right) Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, and Dan Ackroyd—plays Downtown Center Cinemas on Oct. 6 and 10.
DO THE HUSTLER Ramona (Jennifer Lopez), an exotic dancer at a club frequented by greedy Wall Street types, milks her clients dry and almost gets away with it, in Hustlers.
PHOTO COURTESY OF 5POINT FILM FESTIVAL
MOVIES from page 47
AD ASTRA What’s it rated? PG-13 What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Galaxy, Park, Stadium 10 Co-writer James Gray (The Lost City of Z, The Immigrant, We Own the Night, The Yards, Little Odessa) directs this sci-fi mystery about astronaut Roy McBride (Brad Pitt), who’s recruited to venture into space in search of his father, Clifford McBride (Tommy Lee Jones), who 30 years earlier underwent a space mission of his own that was thought to have been doomed. Now bursts of antimatter threaten Earth, which appear to be coming from the senior McBride’s Lima Project, last heard from 16-years earlier in orbit around Neptune. I couldn’t help but see the obvious parallels between this story and Apocalypse Now (1979), or if you’d like to go back further, Joseph Conrad’s 1899 novella Heart of Darkness. Pitt’s Roy McBride is the Capt. Willard/Charles Marlow character sent on a dangerous mission to stop a rogue agent, and Tommy Lee Jones’ Clifford McBride is Col./Mr. Kurtz, the former heroic and loyal part of the team who’s apparently gone mad. Pitt’s narration further recalls Martin Sheen’s narration as Willard in Apocalypse Now and his thoughtful analysis of Kurtz and what caused him to drift into insanity. As for Jones’ Clifford, his obsession is with finding intelligent life outside the solar system. From Neptune, the outermost planet in our solar system, he should be able to send and receive unobstructed signals from deep space. Surely intelligent life is out there. The film explores humanity’s place in the universe and our penchant for selfdestruction. The colonized moon is both a fought over mining resource and a tourist destination preyed on by pirates. Roy is a
At the Movies
PHOTO COURTESY OF COLUMBIA PICTURES
EXPERIENCE COMMUNITY The 5Point Film Festival screens on Oct. 4, in the Fremont Theater, with its mission to “ignite personal and communal adventure of all kinds through the experience of sharing meaningful stories.”
Pick
INTO THE DARK When? 2018 What’s it rated? TV-MA Where’s it available? Hulu
J
alapeño-flavored kettle-cooked potato chips are my all-time favorite snack food. But I don’t buy them often because whenever I do, I lose all sense of self-control and eat an entire bag in one sitting. So, for the sake of my heart and my waistline, I buy pretzels to satiate my salty snack craving. They’re always reliably satisfying, but rarely fantastic, so portion control is never an issue. Yet, when I need something to munch on, there’s always a bag in my pantry. To me, the anthology horror series Into the Dark is the pretzel of television. Each episode—all of which function as short movies with 90-minute run times and different casts—is consistently entertaining, but never phenomenal.
fearless and impossible-to-rattle explorer who’s so closed off to his own emotions that he’s doomed his marriage to Eve (Liv Tyler). Essentially, Ad Astra is an existentialist quandary. Are we alone in the universe? Can we really make a true connection with anyone or anything? If these questions interest you and if you can settle in to this mesmerizing but often slow and contemplative film, you just might love it. On the other hand, if you’re expecting Star Wars or Star Trek, you’ll be sorely disappointed. Ad Astra is a meditation on loneliness. (124 min.) —Glen Starkey Nonetheless, I’m eager to watch each new episode that’s released. The first episode of the series, titled The Body, was released on Oct. 5, 2018. Since then, one episode has been put out each month based on a theme related to a holiday in that month. This includes many of the more widely celebrated holidays, such as Halloween and Thanksgiving, but also more greeting-card focused occasions, like Father’s and Mother’s days. Jason Blum’s Blumhouse Television produces the series, which wrapped up its first season on Hulu with episode 12, titled Pure in September. The second season kicks off on Oct. 4, with another Halloween-themed episode. The first season’s Halloween episode, which was about a hitman crashing a Halloween party, was mediocre at best. It was neither funny enough to be comedic nor scary enough to be horrific, but thankfully the series got better. Aside from the first episode, most installments are pretty entertaining, with a few exceeding that level. So far, my favorite is Pooka!, which was released in December, and tells the story of an unemployed actor who slowly descends into madness after taking a job wearing
ANNABELLE COMES HOME
Conjuring franchise the idea fountain would run dry, but for horror fans, there are still some surprises here, though perhaps not as scary and effective as in those that came before. Add in some great performances, some deeper messages about guilt, and an unnerving atmosphere, and you have the makings of an effective, albeit highly commercialized, horror flick. (100 min.) —Caleb Wiseblood
What’s it rated? R What’s it worth? Matinee Where’s it showing? Sunset Drive-In To keep a possessed doll from wreaking havoc, demonologists Ed and Lorraine Warren (Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga, respectively) lock Annabelle in their artifacts room at home. But unspeakable horror awaits the family when Annabelle awakens the evil spirits in the room, who all set their sights on Judy, the Warrens’ 10-year-old daughter, and her friends. You’d think this far along in the
Pick
a mascot costume to promote a new toy. It was one of the weirder and more experimental episodes. A close second favorite is They Come Knocking, which was released in June. It’s more of a straightforward horror story about a father and his two daughters being hunted by some supernatural beings during a camping trip in the desert. In addition to playing off monthly holidays, the series has also dished out some social commentary. Back in March, to recognize International Women’s Day, the series released the episode Tree House, which was influenced by the #MeToo movement. And fittingly, on July
BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON What’s it rated? R 4, the series released the episode Culture Shock, which told the story of a woman fleeing Mexico to try to start a new life in the U.S. The series also took on the subject of internet trolling with April’s release, I’m Just Fucking With You. The social commentary—plus the cycle of a new episode with a new cast and director being released each month—makes each installment feel fresh and different. This format also allows for mistakes and second chances. If one episode falls short, there’s always hope that the next month’s could be better (two seasons, 90 min. episodes). Δ —Zac Ezzone
PHOTO COURTESY BLUMHOUSE PRODUCTIONS
48 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
SPOOKILY RELIABLE Each episode in the anthology horror series Into The Dark is consistently entertaining, although rarely remarkable.
What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre (ends on Oct. 6) Hard-partying Brittany (Jillian Bell, Workaholics) receives a startling wake-up call when a visit to the doctor reveals how unhealthy she is. Determined to lose weight, Brittany takes up running to help her prepare for a new goal: to compete in the New York City Marathon. First-time writer-director Paul Downs Colaizzo helms this drama-comedy. Both earnest and hilarious, this film works in large part because Bell is willing to take her character to raw and uncomfortable places. She really carries the film through its unexpected twists and turns. Don’t be surprised if you leave the theater inspired. (103 min.) —Caleb
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DOWNTON ABBEY
Fremont Theater (all ages; $12 at Boo Boo Records or fremontslo.com). “We believe that communities are made better when their people pursue adventure and intentionally live their own best story,” according to the festival. “And so, our mission is to ignite personal and communal adventure of all kinds through the experience of sharing meaningful stories. We envision a national network of educated, engaged, and multi-generational communities inspired by story to take action in their individual and collective lives.” Find more info at 5pointfilm.org. —Glen
GHOSTBUSTERS
What’s it rated? PG What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre on Oct. 6 (4 p.m.) and Oct. 10 (7 p.m.) To mark its 34th anniversary, director Ivan Reitman’s (Meatballs, Stripes, Kindergarten Cop) 1984 blockbuster comedy returns to the big screen for a limited run. A trio of former parapsychology professors—Drs. Peter Venkman (Bill Murray), Raymond Stantz (Dan Ackroyd), and Egon Spengler (Harold Ramis)—open a ghost removal service in an old fire station just as New York City is inundated by all manner of ghosts. The film is a riot—a perfect blend of special effects, mock seriousness, and brilliantly deadpan performances by the three leads. Murray is especially engaging as the chronically inappropriate Venkman, who hits on one of his clients, Dana Barrett (Sigourney Weaver), whose refrigerator has become possessed. It’s simply a joy to watch! —Glen
What’s it rated? PG What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Fair Oaks, Galaxy, The Palm, Park, Stadium 10 The beloved TV series about the ultra rich Crawley family and their servants comes to the big screen under director Michael Engler (Sex and the City, Six Feet Under). If you’re a fan of the show, you’re already sold on revisiting these characters. If you’re like me and have never seen a single episode, you can jump into the fray and follow along well enough with its breezy brand of fun. A period piece and mannered drama, it features a great cast and an interesting albeit lightweight story. (122 min.) —Glen
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5POINT FILM FESTIVAL
HUSTLERS
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What’s it rated? Not rated Where’s it showing? Friday, Oct. 4, in the Fremont Theater The 5Point Film Festival screens on Friday, Oct. 4, at 6 p.m., in the
New
What’s it rated? R What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, MOVIES continued page 50
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www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 49
Arts SAN LUIS OBISPO
MOVIES from page 48 Galaxy, Park, Stadium 10 Writer-director Lorene Scafaria (Seeking a Friend for the End of the World, The Meddler) helms this crime dramedy based on New York magazine reporter Jessica Pressler’s articles about a group of strip club performers led by Ramona (Jennifer Lopez), who through craftiness exploit their Wall Street clients and extract their riches. Initially working at a strip club just to make ends meet, Dorothy (Constance Wu)—or Destiny, as her clients call her—starts to embrace the profession as a long-term career after meeting Ramona (Lopez), the club’s top money earner. After a friendly encounter, Ramona quickly takes Destiny under her wing, instructing her on the ins and outs of attracting wealthy, eager-to-spend-a-shit-ton customers. The opening to this section of the film reminded me of the clique listing scene in Mean Girls, as Ramona labels the different types of men Destiny should aim for—insecure guys who can be strung along for months, regulars that visit the club frequently, and the head honchos (CEOs and bankers ready to spend thousands during the course of one night). With Ramona’s help, Destiny has a Goodfellasesque rise to the top of the club alongside her, joined by some of their stripper peers, including Diamond (Cardi B) and Liz (Lizzo). If I could even muster a single complaint, it would be that those two don’t get enough screen time. Other than that small nitpick, I was consistently engrossed by Hustlers all the way up to its conclusion— which echoes Goodfellas again with an inevitable fall from grace for its characters, once drugs and theft enter the picture. Hustlers is definitely a film to take seriously, but it’s also simultaneously one of the funniest films of the year. The humor comes from genuine interactions and character quirks rather than forced one-liners. One stripper, Annabelle (Lili Reinhart) involuntarily vomits when under stress—which you can probably predict is quite often. I don’t recall ever finding throwup particularly funny, but Hustlers earned the church a convert—consider me a born-again barf fan. But in all seriousness, the real stars of the film are Wu and Lopez, who deliver equally top-notch performances as two friends during a dangerously deteriorating relationship. (110 min.) —Caleb
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IT: CHAPTER 2
What’s it rated? R What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Park, Stadium 10 Andy Muscietti (Mama, It) directs this two-part film based on Stephen King’s 1986 horror novel about an evil subterraneandwelling clown named Pennywise (Bill Skarsgård) who preys on the children of Derry, Maine, by exploiting their fears and phobias. In the first part (2017), we’re introduced to The Losers Club, a group of seven adolescent misfits who band together for protection from the town’s bullies, but more importantly from Pennywise, who abducts and murders children. The kids apparently defeat Pennywise in the first part, but in Chapter 2, 27 years after the first episode, Pennywise returns, and Mike Hanlon (Isaiah Mustafa) begins to call the other members of The Losers Club to remind them of their blood pact to return to Derry and band together to defeat Pennywise if he ever returns. Soon, Bill Denbrough (James McAvoy), Beverly Marsh (Jessica Chastain), Richie Tozier (Bill
Pick DOWNTON ABBEY (PG) Weekdays: 4:15, 7:00 Sat-Sun: 1:30, 4:15, 7:00
MILES DAVIS: BIRTH OF THE COOL (NR) Weekdays except Mon: 4:15, 7:00 Sat-Sun: 1:30, 4:15, 7:00 Mon: 7:00
LINDA RONSTADT: THE SOUND OF MY VOICE
(PG-13) Weekdays except Mon: 4:15, 7:00 Sat-Sun: 1:30, 4:15, 7:00 Mon: 4:15
At the Movies PHOTO COURTESY OF BBC FILMS
Hader), Ben Hanscom (Jay Ryan), Eddie Kaspbrak (James Ransone), and Stanley Uris (Andy Bean) are drawn back to the Pennywise mystery, and through flashback we revisit their younger selves (Chosen Jacobs as Mike; Jaeden Martell as Bill; Sophia Lillis as Beverly; Finn Wolfhard as Richie; Jeremy Ray Taylor as Ben; Jack Dylan Grazer as Eddie; and Wyatt Oleff as Stanley). Oh man, this film is fun! It’s the sort of nostalgic, over-the-top horror of Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983), with crazy special effects, jump scares, and laughs. Ultimately, the story is about the enduring bonds of friendship, teamwork, and trust. (102 min.) —Glen
JOKER
What’s it rated? R Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Galaxy, Park, Stadium 10, Sunset Drive-In Co-writer Todd Phillips (Old School, The Hangover, War Dogs) directs this character study and origin story of Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix), who after being rejected by society becomes Joker, Batman’s future archnemesis. (121 min.) —Glen
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JUDY
What’s it rated? PG-13 Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Galaxy, Park, Stadium 10 Rupert Gold (True Story) directs this biopic about Judy Garland (Renée Zellweger), who in 1968 arrived in London to perform a five-week sold-out series of concerts amid battling alcoholism, substance abuse, and depression. (118 min.) —Glen
New
LINDA RONSTADT: THE SOUND OF MY VOICE
What’s it rated? PG-13 What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Galaxy, The Palm Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman direct this documentary about singer Linda Ronstadt, who in her 20s burst into the ’60s folk scene and went on to be one of the biggest music stars of the 20th century. The film, features interviews with Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt, Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, Jackson Browne, Maria Muldaur, and many more. Whether you’re a longtime fan or one of the uninitiated, you’ll find a lot to love here, from Ronstadt’s amazing voice to her inspirational life. Deeply moving, the film will have you clamoring for more of her music. (95 min.) —Glen
Pick
THE MANHATTAN SHORT FILM FESTIVAL
What’s it rated? Not rated Where’s it showing? SLO County Libraries, through Oct. 5 SLO Libraries will be among more than 400 venues worldwide participating in the 22nd annual Manhattan Short Film Festival, through Oct. 6. Attendees of this free event will view 10 short films and then have the chance to vote for Best Film and Best Actor. The winners will be announced on Oct. 7. The festival received 1,250 entries from 70 countries before selecting the 10 finalists. The featured filmmakers hail from seven countries: Iran, Canada, Germany, Finland, the USA, and the United Kingdom. All final 10 short films will become Oscar-qualified, meaning they will
New
END OF THE RAINBOW Judy Garland (Renée Zellweger) arrives in 1968 London to perform a five-week sold-out series of concerts amid battling alcoholism, substance abuse, and depression, in Judy. become automatically eligible for an Academy Award nomination. The Manhattan Short Film Festival will take place at the following branches: Morro Bay Library, Oct. 3, at 1 p.m.; and Nipomo Library, Oct. 5, at 1:30 p.m. —Rebecca Juretic
MILES DAVIS: BIRTH OF COOL What’s it rated? Not rated Where’s it showing? The Palm See Split Screen.
ONCE UPON A TIME … IN HOLLYWOOD What’s it rated? R What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre Writer-director Quentin Tarantino (Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill, Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained, The Hateful Eight) helms this story set in 1969 Hollywood about fading TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) as they struggle to remain relevant in the changing entertainment industry. Tarantino’s ninth film features an ensemble cast and multiple storylines. (161 min.) —Glen
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PHOTO COURTESY OF BRON STUDIOS
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What’s it rated? R What’s it worth? Stream it Where’s it showing? Galaxy, Stadium 10 Adrian Grunberg (Get the Gringo) directs this fifth installment in the Rambo franchise that started in 1982 with Rambo: First Blood, about traumatized Vietnam vet John Rambo (Sylvester Stallone), who’s drawn into combat with local police after being unfairly arrested. Over the series, which includes Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985), Rambo III (1988), and Rambo (2008), Rambo has fought corrupt police, enemy troops, and drug cartels. This time around, Rambo travels to Mexico to save his kidnapped niece from a drug gang. The previous Rambo film really upped the ante on the gory violence, and this new installment does the same, offering up an array of stomachchurning carnage. If that’s all you want in a film, enjoy! However, this film—and the previous three—are devoid of the complexity of the rather excellent original. Instead, we’re treated to more of Rambo’s menacing platitudes and creative ways to dispatch the seemingly endless supply of bad guys in his sights. “Last” blood? One can hope. (89 min.) ∆ —Glen
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What’s it rated? PG-13 What’s it worth? Full price Where’s it showing? Downtown Centre, Stadium 10 Writers-directors Tyler Nilson and Michael Schwartz helm this adventure dramedy about Zak (Zack Gottsagen), a young man with Down syndrome, who runs away from a nursing home to pursue his dream of becoming a professional wrestler. With the help of small-time outlaw Tyler (Shia LeBeouf), and kind nursing home employee, Eleanor (Dakota Johnson), the trio embarks on a Mark Twain-like odyssey. This sweet crowd pleaser hits all the right notes and is enriched by a stellar cast. It opens with 22-year-old Zak, a ward of the state, stuck in a nursing home because the state “has no where else to put him.” The nursing home residents love him because he’s a sweet young man, but he doesn’t belong there. He’s roommate is Carl (an excellent Bruce Dern), who’s exceedingly tired of watching Zak’s old wrestling tapes of his favorite pro wrestler The Salt Water Redneck, aka Clint (an equally excellent Thomas Haden Church), who runs a small wrestling school. Long story short, Zak eventually slips out of the home and is on the road. This is a small film with a big heart. I loved it. (97 min.) —Glen
RAMBO: LAST BLOOD
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BECOMING JOKER After being rejected by society, Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) becomes Joker, Batman’s future archnemesis, in the origin story Joker.
50 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
New Times movie reviews were compiled by Senior Staff Writer Glen Starkey. Contact him at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
Arts
Get Out!
BY KAREN GARCIA
See you downtown
PHOTO BY KAREN GARCIA
New Times’ staff sips and saunters around downtown SLO on Sept. 27
W
hen asked what it’s like to work for a local media outlet, I always say it’s a great way to get to know an area. New Times, if you didn’t already know, is located on the bottom floor of a building in the heart of downtown San Luis Obispo. I won’t speak for my colleagues, but I do love setting up an interview outside of the basement—I mean office—to just get out and soak up some vitamin D. Through these reporting outings, I’ve gotten to know a lot of different people and plenty of places I wouldn’t have otherwise become acquainted with. Although our stories take us to different corners of SLO County, there are also the shops and people we haven’t met right near our office. I’m not talking about the local restaurants we frequent for lunch—shout out to Woodstock’s Pizza, San Luis Taqueria, Thai Classic, Firestone, and Sidewalk Market! Thank you for being our goto when we need a quick and delicious bite to eat. Yet it’s safe to say we haven’t seen all that our downtown has to offer. Luckily, the New Times editorial crew was invited to the third annual Sip n’ Saunter event on Sept. 27 put together by the Downtown SLO Association, which takes place literally all over our city’s downtown area. This year, 40 different stores, restaurants, bars, and salons participated in the event. On this Friday night, there’s a drink and/or food vendor ready to give us a taste at each location. The event begins at the association’s office, where we gear up with a wristband, wine cup, and map of participating locations. We look at the map to see if there are any shops that are beckoning our taste buds. There are a few places we mark off as a must, but for most of the night we just walk down the street and look for a green lantern, which signifies they are ready for us to Sip n’ Saunter. Making the trip to every single vendor doesn’t happen, but we definitely make a dent in the list. We go into a lot of stores I usually walk by or window-shop at. We explore The Ritual, a men’s clothing and barber shop, which recently moved to its new location on Higuera Street—just a few doors down from its original spot. I might not benefit from their barber services, but I do see a lot of clothing items, pocket knives, and other accessories that I can give as gifts in the future. Their vendor pairing is Tin City Cider’s Polly Dolly (a cider and rosé blend) or Hard Cider with Hops with a spoonful of mac and cheese from Giuseppe’s Cucina Rustica. There are also a lot of wine favorites that are served and new wineries I haven’t tried before. Habitat Home and Garden is one stop that has some beautiful, oneof-a-kind furniture pieces that we learn are pre-treated, so if a little wine gets spilled on a couch, it’s easy to clean out. Thankfully, we take a lot of care to not spill any of the wine we’re served from Fillipponi Ranch and Ancient Peaks Winery, or drop any of the arancini and crocchette provided by the Flour House. Arancini and crocchette are Sicilian fried rice balls, stuffed with ’nduja and provola, saffron, tomato and Parmigiano salsina. On the outside is a potato croquette with prosciutto cotto, provola, Parmigiano fondue, and calabrian chili aioli. So that’s a mouthful of ingredients, but it’s also a mouthful of deliciousness—which definitely makes me want to visit the Flour House and see what other offerings it has on its menu. Overall, the Sip n’ Saunter is a fun way to get to know our local businesses, taste some great food, and have plenty of wine—or beer— in between. I appreciate how the vendors, both new and already established, tell us more about their business or product. It’s also nice to spend time together as an editorial team outside of the newsroom, getting our necessary dose of outdoor weather, food, and drinks. We talk about work, the food, and run into a lot of people we’ve interviewed for stories in the past. It’s amazing to see how many people turned out for the event. Everywhere I look, there are people with blue wristbands and maps finding their next stop. We sipped, we sauntered, we conquered downtown. Δ Staff Writer Karen Garcia is typing away in the basement, dreaming of sipping wine at kgarcia@newtimesslo.com.
@getoutslo AFTER HOURS FUN New Times Marketing and Events Coordinator Rachelle Ramirez had some fun with photo props at Habitat Home and Garden. PHOTO BY CAMILLIA LANHAM
PHOTO BY KAREN GARCIA
SWEET TREATS Sheila Kearns Chocolate & Confections was sampling their milk, dark, and bourbon chocolate (pictured here) treats. PHOTO BY CAMILLIA LANHAM
WHOLE EXPERIENCE A visit to The Ritual not only came with a hard cider and food pairing, it also had musical entertainment. SAVORY GOODS The New Times editorial crew can’t really get over the arancini and crocchette served up by Flour House— delicious.
PHOTO BY CAMILLIA LANHAM
PHOTO BY KASEY BUBNASH
PIT STOP There was a lot of walking involved in the event, so Assistant Editor Peter Johnson (left) and I chose these fancy chairs at Sheila Kearns Chocolate & Confections to take a quick break.
MORE PLEASE Hands Gallery had a beautiful selection of hand-crafted goods, from jewelry to clocks, to look at while munching on wraps served by Mother’s Tavern.
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 51
Flavor
Beer and Wine
BY BETH GIUFFRE
Pretty in pink
PHOTO COURTESY OF FIRESTONE WALKER
Firestone Walker blends the best of both worlds in one can
L
obster corndogs. Ramen burgers. Ice-cream-cone cannoli. Foodies far and wide are being treated to boundary-pushing hybrids on their plates, and now two Central Coast beverage makers are bringing a fanciful blend in the form of a six-pack. Firestone Walker brewmasters teamed up with Niels Udsen, owner of Castoro Cellars, to create Rosalie. She comes in slim pink cans, with her name in pretty pink cursive above a beautiful, longhaired woman holding up grapes, with the bricks of the historic Paso Robles Inn surrounding her. She’s at once a beer and a wine. And she solves the age-old restaurant dilemma: Shall I order an IPA or a glass of rosé? Dear, you can have both, in a stemless wineglass no less. Swirl and sniff the aromatics in the glass before you sip, and keep an open mind. For my first try of the Rosalie, Firestone Walker Quality Control Manager Amy Crook had me lick some hibiscus flowers in a little cup to see if I could recognize them in the body of the beer-wine. The enigma drink proved lovely, like a light pilsner dating a rosé. As someone who likes light, fragrant wines like rosés and viognier and also adores beer, I realized I’m among the
BREAKING THE BEER MOLD Rosalie is co-fermented with chardonnay and other aromatic local wine grape varieties from Castoro Cellars in Paso Robles. The brewmasters incorporate a dash of hibiscus flower to achieve that pretty rosé color.
prime target market. I wondered what my friends and family might think, so I took some six-packs home to run a little experiment. It was a smashing success: Everyone seemed to be pleasantly surprised at how bright and fresh Rosalie tasted. Some were astounded that a beer could be so elegant, and others were amazed that a sophisticated wine could get along with a tough ol’ beer. PHOTO BY BETH GIUFFRE “It’s a backyard beer all day,” said Head Brewer Dustin Kral, who has been at Firestone for 17 years. “It’s just unique. It’s different. The acidity is bright, and the color is beautiful.” According to Udsen, rosé is really in right now. And in the beer world, there’s the hazy thing going on, and IPA’s popularity has skyrocketed. Udsen is hopeful this beer-wine hybrid trend sticks. Kral recently introduced the Rosalie at the Mammoth Bluesapalooza. “It was overlooked by a lot of our clientele,” he said, describing how sometimes Firestone staff would have to twist people’s arms to try something new. “Our customers wanted their IPAs and their standard beer, but once I started telling people exactly what it is—because what this beer needs is the story—not only were they drinking it the ROOTED IN WINE It makes sense that Firestone rest of the day, they were going Walker Brewery got back to its roots in wine. Their back and getting their buddies very first beers were fermented in wine barrels. Pictured (from left to right) are Head Brewer Dustin to come over and taste it and Kral, Quality Control Manager Amy Crook, and drink it.” Production Director Ali Razi. Rosalie is only 5 percent
52 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
alcohol and is made with no extracts, fruit-flavoring, or shortcuts. Plus, it’s low in calories. “I think Firestone, in general, always veered away from making products that we don’t want to drink ourselves, just because we think there’s a mass appeal to them,” said Firestone Walker’s Production Director Ari Razi, who has worked 16 years for the brewery. “I think that with this rosé style, there are so many overly sweet products out there that are artificial, where this beer was designed for a more sophisticated palate.” Rosalie is part of Firestone’s circle of life—their first beers were fermented in wine barrels, and ever since, they’ve used oak barrels in their brewing operations. Firestone brewery started small, on the Firestone family vineyard in Los Olivos, and moved to the old SLO Brewing Company building in Paso Robles in 2001. Now it’s the fourth largest craft brewery in California and employs hundreds of SLO County residents. Firestone has a brewery in Venice, California, called The Propagator that serves as an extension of its two other brewing operations in Paso and Buellton. It’s a state-of-the-art beer research and development think tank, where Rosalie was conceptualized. Firestone is also the founder of the Terroir Project, a collaborative experiment into beer-wine hybrids. Once Rosalie was made, Firestone had to purchase new equipment and tackle the challenges of integrating sugary grapes into the pipes and tanks, making the new brew shelf-stable, and preserving the qualities of a well-made beverage. Several test batches were made. Udsen and Firestone Brewmaster Matt Brynildson tasted the samples along the way, and Udsen said they both
The rosé lover’s beer
Look for Firestone Walker Brewing Company’s six-pack slim can Rosalie—a hybrid half-beer, half-wine with an acid profile similar to a rosé—in the beer and wine section of local grocery stores. Firestone Walker Brewing Company brewhouse tours and tastings are held at the Visitor’s Center: 1400 Ramada Drive, Paso Robles. Call (805) 225-5911. Firestone’s Taproom Restaurant is located at the same location.
learned quite a bit over the experimental span of a year. The wine grape juice was pressed and delivered for cold storage at their brewery in Paso, and the process of brewing a base beer began. “It was definitely a new challenge,” said Crook, who tastes Rosalie every week to monitor the tank. “It opened up a whole new realm of raw ingredient microbiology to watch … but we learned how to control it, and we haven’t had any issues.” In September 2018, Firestone’s friends and neighbors at Castoro harvested 100 tons of chardonnay grapes specifically reserved for Rosalie, later followed by another 100 tons of viognier, sauvignon blanc, riesling, and muscat. Brynildson wanted the “crowd-pleasing textures and flavors” of the chardonnay but also wanted the lift of the other aromatic grape varieties. Udsen said he met Brynildson through Castoro’s yearly Whale Rock Music & Arts Festival. Brynildson is a big fan of music, and it was at the festival when Brynildson told Udsen he wanted to make a beer with him. “I thought he was just BS’n’ me,” Udsen recalled. But Brynildson persisted. Udsen said he could supply enough grape juice for the project, and Brynildson was happy his supplier would be local. FLAVOR continued page 54
October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. A portion of the proceeds from the purchase of each Pink Ribbon Bagel® sold during the month of October will be donated to Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation. For more information on this charitable organization, please visit www. drsusanloveresearch.org.
Santa Maria 540 E. Betteravia PANERABREAD.COM (805) 349-9800
Arroyo Grande 1390 W. Branch (805) 473-9292
San Luis Obispo 299 Madonna Rd (805) 547-1800
eat & drink up.
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local oysters from Morro Bay with housemade cocktail sauce, spicy mignonette, & cucumber melon granita.
1023 CHORRO ST. SAN LUIS OBISPO LUNARED.COM
805-540-5243 www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 53
Flavor PHOTO COURTESY OF FIRESTONE WALKER
Celebrating 22 Years! New York Style
Bagels
12 Different Cream Cheeses SANDWICHES • SALADS • ESPRESSO
And Our Famous Blended Drinks!
PISMO BEACH 503 Five Cities Dr., #B 805-773-9263 ARROYO GRANDE 1259 E. Grand Ave. 805-473-1500 Drive-Thru Window
Voted Best Indian Food!
Shalimar INDIAN RESTAURANT
WE’VE MOVED to the Marigold Center
Come visit our NEW location!
3820 Broad Street, SLO All You Can Eat Buffet with 15+ Items! Lunch - $11.99
Mon-Sat 11:30am – 3:00pm
Monday Dinner - $12.99 Sunday Brunch - $12.99
Served with one champagne or Lassi
Now at Farmer’s Market by Bubble Gum Alley every Thursday! BANQUET, CATERING, & DINE OUT AVAILABLE! FREE DELIVERY IN SLO AREA (805) 781-0766 · shalimarslo.com 3820 Broad St. (Marigold Center) San Luis Obispo · Open 7 Days a Week
U-P IC K • Certified Organic • Apples
Voted SLO County’s BEST TACO!
• Flowers • Hard Cider • Pumpkins • FamilyOwned
SLO CREEK FARMS 6455 Monte Rd • 702-245-3135 Open Daily 11am-5pm
www.slocreekfarms.com
INDY WINE Firestone Walker Brewmaster Matt Brynildson’s idea was to use subtle souring techniques to create an acid profile similar to rosé wine.
MORRO BAY 2680 N. Main St 805-772-4965
NOW IN SLO! 1575 Calle Joaquin 805-439-2856
www.TacoTemple.com
FLAVOR from page 52
“It was fun for both of us,” said Udsen, who personally loves the Rosalie. “It’s real light and fresh. You gotta quaffer for sure!” ∆ Flavor writer Beth Giuffre is pleased to have met Rosalie. Send more flavorful introductions to bgiuffre@newtimesslo.com.
NEWS NIBBLES SEASONAL EATS FarmSLO, a program of Slow Money SLO, announces Bounty of the Harvest, a benefit dinner to support small, local farms. The entire dinner will feature and celebrate local food, along with the purveyors who grew or produced them. The dinner will be held Oct. 5, from 5 to 7:30 p.m., at Tiber Canyon Ranch, 280 W. Ormonde Road, SLO. Event attendees interested in learning about the olive groves at Tiber Canyon may arrive early for a tour by the owners. A curated, local menu by SLO Provisions Executive Chef Sam Williams will showcase Kandarian Organic Farms ancient grains and legumes, featured in salads and incorporated into a special batch of Whalebird Kombucha flavor made specifically for the event. Likewise, Rock Front Ranch Jujube fruit will be used to create an event-only ice cream by Doc Burnstein’s. A sample of other menu items are Etto Pasta, Bee Wench Chicken, produce from Dragon Springs Farm, Surfside Farms, and Robinsong Farms. Niner Wine Estates will be there to pour their award-winning wines. Tickets are $100 at slowmoneyslo.org and include food, beverages, entertainment, and parking ... Also on Oct. 5, from 6 to 9 p.m., Gopher Glen Organic Apple Farm and Avila Valley Barn will host the third annual Hard Cider Harvest Dinner, held in the orchard under café lights and stars, at Gopher Glen, 2899 See Canyon Road, SLO. Tickets, $75, at gopherglen.com, include chef Jesse Smith’s (Farmers Guild Catering) family-style chicken dinner paired with six Gopher Glen hard ciders, dessert with coffee, and a meet-and-greet with Gopher Glen farmers.
FAB FESTS
1127 Broad St. San Luis Obispo · www.sidecarslo.com @sidecar_slo · #sidecarslo · info@sidecarslo.com 54 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
An Oktoberfest beer garden, an oyster eating contest sponsored by Giovanni’s Fish Market, a Hawaiian shirt contest, and a lineup of incredible bands and musicians will be the highlights of this year’s family-friendly Rhythm of the Sea Morro Bay Harbor Festival, on the Embarcadero behind the Morro Bay Maritime Museum, Oct. 5, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Oct. 6, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tickets ($5 to $10; kids under 12 free) can be purchased at my805tix. com, with a discount for Morro Bay residents. To enter the oyster eating contest (2:30 p.m.
Oct. 5), be at the Embarcadero Stage at 2 p.m. Entry is $10 at Giovanni’s or sign up at the stage … California Dreams is the theme for this year’s family-friendly Colony Days Festival, Oct. 5, from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Sunken Gardens, 5942 West Mall, Atascadero. The event will start with a Lions Club pancake breakfast ($5 adult/$3 child) at 7 a.m., followed by the parade at 10 a.m. and a variety of food and retail vendors ... Grab your train whistle kids! Railroad BBQ Company will be serving food and beverages at this year’s Railroad Festival at the San Luis Obispo Railroad Museum, 1940 Santa Barbara Ave., SLO, on Oct. 5, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fableist Wine Tasting will make a stop, from noon to 4 p.m. … Colony Market and Deli’s owner Joanna Wemple decided to hold a pop-up shop with food after hearing her customers wish more shops were open on Sundays. The Stay Local, Shop Local Sunday Pop-Up Shop will be Oct. 6, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Colony: 6040 El Camino Real, Atascadero. Shops will include Vivant Cheese and Purple Cowboy Wine (proceeds to benefit Tough Enough to Wear Pink); Anna & Mom, Roxanne’s Birkenstocks, Life Elements, and Drew Davis Fine Art.
MISC. NIBBLES Caliwala Food Market & Deli has opened in Santa Margarita (2200 El Camino). Catch the grand opening celebration on Oct. 6, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Caliwala is a brand new fresh and local community market, with organic snacks, drinks, ice cream, and deli. ∆ Flavor writer Beth Giuffre needs some organic snacks right about now. Send crackers and cookies to bgiuffre@newtimesslo.com.
D INE ’N’ DISH Prosecco and popcorn My husband (bless his heart) recently went along with me to see Downton Abbey at the Galaxy Atascadero movie theater, and lo and behold, next to the concessions on a pretty little side table, the theater was advertising bubbly to go with our movie. At the Galaxy, you can order wine by the glass or bottle and drink it with your popcorn and Junior Mints while you watch your favorite movies. The Galaxy Theatre also holds wine tastings every other Wednesday, and this month has been all about J. Dusi wines. But for Downton Abbey (which has so much wine drinking, it could almost be fit into the wine-themed genre of movies), the management at the Galaxy pulled out the white linen for an Italian prosecco special. While Downton is playing, the prosecco special will be available: $12 for a double pour of La Marca prosecco (12 ounces means: “Never complain, never explain”) in a nice, stemless wine glass. The light and floral sparkling wine with sinful buttered popcorn, and in the extra-spacious VIP red leather movie chairs—this is the pairing that you may not even think you would need but probably deserve. The Galaxy Atascadero is located at 6917 El Camino Real, Atascadero. The $12 for a 12 ounce pour of prosecco special will run as long as Downton Abbey is in the theater. ∆ Flavor writer Beth Giuffre is ready for a matinee. Send extra Junior Mints to bgiuffre@newtimesslo.com.
9 1 8 2 11 E T A D N O I T PUBLICA
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Open Houses Arroyo GrAnde
sAn luis oBisPo
520 Torrey Pine PlAce, 4BD, 4BA, $1,200,000, Sun
3273 violeT sTreeT, 3BD, 2BA, $789,000.00, Thur
1182 BriTTAny Ave, 3BD, 2.5BA, $510,000, Sat 1-3, Amy Gallagher, 805-550-8705, Stew Hizey, DREBroker # 00874459
1260 & 1262 sTAfford sT, 2BD, 2BA, $865,000, Sat
1182 BriTTAny Ave, 3BD, 2.5BA, $510,000, Sun 12-3,
3324 rockview courT, 2BD, 2.5BA, $680,000, Sat 10-
12-3, Allan Real Estate Investments, 805-473-7500, Dennis Allan, RE#00961923
Amy Gallagher, 805-441-6300, Cynthia Harrigan, DREBroker# 00874459
1037 Ash sT, 3 BD, 2 BA, $759,000, Sat 1-3, Amy Gallagher,
449 MesA wAy, 3BD, 2.5BA, $674,900, Sat 11-4, Sun 11-4, Richardson Properties, 805-458-7914, Amanda Dunton, RE#01874074
1045 Ash sT, 4 BD, 3 BA, $845,900, Sat 1-3, Amy
Gallagher, 805-710-0588, Diane Caston, DREBroker# 00874459
2478 vicToriA Avenue #102, 2BD, 2.5BA, $663,440,
1047 Ash sT, 4BD, 3BA, $849,900, Sat 1-3, Amy Gallagher,
805-710-0588, Diane Caston, DREBroker# 00874459
205 corBeTT cAnyon dr, 3BD, 2BA, $675,000,
Sun 12-2, Kellye Grayson, 805-316-0375, Kellye Grayson, RE#02014877
505 lAunA ln, 3BD, 2BA, $660,000, Sat 11 - 2, Coast & County Brokers, 805-801-0895, Cathy Francis, DRE #01359364
ATAscAdero 11800 old Morro roAd, 5BD, 4BA, $999,900, Sun 1-3,
COMPASS, 805-610-0345, April Fehrer, DRE#01446379
loMPoc 2425 ceBAdA cAnyon ln, 3BD, 2.5BA, $1,395,000,
Sun 1 -4, Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices, 805-689-3242, Kerry Mormann, #00598625
Morro BAy 361 dunes sT, 2BD, 1BA, $663,100, Sat 10:30 - 1, Rock View Realty, 805-225-3151, Sean Green, DRE# 02030433
oceAno Max DelOro, 805-781-3750, Hal Sweasey DRE: 01111911, 01971268
249 BridGe sTreeT, 3BD, 2.5BA, $925,000, Sat 12-3, Sun 12-3, Richardson Properties, 805-709-3480, Andrea Soderin, RE#01774160 261 BridGe sTreeT, 3BD, 2.5BA, $925,000, Sat 12-3, Sun 12-3, Richardson Properties, 805-709-3480, Andrea Soderin, RE#01774160
1832 sPooner dr, 5BD, 3.5BA, $859,000, Sat 12-2,
Gordon & Gordon Properties, 805-773-2610, Kirby & Margaret Gordon, BRE#00481105
sAn MiGuel 86610 oAk sTreeT, 3BD, 3BA, $379,000, Sun 12 - 3, Century 21 Hometown Realty, 805-835-3166, Bernadette Corona, #00874459
sAnTA MAriA -1, Coast Family Real Estate, 805-260-1455, Tonia & Kenny Kleinsmith, #1433807
sAnTA ynez
STONE REAL ESTATE, 850-266-5216, Angelo Passidakis, #01055589
5510 BAseline Ave, 3BD, 2.5BA, $1,835,000, Sun 1 -4, Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices, 805-689-3242, Kerry Mormann, #00598625
PisMo BeAch
solvAnG
100 el PorTAl dr, 3BD, 3BA, $1,215,000, Fri 9:30 - 12,
1378 vesTer hof, 3BD, 2BA, $829,000, Sun 1 - 3, Santa Ynez Valley Real Estate Company, 805-688-5717, Allan Jones, #984793
EIGHTY20 GROUP - A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION - DRE LICENSE NO. 02092190
ON THE CENTRAL COAST
2450 vicToriA Avenue #102, 2BD, 2.5BA, $618,340, Sat 11:30-5:30, Sun 11:30-5:30, Richardson Properties, 805305-2425, Amber Morgan Wong, RE#01915584
1620 21sT., 3BD, 1BA, $449,000, Sat 1-3pm, CORNER
Keller Williams Realty Central Coast, 805-835-6386, Jennifer Dawson, BRE# 01967230
FIND YOUR DREAM HOME
Sat 11:30-5:30, Sun 11:30-5:30, Richardson Properties, 805305-2425, Amber Morgan Wong, RE#01915584
483 sAinT MArys cT, 3BD, 2BA, $474,900, Sat 11
1620 lAGunA dr, 3BD, 3BA, $875,000, Sun 12 - 3, RE/
569 Higuera Street, Suite B, Downtown SLO www.eighty20.group
2, Richardson Properties, 805-550-1151, Andrew Richardson, RE#01872187
465 MesA wAy, 3BD, 2.5BA, 664,900.00, Sat 11-4, Sun 11-4, Richardson Properties, 805-458-7914, Amanda Dunton, RE#01874074
805-710-0588, Diane Caston, DREBroker#00874459
Introducing the Eighty20 Group. San Luis Obispo’s newest real estate brokerage. With deep local roots, a fresh approach to marketing, and an unmatched commitment to our community. The next chapter of hyper-local real estate has arrived.
1-3, David Bjerre, 805-544-6060, David Bjerre, #00891620
1051 Ash sT, 4BD, 2.5BA, $829,900, Sat 1-3, Amy Gallagher, 805-710-0588, Diane Caston, DREBroker#00874459
Real Estate Refined.
3:30-6:30, Richardson Properties, 805.305.1950, John Souza, LICENSE: 01239099
$315,000
230 North 3rd St., Shandon
3 beds, 2 full baths | Single Family Residence 1,152 sq ft; 7,000 sq ft lot MLS# PI18197585
AFFORDABLE HOME IN SLO COUNTY!
Kirby Gordon
Margaret E. O’Hara-Gordon
805.773.2610 or 800.394.2610
805.550.7075
email: moharagordon@gmail.com BRE# 01099075
Email: Kirby@gordonandgordonre.com CA BRE#00481105
1533 Brighton Ave., Grover Beach
$559,500
RESULTS THAT WILL MOVE YOU!
This detached townhome was the builder’s personal unit and has high-end finishes that you would normally only find in a million dollar custom home! With 3 bedrooms and 2 1/2 baths, this home just blocks from the beach includes a kitchen with special order cherry cabinets with wood-carvings, granite counters and backsplash, two separate stainless steel sinks and appliances, a pot filler fixture for pasta, a RO unit and custom fixtures. The refrigerator opening was sized for an extra large Sub Zero type unit. There are travertine floors downstairs and up the stairway and cherry wood floors upstairs. The bathrooms are very well appointed with travertine showers and floors and unique natural stone sinks. This is the end unit in the back down a custom paver common driveway. If you have been searching for that perfect first or second home that is turnkey and move-in ready, then this is the home for you! LEASE OPTION.
1832 Spooner Dr. San Luis Obispo $879,500
Large family home with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 fireplaces, and 3-car garage in a great location close to shopping, schools and transportation. This home also has an office, den/game room and lots of storage, and is within easy walking distance of the neighborhood park. The home was built in 2003 and is in move-in turn-key condition. With 3,407 square feet of living area this is the best priced home per square foot in all of San Luis Obispo. If you have been searching for that perfect family home in San Luis Obispo, then this is the property for you!
MARY MITCHELL
Broker/Owner DRE#01452479
805-550-7185 direct
Mary@MitchellRealEstate.com
OPEN HOUSE Sat 12-2pm
121 Grandview, Grover Beach Price Reduced! Ocean, dunes, and city views from this 5 bedroom, 4.5 bath North Grover Beach home.
Big Sur … Big View - $3,770,000 5 BD, 3 BA Sea View Ranch on over 190 acres of ocean view property. Level areas with 4 cabins, & approx. 15 usable acres extending to top of the hill. Propane, generators, spring-fed water system & holding tanks.
Residential – Multi-Family - Investment Property – Land & Vineyards
(805) 801-6694
P I S M O B E A C H gordonandgordonRE.com 56 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
104 W. Branch Street – Arroyo Grande www.AuerSells.com • auerproperty@gmail.com
Brenda Auer
Broker #01310530
Classies
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WANTED TO BUY
APARTMENTS/DUPLEX FOR RENT
WAREHOUSE WANTED
SLO MOTEL ROOMS
Estab Ventura business in search of a warehouse w/ office space. Min 1200 - ~2000 sq ft. No retail traffic. Any future availability also considered. PQN Audio 805-794-6475
HBO/Cable, TV, Free Wi-Fi, Refrigerator, Micro, Low Rates, Sunday through Thursday, Weekly Available, No Pets. 805-543-7700
SMALLER COMPUTER DESK
ELECTRONICS
Smaller computer desk with wheels that has a slide-out shelf for the keyboard and printer. $30 Call 464-0700 and ask for Roger.
LEGAL NOTICES ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE (ONLINE AUCTION)
CONVERT YOUR BIKE TO ELECTRIC
RV’S RV FOR SALE
2006 Winnebago Classy Motorhome. Original Owner. 6k miles. 2 slides. 27’. Like Brand New. $31,800. Contact 661543-7536. Located in Fresno
Build an Electric Bicycle For more inquires, contact: Mike Sten 310-750-5405 msten1@hotmail.com
TV FOR SALE
Vizio 32” T.V. with remote. $50. Ex. cond. Dynex 32” T.V. with remote for $40. Ex. cond. Call 464-0700 and ask for Roger.
HOUSEHOLD
VEHICLES WANTED
Tanja K. Lundien, Christopher W. Perdue, Robert L. Walker, Kristin R. Dejong, Brianna L. Touey, Michelle J. Baranek, Dylan Halter, Maria M. Viveros, Norma Brito, Anthony R. Kuhnle, Shawna A. Bedford, Tracy N. Powers, & Bobby J. Cremeans,
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$$$ WANTED, Motor Homes, Travel Trailers, RV’s, Trucks, Cars, EZ as 123 Cash on the Spot. Top $$Dollar. Beat any price!! 559-790-1582.
CLASSIC CARS WANTED
• CA$H ON THE SPOT
• All cars, trucks, SUVs • We come to you!
The contents of these storage spaces include furniture, piano, lamps, electronics, office furniture, art, BBQ, air rifle, toys, bikes, sports equip., outdoor gear, ladders, appliances, auto parts & equip., tires, fishing gear, tools, misc. boxes, containers, & other items.
COMPUTER DESK FOR SALE
Computer Desk with lower shelf for printer and paper. Upper shelf between two side storage towers. Excellent condition. $40. Call 4640700 and ask for Roger.
HAULING & CLEAN-UP JT’S HAULING
Trees, Debris, Garage Clean Up, Moving and Recycling. Call Jon 805-440-4207
WANTED TO BUY
October 3 & 10, 2019
ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE (ONLINE AUCTION)
MISCELLANEOUS
$ CALL DANNY $
(702) 210-7725
PETS
Afterlife Services for Your Animal Companion
SELL YOUR RV!
Serving many pet hospitals throughout SLO County.
• CA$H ON tHE SpOt • All RVs • We come to you!
**Ask your Veterinarian if they use Eden Memorial Pet Care
Located in Paso Robles 888-216-6127
www.EdenMemorialPetCare.com EdenMemorialPetCare
BAR STOOLS & SHELF UNIT
(702) 210-7725
Two Solid Wood Counter Stools that swivel. Seat is 24” high and the back is 43” high. $60 for both. Shelf Unit with pull down desk. Has 3 lower drawers and 2 upper shelves. $80. Call 464-0700 and ask for Roger.
FELINE NETWORK ADOPTIONS At Petco in SLO. Most Saturdays 11 to 4. Fixed with shots. For SPAY/ NEUTER help/assistance in City of SLO or South County call 549-9228, ext. 707. www.felinenetwork.org
FREE COUCH
FREE couch. Great condition. You haul it, it’s yours. Call 805-752-1150
Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash and credit card only. All purchased items sold as is where is and must be removed within 72 hours of the sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Auctioneer: Plastino Interests, Inc., CA Bond#7901004996 Online Auction Platform: www.storagetreasures.com Facility Phone: (805) 489-0500
CASH FOR ANTIQUE GUNS!
Old West, Indian and Civil War items, stone Indian bowls. Private collector. 805-6100903
$ CALL DANNY $
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to Sections 21700-21716 of the Business & Professions Code. The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on the 17th day of October 2019, at 10:00 AM, at www.storagetreasures.com. Property is stored at Fortress-Secure Mini-Storage, 2175 Willow Road, Arroyo Grande, CA County of San Luis Obispo, State of California, the contents of the following tenant’s storage space(s):
@newtimeslo
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to Sections 21700-21716 of the Business & Professions Code. The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on the 17th day of October 2019, at 1:00PM, at www.storagetreasures.com. Property is stored at Central Coast Self Storage, 725 Sheridan Road, Arroyo Grande, CA County of San Luis Obispo, State of California, the contents of the following tenant’s storage space(s): Anthony Cestaro, Janice A. Tomlin, Steven J. Kelly, Nichole M. Evans, Pauline L. Ponce, Sandra Lujan, Cory Hernandez, Amanda S. Isaacson, Cody White, Alfonso Bedania, Aaron Cepeda, Lubna Haddad, Jesse Chavez, & Jason Fisser. The contents of these storage spaces include auto parts & equip, appliances, furniture, sports equip, art & art supplies, bikes, toys, ladder, electronics, grill, outdoor gear, clothes, camera gear, mats, xtrasun light, misc. boxes, containers, & other items. Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash and credit card only. All purchased items sold as is where is and must be removed within 72 hours of the sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Auctioneer: Plastino Interests, Inc., CA Bond#7901004996 Online Auction Platform: www.storagetreasures.com Facility Phone: (805) 481-1484 October 3 & 10, 2019
EDWARDE. ATTALA(SBN:206640) CURTISV. ABRAM(SBN307077) ATTALALAW,APC 1502 HIGUERA STREET,SAN LUIS OBISPO,CA 93401 (805)5431212FAX:(805)5431213 ATTORNEY FOR: KENNETH R. MCCOY AND FRANCES A. CHAVES, PETITIONERS SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNA, COUNTY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO
1035 Palm Street,Room385 San Luis Obispo,CA 93408 In re: R. D. McCoy Family Trust Dated November 16, 1994 NOTICE OF HEARING— DECEDENT’S ESTATE OR TRUST Case Number: 16PR-0106 This notice is required by law. This notice does not require you to appear in court, but you may attend the hearing if you wish. 1.NOTICE is given that Kenneth R. McCoy and Frances A.Chaves,Co-Successor Trustees of the R.D.McCoy Family Trust Dated November 16,1994 have filed VERIFIED PETITION TO ESTABLISH THE FACT OF AND THE TIME AND PLACE OF DEATH OF RONALD FARIAS(Cal. Prob.§200et.seq.) 2.You may refer to the filed documents for more information.(Some documents filed with the court are confidential.) 3.A HEARING on the matter will be held as follows: a.Date:October 25,2019 Time:9:00AM Dept.:4.b.Address of court shown above. ————————————— ———Assistivelisteningsystems,com puter-assisted real-time captioning,or sign language interpreter services are available upon request if at least 5 days notice is provided. Contact the clerk’ soffice for Request for Accommodations by Persons With Disabilities and Order(form MC-410).(CivilCodesection54.8.) ————————————— ———Sept 26, Oct 3, 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-1966 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SOLUTIONS SOUTH, 910 Ramona, Suite I, Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. William Joseph Schmidt (1186 San Sebastian Ct., Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ William Joseph Schmidt, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 08-15-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 08-15-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2008 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/20/1998) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MGF ENTERPRISES, 425 S. Elm Street, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Manfred Freutel (1385 Atlantic City Ave. Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Manfred Freutel. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 08-20-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 08-20-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2059 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/19/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, AG MASSAGE & STRETCH, 415 El Camino Real, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Massage & Stretch LLC (543 Ide Street, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Massage & Stretch LLC, Rachel Taylor, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 0826-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 08-26-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2066 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, VILLAGE PARKING, 102 Bridge Street, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Hometown Ventures, LLC (102 Bridge Street, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Hometown Ventures, LLC, Chris Gallagher, Managing Member. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 08-26-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 08-26-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2106 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/06/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, DIPPEL SPEED & STEEL, 1121 Mesa View A, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Douglas Robert Dippel (222 Laurel St., Avila Beach, CA 93424). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Douglas Dippel. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 08-30-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 08-30-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
LEGAL NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2112 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/30/2012) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CIENAGA SOLAR, 561 Windermere Lane, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Cienaga Services, Inc. (561 Windermere Lane, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Cienaga Services, Inc., Gabriel Alarcon, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 08-30-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 08-30-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2116 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (07/02/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CHANTICLEER VINEYARD BED AND BREAKFAST, KINDRED OAK FARM, 1250 Pain Horse Place, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Kindred Oak LLC (1250 Pain Horse Place, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Kindred Oak LLC, Lisa Peach, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-03-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 0903-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2120 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HORSEPLAY, BOOK CLUB, HANS GRUNER, QUPE, ALLOY WINE WORKS, IF YOU SEE KAY, CLAYHOUSE, PURPLE COWBOY, 453 Laetitia Vineyard Dr., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Vintage Wine Estates, Inc. (205 Concourse Boulevard, Santa Rosa, CA 95403). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Vintage Wine Estate, Inc., Patrick Roney, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-03-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-03-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2122 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (07/26/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MHL PSYCH SERVICES, 1275 Montecito Ridge Dr., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Michael Lisiak (1275 Montecito Ridge Dr., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Michael Lisiak. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-03-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-03-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
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LegaL Notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2123 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (06/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, THE LOCKED INN, 750 Farroll Rd., Suite C, Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. Heather Marie Barr (2108 Fairchild Way, Apt. 1, Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Heather M. Barr, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-03-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 0903-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2127 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (07/10/2014) New Filing The following person is doing business as, LARA HR SERVICES, 368 Mercedes Lane, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Alicia Irene Lara (368 Mercedes Lane, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Alicia Irene Lara, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-04-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. N. Balseiro, Deputy. Exp. 09-04-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2132 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/13/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SERVPRO OF MORRO BAY/KING CITY, 6820 Sherry Place, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Envirotec Environmental Inc. (10322 Maikai Dr., Huntington Beach, CA 92646). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Envirotec Environmental Inc., Robert Skelton, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-04-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Currens, Deputy. Exp. 09-04-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2134 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (05/12/2014) New Filing The following person is doing business as, PURLIEU MANAGEMENT AND LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION, 725 Buckley Road, Suite A, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Taylor D. Boyle (425 Oconnor Way, San Luis Obispo, CA 93405). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Taylor D. Boyle, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-0419. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. N. Balseiro, Deputy. Exp. 09-04-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2137 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (05/31/2016) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CHC PHARMACY PASO ROBLES, 2800 Riverside Avenue, Suite 100, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. imgRX SLO, Inc. (1330 Enclave Parkway, Houston, TX 77077). This business is conducted by A DE Corporation /s/ imgRX SLO, Inc., Eric Christensen, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-0519. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-05-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
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FILE NO. 2019-2138 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/03/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, BAYSHORE REALTY, 560 Morro Bay Blvd., Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Janne A. Reddell (1787 Sage Ave., Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Janne A Reddell, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-05-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-05-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2152 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/09/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, BLUE SKY REALTY, 1248 E. Grand Ave., Suite E, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Julie Marie Klein (2550 Cienaga St. Space 30, Oceano, CA 93445). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Julie Marie Klein, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-09-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2142 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/12/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TINASHE FARMS, 1033 South River Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Tinashe, Inc. (1033 South River Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Tinashe, Inc., Raymond Maravilla Sancho, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-05-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-05-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2153 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, NORTH COUNTY WOMENADE, 3480 South Higuera Street, Suite 100, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. San Luis Obispo County Child Abuse Prevention Council (3480 South Higuera Street, Suite 100, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ San Luis Obispo County Child Abuse Prevention Council, Lisa Fraser, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. A. Bautista, Deputy. Exp. 09-09-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
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FILE NO. 2019-2162 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (06/01/2016) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SLO FILM FEST, SLO FILM FESTIVAL, 1316 Broad Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. San Luis Obispo International Film Festival Inc. (1316 Broad Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ San Luis Obispo International Film Festival Inc., Paul Metchik, Board President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Currens, Deputy. Exp. 09-09-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2167 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (01/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, BAR R RANCH, 38 Altamont Way, Camarillo, CA 93010. Ventura County. Roger Alan Staben (38 Altamont Way, Camarillo, CA 93010). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Roger Alan Staben, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-10-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-10-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2144 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SAGE PROPERTIES, 1009 Morro St., Suite 207, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Mary Kubacki Inc. (1155 Woodside Drive, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Mary Kubacki Inc., Mary Kubacki, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-05-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-05-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2155 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, LEFT FIELD, 1040 Los Osos Valley Rd., Los Osos, CA 93402. San Luis Obispo County. Nick Wilkinson (1719 14th St., Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Nick Wilkinson, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 09-09-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2171 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/06/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TIENDITA LA MISSION, 1299 Mission St., San Miguel, CA 93451. San Luis Obispo County. Carmela Roman Martinez (1320 Los Olivos, Apt. 8, Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Carmela Roman Martinez, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-10-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 09-10-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2147 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/06/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, NIPOMO TIRES, 190 S. Thompson Ave., #B-Back Building, Nipomo, CA 93444. San Luis Obispo County. Hortensia F Diaz (4527 Cynbalaria Ct., Santa Maria, CA 93455). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Hortensia Diaz, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-06-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 0906-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2151 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/29/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, DATABROOK, 408 Printz Rd., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Ryan James Shepherd (408 Printz Rd., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Ryan James Shepherd. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-06-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-06-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2157 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CARRIE’S NOTARY AND DOC SIGNING, 6359 Charing Ln., Cambria, CA 93428. San Luis Obispo County. Carrie Kay Herzog (6359 Charing Ln., Cambria, CA 93428). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Carrie Herzog. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. A. Bautista, Deputy. Exp. 09-09-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2160 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/09/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, COVERED SLO, 1896 Songbird Street, Avila Beach, CA 93424. San Luis Obispo County. Covered SLO LLC (1896 Songbird Street, Avila Beach, CA 93424). This business is conducted by A DE Limited Liability Company /s/ Covered SLO LLC, Melissa Tucker, President & Chief Executive Officer. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-09-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 0909-24. September 12, 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2176 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/14/2017) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SPRINGHILL SUITES PASO ROBLES, 900 El Camino Real, Atascadero, CA 93422. San Luis Obispo County. Daon Properties, LLC (2280 S Haven Ave., Ontario, CA 91761). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Mun Soo Kang, Manager. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-11-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-11-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2180 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/01/2014) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CENTRAL COAST NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY PC, 1531 Higuera Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. David J. Yeh (1531 Higuera Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ David J. Yeh. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-11-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 09-11-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
58 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
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FILE NO. 2019-2187 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, JUICEBOSS, JUICE BOSS, JUICEBOSS DELIVERS, JUICE BOSS DELIVERS, 8550 Unit C, El Camino Real, Atascadero, CA 93422. San Luis Obispo County. Amy Vanessa Einolander (670 Hollyhock Lane, Templeton, CA 93465). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Amy V. Einolander, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-12-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. N. Balseiro, Deputy. Exp. 09-12-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2189 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, EVERLYGROVE REAL ESTATE, EVERLYGROVE, EVERLYGROVE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, 1232 Park St. #200, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. California Hotel Brokers (1232 Park St. #200, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ California Hotel Brokers, Aaron Graves, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-12-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. A. Gibson, Deputy. Exp. 09-12-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2191 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/12/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, LAUREN’S LEATHERS, 991 Little Morro Creek Road, Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Lauren Ashley Victor (991 Little Morro Creek Road, Morro Bay, CA 93442). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Lauren Victor, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-12-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-12-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2196 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/11/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HYDRA FIRE PROTECTION, 480 Violet Ave., Nipomo, CA 93444. San Luis Obispo County. Chad Damon Phillips II (480 Violet Ave., Nipomo, CA 93444). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Chad Damon Phillips II. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-13-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-13-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2204 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, RL DETAILED LANDSCAPING, 2555 Paso Robles St., Oceano, CA 93445. San Luis Obispo County. Rafael Lopez (2555 Paso Robles St., Oceano, CA 93445). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Rafael Lopez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-16-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-16-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2206 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/07/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SANTANA WEALTH MANAGEMENT, 1181 Main St., Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Santana Wealth Management (1181 Main St., Morro Bay, CA 93442). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Santana Wealth Management, Guadalupe R. Santana, Client Services Manager. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-16-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Currens, Deputy. Exp. 09-16-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2227 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/17/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, OTTHSAW, OATHSAW, 1751 21st Street, Oceano, CA 93445. San Luis Obispo County. Alisa Evelyn Reynolds (1751 21st Street, Oceano, CA 93445). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Alisa E. Reynolds, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-17-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-17-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2239 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/19/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MONTECITO ENTERPRISES, 461 Stoneridge Drive, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Richard Ungeheuer (461 Stoneridge Drive, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Richard Ungeheuer. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-19-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-19-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2207 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (05/22/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MARTITECT, MARTITECT DESIGN, 1155 Stonecrest Drive, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Marta Anna Blachowicz (1155 Stonecrest Drive, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Marta Anna Blachowicz. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-16-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 09-16-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2229 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SWELL LOCKSMITHING, SLO LOCK, SLO VALLEY LOCKSMITH, 1269 Southwood Dr., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Kranes LLC (1269 Southwood Dr., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Kranes LLC, Andrew Kranes, Managing Member. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-18-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-18-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2208 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, ESTERO GLASS, 1560 Main St., Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Construction Inc. (11030 Santa Rita Road, Cayucos, CA 93430). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Construction Inc., Ross Selkirk, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-16-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-16-24. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2232 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HYUNDAI SAN LUIS OBISPO, 1407 auto Park Way, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Rob Dog Motors Inc. (1407 auto Park Way, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Rob Dog Motors Inc., Robert S. Haupt, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-18-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-18-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2219 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/09/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CREATIVE SOLUTIONS COUNSELING AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION, 1445 West Grande Ave., Suite C, Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. Kelly Lee Bell (280 Chelsea Court, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Kelly Lee Bell. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-17-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-17-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2234 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, VIRTUAL HORIZON, VH, 1145 Azalea Ct., Nipomo, CA 93444. San Luis Obispo County. Alexander David Morrison (1145 Azalea Ct., Nipomo, CA 93444). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Alexander Morrison. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-18-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 0918-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2220 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/17/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CALIFORNIA’S GOLD REAL ESTATE, 1445 West Grande Ave., Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. Merilee Peck (1445 West Grande Ave., Suite C, Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Merilee Peck, Broker. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-17-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. A. Bautista, Deputy. Exp. 09-17-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2237 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CLARITY FOR GOOD, 38 El Mirador Ct., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Melissa Jenna Godsey (38 El Mirador Ct., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Melissa Godsey. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-18-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-18-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2242 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/19/2018) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MORRO BAY SPIRITUAL SUPPLY, 875 Main St., Ste. C, Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Sharon Marie Degnan (875 Main St., Ste. C, Morro Bay, CA 93442). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Sharon Marie Degnan. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-1919. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-19-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2244 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (01/01/2003) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SAN LUIS OBISPO PLUMBING, SAN LUIS PLUMBING, SLO PLUMBING, PLUMBING OF SAN LUIS OBISPO, PLUMBING OF SAN LUIS, 2250 Beach Street, Oceano, CA 93445. San Luis Obispo County. Five Cities Plumbing, Inc. (2250 Beach Street, Oceano, CA 93445). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Five Cities Plumbing, Inc., Chad Paul Tanner, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-1919. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-19-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2245 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (07/18/2012) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TEAM MOYER REAL ESTATE, 507 Cambridge Street, Cambria, CA 93428. San Luis Obispo County. Jason Moyer’s Real Estate Depot Inc. (507 Cambridge Street, Cambria, CA 93428). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Jason Moyer’s Real Estate Depot Inc., Jason S. Moyer, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-19-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-19-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2246 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/19/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HAHN EQUIPMENT RENTAL AND SUPPLY COMPANY, 238 Panorama Drive, Pismo Beach, CA 93449. San Luis Obispo County. Michael Eugene Hahn (238 Panorama Drive, Pismo Beach, CA 93449). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Michael Eugene Hahn, Sole Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-19-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-19-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
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LegaL Notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2251 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/13/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, SOMATIC RESILIENCY, 7730 Morro Road, Suite 207, Atascadero, CA 93422. San Luis Obispo County. Kari Stettler (1997 Geneseo Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Kari Stettler. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-19-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 0919-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2253 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/11/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TREAD CONNECTION, 254 Newport Ave. #A, Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. BC Mobile Tire Sales and Service (254 Newport Ave. #A, Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ BC Mobile Tire Sales and Service, Brian E. Crist, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-20-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2255 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9909, 8320 El Camino Real, Atascadero, CA 93422. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-2019. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2256 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9892, 827 Oak Park Blvd., Pismo Beach, CA 93449. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-2019. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2257 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9345, 717 Marsh Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-2019. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
LegaL Notices
LegaL Notices
LegaL Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2259 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9592, 1435 E. Grand Ave., Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-20-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2260 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9873, 1300 Madonna Rd., San Luis Obispo, CA 93405. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-20-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2261 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (10/20/2008) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CVS/PHARMACY #9925, 187 Niblick Rd., Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C. (Once CVS Drive, Woonsocket, RI 02895). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Longs Drug Stores California, L.L.C., Melanie K. Luker, Secretary. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-20-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-20-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2265 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/01/2018) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HEROES2HIRE, 2450 Coburn Lane, Shell Beach, CA 93449. San Luis Obispo County. Randall Miller (2450 Coburn Lane, Shell Beach, CA 93449). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Randall Miller, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-23-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-23-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2266 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TIPSY TAPS BAR RENTAL, 1130 Rachel Lane, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Renee M Elliott (1130 Rachel Lane, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Renee Elliott. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-23-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-23-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2267 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/23/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, URSA MAJOR, 2280 Sunset Dr., Suite C, Los Osos, CA 93402. San Luis Obispo County. Marcia Beck (1780 Pecho Rd., Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Marcia Beck, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-23-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-23-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2269 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/23/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, CEDAR AND CLOTH HOME, 866 W Grand Ave., Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. Geadell Giatti, Daniel Osvaldo Giatti (1730 Newport Ave., Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by A Married Couple /s/ Geadell Giatti, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-23-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. A. Bautista, Deputy. Exp. 09-23-24. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2282 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (07/08/2016) New Filing The following person is doing business as, JOHNNYLAWN, 9131 San Gabriel Road, Atascadero, CA 93422. San Luis Obispo County. Johnette Jamie Segreto (9131 San Gabriel Road, Atascadero, CA 93422). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Johnette Jamie Segreto, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-24-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Levy, Deputy. Exp. 09-24-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2284 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/24/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, IMAJIZE, SPINTECH, SHOESHOT, 1301 Carmel Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Spinshot, Inc. (1301 Carmel Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Spinshot, Inc., Michael Allen, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-24-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-24-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2286 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/24/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, AR & COMPANY PR & MARKETING, 612 12th Street, Suite 204, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Daisy Products, LLC (612 12th Street, Suite 204, Paso Robles, CA 93446). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Daisy Products, LLC, Denise A. Robinson-Platz, Managing Member. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-24-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 0924-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2288 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/16/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MERINGUE WINE COMPANY,BEZI, 890 Osos St., Suite H, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Anthony Bozzano, LLC (890 Osos St., Suite H, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Anthony Bozzano, LLC, Anthony Bozzano, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-24-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-24-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2294 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/24/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, VAGNONI RESEARCH AND CONSULTING, 548 Saratoga Ave., Grover Beach, CA 93433. San Luis Obispo County. David B Vagnoni (548 Saratoga Ave., Grover Beach, CA 93433). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ David B Vagnoni, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-24-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-24-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2295 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/21/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, MZR FITNESS INC., 3536 South Higuera Street, Suite 200, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. MZR Fitness Inc. (3536 South Higuera Street, Suite 200, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ MZR Fitness Inc., Michael Robinson (President). This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-25-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. N. Balseiro, Deputy. Exp. 09-25-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2296 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (08/20/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TIENDITA FARM, 2520 Tienda Place, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420. San Luis Obispo County. Maricela Laris Cuellar (2520 Tienda Place, Arroyo Grande, CA 93420). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Maricela Laris Cuellar, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-25-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. N. Balseiro, Deputy. Exp. 09-25-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2301 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (02/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, HANNAH MOTTA SOCIAL MEDIA CONSULTING, 747 Mill Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. Hannah Layman (747 Mill Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Hannah Layman. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-25-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-25-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
60 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
LegaL Notices
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2304 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (01/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, THE NARTURAL LASS, VALERIE HINES, 1860 Don Ave., Los Osos, CA 93402. San Luis Obispo County. Valerie Hines (2466Tierra Drive, Los Osos, CA 93402). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Valerie Hines, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-26-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2305 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (06/01/2005) New Filing The following person is doing business as, ITECH SOLUTIONS, 355 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. The ITECH Group, Inc. (355 Pacific St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ The ITECH Group, Inc., Brian Weiss, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-2619. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
LegaL Notices
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2312 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/26/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, J G B TRUCKING, 1550 Guadalupe Street, Guadalupe, CA 93434. San Luis Obispo County. Juan Gutierrez (384 Mars Ct., Nipomo, CA 93444). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Juan Gutierrez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-26-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. King, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2315 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (N/A) New Filing The following person is doing business as, IGNITE BOOTY SCHOOL, 1280 Scott Street, Morro Bay, CA 93442. San Luis Obispo County. Shawna Marie Battaglia-Winfield (1280 Scott Street, Morro Bay, CA 93442). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Shawn Battaglia-Winfield, Owner. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-26-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. JA. Anderson, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2316 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (01/01/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, ANCIENT MEDICINE NURSE, 660 Vista Del Rio, Nipomo, CA 93444. San Luis Obispo County. Sandra Lourido (660 Vista Del Rio, Nipomo, CA 93444). This business is conducted by An Individual /s/ Sandra Lourido. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-26-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
LegaL Notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-2317 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (09/18/2019) New Filing The following person is doing business as, DUCKIE’S CHOWDER HOUSE, 55 Cayucos Dr., Cayucos, CA 93430. San Luis Obispo County. Duckie’s, Inc. (55 Cayucos Dr., Cayucos, CA 93430). This business is conducted by A CA Corporation /s/ Duckie’s, Inc., Christopher Dorn, President. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-2619. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. S. Currens, Deputy. Exp. 09-26-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
FILE NO. 2019-2321 TRANSACTION BUSINESS DATE (11/01/2014) New Filing The following person is doing business as, TOOTH AND NAIL WINERY, RABBLE WINE CO., 3090 Anderson Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446. San Luis Obispo County. Tolliver Ranch Brands, LLC (P.O. Box 5090, Paso Robles, CA 93447). This business is conducted by A CA Limited Liability Company /s/ Tolliver Ranch Brands, LLC, Rob Murray, Managing Member. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 09-27-19. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal) Tommy Gong, County Clerk. G. Ugalde, Deputy. Exp. 09-27-24. October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
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ADMINISTRATIVE PERMIT PUBLIC HEARING
CITY OF GROVER BEACH NOTICE TO BIDDERS SEALED BIDS will be received by the City Clerk of the City of Grover Beach at the City Clerk’s Office at 154 South 8th Street, Grover Beach, CA 93433 until 2:00 p.m., on Thursday, October 24, 2019 and promptly thereafter all bids that have been duly received will be publicly opened and read aloud for furnishing to said City all labor, materials, equipment, transportation, services and supplies necessary to construct and complete the construction of the: MEASURE K-14 STREET REHABILITATION AND REPAIR PROJECT, CIP 2295-9 SOUTH 16TH STREET FROM GRAND AVENUE TO THE PIKE General Work Description: In general, the Work shall be street pavement repair, including and not necessarily limited to, potholing, traffic control, water pollution control practices, pre- and postconstruction survey monument protection and establishment, adjustment of pavement surface features (water utility boxes, sewer manholes, storm drain manholes, and survey monument wells), clearing and grubbing of debris (plant, soil, etc.) within the work limits, pavement dig out spot repairs, milling to remove asphaltic concrete pavement surface, full depth pavement rehabilitation, hot mix asphalt repaving street surface and conform areas, removal and replacement of asphalt dike, slurry seal, fog seal, and installation of pavement markings. The estimated opinion of probable construction cost for this Base Bid Work is $352,000. Conditions of Submitting a Bid: Bids are required for the entire Work described herein. The Contractor shall possess a Class A license at the time this Contract is awarded through Contract acceptance. The Contractor and all subcontractors will be required to obtain a City of Grover Beach Business Tax Certificate at the time the Contract is awarded. This Contract is subject to state contract nondiscrimination and compliance requirements pursuant to Government Code, Section 12990. Notice to Bidders, Plans, Special Provisions, and Proposal Forms may be inspected at the Public Works Office in Grover Beach, California, and copies of said documents may be obtained through the Blueprint Express Plan Room: http://www.beplanroom.com/ public.php. No bid will be received unless it is made on a Proposal Form furnished by the City. Bids received via FAX will not be considered. Each bid shall be accompanied by cash, certified or cashier’s check, or bidder’s bond for not less than ten percent (10%) of the amount of the base bid, made payable to the City of Grover Beach. Pursuant to Section 1773 of the Labor Code, the general prevailing wage rates in the county, or counties, in which the work is to be done have been determined by the Director of the California Department of Industrial Relations. These wages are set forth in the General Prevailing Wage Rates for this project available from the California Department of Industrial Relations’ Internet web site at http://www. dir.ca.gov/OPRL/PWD/. Future effective general prevailing wage rates, which have been predetermined and are on file with the California Department of Industrial Relations are referenced but not printed in the general prevailing wage rates. This project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the Department of Industrial Relations. Pursuant to Labor Code section 1725.5, no contractor or subcontractor may be listed on a bid proposal or be awarded a contract for public work on public works project unless registered with the Department of Industrial Relations. Notice is also hereby given that any or all bidders may be required to furnish a sworn statement of their financial responsibility, technical ability and experience before award is made to any particular bidder. Bidders shall contact the City of Grover Beach Department of Public Works office at (805) 473-4530 the day prior to bid opening to obtain any bidding addenda information. Submittal of a signed bid shall be evidence that the Bidder has obtained this information and that the bid is based on any changes contained therein. Submittal of Bidder’s Inquiries: Inquiries or questions based on alleged patent ambiguity of the plans, specifications or estimate must be communicated as a bidder inquiry prior to bid opening. Bidder’s inquiries shall be submitted in writing via e-mail to the City of Grover Beach, Public Works Department, at: PublicWorks@ groverbeach.org. The cutoff time that the City will accept bidder’s inquiries is 5:00 p.m. on the fifth business day prior to the bid opening date. The City will respond to inquires via bidding addenda. Any such inquiries, submitted after the cutoff time of receiving bidder’s inquiries, will not be treated as a bid protest. Bid Submittal Instructions: On the outside of the bid envelope the Bidder shall indicate the following: 1.
Name and Address of Bidder
2.
Name of project on which bid is submitted
3.
Date and time of bid opening
The right is reserved by the City of Grover Beach to reject any or all bids, to evaluate the bids submitted, and award the Contract to the lowest responsible bidder. The City further reserves the right to waive any informalities or minor irregularities in the bid. No bidder may withdraw his bid for a period of sixty (60) working days after the date set for the opening thereof. Dated this 26th day of September 2019, at the City of Grover Beach, California. City of Grover Beach STATE OF CALIFORNIA Gregory A. Ray, P.E. Public Works Director/City Engineer September 26 and October 3, 2019
ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS Applications to make minor changes to the properties at the addresses listed below have been received by the City. 1. 547 Dana St. ARCH-0476-2019; Architectural review of an addition to a single-family dwelling on a sensitive site (Contributing List Resource in the City’s Inventory of Historic Resources, and located within the Downtown Historic District). This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-3-H Zone; Todd and Elizabeth Peterson, applicant. (Walter Oetzell) 2. 291 Hathway St. ARCH-0534-2019; Architectural review of the conversion of the garage of a single-family dwelling into a bedroom, laundry room, and storage space. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2 Zone; Jackie Emanuelson, applicant. (Walter Oetzell) 3. 3761 Orcutt Rd. ARCH-0263-2019; Design review of 17 Multi-Unit Dwellings (8 Duplex, 9 Triplex) on Lots 14-20 of Tract 3066 (Jones Parcel, Phase II). The project is consistent with the Orcutt Area Specific Plan Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) certified and adopted by the City Council on March 2, 2010, and with the supplemental Initial Study and Mitigated Negative Declaration for Vesting Tentative Map 3066, adopted by the City Council on May 19, 2015 (Resolution No. 10620); R-1-SP, R-2-SP, C-C-MU, AND C/OS-SP zones; Ambient Communities, applicant. (Walter Oetzell) 4. 1299 Orcutt Rd. DIR-0557-2019; Request to allow temporary signage, including flags, in connection to a new residential development grand opening and initial sales of homes. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2-SP, R-4-SP and C/OS-SP zones; Robbins Reed, Inc., applicant. (Kyle Van Leeuwen) 5. 1063 George St. DIR-0376-2019; Request to establish an Accessory Dwelling Unit of 1,200 square feet, on a property where an Accessory Dwelling Unit would normally be limited to 630 square feet in size. The project is located on a sloping lot. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2 zone; Morris Britt C, ETAL, applicant. (Kyle Van Leeuwen) 6. 1155 Pismo St. HOME-0606-2019; Review of a Homestay application to allow short-term rental (such as Air BnB) of an owner-occupied detached bedroom (guest quarters unit) at 1155 Pismo St. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2-H zone; Kenneth Jostes, applicant. (Cassidy McSurdy) 7. 1516 Garden St. HOME-0605-2019; Review of a Homestay application to allow a short-term rental (such as Air BnB) of an owner-occupied residence at 1516 Garden St. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2-H zone; Chris Frago, applicant. (Cassidy McSurdy) 8. 1571 Mill St. DIR-0584-2019; Request to construct a conforming addition to a legal non-conforming structure; the project also includes a request for tandem parking. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2 zone; Edward Attala, applicant. (Hannah Nguyen) 9. 974 West St. DIR-0555-2019; Request for an exception to allow a four-foot side setback where a minimum five-foot side setback is the standard, to construct a minor non-conforming addition to a legal non-conforming single-family dwelling. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-1 zone; Ryan Swenson, applicant. (Hannah Nguyen) 10. 1365 Woodside Dr. HOME-0596-2019; Review of a Homestay application to allow short-term rental (such as Air BnB) of an owner-occupied residence at 1365 Woodside Drive. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-1 zone; Mark Nakamura, applicant. (Hannah Nguyen) ARCH-0028-2019; Re-notice of 11. 2034 Swazey St. architectural review of three new two-story single-family residences (two two-bedroom and one one-bedroom), and two detached garage structures, on a site with an existing two-bedroom residence to remain. Project includes a request for a common-interest subdivision to create four lots. Project includes requests for setback reduction between structures and proposed new lot lines, which include: 1) A seven-foot rear setback on proposed parcel one, where ten feet is normally required; 2) a five-foot side setback on proposed parcel two, where ten feet is normally required; 3) a seven-foot side setback on proposed parcel three, where 11 feet is normally required; 4) a five-foot rear setback on proposed parcel four, where nine feet is normally required; and 5) a request to locate the two garage structures on the interior side lot line with no setback. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-2 zone; Levi Seligman, applicant. (Kyle Van Leeuwen) 12. 3076 Duncan Ln. FNCE-0101-2019; A request for an exception from fence height standards to allow an eightfoot tall fence within the street setback along a limited portion of the site street frontage, where fencing is normally limited to between three and six feet in height. The project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA). M Zone; Peter Jurgens, applicant. (Walter Oetzell) 13. 570 Higuera Ave. DIR-0533-2019; A request to allow monthly Saturday afternoon events, as an Intermittent Use, including amplified live music and entertainment by artists and performers for patrons of the Creamery Marketplace. The action is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); C-D Zone; Covelop Holdings, LLC, applicant. (Walter Oetzell) The Community Development Director will either approve or deny these applications no sooner than October 14, 2019. The Director’s decision may be appealed, and must be filed with the appropriate appeal fee within 10 days of the Director’s action. For more information, contact the City of San Luis Obispo Community Development Department, 919 Palm Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401, stop by, or call (805) 781-7170, weekdays, 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. October 3, 2019
The City of San Luis Obispo’s Zoning Hearing Officer will hold a public hearing at 2:30 p.m. or later on Monday, October 14, 2019, in the Council Hearing Room, at City Hall, 990 Palm Street, to consider the following: 1. 3970 Broad St. Suite 2. USE-0536-2019; Review of a Minor Use Permit to establish a 3,279-square-foot Urgent Care Center, a Clinic Use, in the C-C Zone, within the Marigold Shopping Center. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); C-C zone; Cottage Health, applicant. (Kyle Van Leeuwen) 2. 1007 Islay St. DIR-0546-2019; Request for a creek setback exception to allow for the construction of a two-story accessory structure located approximately 15 feet from the creek top-of-bank where a 20-foot setback is normally required in the R-3-H zone, to allow for the retention of an existing tree on the site. The project also includes a request for a street side setback of 18.5 feet where 20 feet is normally required for enclosed parking spaces from which vehicles exit directly onto the street. This project is categorically exempt from environmental review (CEQA); R-3-H zone; Nicole Birdsall, applicant. (Kyle Van Leeuwen) PLEASE NOTE: Any court challenge to the actions taken on these public hearing items may be limited to considering only those issues raised at the public hearing described in this notice or in written correspondence delivered to the City of San Luis Obispo at, or prior to, the public hearing. October 3, 2019
COUNTY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING & BUILDING TREVOR KEITH, Department Director NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT WHO:
County of San Luis Obispo Department of Planning and Building
WHAT:
A Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for the Los Osos Community-Wide Habitat Conservation Plan is complete and available for public review and comment. The document addresses the environmental impacts that may be associated with the request by the County of San Luis Obispo, as the applicant, to obtain a programmatic incidental take permit from the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and adoption of a Community-Wide Habitat Conservation Plan. The County is requesting a permit term of 25 years to authorize take of covered species associated with covered activities in the Habitat Conservation Plan area, which covers approximately 3,644 acres in the community of Los Osos and the northwestern portion of the adjacent Montan᷃a de Oro State Park (in various land use categories). As the permittee, the County will have the ability to issue certificates of inclusion to confer incidental take coverage to landowners and other entities as long as their activities are included on the incidental take permit. State Clearinghouse # 2013091071
WHERE: Copies of the DEIR and all documents referenced in the DEIR, are available for review from the County Environmental Coordinator, 976 Osos St., Rm 200, San Luis Obispo. Copies of the EIR are also available for review at the following locations: County libraries at Los Osos Library, Cal Poly Library, and SLO City/ County Library. The DEIR is on the Planning Department’s web site at: slocounty.ca.gov/LosOsosHCP HOW TO COMMENT OR GET MORE INFORMATION: Anyone interested in commenting on the DEIR should submit a written statement to Kerry Brown of the San Luis Obispo County Department of Planning and Building at 976 Osos St., Rm 200, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408-2040 by 4:30p.m., November 17, 2019. If you need more information about this project, please contact Kerry Brown at (805) 781-5713 or kbrown@co.slo. ca.us. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS: The DEIR focuses on the following issues: air quality, biological resources, cultural resources, geology and soils, greenhouse gas emissions, hazards and hazardous materials, hydrology and water quality, land use and planning, noise, public services, and transportation and circulation. Pursuant to CEQA Section 15087(c)(6), the proposed project area includes one or more sites described under Government Code Section 65962.5 (known as the “Cortese List”), which includes hazardous waste facilities, land designated as hazardous waste property, hazardous waste disposal sites, or is subject to the Hazardous Waste Substances Statement required under subsection (f) of that Section, or is found on a list at the following website: http://www.calepa.ca.gov/ SiteCleanup/CorteseList/default.htm PUBLIC HEARING A public hearing before the County of San Luis Obispo Planning Commission will be scheduled in the winter of 2020, in the Board of Supervisors Chambers, County Government Center, San Luis Obispo. **If you challenge this matter in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this public notice or in written correspondence delivered to the appropriate authority at or before the public hearing** DATED: October 3rd, 2019 HILARY BROWN ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
COUNTY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING & BUILDING TREVOR KEITH DIRECTOR Environmental Impact Report Scoping Meeting Somera (The Cottages) Development Plan / Coastal Development Permit DRC2018-00033 (ED19-008)
What: An Environmental Impact Report (EIR) Scoping Meeting for the proposed Somera (The Cottages) Development Plan / Coastal Development Permit DRC2018-00033 (ED19-008). An EIR Scoping Meeting is an opportunity for agencies and interested members of the public to obtain information about the project and provide input on the issues that will be analyzed in the EIR. The subject of the EIR and the scoping meeting is a request by SCM Avila Beach Partners, LLC for a Development Plan/ Coastal Development Permit to allow for the construction of a 50-room cottage style hotel, various sized temporary events not exceeding 200 guests and modification of side and rear setback standards. The applicant is also requesting a Variance to grade over 30% slopes and an amendment to the San Luis Bay Estates Master Development Plan to increase the potential development area from the previously approved 4 acres to 7 acres. The project will result in the disturbance of approximately 7 acres on the 22.25-acre parcel with an approximate of 20,300 cubic yards of cut and 18,000 cubic yards of fill. The project site is in the Recreation land use category and is located approximately 620 feet northwest of the Avila Beach Drive and Ana Bay Drive intersection in the community of Avila Beach. The site is in the San Luis Bay Coastal Planning Area. The County Department of Planning & Building invites all interested persons and organizations to attend this meeting and provide comments on the preliminary environmental assessment. The scoping meeting discussion will be focused on environmental concerns, the focus of the project environmental document, feasible ways in which project impacts may be minimized (mitigation measures) and potential alternatives to the project. You may comment by providing testimony in person at the scoping meeting below. Alternatively, written comments will also be accepted and should be submitted to Schani Siong, 976 Osos Street, Room 300, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408, no later than October 30, 2019. Where/When: Details for the Scoping Meeting is as below: Date: Thursday October 10, 2019 Location: Avila Beach Community Center 191 San Miguel Street, Avila Beach, CA 93424 Time: 6:00pm to 8:00pm Further Information: Additional project information and the preliminary initial study for the proposed project are available for review starting October 1, 2019 at the County’s Department of Planning & Building website https://www.slocounty.ca.gov/Departments/Planning-Building. aspx (under Active Major Projects). Please contact Schani Siong at (805) 781-4374 or ssiong@co.slo.ca.us for additional information. September 26 & October 3, 2019
NOTICE TO ANYONE CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING SEIZED PROPERTY WHICH IS SUBJECT TO FORFEITURE: $3,683 U.S. CURRENCY. On 08-21-19 at 1433 Calle Joaquin, San Luis Obispo. The San Luis Obispo Police Department seized the property listed above for Health and Safety Code Sections(s) H.S 11351 and H.S 11470. We are now taking action to forfeit this property. If you claim an interest, you MUST file a claim within 30 days from the date this notice is first published. Claims MUST be filed with the Superior Court Clerk’s office located at the County Government Center, San Luis Obispo, California. You MUST ALSO provide a copy of the claim to the District Attorney’s Office at the County Government Center, Room 450, San Luis Obispo, California 93408, Attention: Chief Deputy District Attorney Jerret Grand. Use Control No. 2019AF-01 on any correspondence relating to this property. If you fail to file a claim on time, the District Attorney WILL FORFEIT the property to the State and it will be disposed of according to law (Health and Safety Code #11489). Dated: 09/11/2019 /s/ Jerret Grand Chief Deputy District Attorney September 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 61
» LEGAL NOTICES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 60
LegaL Notices
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to the California Self-Storage Facilities Act (California Business & Professions Code Section 21700 et seq.). The undersigned will sell at public auction by competitive bidding on Sunday, September 15th, 2019 at 11:00 AM. on the premises where the property has been stored and which are located at Meathead Mini Storage, 3600 South Higuera Street, San Luis Obispo, California, the following:
a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a formal Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk.
Karen Ferraro Unit No. F07 Miscellaneous personal commercial property
Attorney for Petitioner: S. Sharon Yoon 5403 Calarosa Ranch Road Camarillo, CA 93012
LegaL Notices LIEN-SALE AUCTION AT MEATHEAD MINI STORAGE
Dennis Healy Unit No. I04 Miscellaneous personal commercial property D’Ann Martin Unit No. 363 Miscellaneous personal commercial property Sami Mezrioui Unit No. L08 Miscellaneous personal commercial property Joshua Brown Unit No. 812 Miscellaneous personal commercial property Russell Sheppel Unit No. O09 Miscellaneous personal commercial property
and/or
October 3, 10, & 17, 2019 and/or
and/or
and/or
and/or
and/or
Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash only. All purchased items will be sold AS IS, WHERE IS and must be removed at the time of sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between the owner and the obligated party. Dated: 8/11/2019 Auctioneer: Kenneth D. Erpenbach dba Hitchin’ Post Auction Barn Bond No. MS879-23-57 (805) 434-1770 October 3, 10, 2019
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: EDWARD VANN GROVER CASE NUMBER: 19PR - 0310
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: EDWARD VANN GROVER A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by MARJORIE D. GRIGGS in the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo. The Petition for Probate requests that MARJORIE D. GRIGGS be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: October 29, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. in Dept: 9, in Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, located at 1050 Monterey Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: ELISA LOUISE MORRISON CASE NUMBER: 19PR - 0286
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: ELISA LOUISE MORRISON A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by MARK MARTELLA in the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo. The Petition for Probate requests that MARK MARTELLA be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: October 15, 2019 at 9:00 a.m. in Dept: 9, in Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, located at 1035 Palm St., Room 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a formal Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: John B. Merzon 140 7th Street Templeton, CA 93465 September 19, 26, & October 3, 2019
LegaL Notices
LegaL Notices
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE T.S. NO. 18-0369-11
lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 916-939-0772 or visit this Internet Web site www.nationwideposting.com, using the file number assigned to this case 18-0369-11. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 9/6/2019 The Wolf Firm, A Law Corporation 2955 Main Street, 2nd Floor Irvine, California 92614 Foreclosure Department (949) 720-9200 Sale Information Only: 916-939-0772 www.nationwideposting.com Sindy Clements, Foreclosure Officer PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT THE WOLF FIRM MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR, ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION YOU PROVIDE MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. NPP0360571 To: NEW TIMES 09/19/2019, 09/26/2019, 10/03/2019
NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED 注:本文件包含一个信息摘要 참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정 보 요약서가 있습니다 NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN RESUMEN DE LA INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE DOCUMENTO TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG IMPORMASYON SA DOKUMENTONG ITO NA NAKALAKIP LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU NÀY PLEASE NOTE THAT PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(d) (1) THE ABOVE STATEMENT IS REQUIRED TO APPEAR ON THIS DOCUMENT BUT PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a) THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION IS NOT REQUIRED TO BE RECORDED OR PUBLISHED AND THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION NEED ONLY BE MAILED TO THE MORTGAGOR OR TRUSTOR. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 12/8/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: STEFAN WORTH, A MARRIED MAN, AS HIS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY Duly Appointed Trustee: The Wolf Firm, A Law Corporation Recorded 12/15/2006 as Instrument No. 2006088489 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Luis Obispo County, California, Street Address or other common designation of real property: 425 VIA VICENTE NIPOMO CA 93444 A.P.N.: 092-564-010 Date of Sale: 10/15/2019 at 11:00 AM Place of Sale: In the breezeway adjacent to the County General Services Building, 1087 Santa Rosa Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $1,105,699.45, estimated The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE T.S. NO. 19-0417-11
NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED 注:本文件包含一个信息摘要 참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보 요약서가 있습니다 NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN RESUMEN DE LA INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE DOCUMENTO TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG IMPORMASYON SA DOKUMENTONG ITO NA NAKALAKIP LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU NÀY PLEASE NOTE THAT PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(d)(1) THE ABOVE STATEMENT IS REQUIRED TO APPEAR ON THIS DOCUMENT BUT PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a) THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION IS NOT REQUIRED TO BE RECORDED OR PUBLISHED AND THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION NEED ONLY BE MAILED TO THE MORTGAGOR OR TRUSTOR YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 3/24/2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: MARY A. BRUGGEMAN, AN UNMARRIED WOMAN Duly Appointed Trustee: The Wolf Firm, A Law Corporation Recorded 3/31/2005 as Instrument No. 2005024980 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Luis Obispo County, California, Street Address or other common designation of
62 • New Times • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • www.newtimesslo.com
LegaL Notices
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0520
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Tony Ezequiel Palomares filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Tony Ezequiel Palomares to PROPOSED NAME: Tony Édouard Alexander Ambrose THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 11/13/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 9 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 6, 2019 /s/: Tana L. Coates, Judge of the Superior Court September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0532
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Johnnie Souza filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Johnnie Souza to PROPOSED NAME: John Phillip Souza THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 10/23/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 9 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 10, 2019 /s/: Tana L. Coates, Judge of the Superior Court September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
MISSION PLAZA RAILING UPGRADE 2019 SPEC. NO. 1000039 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the City of San Luis Obispo will receive bids for the “MISSION PLAZA RAILING UPGRADE 2019, Spec. No. 1000039” at the Public Works Administration Office located at 919 Palm Street, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 until, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2019, at 2:00 P.M., when they will be publicly opened. Bids received after said time will not be considered. Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope plainly marked with the project title, contractor name, address, and specification number. The Contractor must possess a valid Class A Contractor’s License at the time of the bid opening. Every bid must be accompanied by a certified check/cashier’s check or bidder’s bond for 10% of the bid amount, payable to the City of San Luis Obispo. Download FREE at the City’s website: www.SloCity.org - Bid packages under Bids & Proposals. Bid packages may be obtained at the Public Works Department for a non-refundable fee of $15.00 in person, $25.00 if mailed. City Standard Specifications and Engineering Standards may be obtained for a non-refundable fee of $16.00 in person, $21.00 if mailed. Questions may be addressed to Brian Rodriguez, Project Manager, at 805-781-7226 or BRodrigu@ SloCity.org. October 3, 2019
NOTICE
LegaL Notices
real property: 912 DODSON WAY ARROYO GRANDE, CA 934203114 A.P.N.: 077-201-009 Date of Sale: 10/29/2019 at 9:00 AM Place of Sale: At Breezeway facing Santa Rosa Street, County of San Luis Obispo General Services Building, 1087 Santa Rosa St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93408 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $285,448.71, estimated The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (800) 280-2832 or visit this Internet Web site www.auction.com, using the file number assigned to this case 19-041711. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 9/11/2019 The Wolf Firm, A Law Corporation 2955 Main Street, 2nd Floor Irvine, California 92614 Foreclosure Department (949) 720-9200 Sale Information Only: (800) 2802832 www.auction.com Sindy Clements, Foreclosure Officer PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT THE WOLF FIRM MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR, ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION YOU PROVIDE MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. NPP0360774 To: NEW TIMES 09/26/2019, 10/03/2019, 10/10/2019
TO ANYONE CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING SEIZED PROPERTY WHICH IS SUBJECT TO FORFEITURE: $4,300 in U.S. CURRENCY. On 10-01-19 at 8445 Del Rio, Atascadero, CA. The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Special Operations Unit seized the property listed above for Health and Safety Code Sections(s) H.S 11378 and H.S 11470. We are now taking action to forfeit this property. If you claim an interest, you MUST file a claim within 30 days from the date this notice is first published. Claims MUST be filed with the Superior Court Clerk’s office located at the County Government Center, San Luis Obispo, California. You MUST ALSO provide a copy of the claim to the District Attorney’s Office at the County Government Center, Room 450, San Luis Obispo, California 93408, Attention: Chief Deputy District Attorney Jerret Grand. Use Control No. 2019-AF-02 on any correspondence relating to this property. If you fail to file a claim on time, the District Attorney WILL FORFEIT the property to the State and it will be disposed of according to law (Health and Safety Code #11489). Dated: 10/01/2019 /s/ Jerret Grand Chief Deputy District Attorney October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF SUPERVISORS WHO:
San Luis Obispo County Board of Supervisors
WHEN: Tuesday, October 22, 2019, at 9:00 a.m. All items are advertised for 9:00 a.m. To find out placement of this item on the Board of Supervisors Agenda, go to the County’s website at www.slocounty.ca.gov on the Wednesday before the scheduled hearing date. WHAT: Hearing to consider and identify public needs for the 2020 Action Plan for allocating federal block grant funds. The Urban County of San Luis Obispo, which includes the cities of Arroyo Grande, Atascadero, Morro Bay, Paso Robles, Pismo Beach, San Luis Obispo, and the County of San Luis Obispo, is inviting interested persons to attend a public hearing discussing county housing and community development needs, which may be addressed though Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), Home Investment Partnerships Act (HOME), Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG), and Permanent Local Housing Allocation (PLHA) funding. The purpose of the hearing is to give the public an opportunity to express their views on both the needs of the community and the use of the federal and state funds. CDBG funds can be used for housing, public facilities, and economic development activities that benefit low-income persons. HOME funds are used to support affordable housing projects for low-income families. ESG funds support homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, and homelessness prevention and rapid re-housing programs. PLHA funds may be used for a wide range of activities to address unmet housing needs in the county. WHERE: The hearing will be held in the San Luis Obispo County Board of Supervisors Chambers, 1055 Monterey St., Room #D170, County Government Center, San Luis Obispo, CA. The Board of Supervisors Chambers are located on the corner of Santa Rosa and Monterey Streets. At the hearing all interested persons may express their views for or against, or to change the proposal. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: You may contact Matt Leal, Project Manager, in the San Luis Obispo County Department of Planning and Building, 976 Osos Street, Room 200, San Luis Obispo, California 93408, (805) 781-5600. The staff report will be available for review the Wednesday before the scheduled hearing date on the County’s website at www.slocounty.ca.gov. DATED: 10/02/2019 WADE HORTON, EX-OFFICIO CLERK OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS By:/s/ Annette Ramirez, Deputy Clerk October 3, 2019
LegaL Notices ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0550
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Saskia Stephanie Hanover filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Saskia Stephanie Hanover to PROPOSED NAME: Saskia Stephanie Rider THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 10/24/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 18, 2019 /s/: Ginger E. Garrett, Judge of the Superior Court September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0556
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Heidi Harmon filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Heidi Harmon to PROPOSED NAME: Heidi Knowles THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 11/21/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 20, 2019 /s/: Ginger E. Garrett, Judge of the Superior Court September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0558
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Brandi Mileen Dodson filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Brandi Mileen Dodson to PROPOSED NAME: Bee Mileen Dodson THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the
LegaL Notices petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 11/21/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 20, 2019 /s/: Ginger E. Garrett, Judge of the Superior Court September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CV-0564
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Inocente Brito Alarcon AKA Inocente Brito-Alarcon filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Inocente Brito Alarcon AKA Inocente BritoAlarcon to PROPOSED NAME: Ino Alarcon Brito THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 11/14/2019, Time: 9:00 am, Dept. 2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 1035 Palm St. Rm. 385, San Luis Obispo, CA 93408. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 24, 2019 /s/: Ginger E. Garrett, Judge of the Superior Court October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CVP-0294
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Kathryn Aron, f/k/a Kathryn Sims filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Gavin Sims to PROPOSED NAME: Gavin Aron, PRESENT NAME: Kaitlyn Sims to PROPOSED NAME: Kaitlyn Aron THE COURT ORDERS: that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 10/23/2019, Time: 9:30 am, Dept. P2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 901 Park Street, Paso Robles, CA 93446. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 9, 2019 /s/: Linda D. Hurst, Judge of the Superior Court September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
LegaL Notices ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 19CVP0306
To all interested persons: Petitioner: Nicklie Gregg Raya filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Nicklie Gregg Raya to PROPOSED NAME: Greig Nicklie Welch
SUMMONS (FAMIly lAW) NOTICE TO RESPONDENT (NAME): STEPHEN JAMES RODRIqUEz
yOU HAVE BEEN SUED. READ THE INFORMATION BElOW AND ON THE COURT ORDERS: that all THE NExT PAGE. persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 11/13/2019, Time: 9:30 am, Dept. P2 at the Superior Court of California, County of San Luis Obispo, 901 Park Street, Paso Robles, CA 93446. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: New Times Date: September 25, 2019 /s/: Linda D. Hurst, Judge of the Superior Court October 3, 10, 17, & 24, 2019
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
NEW FILE NO. 2019-2161 OLD FILE NO. 2018-2360 Let’s Play Gratitude, 1343-A Higuera St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401. San Luis Obispo County. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in San Luis Obispo County on 09/24/2018. The following person has abandoned the use of the fictitious business name: Deborah Sue Krueger (1343-A Higuera St., San Luis Obispo, CA 93401). This business was conducted by An Individual /s/ Deborah Krueger. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 0909-2019. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal)Tommy Gong, County Clerk. By A. Bautista, Deputy Clerk. September 19, 26, October 3, & 10, 2019
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
NEW FILE NO. 2019-2268 OLD FILE NO. 2019-0271 Cedar and Cloth, 866 West Grand Ave., Grover Beach, 93433. San Luis Obispo County. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in San Luis Obispo County on 09/23/2019. The following person has abandoned the use of the fictitious business name: Sarah Elisabeth Beresford (866 West Grand Ave., Grover Beach, 93433). This business was conducted by An Individual /s/ Sarah Beresford. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Luis Obispo on 0923-2019. I hereby certify that this copy is a correct copy of the statement on file in my office. (Seal)Tommy Gong, County Clerk. By S. King, Deputy Clerk. September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
for the week of Oct. 3
LegaL Notices
PETITIONER’S NAME IS: KElSEy MAE RODRIqUEz CASE NUMBER: D394152
You have 30 calendar days after this Summons and Petition are served on you to file a Response (form FL-120) at the court and have a copy served on the petitioner. A letter, phone call, or court appearance will not protect you. If you do not file your Response on time, the court may make orders affecting your marriage or domestic partnership, your property, and custody of your children. You may be ordered to pay support and attorney fees and costs. For legal advice, contact a lawyer immediately. Get help finding a lawyer at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www. courts.ca.gov/selfhelp), at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpca.org), or by contacting your local county bar association. NOTICE: Restraining orders are on page 2: These restraining orders are effective against both spouses or domestic partners until the petition is dismissed, a judgment is entered, or the court makes further orders. They are enforceable anywhere in California by any law enforcement officer who has received or seen a copy of them. FEE WAIVER: If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the clerk for a fee waiver form. The court may order you to pay back all or part of the fees and costs that the court waived for you or the other party. 1. The name and address of the court are: THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA County of Ventura 800 South Victoria Avenue Ventura, CA 93009 2. The name, address, and telephone number of petitioner’s attorney, or petitioner without an attorney are: Kelsey Mae Rodriquez 1788 Wexford Circle Simi Valley, CA 93065 Date: July 24, 2019 /s/ Michael D. Planet, Clerk, D. Olivera, Deputy September 26, October 3, 10, & 17, 2019
Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology Homework: “Privilege is when you think something is not a problem because it’s not a problem for you.” Comment. Freewillastrology.com ARIES
LIBRA
(March 21-April 19): In 1956, the U.S. federal government launched a program to build 40,000 miles of high-speed roads to connect all major American cities. It was completed 36 years later at a cost of $521 billion. In the coming months, I’d love to see you draw inspiration from that visionary scheme. According to my analysis, you will generate good fortune for yourself as you initiate a long-term plan to expand your world, create a more robust network, and enhance your ability to fulfill your life’s big goals.
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Every time my birthday season comes around, I set aside an entire day to engage in a life review. It lasts for many hours. I begin by visualizing the recent events I’ve experienced, then luxuriously scroll in reverse through my entire past, as if watching a movie starring me. It’s not possible to remember every single scene and feeling, of course, so I allow my deep self to highlight the moments it regards as significant. Here’s another fun aspect of this ritual: I bestow a blessing on every memory that comes up, honoring it for what it taught me and how it helped me to become the person I am today. Dear Libra, now is an excellent time for you to experiment with a similar celebration.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus-born YouTube vlogger Hey Fran Hey has some good advice for her fellow Bulls, and I think it’ll be especially fresh and potent in the coming weeks. She says, “Replacing ‘Why is this happening to me?’ with ‘What is this trying to tell me?’ has been a game changer for me. The former creates a hamster wheel, where you’ll replay the story over and over again. Victimized. Stuck. The latter holds space for a resolution to appear.”
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “The soul has illusions as the bird has wings: It is supported by them.” So declared French author Victor Hugo. I don’t share his view. In fact, I regard it as an insulting misapprehension. The truth is that the soul achieves flight through vivid fantasies and effervescent intuitions and uninhibited longings and non-rational hypotheses and wild hopes—and maybe also by a few illusions. I bring this to your attention because now is an excellent time to nurture your soul with vivid fantasies and effervescent intuitions and uninhibited longings and nonrational hypotheses and wild hopes.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): I know people of all genders who periodically unleash macho brags about how little sleep they need. If you’re normally like that, I urge you to rebel. The dilemmas and riddles you face right now are very solvable IF and only IF you get sufficient amounts of sleep and dreams. Do you need some nudges to do right by yourself? Neuroscientist Matthew Walker says that some of the greatest athletes understand that “sleep is the greatest legal enhancing performance drug.” Top tennis player Roger Federer sleeps 12 hours a day. During his heyday, world-class sprinter Usain Bolt slept ten hours a night and napped during the day. Champion basketball player LeBron James devotes 12 hours a day to the rejuvenating sanctuary of sleep.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Actor and dancer Fred Astaire was a pioneer in bringing dance into films as a serious art form. He made 31 musical films during the 76 years he worked and was celebrated for his charisma, impeccable technique, and innovative moves. At the height of his career, from 1933 to 1949, he teamed up with dancer Ginger Rogers in the creation of 10 popular movies. In those old-fashioned days, virtually all partner dancing featured a male doing the lead part as the female followed. One witty critic noted that although Astaire was a bigger star than Rogers, she “did everything that Fred Astaire did. She just did it backwards and while wearing high heels.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, you may soon be called on to carry out tasks that are metaphorically comparable to those performed by Rogers.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your number one therapy in the coming weeks? Watching animals. It would be the healthiest thing you could undertake: Relax into a generously receptive mode as you simply observe creatures doing what they do. The best option would be to surrender to the pleasures of communing with both domesticated AND wild critters. If you need a logical reason to engage in this curative and rejuvenating activity, I’ll give you one: It will soothe and strengthen your own animal intelligence, which would be a tonic gift for you to give yourself.
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SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Depression is when you think there’s nothing to be done,” writes author Siri Hustvedt. “Fortunately I always think there’s something to be done.” I offer this hopeful attitude to you, Scorpio, trusting that it will cheer you up. I suspect that the riddles and mysteries you’re embedded in right now are so puzzling and complicated that you’re tempted to think that there’s nothing you can do to solve them or escape them. But I’m here to inform you that if that’s how you feel, it’s only temporary. Even more importantly, I’m here to inform you that there is indeed something you can do, and you are going to find out what that is sooner rather than later.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “How inconvenient to be made of desire,” writes Sagittarian author Larissa Pham. “Even now, want rises up in me like a hot oil. I want so much that it scares me.” I understand what she means, and I’m sure you do, too. There are indeed times when the inner fire that fuels you feels excessive and unwieldy and inopportune. But I’m happy to report that your mood in the coming weeks is unlikely to fit that description. I’m guessing that the radiant pulse of your yearning will excite you and empower you. It’ll be brilliant and warm, not seething and distracting.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I envision the next 12 months as a time when you could initiate fundamental improvements in the way you live. Your daily rhythm 12 months from now could be as much as 20 percent more gratifying and meaningful. It’s conceivable you will discover or generate innovations that permanently raise your long-term goals to a higher octave. At the risk of sounding grandiose, I predict you’ll welcome a certain novelty that resembles the invention of the wheel or the compass or the calendar.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Modern literary critic William Boyd declared that Aquarian author Anton Chekhov (1860–1904) was “the best short-story writer ever,” and “the first truly modern writer of fiction: secular, refusing to pass judgment, cognizant of the absurdities of our muddled, bizarre lives and the complex tragi-comedy that is the human condition.” Another contemporary critic, Harold Bloom, praised Chekhov’s plays, saying that he was “one of the three seminal figures in the birth of early modernism in the theatre.” We might imagine, then, that in the course of his career, Chekhov was showered with accolades. We’d be wrong about that, though. “If I had listened to the critics,” he testified, “I’d have died drunk in the gutter.” I hope that what I just said will serve as a pep talk for you as you explore and develop your own original notions in the coming weeks.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Pisces-born Dorothy Steel didn’t begin her career as a film actress until she was 91 years old. She had appeared in a couple of TV shows when she was 89, then got a small role in an obscure movie. At age 92, she became a celebrity when she played the role of a tribal elder in Black Panther, one of the highest-grossing films of all time. I propose that we make her one of your inspirational role models for both the coming weeks and the next 12 months. Why? Because I suspect you will be ripening fully into a role and a mission you were born to embody and express. ∆
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny's expanded weekly horoscopes and daily text message horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. © Copyright 2019
www.newtimesslo.com • October 3 - October 10, 2019 • New Times • 63