HIKES
for the tykes
Artist open studios for
ARTour
FOAM FEST FUN
WIN TICKETS
The allure of
DESOLATION WILDERNESS
Fall Golf at Tahoe Donner DRIVE AND DINE
W I T H T H E S E PA R T I C I PAT I N G B U S I N E S S E S
Starting at $67 for Tahoe Donner members, $77 for guests, or $87 for public, you can play 18 holes with a shared cart and get a $20 food credit at The Lodge Restaurant & Pub. Valid for golf play any day beginning Sept. 8 after 1 p.m. daily; food credit must be used the same day.
FALL GOLF RATES – START SEPT. 14 For more information, call the golf pro shop at 530-587-9443.
WEST SHORE BUSINESSES OPEN FOR YOU Highway 89 from Tahoe City’s Fanny Bridge to Emerald Bay, open during construction.
DELAYS ARE WORTH THE WAIT TO EXPLORE THE WEST SHORE Lake Tahoe access | Parks & Trails | Dining Lodging | Hiking & Biking
Photo by KiwiKamera.com
New! Pancakes and Ponies On Sept. 12 and 19, bring the little ones and join us for a fun new Saturday morning event! Enjoy a hearty cowboy breakfast of pancakes, bacon, sausage, scrambled eggs, coffee and juice, followed by a pony ride. You can come out for breakfast only, or do both the breakfast and the 15-minute pony ride. For children ages 2-6, times 9-11 am. Reserve now: 530-587-9470.
Bikeworks Open Weekends Fall is a wonderful time to ride the trails of Tahoe Donner. Rentals, guided rides, and repairs are offered weekends through September, while conditions permit. Call 530-582-9694 for information and reservations.
No construction on weekends! TahoeWSA.com
nltra.org
placer.ca.gov
dot.ca.gov
(530) 587-9400 |
JOIN US!
TheTahoeWeekly.com
What’s Inside
Volume 34 | Issue 22
Tim Hauserman
| SEPTEMBER 3-9 P.O. Box 87 | Tahoe City, CA 96145 (530) 546-5995 | f (530) 546-8113 | TheTahoeWeekly.com
… the mighty Sierra, miles in height, and so gloriously colored and so radiant, it seemed not clothed with light but wholly composed of it, like the wall of some celestial city... Then it seemed to me that the Sierra should be called, not the Nevada or Snowy Range, but the Range of Light.
SUBMISSIONS Editoral editor@tahoethisweek.com Photography production@tahoethisweek.com Entertainment entertainment@tahoethisweek.com
IN THE OFFICE
– John Muir
06 THE
Features Desolation Wilderness Local Profile Hikes for the Tykes Sierra Stories ARTour The Arts
Account Executive Greg Pisarski greg@tahoethisweek.com, ext. 108 Art Director | Production Alyssa Ganong production@tahoethisweek.com, ext. 106 Graphic Designer Mael Passanesi graphics@tahoethisweek.com, ext. 101
Out
about
Music SCENE
Associate Editor | Social Media Manager Jenn Sheridan features@tahoethisweek.com, ext. 104 Northstar
06 11 15 22 23 24
Publisher & Editor In Chief Katherine E. Hill publisher@tahoethisweek.com, ext. 102
Adminstrative Manager Michelle Allen
From the Publisher
Indulge in all Tahoe has to offer
Sierra Stories only in Tahoe Weekly
We are excited to announce that author and historian Mark McLaughlin will only be publishing his history and weather stories locally in Tahoe Weekly from now on. We’d had a longstanding relationship with Mark to publish his widely popular column and it’s now exclusively in Tahoe Weekly. And, look for his new book, “Snowbound: Legendary Winters of the Tahoe Sierra,” out this winter.
Contributing Writers Barbara Keck, Bruce Ajari, Mark McLaughlin, Warren Miller, David “Smitty” Smith, Nicole Cheslock, TJ Lester, Priya Hutner, Katrina Veit
18 28 26 27 28 28
Puzzles Horoscope Foam Fest Entertainment Calendar & Live Music
Local
flavor
05 07 08 10 12 12 13 14 14 16 17 18 19 20 21 21
36 32 34 36 37 38
Tasty Tidbits Restaurant Directory Tastes By the Glass Stir It Up
DEADLINES & INFO
Lake Tahoe Facts Sightseeing Events Biking Marinas & Boat Ramps Announcements Gone Fishin’ Watersports Warren’s World Golfing On Par Wet ‘n’ Dirty Hiking Beaches & Parks For the Kids Campgrounds
Sept. 17 Issue Editorial: 5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8 Display Ad Space: Noon Thursday, Sept. 10 Display Ad Materials: 3 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 10 Camera-Ready Ads: 3 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 10 TAHOE WEEKLY is published weekly throughout the summer and biweekly the rest of the year, with occassional extra issues at holiday times. Look for new issues on Thursdays. Not available by subscription. Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com. TAHOE WEEKLY, est. 1982, ©2007. Reproduction in whole or in part without publisher’s express permission is prohibited. Contributions welcome via e-mail. The Weekly is not responsible for unsolicited submissions. Member: North Lake Tahoe Resort Association, North Tahoe Business Association, Incline Community Business Association, Truckee Donner Chamber of Commerce, Tahoe City Downtown Association & Truckee Downtown Merchants Association. Printed on recycled paper with soy-based inks. Please recycle your copy.
ON THE COVER
Matt Tucker
It will be a fun-filled and jam-packed week in Tahoe and Truckee with a plethora of outings to get you into the wilderness, exploring artists’ studios, and indulging in live music, good times and fine food and wine. To prepare for the many food, beer and wine events on tap over the weekend, start off with an excursion into Desolation Wilderness for an overnight camping trip or explore one of the area’s kid-friendly trails. Tim Hauserman’s shares his favorite spots to explore in Desolation Wilderness (doesn’t our cover make you want to grab your pack and hit the trail?), along with his picks for the best “Hikes with tykes” to enjoy with the littlest hikers. ARTour, one of my favorite local art events, has moved its open studio tour to September, featuring 22 artists on the North Shore and Truckee. This is a unique opportunity to see artists at work, to talk to them about their artwork and to take home your favorite discoveries. Don’t worry, the ARTour continues over six days, so there’s plenty of time to hit every studio. Now for those great events over the long holiday weekend, two must-do events are the Foam Fest on Sept. 5 and the Alpen Wine Festival on Sept. 6, both at Squaw Valley. Besides the live music and tastings from more than 40 breweries on Sept. 5, followed the next day by a wine tasting extravaganza, both events are benefits for wonderful nonprofits.
Entertainment Editor Priya Hutner entertainment@tahoethisweek.com
24
WIN TICKETS
DIGITAL EDITION
Want a 2-night stay at the Tahoe Biltmore? How about gift certificates to enjoy dining out? Then, head to TheTahoeWeekly. com or facebook.com/TheTahoeWeekly and take the Reader Survey to be entered in our drawing.
standup paddleboard past Upper Echo Lake through Desolation Wilderness in search of solitude. Plan your own excursion into the breathtaking wonder of Desolation Wilderness
Download your free, digital editions of Tahoe Weekly & Tahoe Powder at TheTahoeWeekly.com or issuu app.
Find us at TheTahoeWeekly.com | Keep up-to-date at 4
Dave Smoyer huffs a Naish inflatable
after reading Tim Hauserman’s feature in this issue for his picks for an unforgettable trip into the back country. Photography by Ryan Salm. | ryansalmphotograhy.photoshelter.com
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@TheTahoeWeekly
September 3-9, 2015 GRAY ’S CROSSING COYOTE MOON
TAHOE DONNER
TRUCKEE AIRPORT
Donner Lake Donner Summit
OLD GREENWOOD
Truckee
PONDEROSA
DONNER LAKE
N h Ta
GRAEAGLE GRIZZLY RANCH WHITEHAWK RANCH
TAHOE CITY
Tahoe City
LAKE FOREST
Dollar Hill
TAHOE CITY
Sunnyside SUNNYSIDE
Ta h o e R i m
il
DEEPEST POINT
COON ST. BOAT LAUNCH NORTH TAHOE
NV
TAHOE VISTA REC AREA
Eagle Rock HOMEWOOD
Marlette Lake
SAND HARBOR
Spooner Lake
o Ta h
OBEXER’S
e Ri m Tr a i l
Tahoma
Visit plugshare.com for details
Meeks Bay MEEKS BAY
Cave Rock
Average Water Temperature: 42.1˚F
Emerald Bay
South Lake Tahoe
Stateline
Fannette Island SKI RUN
Average Surface Water Temperature: 51.9˚F Average Surface Temperature in July: 64.9˚F Highest Peak: Freel Peak at 10,881 feet
Lake Tahoe sits at an average elevation of between 6,223’ and 6,229.1’. The top 6.1’ of water is controlled by the dam in Tahoe City and holds up to 744,600 acre feet of water.
LAKESIDE BIJOU
Shoreline: 72 miles Lake Tahoe has a surface area of 191 square miles. If Lake Tahoe were emptied, it would submerge California under 15 inches of water.
CAMP RICHARDSON Ta h oe
Average Snowfall: 409 inches
TAHOE KEYS
Cascade Lake
There is enough water in Lake Tahoe to supply everyone in the United States with more than 75 gallons of water per day for 5 years.
Lake Tahoe is as long as the English Channel is wide.
EDGEWOOD TAHOE
CAVE ROCK
Zephyr Cove
Watershed Area: 312 square miles
Lake Tahoe is the second deepest lake in the U.S. (Crater Lake in Oregon, at 1,932 feet, is the deepest), and the 11th deepest in the world.
Size: 22 miles long, 12 miles wide
CA
Age of Lake Tahoe: 2 million years
Maximum depth: 1,645 feet
Natural rim: 6,223’
Glenbrook
Homewood ELECTRIC CHARGING STATIONS
Average depth: 1,000 feet
Volume: 39 trillion gallons
Lake
Tahoe
Tahoe Pines
INCLINE VILLAGE CHAMPIONSHIP
Crystal Bay
Kings Beach SIERRA BOAT CO.
GOLF COURSES
CASINOS
Incline Village
Carnelian Bay
Alpine Meadows
a Tr
INCLINE VILLAGE MOUNTAIN
OLD BROCKWAY
RESORT AT SQUAW CREEK
BOAT RAMPS
ra Rim T
Tahoe Vista
Olympic Valley
MARINAS
oe
NORTHSTAR
Truckee River
THE DRAGON AT NAKOMA GOLF RESORT
STAMPEDE RESERVOIR
il
SCHAFFER’S MILL
PLUMAS PINES
RENO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
BOCA RESERVOIR PROSSER RESERVOIR
WEST EAST SOUTH
OUT & ABOUT
R i m Tr ail
Fallen Leaf Lake
LAKE TAHOE AIRPORT
FREEL PEAK
TAHOE PARADISE
Permanent Population: 66,000
LAKE TAHOE
Number of Visitors: 3 million annually
LAKE TAHOE
How the lake was formed
About 3 to 5 million years ago, the valley that would become the Tahoe Basin sank between parallel fractures in the Earth’s crust as the mountains on either side continued to rise. A shallow lake began to form in the resulting valley. Roughly 2 to 3 million years ago, erupting volcanoes blocked the outlet, forcing the lake to rise hundreds of feet above its current elevation, and eventually eroded down to near its current outlet. Between 1 million and 20,000 years ago, large masses of glacial ice covered the west side of the Tahoe Basin. Current geologic theory suggests an earthen berm (moraine) left by a receding glacier near Olympic Valley acted as a dam, causing the lake level to rise and then draw down rapidly when the dam catastrophically failed. Between
7,000 and 15,000 years ago, a 4-mile segment of the West Shore collapsed into the Lake causing a massive submerged debris avalanche, widening the Lake by 3 miles and creating McKinney Bay.1 The Tahoe Basin is mostly granite, with little topsoil, and therefore few nutrients have washed into the lake to promote the growth of algae and other organisms that make water murky. As well, 40 percent of the precipitation falling into the Tahoe Basin lands directly on the lake. The remaining precipitation drains through the decomposed granite soil found in marshes and meadows, creating a good filtering system for water. Urbanization of the Tahoe Basin has eliminated 75 percent of its marshes, 50 percent of its meadows and 35 percent of its steam zone habitats. About 85 percent of all wildlife in the Tahoe Basin use these habitats.
About the lake Lake Tahoe is located in the states of California and Nevada, with two-thirds in California. It is fed by 63 streams and two hot springs. The Truckee River is Tahoe’s only outlet and flows from the dam in Tahoe City east through Reno and eventually drains into Pyramid Lake in the Nevada desert. However, water releases are not permitted when the lake surface level falls below the natural rim at 6,223.’ The lowest lake level on record (measured since 1900) was 6,220.26’ on Nov. 30, 1992. The Lake of the Sky appears blue in color as other colors in the light spectrum are absorbed and blue light is scattered back.
Lake clarity The University of California, Davis, operates the Tahoe Science Center, which monitors, among other things, the clarity
of Lake Tahoe. Clarity has been measured since 1968 and was first recorded at 102.4’. The waters of Lake Tahoe were clear to an average depth of 77.8’ in 2014. The lowest average depth on record was 64.1’ in 1997. Lake Tahoe is losing clarity because of algae growth fueled by nitrogen and phosphorus.
Lake Tahoe’s discovery The first recorded discovery of Lake Tahoe by white explorers was on Feb. 14, 1844, when John Charles Frémont and Charles Preuss spotted the lake from atop Red Lake Peak. The lake went through several names before it was officially named Tahoe in 1945. Tahoe is a mispronunciation of the first two syllables of the Washoe’s word for the lake – Da ow a ga, which means “edge of the lake.”
Learn more: Visit the Tahoe Science Center in Incline Village or tahoesciencecenter.org. Sources: Tahoe Environmental Research Center, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Forest Service, “Tahoe Place Names” and David Antonucci (denoted by 1).
5
FEATURE
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Heather Lake and the Crystal Range
allure DESOLATION WILDERNESS j THE
OF
Story & photos by Tim Hauserman
ust to the west of Lake Tahoe lies Desolation Wilderness, a place of polished granite and shimmering mountain lakes. It’s a true backpacker’s paradise: The hiking is not exceptionally hard, the scenery is jaw dropping and the trailheads are just down the road a piece. When I first started taking my young daughters backpacking, Desolation was the first place we chose, and we kept coming back for more year after year. A short drive followed by a few hours of hiking brought the kids to a place where they could find hours of joy along a lakeshore. They splashed from island to island half way across Lake Aloha, hid from the thunder in the rocky crags at Fontanillis, waited for the friends that would not arrive at Lower Velma, and rested at Gilmore before attacking the formidable Mount Tallac.
Explore the rocky crags at Fontanillis Lake and Dicks Peak.
The solution, however, is fairly simple. Go midweek. Go off season. And, by off season I mean the day after all the whippersnappers put away their big backpacks and grudgingly hoist up their school ones. Then, most likely, you can walk right in and pick up a permit to go anywhere you like.
“On my many Desolation solo adventures, I’ve pondered how amazing it was that I had Half Moon Lake to myself on Labor Day night.”
At this point, I could regale you with tales of what is the best lake in Desolation to go to, but that would be giving away my secret. And, truth be told, since I seem to go back to the old standbys time after time, I might have missed a good one anyway. It’s OK, you really can’t miss having a great experience by hiking up to any of the lakes in Desolation. Here are a few options:
A BIG KAHUNA WITH A SIDE OF ALOHA
If you have a bit more than 30 miles in your tank and really would love to experience a glorious crossing of Desolation Wilderness, start at Echo Lake, and roll past the beautiful and mysterious Lake Aloha. It’s one of my favorite Desolation lakes, but it does lose a bit of charm as the season progresses because the water gets quite shallow. Next, hike on the Tahoe Rim Trail past Heather and Susie Lakes (both awesome and amazingly different even though they are just a mile apart) and make the climb over Dicks Pass. From the pass it is not all downhill, but many miles are, as you descend past Dicks and Fontanillis to Middle Velma Lake. Now proceed on the Tahoe Rim Trail/Pacific Crest Trail for a few miles before turning right and heading up, up, up and over Phipps Pass, where you get to descend past the Tallant Lakes, which include Rubicon, Stony Ridge and Crag, before you end with an easy mile out to Meeks Bay. Arrange for a shuttle and at least three days off and you will have a blast. n
EASY PEESY
For those of us coming from North Tahoe or Truckee, the quickest way into Desolation Wilderness is via the Meeks Bay trailhead off Highway 89 on the West Shore. From here, the trail begins with a flat mile followed by four, only moderately steep, miles to the lovely shore of Crag Lake. Still energized? You can take on another 1.2 miles and reach Stony Ridge, a larger and slightly more remote lake.
6
On my many Desolation solo adventures, I’ve pondered how amazing it was that I had Half Moon Lake to myself on Labor Day night, wondered where in the hell those teeny, little 4Q Lakes were, watched an osprey dive successfully time after time in the fading light of a Dicks Lake evening, and valiantly, but unsuccessfully, fought off a band of marauding squirrels stealing my food at Middle Velma Lake. In other words, Desolation is an awesome place to spend a few days. Of course, there are a few caveats: It can be busy and backpacking permits are not only required, but include a fee, and are limited in number.
LAYOVER DAY SPECIAL
The hike into Dicks or Fontanillis Lake from the Bay View Trail is the same distance as the hike from Meeks Bay to Crag, but there is quite a bit more elevation gain. It does, however, make for a much better choice for a two-night campout. Spend the first night at Dicks and then the next morning take the 2-mile, well-graded climb to the top of Dicks Pass. From there, the views truly are sublime. You can then saunter down to the lake for a swim or three and enjoy another evening at the lake. Before heading home the next day, spend the morning exploring Fontanillis and Middle Velma Lakes, both enticingly beautiful and close by.
Sunset at Middle Velma Lake.
Tim Hauserman wrote “Tahoe Rim Trail: The official guide for hikers, mountain bikers and equestrians,” now on its 3rd edition.
OUT & ABOUT
September 3-9, 2015
(530) 542-2908 | cityofslt.us Urban Trailhead at base of Heavenly Gondola with local exhibits and programs. BlueGo
Fannette Island
Emerald Bay
(530) 541-3030 | parks.ca.gov Lake Tahoe’s only island is located in Emerald Bay & is home to an old tea house. Boat access only. (Closed Feb. 1-June 15 for nesting birds.)
Hellman-Ehrman Mansion
West Shore
Tours daily until Sept. 30 | $10 parking (530) 525-7232 Park | (530) 583-9911 Tours Tour the historic Ehrman Mansion, see boathouses with historic boats, and General Phipps Cabin built in the late 1800s. Private & ADA tours available. TART
Kings Beach
Northshore
northtahoebusiness.org Kings Beach is a popular spot for dining and shopping with the North Shore’s largest sandy beach located in the heart of town. Free parking at North Tahoe Beach and on Brook Street. TART
North Lake Tahoe Demonstration Garden
Incline Village
Daily | Free (775) 586-1610, ext. 25 | demogarden.org Demonstrations of lake-friendly landscaping using native and adaptive plants, water conservation, soil stabilization techniques, defensible space from wildfires & BMPs. Self-guided tours & clinics. TART
North Tahoe Arts Center
Tahoe City
Wed.-Mon. | Free (530) 581-2787 | northtahoearts.com Featuring exhibits of work by local artists. TART
Tallac Historic Site
South Lake Tahoe
(530) 541-5227 | tahoeheritage.org Once known as the “Grandest Resort in the World” as the summer retreat for three San Francisco elite families with the Baldwin Estate, Pope Estate & Valhalla. Today features historic home tours, Baldwin museum, guided walks and summer programs.
Tahoe Art League Gallery
South Lake Tahoe
(530) 544-2313 | talart.org Featuring local artists and workshops. Second location at Ski Run Center. BlueGo
Tahoe City
North Shore
visittahoecity.com Tahoe City is popular for shopping and dining with historical sites. At the junction of highways 89 & 28, visitors may see the Tahoe City Dam, Lake Tahoe’s only outlet, and Fanny Bridge. Peer into Watson Cabin (1909) in the center of town for a glimpse at pioneer life. Free parking at Commons Beach, Grove Street, Jackpine Street, and the 64 acres at Highways 89 & 28. TART
Thunderbird Lodge
Truckee truckeehistory.org | truckee.com The historic town of Truckee was settled in 1863, and grew quickly as a stagecoach stop and route for the Central Pacific Railroad. During these early days, many of Truckee’s historical homes and buildings were built including The Truckee Hotel (1868) and the Capitol Building (1868). Stop by the Depot for a walking tour of historic downtown. Paid parking downtown with free lot on Donner Pass Road next to Beacon. TART Emerald Bay
Tours daily until Sept. 30 | Parking fee (530) 541-3030 | (530) 525-9529 ADA parks.ca.gov or vikingsholm.com Tour Vikingsholm Castle, see Eagle Falls and Fannette Island (the Lake’s only island), home to an old Tea House, and explore hiking trails. TART
Watson Cabin
Tahoe City
Open until mid September (530) 583-1762 | northtahoemuseums.org Watson Cabin, built by Robert Watson and his son in 1909, is the oldest building in Tahoe City and on the National Register of Historic Places. TART
Museums Donner Memorial Visitor Center
Soda Springs
(530) 582-7892 | parks.ca.gov The Donner Memorial State Park features exhibits and artifacts on the Donner Party (184647) at the visitor center, and see the towering Pioneer Monument.
Donner Summit Historical Society
Truckee
donnersummithistoricalsociety.org Museum at the corner of Old Highway 40 & Soda Springs Road. Take the 20-mile interpretive driving tour along Old 40. Maps online or at museum. TART
Gatekeeper’s Museum
Tahoe City
Wed.-Sun. (530) 583-1762 | northtahoemuseums.org Featuring historic photos, the Steinbach Indian Basket Museum and local historical memorabilia. TART NORTH LAKE TAHOE & TRUCKEE | TART Bus & shuttle schedules at Visitors’ Centers, laketahoetransit.com, google.com/transit or nextbus.com. SOUTH LAKE TAHOE | BlueGo Visit tahoetransportation.org.
Sightseeing LAKE TAHOE | TRUCKEE
East Shore
Open until mid October | thunderbirdtahoe.org Thunderbird Lodge is the former Whittell estate. This magnificent lakefront home features the Lighthouse Room, Old Lodge, 600’ underground tunnel (with a former lion cage) and Boat House, home to the “Thunderbird,” a 1939 wooden boat. Ages 6+ only. No on-site parking. Tours by reservation only.
Vikingsholm Castle
It’s the perfect weather for a scenic hike as the seasons begin to change.
KidZone Children’s Museum
Tahoe Maritime Museum
Truckee
Tues.-Sun. | Locals’ first Tues. half price Closed Sept. 6-21 (530) 587-5437 | kidzonemuseum.org For kids up to age 7 with interactive exhibits, science & art classes, the BabyZone for new-borns to 18 months & the Jungle Gym for toddlers and older. TART
Homewood
Thurs.-Tues. (530) 525-9253 | tahoemaritimemuseum.org Featuring guided tours, exhibits and hands-on activities for kids on Tahoe’s maritime history. TART
Tahoe Science Center
Incline Village
Tues.-Fri. & by appt. | Free (775) 881-7566 | tahoesciencecenter.org University of California, Davis, science education center at Sierra Nevada college. Exhibits include a virtual research boat, biology lab, 3D movies and docent-led tours. Ages 8+. TART
Incline Village & Crystal Bay Historical Society Incline Village Daily | Free | tahoehistory.org Features local history exhibit focusing on 1870-1970, along with “Bonanza” exhibit. Inside Starbucks building. TART
Truckee Railroad Museum
Truckee
(530) 541-5458 | laketahoemuseum.org Features Washoe artifacts and exhibits on early industry, settlers, and archival films of Tahoe. BlueGo
Sat.-Sun. & holidays truckeedonnerrailroadsociety.com Located in a caboose next to the Truckee Depot. Exhibits include the train’s role in logging, fighting snow on the railway, the role of Chinese emigrants and a children’s area. TART
Museum of Sierra Ski History & the 1960 Olympic Winter Games Tahoe City
Visitors’ Centers
Lake Tahoe Museum
South Lake Tahoe
Kings Beach
Daily | Free Features official 1960 Winter Olympic items such as skis, promotional literature, collection of official Olympic photographer Bill Briner. Learn the history of skiing in the Sierra. Inside Boatworks Mall. TART
Old Jail Museum
Kings Beach State Rec. Area, Wed.-Mon. (summer)
Incline Village 969 Tahoe Blvd., (800) 468-2463
South Lake Tahoe 3066 Lake Tahoe Blvd., (530) 541-5255
Stateline
Truckee
169 Hwy. 50, (775) 588-4591
Weekends until mid Sept. (530) 582-0893 | truckeehistory.org One of a few surviving 19th-Century jailhouses of its kind in the West used from 1875 until May 1964. TART
Olympic Museum
Tahoe City 100 North Lake Blvd., (530) 581-6900
Truckee 10065 Donner Pass Road (Depot), (530) 587-8808
U.S. Forest Service, Incline Village
Olympic Valley
855 Alder Ave., (775) 831-0914 (Wed.-Fri.)
Sat.-Sun. Sept. 5-Oct. 4 (800) 403-0206 | squawalpine.com Squaw Valley, host of the VIII Winter Olympic Games in 1960, celebrates its Olympic History with the symbolic Tower of Nations and Olympic Flame at the entrance to the valley. The Olympic Museum at High Camp features historic memorabilia and photographs. Tram ticket required. TART
U.S. Forest Service, South Lake Tahoe 35 College Dr., (530) 543-2600
U.S. Forest Service, Tahoe City 3080 N. Lake Blvd., (530) 583-3593 (Fridays)
U.S. Forest Service, Truckee 10811 Stockrest Springs Road, (530) 587-3558
LAKE LEVELS Lake Tahoe
Readings taken on Friday, August 28, 2015
Natural rim 6,223’
RESERVOIR CAPACITY
Elevation 6,222.39’ | Elevation in 2014 6,223.54’
APA PA AC CIT ITY TY: 40,870 Boca 5,054 CAPA
Stampede 31,391
CAPACITY: CAP
Measured in Acre Feet (AF)
226,500
A Prosser 7,639 CAPACITY: 29,840
Donner 6,160
CAPACITY: A
9,500
CI Independence 15,893 CAPACITY: 18,300
Martis 815 CAPACITY:Y 20,400
Truckee River
Measured in Cubic Feet Per Second (CFS)
225
South Lake Tahoe
South Lake Tahoe
(530) 543-2674 | fs.usda.gov Features Stream Profile Chamber to view slice of Taylor Creek, nature trails & more. Summer programs.
200,000 AF
Explore Tahoe
Taylor Creek Visitor Center
175
Eagle Rock, one of the lake’s famous natural sites, is a volcanic plug beside Highway 89 on the West Shore. Easy trail to top on south side.
150,000 AF
West Shore
Open through Labor Day | Guided tours Saturdays (530) 583-3279 | terc.ucdavis.edu This 1920s-era building features a history of the field station, current UC Davis research projects, interactive exhibits and demonstration garden. Ages 8+. TART
125
Eagle Rock
North Shore
100,000 AF
Drive through one of the area’s natural wonders - Cave Rock, the neck of an old volcano. The area is named for the small caves above Highway 50 that were cut by waves when Lake Tahoe was 200 feet higher during the ice ages.
Tahoe City Field Station
75
East Shore
50
Cave Rock
25
Attractions
Flow at Farad 109 | troa.net troa net 7
OUT & ABOUT
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Events
“Around Patagonia” | Joel Wolpert
Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for a complete list of events. EVERY WEDNESDAY
Family Story Time Incline Village Children of all ages are invited to enjoy stories, songs, games and crafts from 4 to 4:45 p.m. at the Incline Village Library every Wednesday except Sept. 16. Free. | (775) 832-4130 Wine & painting Homewood Join The Painted Vine at West Shore cafe for step-by-step instruction from experienced artists to create a work of art while enjoying a glass of wine every Wednesday from 5:30 to 8 p.m. until Sept. 9. No experience is necessary and classes are $40. | RSVP painted-vine.com EVERY THURSDAY
TA K E I N T H E
TRAIL RUNNINg F I L M F E S T I VA L
Homewood Mountain Resort presents the international Trails in Motion Film Tour on Sept. 10 featuring the best trail running and ultra-running films. The film festival is being presented in conjunction with the Tahoe 200 Endurance Run from Sept. 11 to 15, which will start and finish at the North Lodge.
like-minded trail runners and outdoor enthusiasts in a visual celebration of the sport. This year’s films include shorts “Just Keep Running,” “An Idea,” “From The Trails,” “La Triple Corona,” “For The Love” and “Before He Wakes,” with documentaries “Finding Traction,” “Why We Run” and “Around Patagonia.” The film showings start at 7 p.m. in the South Lodge, and doors open at 6. Enjoy sponsor booths, raffles and free schwag. Tickets are $15 in advance with tickets available at the door if available. As well, food will be available for purchase for $15 per plate, and the bar will be open. | skihomewood.com
EVERY TUESDAY
“Finding Traction” | Partnership Productions
The Trails in Motion Film Tour brings a collection of the finest trail running films to passionate audiences around the world. Not only does the festival strive to present a varied montage of high-quality film content from dynamic filmmakers in this genre, but it also seeks to develop a global community that brings together 8
Farmers’ Market Truckee The Foothill Farmers’ Market is open on Tuesdays until Oct. 30 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Truckee River Regional Park. | foothillfarmersmarket.com 55+ Hiking Series Area venues Trekkers of all abilities are welcome to join IVGID Senior Programs for light to moderate hikes from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. until Oct. 20 at locations throughout the region followed by lunch with fellow hikers at Sierra Nevada College’s Patterson Hall. $10, $13 with IVGID pass, includes hike, transportation and lunch. | RSVP (775) 832-1310
Conversation Café Incline Village The Conversation Café is a drop-in conversation forum hosted by the Senior Programs staff at Aspen Grove Community Center from 10 to 11:15 a.m. every week except holidays. Participate with people sharing diverse views and a passion for engaging with others over interesting topics and news items. $2 donation includes continental breakfast. | (775) 832-1310 Toddler story time Incline Village Incline Village Library hosts toddler story time every Thursday from 11:15 to 11:45 a.m. with stories, puppets, music and movement for ages 6 months to 3 years. | (775) 832-4130
Farmers’ Market Incline Village The Farmers market is open at Tunnel Creek every Thursday through Sept. 24 from 4 to 7 p.m. | laketahoemarkets.com EVERY FRIDAY
Farmers’ Market Crystal Bay The Farmers market is open at Tahoe Biltmore Bay every Friday through Sept. 24 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. | laketahoemarkets.com Wine & cheese tours East Shore Thunderbird Lodge hosts wine and cheese tours every Friday with California wines and a selection of hors d’oeuvres prepared by the Thunderbird’s culinary program team along with additional time on the grounds. $100 per person. 21+ only. | RSVP thunderbirdtahoe.org Winemaker event Truckee Uncorked Truckee hosts a winemaker event every Friday from 5 to 7 p.m. featuring a different winery each week. $10 tastings. | teloswine.com Friday Fun Night Northstar The Village at Northstar offers a variety of activities from 5 to 8 p.m. Complimentary and paid activities include face painting, balloon twisting, corn hold, ladder ball, yoga, live music and mini golf until Sept. 4. End the evening with retro skate nights with music from the 70s and 80s. | northstarcalifornia.com Family Movie Night Tahoe Donner Enjoy a free Family Movie every Friday at Northwoods Clubhouse at 6:30 p.m. with G and PG movies. | (530) 582-9669
Tahoe Star Tours Northstar Finish off Friday nights with Star Guide Tony Berendsen who will showcase the cosmos through a high-powered Celestron telescope at the Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe, starting at 8:30 p.m. every week until Sept. 4. Food and refreshments available for sale. $35 adult, $20 kids. | northstarcalifornia.com EVERY SATURDAY
Winemaker event Tahoe City Uncorked Tahoe City hosts a winemaker event every Saturday from 5 to 7 p.m. featuring a different winery each week. $10 tastings. | teloswine.com Adventure Movie Series Truckee California 89 hosts adventure movies outside on the lawn every Saturday through Sept. 11 at 7 p.m. to benefit local nonprofits. Enjoy beer and grilled sausages. $5. | (530) 214-8989 EVERY SUNDAY
Kids golf free Incline Village Every Sunday at the Incline Mountain Golf Course is Family Fun Day with kids 17 and younger playing free with paying adult until Oct. 4. | Tee times (775) 832-1150
SEPT. 3 | THURSDAY Tequila Tasting Kings Beach Enjoy a Tequila Tasting on the first Thursday of the month at 5:30 p.m. at Caliente! with complimentary appetizers with the tasting. $10 or included in the purchase of a specialty drink. | calientetahoe.com ARTour Opening Reception Tahoe City Meet the artists of ARTour during an open reception from 5 to 7 p.m. at North Tahoe Art Gallery. The galleries will showcase select work by artists participating in the tour. ARTour is from Sept. 4 to 6 and 11 to 13 at local studios. Guidebooks for the self-guided tour will be available during the reception. The reception is free and open to the public. See feature in this issue. | northtahoearts.com
SEPT. 4 | FRIDAY Bird Hike South Lake Tahoe Join the Tahoe Rim Trail Association and naturalist Scott Dietrich for a guided, 2-mile hike. Learn to identify local species of birds. Meet at the Big Meadows trailhead at 8 a.m. | RSVP tahoerimtrail.org Lifescapes Incline Village Lifescapes is a writing program for seniors who wish to write and share their memories. New members are always welcome. Meets the 1st and 3rd Friday of each month from 2 to 4 p.m. | (775) 832-4130 First Fridays Tahoe City Tahoe City hosts First Friday each month with specials at participating shops throughout town. | visittahoecity.com
September 3-9, 2015
FREE BOWLING
each person who bowls 2 games at regular price gets a 3rd game free with this coupon First Fridays Truckee Every First Friday of the month from 5 to 8 p.m. head to Historic Downtown Truckee where several of downtown’s unique shops, boutiques, art studios and eateries keep the doors open later and offer special promotions, activities, demonstrations, food and beverages, music and more. Participating shops and restaurants will display First Friday Flags. | historictruckee.com
The Great Sternwheeler Race Zephyr Cove The Great Sternwheeler Race pits the “MS Dixie II” against the “Tahoe Queen” in a 4-mile race along the southeastern shoreline for a chance to win the Tahoe Cup at 11 a.m. Guests may enjoy the race from either boat, including a brunch buffet. $25, $10 kids. | zeyphrcove.com
Kids Night Out Tahoe Donner On the First Friday of every month from 5 to 9 p.m., kids ages 4 to 9 years are invited to an evening of games, dinner, arts and crafts, the Friday Night Movie and even a bedtime story at Northwoods Clubhouse. Parents may enjoy a night out while the trained staff looks after your little ones. Space is limited. Pre-registration and payment is required at least one day in advance. $20 per child. | RSVP (530) 587-9437
Pancake breakfast Truckee Benefit pancake breakfast is offered on the first Sunday of every month from 8 to 11:30 a.m. at Truckee Senior Apartments to benefit Senior Meals on Wheels. $7, $3 children younger than 12.
SEPT. 4-6 | FRIDAY-SUNDAY Arts & Crafts festival Homewood More than 50 artists will showcase an assortment of collectable arts including paintings, ceramics, jewelry, woodwork and photography during Homewood Mountain Resort’s Fine Arts and Crafts Festival from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. | (530) 525-2992 Wellness retreat Tahoe City Granlibakken Tahoe presents the Endless Summer Yoga Retreat, a rejuvenating weekend of yoga, meditation, daily restorative meals, live music and building community. Tickets $240-$684. | RSVP granlibakken.com. 5
SEPT. 5 | SATURDAY | SATURDA Foam Fest Olympic Valley Enjoy a day of beer tasting and music at the 26th Annual Foam Fest in the Village at Squaw Valley from 2 to 6 p.m. to benefit Disabled Sports Far West featuring unlimited tastings from more than 40 breweries, silent auction and live music from Dead Winter Carpenters and Zebuel’s Smoked Out Soul. $30 advance, $35 at event, $10 entry without beer ticket, free 12 and younger. See feature in this issue. | disabledsports.net Brew Walk Northstar Enjoy sampling craft beer from the Anheuser-Busch family from 3 to 6 p.m. in the Village. Tickets $25 | northstarcalifornia.com Brewmaster Dinner Northstar The Ritz-Carlton Lake Tahoe’s hosts a Brewmaster Dinner with 10 Barrel Brewing Company at Manzanita with a three-course dinner and seasonal beers. $65. | RSVP (530) 562-3121 Farm to Table dinner Olympic Valley Six Peaks Grille continues its Summer Dinner Series at 7 p.m. featuring a mixology demonstration featuring Hanger 1 Vodka and a four-course, farmto-table menu with Tahoe Food Hub. $80, $60 kids, complimentary valet. | RSVP (530) 583-6300
Alpen Wine Fest Olympic Valley The 27th Annual Alpen Wine Fest from 2 to 5 p.m. includes wine tasting, live music, a silent auction and raffle. Attendees receive a crystal souvenir wine glass and tastings from more than 40 vineyards. $40 advance, $50 at the event. Proceeds benefit Can Do Multiple Sclerosis, a foundation to help people with MS. | mscando.org Summer Finale Barbecue Tahoe Donner Enjoy live music, games and a barbecue at the Tahoe Donner Driving Range followed by a movie on the green from 1 to 9 p.m. | (530) 582-9646 Lake Mary dinner Norden Enjoy dining outside with scenic views on select dates during the Lake Mary Cabin series at Sugar Bowl from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Benefits a local nonprofit. Open to public. | sugarbowl.com Farm to Peak dinner Homewood Enjoy a five-course meal with wine and beer pairings atop Homewood Mountain Resort. $150 per person. | RSVP skihomewood.com Labor Day Fireworks Carnelian Bay Gar Woods hosts its 3rd Annual Labor Day Fireworks at 8:30 p.m. over Lake Tahoe to benefit North Tahoe-Truckee area high school sports programs. T-shirts and glow sticks will be on sale to benefit programs, as well. Watch from the beach or the restaurant. | RSVP (530) 546-3366
SEPT. 7 | MONDAY Beach Cleanup Area venues Join the League to Save Lake Tahoe in a lake wide beach clean up. Raffle, refreshments and cleanup materials provided. | (530) 541-5388
Bowl Incline North Shore’s Complete Family Recreation Center VOTED BEST POOL ROOM ON THE NORTH SHORE! Automatic Scoring “Bumper Bowling,” Video Arcade, Billiards, Video Poker, Cocktails, ATM, Full Swing Golf Simulator 920 Southwood Blvd., Incline Village (775) 831-1900 email: bowlink@aol.com
SEPT. 6 | SUNDAY
Kids train day Truckee Bring the kids to Truckee River Regional Park from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. to ride a miniature train hosted by Truckee Donner Railroad Society. Free, donations appreciated. | truckeedonnerrailroadsociety.com
OUT & ABOUT
Coupon good for the entire party. Limit 1 free game per person per visit. Not valid with other offers. Not valid for league or tournament play.
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OUT & ABOUT
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Events
Biking “ Mountain biking helps people
SEPT. 8 | TUESDAY
become environmentalists. A mountain bike is a vehicle to appreciate the back country.”
Good Morning Truckee Truckee Good Morning Truckee is held from 7 to 8:30 a.m. at the Truckee Tahoe Airport on the second Tuesday of every month. Open to everyone. $12, $10 chamber members; includes breakfast. | (530) 587-8808
–Ned Overend
BIKE & SKATE PATHS BIKE PATH RULES Walk on the left side of the path Ride bikes on the right side of the path Pedestrians must yield to bikes Don’t stop on the trail; move to the side No motorized vehicles Cyclists call out when passing pedestrians Dogs recommended on leash LAKE TAHOE
LAKE TAHOE
North Shore
TAHOE CROSS COUNTRY (530) 583-5475 | tahoexc.org Tahoe Cross Country offers marked mountain biking and hiking trails in the Burton Creek State Park area just north of Tahoe City. Trail access is free and the terrain is ideal for beginner and intermediate mountain bikers. Advanced riders can find challenging terrain on the Tahoe Rim Trail and around Mount Watson. TART
North Shore
East Shore
Easy | 5 miles RT Runs along Lake Tahoe and connects to Hwy. 28 at each end of Incline Village. Park at Preston Field on Hwy. 28. TART
Strenuous | 14 miles There are several mountain biking trails off the Flume Trail, but if you follow the Flume Trail the whole way you will be rewarded with magnificent views of Lake Tahoe and the surrounding Sierra. The Flume Trail rises 1,600’ above the East Shore of Lake Tahoe. At the end of the Flume Trail, there is a 3-mile, 1,600’ descent down to Tunnel Creek Station on Hwy. 28. It is a moderately difficult ride at 7,000’ to 8,000’ in elevation with more than 1,000’ of climbing and 4.5-miles of single track. It has several steep sections. Park at Tunnel Creek Café off Hwy. 28 in Incline Village and ride to Spooner Lake State Park. Info (775) 298-2501. Call for shuttle schedule.
LAKESHORE BOULEVARD
TAHOE CITY TO DOLLAR POINT Easy-moderate | 5 miles RT First 2.5 miles mostly level with a half-mile climb up Dollar Hill. Access to Tahoe State Park, Burton Creek State Park, Skylandia Park, Pomin Park, Lake Forest Beach, Lake Forest Boat Ramp and campground, fishing, picnicking, playgrounds and athletic fields. Public parking at 64 Acres, Commons Beach and Jackpine. TART
TRUCKEE RIVER CANYON Easy | 9+ miles RT 4.5 miles from the Tahoe City wye to Alpine Meadows Road, with trails continuing to Olympic Valley. The trail is scenic, separate from the highway, and is mostly flat terrain with a few short, gentle grades with trout fishing, river rafting and picnicking along the way. Connects with Squaw Valley Road or continue to Truckee. Public parking at 64 Acres and Squaw Valley Park at Squaw Valley Road. TART
West Shore
TAHOE CITY TO SUGAR PINE POINT STATE PARK Moderate | 22 miles RT Mostly separate from the highway, the trail includes a few miles of highway shoulder and residential streets. Terrain is varied with a few steep sections. Access to picnicking, beaches and playgrounds. Public parking at 64 Acres. TART OLYMPIC VALLEY
OLYMPIC VALLEY Easy | 4 miles RT A 2-mile trail runs beside Squaw Valley Road to the ski area from the Squaw Valley condos to Victoria Road, with views of the meadow and surrounding peaks. Public parking at Squaw Valley Park or Village at Squaw. TART
FLUME TRAIL
NORTHSTAR
NORTHSTAR CALIFORNIA (530) 562-2268 | northstarcalifornia.com Northstar’s Mountain Bike Park boasts more than 100 miles of trails for mountain biking including its signature trail, LiveWire, and the most extensive life-accessed trail network in the Western United States. The park features Skill Development Areas and terrain features including jumps, rails and bridges. Rentals available in the Village at Northstar. Afternoon rates start at 2 p.m., and season passes are available. Downhill Mountain Bike Race Series and Thursday Night Cross-Country Race Series is open to everyone starting in July. Bike Academy offers classes and private lessons. TART TRUCKEE
EMIGRANT TRAIL Moderate | 15+ miles Offers rolling, wide, single-track through high desert, winding through sagebrush, seasonally wet meadows and Jeffrey Pine forests. North of Truckee on Hwy. 89 to Donner Camp picnic area, if too wet, proceed 2.5 miles on Hwy. 89 to Prosser Creek Bridge pullout. 15 miles to Stampede, but can continue on to other areas.
COLDSTREAM VALLEY
MOUNTAIN BIKING ALPINE MEADOWS
WESTERN STATES TRAIL Strenuous | 11.6 miles RT This is a challenging and exhilarating ride (sometimes referred to as Three Bridges Trail) that will afford you a fun downhill swoop and beautiful mountain views. You can ride it either way, starting on either side of the Midway Bridge between Alpine Meadows and Olympic Valley off Hwy. 89. Walk your bike past the guardrail on the east side of the highway at the south end of Midway Bridge, and look for the small, wooden sign marking the Western States Trailhead. The trail begins to climb, then comes to a trail junction where you will turn right. Climb the switchbacks to the T-junction, then turn left onto a fire road where you will stay right, bringing you to The Wall. When you reach the top, pedal through the gate and straight ahead on the fire road, passing all junctions, then go right at the T. Follow the main fire road as it descends, climbs, then descends again; stay left at the intersection, then right past a fire road and a single track. Follow the main fire road down until it turns into a paved road, turn right onto Bunker Drive and right again on Fairway Drive. Keep going until you reach Hwy. 89 at the bottom of the hill; cross the highway and turn right onto the paved bike path to enjoy a leisurely ride along the Truckee River back to your car.
Easy-moderate | 6 miles RT This loop offers a mellow ride offering views of the Sierra Crest, has nice flowers in the spring and circumnavigates a series of ponds. From Donner Pass Road, take Coldstream Road, which alternates pavement and dirt. After a short climb up the old terminal moraine of the glacier that once filled this valley, the valley opens up. Proceed on this road until you come to private property signs at the last pond, then turn left on the dirt road and return on the east side of the valley. Park outside the white gate on Coldstream.
BMX BMX TRACK (530) 582-7720 | tdrpd.com The BMX track is at River View Sports Park in Truckee. Practice Tues. 5-6:30 p.m. and Thurs. 5 p.m.-dark. Free. Races Tues. 6:30 p.m.-dark starting May 8. $10 plus ABA membership.
TRUCKEE PUMP TRACK (530) 582-7720 | facebook.com/truckeebikepark At River View Sports Park in Truckee, the track features berms, whoops and jumps in various circuits built into the track with a Pump Park, Pump Course and Pump Track, with a small start mound for kids with push or strider bikes.
TART: Bus & shuttle schedules at Visitors’ Centers, laketahoetransit.com, google.com/transit or nextbus.com.
10
continued from page 9
SEPT. 10 | THURSDAY Demo Day Area venue Tahoe Mountain Sports hosts a free demo day from 2 to 5:30 p.m. with a 3- to 5-mile group trail run. | (530) 536-5200 Paws 2 Read Incline Village Friendly dogs lend a loving, non-judgmental ear to beginning readers of all ages from 4 to 5 p.m. at the Incline Village Library After practicing reading with a dog, children receive a free book. | (775) 832-4130 Art Talk Incline Village Danica Novgorodoff will be giving an art talk at 5 p.m. in the Holman Arts and Media Center at Sierra Nevada College. Novgorodoff is a freelance graphic designer, illustrator and teacher. She will be reading from her graphic novel “Refresh, Refresh, Refresh” based on the short story of the same name by Benjamin Percy. | sierranevada.edu “Trails in Motion” film tour Homewood Homewood Mountain Resort hosts the “Trails in Motion” film tour at 6 p.m. in association with the Tahoe 200 Endurance Race. The film tour features nine of the most prominent trail and ultra running films from around the world. Food and drinks will be available for purchase. Tickets $15. | trailsinmotion.com Stall and Spin Awareness talk Truckee The Truckee Tahoe Airport hosts a talk on Stall and Spin Awareness from 6 to 8 p.m. at the airport with Tim Brill discussing aircraft controls and aerodynamics, offairport landings, control failures and more. | truckeetahoeairport.com
SEPT. 11 | FRIDAY Parasol Community Table Incline Village Join the Parasol Tahoe Community Foundations for an elegant evening at the Shakespeare Ranch with dinner by Chef Roland Passot. Wine and cocktail reception begins at 5:30 p.m. Benefits the Parasol Community Foundation. Tickets $500. | parasol.org Guitar Strings vs. Chicken Wings Olympic Valley Bands and restaurants will square off against each other in a battle of epic proportions to raise funds and awareness for the Tahoe Institute of Natural Sciences. Starting at 6 p.m., village restaurants will share signature spicy and flavor-packed chicken wings while bands from around the region will compete for the Title, voted by the public. $5. | squawalpine.com Sierra College Insights Talks Truckee Sierra College hosts Insights discussion series at 6:30 p.m. on the Truckee campus. Professor Lyndah Walsh addresses key controversies in the history of American science, policymaking and identifies a thread that runs through all of them. Free. | RSVP sierracollege.ticketleap.com
Writers in the Woods Incline Village Benjamin Percy reads from his most recent novel “The Dead Lands” during the Writers in the Woods series at 7 p.m. at Sierra Nevada College. The book is a post apocalyptic reimagining of the Lewis and Clark saga. Free. | sierranevadacollege.edu
SEPT. 11-13 | FRIDAY-SUNDAY Autumn Food & Wine Festival Northstar The 30th Annual Lake Tahoe Autumn Food and Wine Festival at Northstar will pair epicurean adventures with Northern California’s finest in regional food and wine delicacies. Enjoy three-days of cooking seminars and demonstrations, culinary competitions, wine tastings and food-themed experiences. Some events ticketed. | northstarcalifornia.com
SEPT. 12 | SATURDAY Migrant bird hike Spooner Summit The Tahoe Institute for Natural Science, Lahontan Audubon Society and Tahoe Rim Trail Association team up to offer a 1- to 2-mile hike to search for migrant birds heading south for the winter. Meet at the Spooner north trailhead at 8:30 a.m. | RSVP tahoerimtrail.org Markleeville Creek Day Markleeville Join volunteers on one of the various restoration projects throughout the Alpine watershed from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Projects include invasive weed removal, stream bank stabilization and willow planting. | (530) 694-2327 Trails & Vistas art hike East Shore Art, culture and environment blend for the annual Trails & Vistas art hike at Spooner Lake State Park with hikes starting at 9:30 a.m. Hikes also offered Sept. 19 at Donner Ski Ranch. $35+. | Tickets trailsandvistas.org 5th Annual Calpine Marketplace Calpine Enjoy live music, arts & crafts, classic cars, barbecue and fun for the kids during the 5th annual Calpine Marketplace from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Proceeds benefit the community center, kids park, volunteer fire department and youth scholarships fund in the town. | (530) 320-0764 Women’s water sports event Kings Beach The Butterfly Effect hosts a day of SUP, kayak and canoe at Kings Beach State Recreation Area with group paddles, a beach festival, lunch, yoga and more. | RSVP betheeffect.com Boreal employee reunion Donner Lake Former Boreal Ridge at Castle Peak general manager Jay Price is hosting an employee and managers reunion at his Donner Lake home from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in commemoration of Boreal’s 50th anniversary and in celebration of 40 years of service by John Booth. Hot dogs, beer and chips provided. Bring something to share. | RSVP (530) 587-3150 Dinner in the Barn Beckworth Sierra Valley Farms hosts a farm to table dinner featuring Chef Michael Plapp. Dinner includes a four-course meal of farm-fresh food paired with wine and live music. Meet at 4:30 p.m. $125. | (530) 832-0114
September 3-9, 2015
Bringing the farm to Tahoe
FEATURE
Story & photos by Priya Hutner
Susie Sutphin
S
usie Sutphin is one busy woman. When I arrived to meet her she was juggling the phone, trying to locate Zephyr Squash from a farmer, preparing for her Thursday deliveries and labeling produce in the recently opened Tahoe Food Hub storefront on Alpine Meadows Road. The Tahoe Food Hub was born three years ago when Sutphin’s vision to help people gain access to high quality food while helping local farmers get a fair market price for their produce and meats became a reality. Sutphin, a 15-yearresident of Truckee, has had an impressive career, from her time with Couloir Magazine and Patagonia Clothing to eventually working with the Wild & Scenic Environmental Film Festival where she ran its national tour. The films inspired her to explore building a smarter and more equitable food system. “I just jumped in and did it. I thought I can do this,” Sutphin explains about starting the Food Hub. “I decided I go for it and figure it out from there.” The Tahoe Food Hub works to restore local food distribution by building a regional food system for North Lake Tahoe. Eighty percent of the Tahoe Food Hub’s business is supplying local restaurants with fresh produce, as well as local schools and Tahoe Forest Hospital. Sutphin picks up fresh produce every Monday and Thursday and delivers it the following day. The farmers pick their produce to order insuring absolute freshness. This is why many of the Tahoe chefs use the Tahoe Food Hub for their cuisine.
Do you know someone interesting in Tahoe? To nominate someone you’d like to see featured, e-mail editor@tahoethisweek.com.
agriculture and growing in an alpine ecosystem. She is the farm manager of Truckee’s Growing Dome started by the Kelly family. It is one of the ways local Tahoe children are educated about growing produce. The geodesic growing dome offers edibles year-round. The Tahoe Food Hub also works with local organizations like Project MANA donating produce and helping to promote healthy eating choices. The newest venture is The Tahoe Hub Farm Store. Open to the public, it is brimming with brightly colored fresh fruits and vegetables, organic meats, eggs, coffee and grains. It is definitely worth the ride to base of Alpine Meadows Road.
Susie Sutphin working at the Tahoe Food Hub store at the base of Alpine Meadows Road.
“It’s important that we put more value on our food. We need to think where our food comes from.”
For Sutphin it’s about the story, illuminating the farmers and showing people how it is grown and where it comes from. “It’s important that we put more value on our food,” she explains. “We need to think where our food comes from.”
BIKES • PADDLEBOARDS • KAYAKS PHOTO CREDIT: LISA MASSER
Used Kayaks SUP’s & Bikes
ON SALE!
Discounted Demo Skis /// 3 LOCATIONS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
HOMEWOOD 5395 West Lake Blvd.
(NEXT TO HOMEWOOD POST OFFICE)
530.525.9920
SUNNYSIDE 1785 West Lake Blvd. (NEXT TO FIRESIGN CAFE)
530.583.9920
WESTSHORESPORTS.COM
SUGAR PINE POINT STATE PARK Next to The Ehrman Mansion (BY NORTH BOAT HOUSE ON BEACH)
Sutphin is a one-woman tornado. She collaborates with Slow Food Lake Tahoe offering workshops throughout the year for people who want to learn how to home brew, preserve and can, compost, garden and make homemade Kombucha. In the winter, you can find her and the folks from Slow Food Lake Tahoe behind the serving line at various restaurants for Soup and Bread nights. The Tahoe Food Hub recently introduced the Build Your Own Box program, a farm share produce subscription program. Sourcing from 25 local farms participants’ receive fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables. Sutphin and The Tahoe Food Hub offer educational programs teaching about
The Food Hub recently launched its membership drive to raise funds for the nonprofit organization, one can join a become a Hubster. In the meantime, Sutphin’s imprint can be found in a growing number of Tahoe restaurants where they procure produce for delicious chef creations. Susie Sutphin may be reached at susie@tahoefoodhub.org or visit thetahoefoodhub.org. The Tahoe Food Hub Farm Store is open from 2 to 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
Real Estate prices are edging up. Don’t get edged out! Contact me for a summary of real estate sales from 2006 to present, and a current list of available properties that meet your requirements.
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David Wright (former General Contractor)
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OUT & ABOUT
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Toasting for a good cause
PUBLIC RAMPS
The 27th Annual Alpen Wine Fest includes wine tastings from more than 40 vineyards, silent auction, live music and more at the Village at Squaw Valley on Sept. 6 from 2 to 5 p.m. Proceeds from the event benefit Can Do Multiple Sclerosis (Can Do MS), a foundation providing wellness and education for people with Multiple Sclerosis. The proceeds will fund Squaw Valley programs in 2016, including the Vertical Express Adaptive Ski Experience, and Can Do MS’s inaugural multi-day adaptive program. Entry into the event is $40 in advance, with $50 tickets available at the Village starting at 1 p.m. the day of the event. Attendees receive a commemorative crystal wine glass, full access to all wine tastings including featured wineries Canihan Family Winery, Lumen Wines, Wrath Wines, Frank Family Winery and Quady Winery, and entry into the largest silent auction in the region. The event is also accompanied by live music. | squawalpine.com
LAKE TAHOE
CAVE ROCK
(775) 831-0494
Hwy. 50, East Shore
SAND HARBOR
(775) 831-0494
Hwy. 28, 2 miles south of Incline Village
6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily. Picnic area, restrooms.
BOAT LAUNCH CLOSED FOR THE SEASON. Picnic area, beach, Visitors’ Center, food, restrooms.
COON ST. BOAT LAUNCH (530) 546-4212
CLOSED FOR THE SEASON.
TAHOE VISTA REC. AREA (530) 546-4212
BOAT LAUNCH CLOSED FOR THE SEASON. Picnic area, beach, restrooms.
LAKE FOREST
8 a.m.-4 p.m. daily. $15-$20. Pass available. Restrooms. One-way exit only after closing.
Hwy. 28, Bottom of Coon St. in Kings Beach Hwy. 28, Bottom of National Ave. (530) 583-3796
1.5 miles east of Tahoe City, off Hwy. 28 AREA LAKES
DONNER LAKE
(530) 582-7720
I-80, Donner Lake exit
PROSSER RSVR.
(530) 587-3558
Hwy. 89, 2 miles north of Truckee
BOCA/STAMPEDE RSVR.
(530) 587-3558 I-80, Hirschdale exit
$10 California boats, $15 out-of-state boats. $3 parking. Season pass $70 California, $120 out-of-state. Restrooms.
10 mph speed limit strictly enforced. No fees for parking or launching.
45 mph speed limit. No launching fee. $10 parking. Subject to closure during low water levels.
PUBLIC PIERS Public piers are free, but have limited space; often limited to loading and unloading. DONNER LAKE
DONNER LAKE
I-80, Donner Lake exit
37 public piers on north shore from the boat ramp east. Fenced piers are private.
LAKE TAHOE
GAR WOODS
Carnelian Bay
KINGS BEACH
Bottom of Coon St.
SKYLANDIA PARK
Lake Forest
Access to restaurant, small beaches. Restrooms. Busy pier adjacent to town, public beach, picnic sites. Restrooms. Small beach, picnic facilities. Restrooms.
KASPIAN PICNIC AREA West Shore
Between Tahoe City and Homewood. Picnic area, beach. Restrooms.
GROVE STREET
Open 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Located east of Commons Beach. Restrooms at Commons Beach.
Center of Tahoe City
SUGAR PINE POINT
Tahoma
Hiking, Ehrman Mansion tours, nature trail. Restrooms.
BOAT INSPECTIONS LAKE TAHOE
MANDATORY INSPECTIONS ARE REQUIRED FOR LAKE TAHOE, ECHO LAKES & FALLEN LEAF LAKE. (888) 824-6267 or tahoeboatinspections.com | Fees $30-$121; 7-day pass available. | Daily 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. EAST SHORE SPOONER SUMMIT: Junction of Hwys. 28 & 50. No vessels more than 30’. NORTH SHORE ALPINE MEADOWS: Hwy. 89 at Alpine Meadows Road. | TRUCKEE : Hwy. 267 off Airport Rd., Thurs.-Sun. only. SOUTH SHORE MYERS: At the junction of Hwys. 89 & 50. WEST SHORE HOMEWOOD: Hwy. 89 at Homewood Mountain Resort. CLOSED FOR THE SEASON. TRUCKEE AREA
truckeeboatinspections.com | (530) 582-2361 Mandatory inspections will be required for all vessels for Donner Lake by appointment only. $10-$45. Annual pass available. (530) 582-7724. Mandatory self inspections are in place at Prosser, Boca, Jackson Meadows & Stampede reservoirs.
Call (530) 546-5995, ext. 100, to be listed in Marinas. 12
Agencies seek public feedback California Tahoe Conservancy and U.S. Forest Service plan two open houses to present a land exchange concept that would help both agencies manage their holdings in the Lake Tahoe Basin more efficiently. The proposal would transfer Forest Service urban lots to the California Tahoe Conservancy, while conveying some larger CTC parcels to the Forest Service. The South Shore open house will take place on Sept. 9 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Forest Supervisor’s office. The Tahoe City open house will take place on Sept. 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Tahoe City Public Utility District’s Lakeview Room. There will be no formal presentation. Staff members from both agencies will be available to explain the proposal and answer questions. Maps showing areas proposed for exchange are online. | fs.usda.gov/goto/ltbmu
Audition dates set Director Sophie Moeller is looking for actors in grades 7 to 12, for her production of “Into the Woods,” a youth musical. Auditions and callbacks will be on Sept. 9 at 3:45 p.m. Rehearsals will be on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from Sept. 15 through Oct. 21. There is a $100 enrollment to TDRPD and $100 production fee. Director Kane Schaller is looking for teens and adults for his production of Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible.” Auditions are on Sept. 10 from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Rehearsals will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays from Sept. 15 to Nov. 18. There is a $100 enrollment to TDRPD and $75 enrollment fee to Truckee Community Theater. “Twas the Night Before Christmas” auditions are open to anyone who loves to perform on Sept. 18 and Sept. 19. Times of auditions vary according to roles. There
is no cost for auditioning, but there will be a $100 rehearsal fee. “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever” auditions, for ages 8 to 80, will be held Sept. 30 from 6 to 9 p.m. Rehearsals will be on Wednesdays from 6 to 7:30 p.m. All auditions will be held at Tahoe Donner Recreation and Parks District Community Arts Center. | truckeecommunitytheater.org
Learn to report aquatic invasive species The League to Save Lake Tahoe hosts a free training session on Sept. 9 so that participants may learn to identify and report aquatic invasive plants found in local lakes and streams. The session is in Tahoe City. | Register bit.ly/eyesonthelake
Trails & Vistas expands to two locations Trails & Vistas will be available this year at two different locations: on Sept. 12 the hikes will take place at Spooner Lake and on Sept. 19 at Donner Ski Ranch. The art hikes blend the arts, culture and the environment. Tickets are on sale for $45 for adults and $12 for children ages 4 to 10. This year’s World Concert will be held on Sept. 12 at Sand Harbor Nevada State Park. | Tickets trailsandvistas.org
Support cross-country center Tahoe Cross Country is seeking donations to help support the work of the nonprofit cross-country center and its ski education programs. As well, a local community member has pledged a matching donation for any donation made by the community if $40,000 can be raised. Donations are used to cover fixed costs like insurance, fees and minimum salaries in order to open for the 2015-16 season, and to replace equipment like the 12-yearold groomer. For more information or to make a donation, visit tahoexc.org.
Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for a complete list of announcements.
September 3-9, 2015
Gone Fishin’
MICKEY’S
by Bruce Ajari
BIG MACK CHARTERS
Gal Gone Fishing
In the fall into winter, her attention turns back to her passion – Steelhead. If you are interested in booking her for a trip for trout or steelhead, check out Confluence Outfitters at confluenceoutfitters.com.
OUT & ABOUT
• YEAR-ROUND SPORTFISHING • ALL GEAR PROVIDED • 43’ SPORTFISHER
$90* $850 FULL BOAT
*Discount for Cash
FISHING REPORT (See Sightseeing for water levels)
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Boca | Inflow is at 118 cfs and the outflow is 61 cfs. Fishing has been fair. Fly-fishers have been catching some fish near the inlet with nymphs, streamers and dries.
MickeysBigMack.com
Leslie Ajari on a float trip on the Green River in Utah. | Josh Mezher
W
ell, we never had a clue that my daughter, Leslie, would make flyfishing her profession as an adult. She and her brother, Wes, were introduced to fishing at a young age and then to fly-fishing at about 10-years-old. After graduating from St. Mary’s College in Moraga, she worked at a lot of different jobs and would come home and visit and go fishing with me. Before I knew it, she was telling me that she was thinking about going to guide school to become a fly-fishing guide.
“Before I knew it, she was telling me that she was thinking about going to guide school to become a fly-fishing guide.” One day, she called me and asked me what I thought of a guide school through Confluence Outfitters out of the Red Bluff/Redding area. After checking out the Web site and knowing some of the guides that were employed by them, she received my seal of approval. She enrolled in the guide school last summer, spending a week learning to refine her technique, how to teach, how to treat the clients and how to run a successful guide business. After successfully completing school, she was offered a job with Confluence Outfitters as one of their guides. So, in the late summer, she began her guiding experience and spent last year on the Trinity River, North Coast and Oregon in her pursuit of steelhead. Steelhead Rainbow Trout born in freshwater that go out to the ocean and return to spawn in those same streams are her passion. She loves the technique of swinging flies for them with Spey Rods. The Spey Rods are longer rods that involve casting with two hands. It is quite different than traditional single-hand casting that we do in most fly-fishing. During the spring into early summer, she works as a trout guide on waters such as the McCloud River, Fall River, Hat Creek, Pit River and other waters around the town of Burney. She has a great blog that many people have followed: galgonefishing.com. As she describes the blog, “The chronicles of one woman’s journey through the art of fly fishing.” Her passion for the sport shines through her writing. Check it out.
Donner Lake | Fishing has been fair to good. Kokanee fishing has been good. Nightcrawlers and Powerbait seem to be the main bait for shore anglers. Mackinaw fishing has been good. Fly-fishermen are catching some fish with streamers. Lake Tahoe | Fishing has been fair to good
for mackinaw. A guide is highly recommended if you are fishing for mackinaw for the first time. Toplining and shore fishing is fair. Most shore fishermen use inflated nightcrawlers.
Little Truckee River | With this being the
only fishable stream around it will likely get too much pressure. Consider fishing in alternative waters.
Martis Lake | Zero kill. Catch and Release only with barbless artificial lures or flies. Fishing is the best early in the season and again the fall. With the warming water, the fishing here is slow. Try fishing it again in the fall.
Prosser | Fishing has been fair. Anglers using bait, lures and flies have all caught fish. Flyfishermen have done well near the inlet areas. Bass fishing has been fair.
NORTH TAHOE CRUISES On the Tahoe Gal
|
Four Cruises a Day
Stampede | Fishing has been fair. The ramp is not usable for larger boats. Nightcrawlers, Powerbait and lures have all produced from shore. Fly-fishermen have been doing well near the inlets with nymphs and streamers. The Kokanee fishing has been fair for those getting out. Smallmouth bass fishing has been fair.
Truckee River | Not flowing out of the lake at Tahoe City. The flows through Truckee are at 9 cfs. The flow from Boca downstream to the state line is running between 88 and 99 cfs. Flows are too low now. Please target alternative water and other species such as bass or carp.
Davis and Frenchman | Fishing has slowed.
It will improve in about a month when waters cool. Bruce is a long-time area fly-fisherman and past president of Tahoe Truckee Fly Fishers. Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com to read more.
SPECIAL LABOR DAY FIREWORKS CRUISE SUNSET DINNER CRUISE Live music & Fireworks on Sunday, Sept. 6 LIVE MUSIC on Sunday night | MAGICIAN SHOW on Monday night (530) 583-0141 | TahoeGal.com | Call for reservations | Tahoe City, CA 13
OUT & ABOUT
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14
•
W parking lot with Ward Baker in
hen I drove into the Sun Valley
January 1947, I had no idea that I would spend the next three winters there. On the road from Ketchum to Warm Springs, there was only one building after the Bigwood River Bridge. There was no reason for anyone to live out there because there was no electricity or water beyond the bridge. The ground was pretty fallow and, as they said, it wasn’t even good enough to grow potatoes in. The following summer, ski instructor Leon Goodman built what I recall was the first house there. Prices of real estate were still working against moving that far out of town because you could still buy a vacant lot in Ketchum in the $500 range. I bought my first piece of property in Ketchum on Trail Creek and the road to Hailey for $350 a couple of years later. Owen Simpson, Jack Simpson’s father, upgraded a casino on Main Street in Ketchum the first winter I was there and the next summer the town shut them down so they built a gambling hall halfway to Hailey out of Ketchum’s jurisdiction. This was also short-lived and so they decided to build a large, log gambling casino in the middle of Warm Springs and fly gamblers there from Elko and Jackpot, Nev. By the time they got that giant casino built, Ketchum had annexed Warm Springs and prohibited gambling there, as well. Eventually, the building was moved south of Ketchum just past my little log cabin on Trail Creek on the east side of the road to Hailey and became a large real estate office. My history is vague on this point, but I think the next resident in Warm Springs was either Ernest Hemingway’s son, Jack, or a doctor whose specialty was putting legs back together before the invention of release bindings. When Bill Janss bought Sun Valley in 1964 one of the first things he did was build a chairlift on the Warm Springs side of the mountain and created one of the best ski runs anywhere in the world. I think it climbed to 3,000 vertical feet in 10 or 12 minutes and that chairlift is the first one I rode with my soon-to-be wife, Laurie, during the Christmas holidays in 1984. The first time she said I’ll meet you at the bottom, I realized I’d met an attractive lady who I couldn’t begin to keep up with on a pair of skis and I still can’t keep up with her in many ways, after all of these years. When I look at ski photographs of the late 1930s when Sun Valley was first developed, it helps you understand why they didn’t even look at Mount Baldy to develop at first because 1938 equipment couldn’t handle runs that steep. It would be five years after Dollar Mountain had the first chairlift invented before the first chairlift appeared on Baldy. Ward Baker and I spent two years living
in the Sun Valley parking lot and skiing seven days a week. In the early years before they built the Warm Springs’ lift, occasionally there would be a 4:15 bus from the bottom of Warm Springs back to Sun Valley and we could go out of bounds and ski top to bottom; though no area was considered out of bounds back then. The year that I wanted to be a ski racer I can remember thinking that last run down College or to Warm Springs to the bottom meant skiing at 6 or 8 mph with snow plow turns nonstop. I knew nothing about getting in shape, but after skiing from 8:30 in the morning until 3:30 in the afternoon, I always figured I would be in good shape if I could handle that many snow plow turns. My self-imposed training method worked for me and after a year of just skiing, I spent the next year racing and the third year at Sun Valley teaching on Dollar Mountain.
“I knew nothing about getting in shape, but after skiing from 8:30 in the morning until 3:30 in the afternoon, I always figured I would be in good shape if I could handle that many snow plow turns.”
Ward and I would shadow ski classes and listen to what the instructor told each individual pupil when they finished their run and apply it to what we thought we might be doing. Fortunately, we each had an 8mm motion picture camera and we’d film each other and look at them in the lobby of the skier’s chalet and correct our bumbling mistakes. After I bought my vacant lot on Trail Creek with a great view of Baldy, I had planned on settling there someday before I’d established my film business that took me all over the world. When I produced a film for Bill Janss at Sun Valley the first time he showed it, he sold what became Elkhorn to Johns Manville for the same price that he paid for all of Sun Valley. He eventually sold me 11 acres on the back side of Baldy, from which I developed some amazing Baldy-view lots. When Laurie and I got together, we decided to not settle down in Sun Valley because I had my circle of friends of my previous marriage and so did she. On a press trip to Vail, Colo., we thought we should start over at a different part of the world with all new friends. That worked for us and when the opportunity came to help pioneer the world’s only private ski and golf club at the Yellowstone Club, we would’ve been foolish to say no. And, after a few bumps in the road, that has turned out to be a good decision, especially because we’ve made amazing friends there and the mountain is terrific. After traveling the world of ski resorts with my camera and a rucksack for 50 years, I still think Baldy is one of the best place to turn right and left. n Warren Miller is history’s most prolific and enduring ski filmmaker. Visit warrenmiller.net or his Facebook page at facebook.com/warrenmiller. Read more of Warren’s stories at TheTahoeWeekly.com.
September 3-9, 2015
FEATURE
Hikes for the tykes Story & photos by Tim Hauserman
P
arents of young children visiting Lake Tahoe have a dilemma. They like the concept of introducing their little ones to the joys of hiking into the great forests and ridges that surround Lake Tahoe, but they are concerned that their kids diminutive legs and lack of staying power will not get them to a magnificent viewpoint that the parents would enjoy. Fear not ye parents, a number of short hikes in the area are not only easily hikeable by kids, but take you to pristine mountain settings with awesome views of our favorite patch of Big Blue. These hikes are all on the North Shore, require less then 3 miles round-trip of hiking and provide panoramic, Oh-My-Godlook-at-that views of Lake Tahoe. As an added bonus, these hikes are a bit off the beaten track and don’t attract the choking hordes of onlookers you will find in Emerald Bay.
Trailhead | From Kings Beach, head to
“In about 15 minutes, you can wind your way around the back of the rock and up
about half-mile from the top Brockway Summit on Highway 267 and look for the Tahoe Rim Trail trailhead with parking areas along the highway. Follow a dirt road on the uphill side 100 yards to the trail.
to the edge, where the views are stunningly beautiful.”
Eagle Rock This eroded volcano sits just above Highway 89 at the edge of Blackwood Canyon on Tahoe’s West Shore. Eagle Rock just might provide the best view-to-effort ratio you will find anywhere in the region. In about 15 minutes, you can wind your way around the back of the rock and up to the edge, where the views are stunningly beautiful. Be careful to keep the younger and more clumsy ones back from the edge, but the hike itself is doable by just about anyone. What is especially impressive about this view is that while it stands high above the shore, it is just a few hundred yards as the osprey flies from the edge of the lake. Trailhead | About 4.5 miles south of Tahoe City on Highway 89 look for the large, volcanic rock on the right. If you reach Blackwood Creek, you’ve gone too far. Find parking at the trailhead. It’s right across the highway from the bike trail, so Eagle Rock can make a perfect addition to your ride along the West Shore.
Truckee River Canyon Just above downtown Tahoe City, the Tahoe Rim Trail climbs north through a forest of pine, fir and cedar trees. Around every turn is another vista of Tahoe City and the lake just beyond. In about a mile, the trail arrives at the edge of the Truckee River Canyon where flat rocks provide a great stopping spot to enjoy both the
lake and the Truckee River. Turn around here or continue as far as you want with more lake and canyon views along the route. In addition to the water views, this hike provides enormous specimens of sugar pine, Jeffrey pine and incense cedar for you to ponder. Trailhead | Take Fairway Drive, located next to the Chevron station on the edge of Tahoe City, drive for 0.2 miles to the trailhead with parking on the right.
Flintstone Rock On this hike, the Tahoe Rim Trail ascends through a recently thinned forest of firs with filtered views of the lake. In about a mile, the trail reaches a junction. Here a left turn leads to a flat pile of rocks where the views include much of the lake in one direction, and the Truckee and Donner region in the other. Years ago, I camped at this spot while circumnavigating the Tahoe Rim Trail. I was treated to a steady stream of visitors finding their way to the rock to watch the sunset. After the sun went down, they traipsed their way back to their homes, while I bedded down for the night and gazed at the stars, and waited for the next spectacular light show in the morning.
Chickadee Ridge From the Tahoe Meadows TRT trailhead, the path saunters across lush Tahoe Meadows to a crossing of Ophir Creek, then climbs gently through open forest to Chickadee Ridge where amazing views of Tahoe await. It’s called Chickadee Ridge because hordes of chickadees hang out here waiting for folks to feed them. Trailhead | The Tahoe Rim Trail Tahoe Meadows trailhead is on Highway 431 (Mount Rose Highway) 7.7 miles from the Intersection of 431 and Highway 28 in Incline Village. If you would like to shorten the hike distance, skip the walk through the meadow, and park just where the forest reaches the meadow on the right side. A trail follows the tree line and quickly meets the TRT. Tim Hauserman is the author of “Monsters in the Woods: Backpacking with Children.”
How do you #TahoeTime? Tag your Instagram or Facebook photos
with #tahoetime and @TheTahoeWeekly for a chance to be featured on our social media feeds and in Tahoe Weekly
15
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OUT & ABOUT
September 3-9, 2015
On Par
Play the in the Best Sierra!
by Thomas Lester
Whitehawk Ranch Golf Club
1
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PUBLIC GO in the SierrLF COURSE a Nevada 2014
1 RatdnookreAcdtiv#ity Ou
unty! in Plumas Co
2015
Special Fall Season Rates!
18
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Course Details
Yardage
Slope
Ratings
18 holes | par 71
6,954 to 4,816
129 to 105
71.7 to 62.9
W
hitehawk Ranch Golf Club is a short drive north from Truckee on Highway 89 in the majestic Mohawk Valley. The course was designed by Dick Bailey in 1996 and offers a unique blend of holes that wander through meadows of native grasses and wildflowers along with holes that are cut through towering Aspens, cedars and firs. In 2007 and 2008, Whitehawk was rated as the No. 11 best public course in California by Golf Digest Magazine and also won the esteemed Golf Writers Association Environmental Award in 1997. The course is a par 71 that measures 6,954 yards from the four hawk tees.
“Players that are confident with their driver will likely try to drive the green, while other players will take the conservative route and lay up short of the creek.” Customer service is a premium at Whitehawk Ranch. The staff is extremely friendly and helpful. There is a fully stocked pro shop and a snack bar with sandwiches, hot dogs and beverages. The driving range is a highlight in itself with grass tees, multiple target flags and glistening Titleist NXT golf balls stacked in a neat pyramid. There is a large putting green and a chipping area with a sand bunker.
The 9th hole at Whitehawk Ranch offers the possibility to drive the green. It is a short, 310-yard par 4. There is a stream that runs through the fairway about 210 yards off the tee and a pond that protects the green on the right side. Players that are confident with their driver will likely try to drive the green, while other players will take the conservative route and lay up short of the creek. Many birdies are made on this hole, but so are double bogeys, so make sure to keep your ball in play. The finishing hole at Whitehawk is a slight dogleg right par 5 measuring 558 yards from the back tees. A soft fade down the left center of the fairway is the ideal tee shot and will leave the best angle for the second shot. The second shot should be played to the left of the group of trees in the fairway. A short iron or wedge will be used for this approach into a green that has a stream running in front and a bunker on the right side. Whitehawk Ranch is currently in fantastic shape. The greens are running true and at a quick, but fair, pace. Stay and play packages are available and frequent player discounts are offered. The practice facility may be used all day for $20, which includes unlimited range balls and use of the putting and chipping areas.
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For more information and directions, visit golfwhitehawk.com or call (530) 836-0394.
17
OUT & ABOUT
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Wet ‘n’ Dirty
Courtesy Northstar California
Homewood hosts races, film
Explore the Water Trail
Homewood Mountain Resort hosts a showing of “Trails in Motion,” a series of nine films, on Sept. 10 at Homewood’s South Lodge at 6 p.m. Tickets are $9; food and drinks will be available. Lake Tahoe 200 Endurance Run will start and end at Homewood, circumnavigating Lake Tahoe from Sept. 11 to 15. Runners have 100 hours to complete the 200-mile loop. | skihomewood.com
The Lake Tahoe Water Trail is a 72-mile water route along the shoreline segmented into seven-day trips, including more than 50 public launch and landing sites or trailheads, paddle route itineraries and navigation tools to help paddlers have a safe and fun adventure. Water Trail maps include paddle routes to match ability levels, paddle shops, water safety and aquatic invasive species prevention tips. Seven, day-trip maps include details about parking, on-site facilities and amenities, as well as public beach access to nearby hiking trails and restaurants. Additionally, a waterproof and tearresistant map includes underwater and land topography, latitude/longitude coordinates, GPS waypoints and a detailed listing of shoreline services and points of interest for Lake Tahoe and Fallen Leaf Lake. The map is available at local paddle shops. | laketahoewatertrail.org
IVGID hosts tennis programs
N O R T H S TA R HOSTS
LIVEWIRE CLASSIC Mountain bike enthusiasts have been competing against each other all summer at Northstar. Their journey continues with the Livewire Classic on Sept. 6 at 12:30 p.m. The top three racers in each division will win prizes at the end of the race. An after-party and awards ceremony will be on the Day Lodge Deck at 3:30 p.m. As well, the Fall USA Cycling Downhill Regionals will take place on Sept. 21. Participants must register for these races online before the races or at the event. The registration fee is $42 in advance and $48 the day of the race. Lift tickets are not included in the registration fee and cost $38. Racers may purchase lift tickets with proof of registration. All racers must register and/or check in by 10 a.m. in the Ticket & Season Pass Office the day of the race. | northstarcalifornia.com
is a 33 percent increase above Nevada’s minimum wage of $8.25 per hour. The base elevation – 8,260 feet – allows the resort to catch top-to-bottom snow when winter storms pass through, and this season they are projecting an opening day of Oct. 29, should El Nino decide to show up. Current rates for 2015-16 season passes will apply through Sept. 30. | skirose.com
Get your backcountry on Tahoe Rim Trail Association announces volunteer work days on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays until October. Projects will consist of technical rock work, as well as basic trail-tread maintenance and brushing. No prior experience is necessary. | tahoerimtrail.org
Northstar pumps it up Northstar’s Pumps on Pedals continues on Friday evenings at 5 p.m. until Sept. 4. Women of all skills and experience may work on technique with Northstar’s coaches. The cost is $25. | northstarcalifornia.com
Hit the trails with Big Blue Mount Rose eyes Oct. 29 opening Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe is investing $1.2 million in capital improvements in anticipation of a great winter. They are relocating and renaming the Ponderosa lift chair, adding four new beginner trails, expanding snowmaking systems, renovating the Kids’ Lesson area, investing in new rental skis and snowboards and redesigning the registration desk and process. Workers will be happy to know that Mt. Rose Ski Tahoe is increasing its minimum wage to $11 per hour, which 18
Join the Heavenly Mountain Run on Sept. 6. Starting at the California Base Lodge, the trail climbs 5.8 miles to Tamarack Lodge. The Emerald Bay Trail Run takes place on Sept. 19. Starting at Eagle Point, the course follows 7.5 miles to Lester Beach. Kick off Oktoberfest with the Lederhosen 5K or 10K course. Prizes are offered for best lederhosen or dirndl and top competitors. | bigblueadventure.com
An adult tennis boot camp will be offered from Sept. 8 to 10 for those who want to work on all aspects of their game. Camps will cover stroke technique, strat-egy, fitness, match play and video analysis. The cost is $201 for the camp or $80 per day. Monday night mixers take place from 5 to 7 p.m. every Monday through October. Play a friendly round robin with a different partner every round. The cost is $10 or $8 with IVGID membership. Adult tennis clinics are taught USPTA every Monday through Saturday morning at 10 a.m. The cost is $20 or $15 with IVGID membership. Beginner tennis clinics are held at 10 a.m. every Tuesday through Saturday. The cost is $20 or $15 for IVGID members. Tennis fitness classes take place at 11 a.m. every Wednesday. The cost is $15 or $12 for tennis passholders. | (775) 832-1235 or inclinetennis.com
‘Paddleboard Guide to Lake Tahoe’ released Discover the best places to paddleboard on Lake Tahoe in “Paddleboard Guide to Lake Tahoe: The ultimate guide to stand-up paddleboarding on Lake Tahoe.” This 84-page guide by Laura Norman, covers Tahoe’s most scenic routes, plans for short- and long-distance trips, tips for circumnavigating the lake, dog-friendly beaches and places to buy or rent gear. The book is available at local shops including Mountain Hardware, The Bookshelf and online at keeptahoeblue.org. | facebook. com/tahoesupguide
Around Tahoe Tours offers guided tours Darin Talbot has been narrating selfguided tours of Lake Tahoe for more than 20 years starting with a CD “Around Tahoe” and growing into an “Around Tahoe” app for iPhone and Android. Now guests have the opportunity to join Mr. Tahoe on a guided tour around the lake via shuttle service starting from both North and South Shore. Talbot shares must-see locations around the lake while serenading guests with his original compositions on his signature blue guitar. Photography and camera advice is provided throughout the tour by Chris Talbot of Talbot Photography. Tickets are $75 adults and $50 for children. | aroundtahoe.com or (775) 830-4099
Take the Trails Challenge Truckee Trails has joined forces with the Truckee Donner Recreation and Parks District to challenge the community to get out and explore local trails. The challenge is to hike or bike four of the seven trails highlighted in this year’s program. The first 100 participants to bring a completed challenge form to the front desk will receive a free Trails Challenge T-shirt. | truckeetrails.org
Join the Sierra Gran Fondo Beginning with a mass start in Loyalton, the Sierra Gran Fondo cycling event provides a variety of distance options. Riders can circle the Sierra Valley or climb into the Gold Lakes and Sierra Buttes terrain on Sept. 13. | svgf.org
Tahoe Cup continues The 2015 Tahoe Cup Paddle Racing Series continues with the Tahoe Fall Classic on Sept. 13. | tahoecup.org.
Reel climbing adventures featured High Altitude Fitness will show Reel Rock 10, climbing and adventure films, on Oct. 1 at 7 p.m. Climbers and community members are encouraged to come and mingle before the showing. Starkey’s Food Truck will serve dinner, and Team Flash will provide beer, wine and baked goods. The event is free to members; presale tickets for nonmembers are $12 or $15 at the door. Ticket sales will be limited to 200. | (775) 831-4212
Radical Reels Tour comes to Reno The Banff Mountain Film Festival, the Radical Reels Tour, comes to the Atlantis Casino in Reno, Nev., on Sept. 20 featuring the best action sports movies. See adrenaline-inducing films featuring climbing, biking, BASE jumping, kayaking and more. Tickets are $20. | snowlands.org
420 Games come to Tahoe The 420 Games make their way to Lake Tahoe with the 4.20-mile SUP race and 4.20-mile fun run on Sept. 27 featuring the races, a concert and beer tasting. The 420 Games host athletic events to destigmatize the healthy and responsible use of cannabis. | 420games.org
Bike the night away Tahoe Games offers a family friendly cross-country bike race featuring an illuminated course that spans across the Lake Tahoe Golf Course, over fairways, into the rough, through sand traps, over bridges and down cart paths starting at 7 p.m. on Sept. 26. Registration is required with a $15 entry fee. The 6-mile race offers three heats for Elite 50+, youth and junior and ages 18 to 49. A raffle with awards and after party follows at 10 p.m. Helmets and lights are recommended. No electric bikes will be allowed. | tahoegames.com
continued on page 20
OUT & ABOUT
September 3-9, 2015
Hiking
*Trails open depending on conditions.
“ It is not the mountain we conquer –Edmund Hillary but ourselves.”
T A H O E W E E K LY
STEALS
DEALS
Call (530) 546-5995, ext. 100, to be included in Steals & Deals.
LAKE TAHOE
East Shore
SECRET HARBOR & CHIMNEY BEACH Easy | 3 miles RT Follow the trail to Chimney Beach trail and follow the trail to the end and over a group of boulders to reach the sandy beaches of Secret Harbor (the wooden steps off the trail lead to the nude beach at Secret Cove). West end of picnic area across from Emerald Bay, Hwy. 28, 5.91 miles south of Incline Village.
North Shore
STATELINE LOOKOUT Easy | .5 miles RT This short hike offers superb views of Lake Tahoe. A short, self-guided nature trail explains the history of the North Shore. Take Hwy. 28 to Crystal Bay and turn left on Reservoir Drive, just past the Tahoe Biltmore Casino. Turn right on Lakeview Avenue, then park before the gate (do not block gate or driveways). May drive to the top when gate is open.
West Shore CASCADE LAKE
Moderate | 1.4 miles RT This boulder-strewn hike takes hikers to the waterfall descending from Desolation Wilderness into Cascade Lake. The falls are raging in the spring and are often a trickle by late summer. Since the trail is exposed to the sun throughout the day, save this hike for the morning or early evening. This will be a workout for your knees. Near the end of the trail, walk up a large, flat boulder to the top of a hill where the trail can become confusing. Look for wooden posts marking the trail. Trailhead at end of Bayview Campground off Hwy. 89, 21.5 miles south of Tahoe City. Not recommended for small children or small dogs.
EAGLE ROCK Moderate | 1 mile RT | Dogs not recommended 6.5 miles south of Tahoe City on Hwy. 89. Dirt area for parking on west side of road. Quick hike to the top of a volcanic outcropping offers panoramic views of the area.
EAGLE FALLS & LAKE Moderate | 3 miles RT Great views of Lake Tahoe & Emerald Bay. Falls 5-minute walk from parking lot. Steady ascent to Eagle Lake. West end of picnic area across from Emerald Bay, Hwy. 89, 18.2 miles south of Tahoe City. TART
EMERALD BAY & VIKINGSHOLM CASTLE Moderate | 2.5 miles+ RT | No dogs Steep descent to Vikingsholm Castle. Can continue to Eagle & Emerald Points around the bay for easy hikes. Connects to Rubicon Trail (see below). Park on either side of rocky overlook in Emerald Bay on Hwy. 89, 18.2 miles south of Tahoe City. TART
PAGE MEADOWS Easy to moderate | 4-6 miles RT The hike to Page Meadows is a local favorite because of its easy access and beautiful scenery. You can start the hike to Page Meadows from 64 Acres along the Tahoe Rim Trail. Starting from the 64 Acres parking lot, just south of the Tahoe City wye on Hwy. 89, follow the road along the Truckee River. The paved section turns to a dirt road and after passing the second gate and crossing a small creek, you’ll see the familiar Tahoe Rim Trail blue marker. Follow the TRT through several gentle switchbacks as you begin to climb. The trail will pass above Granlibakken and continue along the TRT. The climb continues for the first 2 miles until you reach an intersection of trails. Follow the TRT marker for Ward Creek Road for about 1 mile until you reach the meadows. Follow the trail back to 64 Acres. For an easy, 4-mile alternative, take Hwy. 89 south of Tahoe City for 2 miles and turn right on Pineland Drive. Take the left fork at Twin Peak Road, which turns into Ward Creek Boulevard, for 1.5 miles until you see an unmarked, gated road. Park on either side and follow the trail; do not block the gate. TART
Mileage is roundtrip, with levels based on family access. All trails are heavily used on weekends.
RUBICON TRAIL & LIGHTHOUSE Moderate | 9 miles RT | No dogs Hike starts at Calawee Cove at D.L. Bliss State Park or Emerald Bay. Trail follows cliffs and coves along Lake Tahoe, nesting ospreys and eagles, short side trail to Rubicon Lighthouse. Although the lighthouse was only used from 1916 to 1919 to warn sailors of the dangerous rocks just below the water’s surface, during its short use the lighthouse was considered the world’s highest elevation maritime navigation light. Parking fee.
TAHOE RIM TRAIL The Tahoe Rim Trail is a 164.8-mile loop trail that encircles Lake Tahoe. The trail is open to hikers and equestrians, and mountain bikers in some sections. It is generally moderate in difficulty, with a 10 percent average grade and elevations ranging from 6,300 to 10,333’. The trail is marked with light-blue triangular Tahoe Rim Trail markers. There are eight trailheads around Lake Tahoe. Guided hikes are offered in the summer. Visit tahoerimtrail.org for maps, guided hikes and descriptions.
REGIONAL HIKES ALPINE MEADOWS
FIVE LAKES Strenuous | 5 miles RT | Dogs prohibited May 15-July 15 Five Lakes is a great hike inside Granite Chief Wilderness, with the first 1 mile+ a steady ascent with great views of Alpine Meadows (be sure to stop and look back). Trailhead 1.8 miles up Alpine Meadows Road from Hwy. 89 on the right side across from the intersection with Deer Park Drive. Look for a well-worn path leading to the trail (designated by a large brown kiosk). Dogs prohibited during fawning season for deer. OLYMPIC VALLEY
SHIRLEY CANYON & SHIRLEY LAKE Moderate-Strenuous | 5 miles RT This trail is your best bet for seeing how those snowy slopes look in summertime. This lovely hike follows a creek as it passes by waterfalls and spectacular granite boulders along Shirley Creek. As you climb, the trail may sometimes be hard to distinguish, so keep the creek on your right going up and on your left going down. Can continue a strenuous climb to High Camp and take the Aerial Tram back to Squaw Valley (check schedule in advance). Follow Squaw Valley Road from Hwy. 89 to the ski area, take a right at the Tram building onto Squaw Peak Road, park at the end (about half a mile up) and follow the sandy path at the end of the condo development to the trailhead. TART TRUCKEE
DONNER LAKE RIM TRAIL Strenuous | Up to 15 miles RT This trail is being built by the Truckee Donner Land Trust with volunteer labor. When complete, the Donner Lake Rim Trail will offer trail users a 23-mile loop through the high country surrounding Donner Lake. Visit tdlandtrust.org for access points.
GLACIER MEADOW LOOP Easy | .5 miles RT This is a short, self-guided nature loop offering a half-hour walk with informational signs along the way that explain how glacial action carved and polished the surface landscape. Take Interstate 80 West from Truckee to the Castle Peak/Boreal Ridge Road exit. Follow signs to the Tahoe National Forest Trailhead.
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alpinearboriststreecare.com
530.582.1286
BUY 2 GET 1 FREE 1/4-lb. HOT DOGS, 40-oz. SLURPEE or BIG GULP Expires 09/10/15. Limit one coupon per person per day. Not good with other offers. Non-negotiable. May not be exchanged for cash. No cash value.
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Visit tahoearthauscinema.com for schedule, upcoming events & tickets. TH E CO B B LESTO N E CE N TE R
475 N LAKE BLVD., TAHOE CITY, CA | 530-584-2431
MARTIS CREEK WILDLIFE AREA Easy | 3 miles RT Loop through Martis Creek meadow for a level walk along the creek. Lots of dogs on this trail. Connects with Tompkins Memorial Trail. Off Hwy. 267, about 6 miles from Interstate 80. Look for Wildlife Viewing Area sign and turn right into the parking area. Dog waste required to be picked up.
PACIFIC CREST TRAIL/MOUNT JUDAH LOOP Moderate | 4.6 miles RT This 4.6-mile loop offers many excellent vista points on the way including awe-inspiring views from the summit of Mount Judah. There is a section of the loop that connects with the Pacific Crest Trail. Pack plenty of water. Take Soda Springs exit off Interstate 80 and follow Donner Pass Road for 3.7 miles and turn onto Mark Lake Road next to Sugar Bowl Academy. Follow signs for the PCT, and then Mount Judah.
TART: Bus & shuttle schedules at Visitors’ Centers, laketahoetransit.com, google.com/transit or nextbus.com. NOTE: Dogs must be on leash within 1 mile of USFS trailheads.
Juan Estrada 530-546-8493 530-412-2220
Tree Trimming & Removal • Brush Chipping Yard Clean-Up • Wood Splitting & Stacking Stump Grinder • Crane Work Licensed & Insured
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OUT & ABOUT
COMMUNIT Y
Galena Creek Visitor Center is celebrating Galena Fest 2015 on Sept. 27 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The family friendly activities, including a mountain bike race, a kids’ run, live music and art projects, are to promote having fun in the great outdoors. | renogalenafest.com
Spartan Race comes to Tahoe
Courtesy Donner Ski Ranch
Construction is under way for a new Bike Park at Donner Ski Ranch slated for a soft opening in late September. Once a destination for mountain bikers during the 1990s, Donner Ski Ranch used to host popular bike races and events. Local biker Jim Severt approached Donner Ski Ranch last spring about reviving the bike trails and plans were set to begin construction this summer. Work has started on reopening existing trails, as well as adding a new downhill trail. The future park will include a variety of cross-country and downhill riding as well as jump trails and man-made features. Severt is also working with Donner Land Trust to create a connector trail between the bike park and the Donner Rim Trail. He says that he envisions a network of trails that caters to bikers of all abilities allowing families to progress side-by side. Severt has more than 15 years of trail building experience including work on the former bike park at Squaw Valley and The Biggest Little Bike Park in Reno.
Spartan Race has announced that the obstacle racing series’ World Championship will be held in Olympic Valley on Oct. 3 and 4. Since its debut in 2011, the annual event had been held at Vermont’s Killington Mountain Resort & Ski Area. The weekend event will include the World Championship Spartan Beast (13-plus miles, 30-plus obstacles) on Saturday, and a Spartan Sprint (3-plus miles, 20-plus obstacles), a Spartan Beast and Ultra Beast (26-plus miles, 60-plus obstacles) on Sunday. The mountainous course will peak at 9,050 feet in elevation. Spartan Race expects more than 10,000 athletes from around the globe to compete in the World Championships for more than $100,000 in cash prizes. NBC Sports has been awarded broadcast rights and is expected to produce a one-hour television special on the event. | spartan.com
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DOGS OK
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PLAYGROUND
FIRE PIT/GRILL
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EAST SHORE
CHIMNEY BEACH | SECRET COVE SAND HARBOR STATE PARK
Hwy. 28, 5.9 miles south of Incline Vlg.
Hwy. 28, 3 miles south of Incline Village
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KINGS BEACH
COON STREET DOG BEACH
Hwy. 28, at the bottom of Coon Street
KINGS BEACH STATE RECREATION AREA NORTH TAHOE BEACH SECLINE BEACH
Hwy. 28, in Kings Beach
Hwy. 28, across from Safeway
Hwy. 28, at the end of Secline Street
SPEEDBOAT BEACH
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Hwy. 28, at Harbor Ave.
TAHOE VISTA
NORTH TAHOE REGIONAL PARK SANDY BEACH
Hwy. 28, at the top of National Avenue
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Hwy. 28, across from the Perennial Nursery
TAHOE VISTA RECREATION AREA
Hwy. 28, at National Avenue
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CARNELIAN BAY
CARNELIAN BAY BEACH PATTON LANDING
Hwy. 28, next to Gar Woods
Hwy. 28, at Onyx Street
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TAHOE CITY
COMMONS BEACH HERITAGE PLAZA
Hwy. 28, in Tahoe City behind the old fire station
Hwy. 28, Downtown Tahoe City
LAKE FOREST BEACH POMIN PARK SKYLANDIA
Off Lake Forest Road, 1.5 miles east of Tahoe City
Off Lake Forest Road, east of Tahoe City
Lake Forest Road, 2.5 miles east of Tahoe City
64-ACRE PARK
Currently, trails are being hand-built by Severt and fellow trail-builder Clif McMillan. Public volunteers are invited to contribute labor and input on future trail plans. Trail building takes place Monday through Saturday. Help is especially appreciated from Sept. 11 to Oct. 3. Interested volunteers may contact Severt at tbpdsr@gmail.com. | facebook.com/thebike-park-at-dsr - Jenn Sheridan
BEACH
bike
Get outside and have fun
RESTROOMS
D ONNER S K I R A NCH REKINDLES
Beaches & Parks
continued from page 18
HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE
Wet ‘n’ Dirty
PICNIC TABLES
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Hwy. 89, just south of Tahoe City
TAHOE CITY DOG PARK
Grove Street
WILLIAM KENT BEACH
Hwy. 89, 2.5 miles south of Tahoe City
WILLIAM LAYTON PARK
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Hwy. 89, just south of Fanny Bridge
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Hwy. 89, 17 miles south of Tahoe City
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WEST SHORE
D.L. BLISS STATE PARK
ELIZABETH WILLIAMS PARK EMERALD BAY BEACH KILNER PARK
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Hwy. 89, 18.5 miles south of Tahoe City
Hwy. 89, 3.5 miles south of Tahoe City
MARIE SLUCHAK PARK MEEKS BAY
Hwy. 89, 4 miles south of Tahoe City
At the corner of Hwy. 89 & Pine Street in Tahoma
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Hwy. 89, 10 miles south of Tahoe City
SUGAR PINE POINT STATE PARK
Hwy. 89, 9.5 miles south of Tahoe City
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TRUCKEE RIVER CANYON
SQUAW VALLEY PARK
At Hwy. 89 & Squaw Valley Road
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TRUCKEE
Pet Network Humane Society 401 Village Blvd, Incline Village
MARTIS CREEK
RIVER VIEW SPORTS PARK
Discover Healthy Sleep @
Offering the best pet supplies (including toys), services & expertise to help care for your pets. DAYCARE & BOARDING All Purchases from Pet Network Humane Society go directly toward funding our animal rescue efforts.
TRUCKEE RIVER REGIONAL PARK DONNER MEMORIAL STATE PARK SHORELINE PARK WEST END BEACH
Organic Specialty Environmentally Friendly Pillows Sheets Sleep Sets
Hwy. 267, .25 miles south of Truckee
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I-80 Donner Lake exit
Donner Pass Road, next to the State Park West of Donner Lake
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DISC GOLF COURSES
INCLINE VILLAGE | (775) 832-1300 | inclinerecreation.com 18-hole course at Incline Park at 980 Incline Way. Free. Daily. TART
OLYMPIC VALLEY | (530) 583-6985 | squaw.com 18-hole course at Squaw Valley’s High Camp. Disc rentals. TART
TAHOE VISTA | (530) 546-4212 | northtahoeparks.com 18-hole course at North Tahoe Regional Park, off National Avenue. Parking $5. Daily dawn-dusk. TART
TRUCKEE | (530) 582-7720 | tdrpd.com 18-hole course at Truckee River Regional Park, off Brockway Road. Dogs must be on leash. Free. Daily dawn-dusk. TART
TRUCKEE | (530) 550-2225 >
7485 Longley Lane, Reno (775) 284.0399
OrganicSleepShop.com Naturally Safe Sleep 20
12200 Joerger Drive
DONNER LAKE
775-833-0273 PetNetwork.org
WE OFFER FULL-SERVICE GROOMING
Hwy. 267, 1 mile south of Truckee Airport
18 holes at Sierra College Campus. Free. Daily dawn-dusk. TART
SKATE PARKS
TRUCKEE | (530) 582-7720 > Truckee River Regional Park with several bowls with a spine and channel, a long rail and ledges. Knee and elbow pads and helmets required. Free. Daily dawn-10 p.m. TART INCLINE VILLAGE | (775) 832-1300 >
Intermediate/advanced area with two, 5-foot tall bowls with a spine, 3-foot box and 2.5 foot bowl for beginners. Street course on top, with 8-foot flat rail, 6-foot down rail, four stairs and a 10-foot downward ramp. Corner Hwy. 28 & Southwood. Daily dawn-dusk. TART
OUT & ABOUT
September 3-9, 2015
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RV SITES
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YEAR ROUND
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FISHING
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RESTROOMS
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SWIMMING
WATER
*Campgrounds open based on conditions.
DISPOSAL
Campgrounds
SHOWERS
For the Kids
MOUNT ROSE
MT. ROSE
(775) 882-2766
Hwy. 431, 7 miles from Incline Village
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LAKE FOREST
(530) 581-4017
1.5 miles east of Tahoe City
TAHOE STATE RECREATION AREA Hwy. 28 at the east end of Tahoe City
Bring out the artist in your child
D.L. BLISS
(530) 525-7277
Hwy. 89, 17 miles south of Tahoe City
EMERALD BAY BOAT CAMP
Handbuilding Ceramics, for ages 6 through 12, is on Mondays starting Sep. 14 or on Thursdays, starting Sept. 10 from 3:45 to 5:15 p.m. Class fees are $11 when paid in advance or $12 for drop ins. Material fees are $20.
KASPIAN RECREATION
Holiday Ceramics is for ages 3 and older on Nov. 7 and Nov. 21 from 9:30 to 12 p.m. Start a project in one class and finish it in the next. The class is $22 per date, plus $6 materials fee. | (530) 582-7720 or tdrpd.org
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WEST SHORE
Beginning Acrylic Painting, for teens, is offered on Wednesdays staring Sept. 3 at from 6 to 8 p.m. by the Truckee Donner Rec and Parks District. The class is $85, plus $35 materials fee.
Nature Art, for grades 2 through 5, will expose children to various mediums using nature as an inspiration. The class is on Wednesdays, starting Sept. 23, from 3:45 to 5:30 p.m. The cost is $100, plus $25 for materials.
(530) 583-3074
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(530) 541-3030
Lake Tahoe in Emerald Bay | Boat or walk-in only
EMERALD BAY | EAGLE POINT Hwy. 89, 21 miles south of Tahoe City
(530) 541-3030
(530) 544-5994
Hwy. 89, 5 miles south of Tahoe City | Bike or walk-in
MEEKS BAY
(530) 544-5994
Hwy. 89, 10 miles south of Tahoe City
MEEKS BAY RESORT
(530) 525-6946
Hwy. 89, 10 miles south of Tahoe City
SUGAR PINE POINT | GENERAL CREEK Hwy. 89, 9.5 miles south of Tahoe City
WILLIAM KENT
(530) 525-7982 Open year-round
(530) 583-3642
Hwy. 89, 2 miles south of Tahoe City
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TRUCKEE RIVER CANYON
GOOSE MEADOWS
Families make music together Music Together Family is a weekly 45-minute music and movement class, designed for babies to 5-year-olds and their parents or caretakers in Truckee. Classes, which include music, movement and instrument play, are Tuesdays, Sept. 8 through Nov. 10 from 10 to 10:45 a.m. Come for a free demonstration on Sept. 9. The fee is $100, plus a $40 materials fee for the instructor. Drop-in classes are $15. For ages 5 to 7, the Music Together Family class is on Fridays, Sept. 11 to Nov. 13, from 4 to 5 p.m. The fee is $150, plus $40 for materials; drops-ins are $15. | (530) 587-7720 or tdrpd.org
Fall, winter swim classes offered Youth swim lessons for ages 5 to 17 will be offered two evenings per week for four weeks and Saturday mornings for eight weeks, starting Sept. 8. There are a variety of sessions being offered at Truckee Community Pool. Register at Tahoe Donner Recreation and Parks District or online. First day of all lessons is a test swim. Swim levels are dependent on age and ability, and run from beginning basics to primary skills, stroke readiness, stroke development and swim team preparation. During school holidays, the pool will be open for combo swims for $3 per resident child or $4 per nonresident child. Proof of residency must be show at the time of drop-in. | (530) 587-7720 or tdrpd.org
Let them climb Climbing classes will be offered in seven sessions in Truckee starting Sept. 8 for grades 1 through 6. Leaping Lizards,
(877) 444-6777
Hwy. 89, 6 miles south of Truckee
grades 1 though 3, meet Tuesdays and Thursdays and Mighty Monkeys, grades 3 to 6, meet Monday and Wednesdays from 4 to 5 p.m. or 5 to 6 p.m. The fee is $105 per session. There are no drop-ins. | (530) 587-7720 or tdrpd.org
GRANITE FLAT
(877) 444-6777
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Yoga develops focus
BOCA CAMPGROUND
Hwy. 89, 2 miles south of Truckee Hwy. 89, 8 miles south of Truckee TRUCKEE
ALDER CREEK
Hwy. 89, 2 miles north of Truckee on Alder Creek Rd. (530) 587-9281
Yoga classes for ages 5 to 10 is offered from 3:45 to 4:45 p.m. in Truckee. Instructors Lisa Stekert and Karen Rodarte will help children develop focus, concentration, strength and balance. Session 1 runs from Sept. 8 to Oct. 20. Session 2 runs from Oct. 27 to Dec. 15. The fee is $90 for the seven-week sessions or $15 for drop ins. | (530) 587-7720 or tdrpd.org
I-80, Hirschdale exit, 1 mile north on Boca-Stampede Rd.
Dance on and on
Hwy. 89 north at Prosser Reservoir
A variety of ongoing dance lessons for kids are offered by Sherrie Peterson at Tahoe Donner Recreation and Parks District Community Recreation Center. Ballet is offered to ages 5 and older, from beginners to advanced. The 60-minute classes are in the afternoons weekly for $10 per class; the 90-minute classes are $12 per class. Contact the instructor to determine a child’s level. Creative Dance is for ages 2 to 5 and begins in September on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays in the mornings. Classes are $10 each. Jazz, for ages 6 to 17, starts in September. Mondays are intermediate jazz dance classes, Wednesdays are jazz/funk, Thursdays are lyrical jazz and Fridays are tap/jazz combo. | (530) 582-7720 or tdrpd.org
Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for a complete list of kids’ activities.
BOCA REST CAMPGROUND
(530) 587-9281
I-80, Hirschdale exit, 1 mile north on Boca-Stampede Rd.
BOCA SPRINGS
(530) 587-3558
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I-80, 7 miles east of Truckee off the Hirschdale exit
BOYINGTON MILL
(530) 587-3558
(530) 587-3071
Open year-round
10100 Pioneer Trail | No tent camping
LAKESIDE
(530) 587-9281
LOGGER CAMP
(530) 587-3558
I-80, 7 miles east of Truckee off the Hirschdale exit, on the south side of Stampede Reservoir
LOWER LITTLE TRUCKEE
Hwy. 89, 11 miles north of Truckee
(877) 444-6777
MARTIS CREEK CAMPGROUND Hwy. 267, 1 mile south of Truckee Airport
PROSSER CAMPGROUND
(530) 587-8113
(530) 587-3558
Hwy. 89, 2 miles north of Truckee off Prosser Dam Rd.
SAGEHEN
(530) 587-3558
Hwy. 89, 2 miles north of Truckee on dirt road
UNITED TRAILS
(530) 587-8282
I-80, 7 miles east of Truckee off the Hirschdale exit
UPPER LITTLE TRUCKEE
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I-80, 7 miles east of Truckee off the Hirschdale exit, between the Boca & Stampede Reservoirs
COACHLAND
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Hwy. 89, 11 miles north of Truckee
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DONNER LAKE
CISCO GROVE CAMPGROUND & RV PARK I-80, Cisco Grove exit
DONNER MEMORIAL STATE PARK I-80, Donner Lake exit
(530) 426-1600
(530) 582-7892
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Reservations may be made for California state campgrounds at (877) 444-6777 or reserveamerica.com. Online reservations for other campgrounds may be made at recreation.gov.
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FEATURE
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Sierra Stories
by Mark McLaughlin
Remembering the legendary Tahoe Tavern: Part III the real value was in the land. Executives for Moana Development Corporation rightfully considered that price for 25 acres of prime lakeshore property near Tahoe City a great bargain and made the deal. This was shortly after the 1960 Winter
“… the Tahoe Tavern condominiums remain as a monument to the talented architect’s sensibilities and expertise.”
Courtesy North Lake Tahoe Historical Society
EDITOR’S NOTE: Parts I & II may be found at TheTahoeWeekly.com.
T complex located south of Tahoe he Tahoe Tavern condominium
City is celebrating its 50th anniversary this summer as the reincarnation of the original Tahoe Tavern hotel built at the turn of the 20th Century. Built as a summer resort, in 1926 a Southern Pacific Railroad subsidiary named Linnard Steamship Co. acquired the luxury hotel and casino from the descendants of Duane L. Bliss, who had opened it in 1902. In the late 1920s, an opportunity to expand into winter sports appeared at North Lake Tahoe. After the purchase of the Tavern, the new operators decided to open the facility from December to March, in an attempt to develop a winter business. Transportation to the lake was provided by SPRR, which maintained a track from the main line in Truckee to the hotel. The train provided reliable winter access for tourists heading to Tahoe. Both Southern Pacific and the Linnard group recognized the economic potential for operating the hotel during the normally closed winter season and preparations were made for a variety of entertainment and sports activities. Southern Pacific promoted its new winter sports operation by scheduling overnight weekend excursion trains from San Francisco, a run they called “The Snowball Special.” Initially, the main attractions were ice skating and tobogganing near the hotel, but soon a Winter Sports Grounds was developed at a pine-sheltered slope (the current location of Granlibakken Resort) about half a mile west of the hotel. A double toboggan slide was built, and then a 65-meter trajectory jump was opened by December 1927. The jump was designed so that at the apex of their leap, skiers could see distant Lake Tahoe over the forest canopy below. Today, Granlibakken is California’s oldest ski area in continuous operation. 22
Before long, the Tavern’s winter sports program included skating, downhill and cross-country skiing, and exhibition ski jumping. To entertain their guests, the Tahoe Tavern hired nationally ranked ski jumpers like Norwegian brothers Alf and Sverre Engen to perform daring leaps. While working at the Tahoe Tavern, Alf and Sverre had a signature move where they hit the jump simultaneously, clasped hands in mid flight, and then broke away for the landing. These professional performances drew hundreds of spectators to the Tavern and the future for winter sports looked bright as the crowds swelled. But with no way to winterize buildings built for summer guests, over time, visitors chose other venues during Tahoe ski trips. By the 1950s, the Tahoe Tavern had deteriorated and its upper floors were condemned as a fire trap. A portion of the wooden structure burned in the early 1960s and the parcel was put up for sale for $1 million. The valuation was low because the hotel could not make a profit, but
Games at Squaw Valley and the investors realized that Lake Tahoe was becoming a popular four-season resort area. The Tahoe Tavern condominium project was designed by Henrik Bull, a legendary ski country architect. In contrast to the original hulking hotel with a tower nearly 150-feet high, Bull designed a series of low-profile, two-story units with gently sloping or flat roofs. Snow is a good insulator that keeps in the heat during winter, and the steep pitches of the old Tavern shed snow dangerously into huge piles that sometimes lasted into late spring. The crescent-shaped groups of townhouses maximized views and eliminated the straight-line aspect of row houses. Not only was the new construction more in scale with the environment, it was part of Bull’s philosophy of “regional sensibility.” Towering first-growth sugar pines and cedars, some 6 feet in diameter, abound on the acreage and Bull managed to fit in the condominiums without removing any of the trees. Due to dilapidated conditions, all of the old, wood structures were removed, but the existing swimming pool and 1,000-foot-long pier were renovated. Even during this current drought, the pier reaches water of sufficient depth for watercraft. Where the Tahoe Tavern once stood is now a broad expanse of open grass. Another advantage of the low-profile structures and flat or slightly sloped roofs is that condo owners further from the lake often have a view of Big Blue. By 1960, Henrik Bull had earned a
reputation as a pioneer of snow country architecture in the United States. An avid lifelong skier who embraced the sport at an early age, his building designs incorporated traditional, alpine architecture that focused on efficiency and safety in heavy snow zones. In 1954, he took a ski trip to Squaw Valley where he ran into his friend Peter Klaussen. The two had been roommates in Boston while Bull earned his architecture degree at MIT and Klaussen pursued his MBA at Harvard Business School. Klaussen bought a parcel of land in Squaw Valley from developer Wayne Poulsen and he asked Bull for an innovative house design. The completed ski chalet was featured in an illustrated article in Sunset magazine that generated an avalanche of letters requesting the construction plans or more information. Klaussen would go on to plan the layout of Alpine Meadows ski area, as well as many other ski industry achievements, while Bull would make a career designing ski country homes and projects. Bull’s design thumbprint may be found at many top ski resorts across the country. In the Tahoe area, he was lead architect for the original Northstar Village project, as well as Stillwater Cove in Crystal Bay. Squaw Valley ski developer Alex Cushing hired Bull to design additions to High Camp, which include the swimming pool and lagoon, skating rink and spa. The prolific architect also designed the Squaw Kids building, as well as other Squaw Village renovations. Henrik Bull died on Dec. 7, 2013, but the Tahoe Tavern condominiums remain as a monument to the talented architect’s sensibilities and expertise. Out of all his Tahoe-based projects, the Tavern remained his favorite to the end. The residents of that community share an important legacy and heritage, more than a century of Tahoe’s colorful history. Tahoe historian Mark McLaughlin is a nationally published author and professional speaker. His award-winning books are available at local stores or at thestormking.com. You may reach him at mark@thestormking.com. Check out his blog at tahoenuggets.com, or read more Sierra Stories at TheTahoeWeekly.com.
Tahoe Nostalgia TAHOE TAVERN OPENS FOR WINTER SPORTS During the winter of 1931, Auburn Ski Club president Wendell Robie was instrumental in convincing the California State Legislature to pass a bill funding highway snow removal in the Tahoe Sierra. Due to that legislation, the winter of 1932 would be the first time that California’s Division of Highways plowed Highway 40 over Donner Pass. The road from Truckee to Tahoe City was not included in that authorization, but the short line railroad that connected the two would be in operation to transport people to the lake for winter sports.
Photograph and caption are from Tahoe historian Mark McLaughlin’s award-winning book “Western Train Adventures: Romance, Robberies & Wrecks” available in stores or at thestormking.com. Courtesy Nevada Historical Society
September 3-9, 2015
FEATURE
ARTISTS OPEN STUDIOS FOR
ARTour Story by Katrina Veit
On the Beach | Heidi Reeves
“People have a better understanding of an artist’s creative process when you can see them working in their own studio. It is more personal than visiting a gallery and you can see a larger body of work.”
H a painting, a photograph, a sculpture — and ave you ever stared at an object of art —
wondered how the artist came to create such a treasure? Then you are a prime candidate for ARTour 2015, a free, self-guided tour of local artists’ studios and workshops from Truckee to Tahoe City, Kings Beach and Incline Village. In its 22nd year, this tenacious event of North Tahoe Arts is changing ever so slightly: the date has been moved from July to Sept. 4, 5, 6 and 11, 12, 13. “We’ve been talking about moving ARTour to September for the last few years,” explains Pam Sutton, coordinator of ARTour 2015 and president of North Tahoe Art’s board of directors. “Traffic in July in North Tahoe is horrendous and just getting more crowded, it seems. Some artists were frustrated because tour participants were having trouble getting to their studios. In September, there are less crowds and cooler weather. So we thought we would give it a try.” Sutton says she has noticed a trend, particularly in the West, to host art events in September, making it the month of art. “Art lovers tend to be mostly retired folks or empty-nesters who have time to take off, but who do not want to fight traffic and crowds,” she says. The ARTour 2015 booklet, available at North Tahoe Arts in Tahoe City or onSierra Seasons Summer | Eva Nichols line at northtahoearts.com, lists the 22 artists in 13 locations, with maps and addresses. Make a morning of it, visiting the artists in Incline Village then have lunch at an Incline eatery or bring a picnic basket and sit by the lake. Finish up the afternoon touring the studios in Kings Beach and be home or back to the hotel by dinnertime. There’s no need to rush. You have six days, over two weeks to visit every artist on the tour.
Many art mediums are represented including ceramics, mixed media, glass, watercolors, painting and photography. There are past ARTour participants, such as Catherine Strand with kilnformed glass and Jenny Antonucci with pastels and watercolors, and there are first-timers, such as Florence Stronk with oil paintings and Amanda Dabel and Anthony Marrone with ceramic art and mixed media. Sutton says Dabel and Marrone are the youngest artists on the tour, which she is excited about. North Tahoe Arts has been actively trying to increase and diversify its membership. “We also have Matt Dodge in Incline Village for the first time this year,” Sutton says. “He told us if we ever moved the date to September, he would be interested.” Dodge, who offers his sculptured photographs this year, was usually not around in July. “People have a better understanding of an artist’s creative process when you can see them working in their own studio. It is more personal than visiting a gallery and you can see a larger body of work,” says Kellie Cutler, NTA executive director. Another tweak to this year’s ARTour is collaboration with Trails & Vistas art hikes, set for Sept. 12 at Spooner Lake and Sept. 19 at Donner Summit. “Trails & Vistas is a great program in the community. NTA saw an opportunity to collaborate last year when Trails & Vistas was highlighted in the North Lake Tahoe Resort Association’s September is Art Month in Tahoe campaign. Moving ARTour to September gave us the opportunity to partner with them,” Cutler explains.
One way they are collaborating is a twoworkshop on Sept. 9 and 10 where community members are invited to make an installation with artist Jane Jenny that will be used on the art hike at Spooner Lake. (See Arts in this issue for details on how to participate.) According to Nancy Tieken Lopez, founder and artistic director of Trails & Vistas, the installation will give the community and participants on the art hikes an opportunity to see how you can work creatively with the environment.
All Dressed Up | Jenny Antonucci
She says that “putting complimentary events together helps promote each other’s organizations and builds on each other’s successes.” Sutton agrees: “There are so many ways to reach out to people and to benefit collaboratively.” Such as the Treasure Hunt sponsored by both groups, which offers two, free prize drawings on Sept. 7 and 14. When you are at an artist’s studio on ARTour, fill out a card and drop it in a bag provided, for the chance to win two tickets Untitled | Charlotte Patterson to Trails & Vistas World Concert at Sand Harbor on Sept. 12; two tickets to Trails & Vistas art hike on Sept. 19; a $75 gift certificate to NTA’s ARTisan Gift Shop or a free, one-year membership to NTA and a tote bag. If you can’t make the ARTour this year, there will be work from the participating artists on display at North Tahoe Arts galleries through Sept. 28. An artists’ reception at North Tahoe Arts on Sept. 3 from 5 to 7 p.m., is free and open to the public. n For more information, call (530) 581-2787 or visit northtahoearts.com.
OPENING RECEPTION Sept. 3 | 5-7 p.m. | North Tahoe Art Center
ARTour OPEN STUDIO TOUR Sept. 4-6 & 11-13 | 10 a.m.-5 p.m. | Area venues
ARTour GROUP EXHIBIT Truckee River | Loreen Thomas
Until Sept. 28 | North Tahoe Art Center 23
THE ARTS
Arts
TheTahoeWeekly.com
THE
Explore creative nature in workshop
Take part in an Environmental Art Installation on Sept. 9 and 10 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on both days with Jane Jenny. This two-day workshop is in collaboration with the Trails & Vistas art hike. No experience is necessary to participate. Using materials from the local forest, workshop attendees will create a site-specific art installation to be used along the Trails & Vistas art hike. On Sept. 9 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. community members are invited to make an installation with Jenny that will be used on the art hike at Spooner Lake. Participants can creatively alter forest materials, using controlled burn scars as inspiration, in Jenny’s studio. Jenny is an environmental installation artist who splits her time between Malibu and North Tahoe. Then on Sept. 10, they will install their creations along the art hike for Trails & Vistas hikers to enjoy. This project will celebrate the symbiotic relationship between people and nature. The workshop is made possible by a grant from the Tahoe Truckee Community Foundation. For more information, visit northtahoearts. com. For information on Trails & Vistas, visit trailsandvistas.org. To register for the classes, e-mail workshops@northtahoearts.com | northtahoearts.com
Exhibit traces roots of Punk “SKEENO In Black & White & Words: Roots of Punk in Reno ’79-‘85” is an exhibition put on by Holland Project partners with Bessie Oakley of The Wrecks. The exhibit, which follows the roots of Reno punk rock from its inception in 1979 through 1985, will be in the Holland Project Gallery in Reno, Nev., through Sept. 4. | arts4nevada.org.
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Untitled Jane Jenny | Trails & Vistas Local college offers fine art exhibits “Haunts or Whatever” is a series of new mixed media works by Nick Larson on display at Sierra Nevada College’s Tahoe Gallery in Prim Library through Oct. 2. Larson draws on experiences he gathered while conducting archeological research and data. An artist’s reception will be on Sept. 3 from 6 to 8 p.m., with an artist’s talk at 6:30 p.m. “Staying Power” by Mary Rothlisberger, was created during her artist-in-residency program this summer. It will be on display at SNC’s Ron and Maureen Ashley Community Gallery through Sept. 18. An artist’s reception is on Sept. 16 from 6 to 8 p.m., with an artist’s talk at 6 p.m. “Burkino Faso: Night and Day” is David Pace’s photography documenting life in a small rural farming village, Bereba, outside Burkino Faso. It will be on display at SNC’s Garage Door Gallery through Sept. 18. An artist’s reception will be on Sept. 16 from 5 to 8 p.m., with an artist’s talk at 5 p.m. | sierranevada.edu
Landscapes with an ecological eye Incline Village Library will have the works of photographer Will Barber on display in September. Barber has a doctorate
in stream and fish ecology from Michigan State University. He worked in Australia before retiring to Reno to pursue photography with an ecological eye. His landscapes have been on display in downtown galleries and published in monographs. | washoecountylibrary.us
Local watercolors on exhibit “The Power of Plants” is a Sierra Watercolor Society Exhibit of original watercolor paintings by local artists. The exhibit will be on display through Sept. 13 at the Wilbur D. May Museum in Reno, Nev. | arts4nevada.org
Exhibit features Tahoe through the ages Nevada Museum of Art presents “Tahoe: A Visual History,” an art historical survey exhibition spanning two centuries of cultural and creative works by painters, photographers, architects, basket weavers and sculptors. It will be on view until Jan. 10, 2016. Five years in the making, the exhibition includes historical and contemporary art dedicated to Lake Tahoe, Donner Pass and surrounding regions of the Sierra Nevada. Ann M. Wolfe, senior curator and deputy director of NMOA, curated the exhibition. “Tahoe: A Visual History” is organized thematically and chronologically to encourage dialogue among museumgoers. Key artworks include the baskets of Washoe weaver Datso-la-lee, known for the degikup basket form, a 6-by-10-foot painting of Donner Lake made by Albert Bierstadt in 1867, photography from Ansel Adams and original drawings by Frank Lloyd Wright for a proposed 1923 colony at Emerald Bay that was never built. More than 15 contemporary artists will be among the historical heavyweights, including artist Maya Lin who created three sculptures reflecting the Tahoe watershed. Talks, classes, hikes and special events will be offered in addition to the exhibition. A 488-page hardcover book of the same name, authored by Wolfe, designed by Kit Hinrichs and co-published by Skira Rizzoli and NMOA, will be on sale in the Museum store and select bookstores, as well as at amazon.com. As well, there are a number of special events, talks, and guided hikes associated
with the exhibit offered over the next several months. Upcoming events include Gene Hattori on Native American baskets of Lake Tahoe on Sept. 11 and noon, Hands ON! for families on local landscapes on Sept. 12 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and a guided hike with Bob Anderson Echo Summit and Echo Lake on Sept. 13 from 9 a.m. to noon. Visit the Web site for details. | (775) 329-3333 or nevadaart.org
ARTour, exhibit open in September September is Art Month in North Lake Tahoe with ARTour and Trails & Vistas art hikes featured as premiere events in the area. ARTour is a free, self-guided tour of artists’ studios in the North Tahoe and Truckee regions. Twenty-two local artists from Incline Village, to Truckee, from Alpine Meadows to the North and West shores of Lake Tahoe will open their studios to the public for two weekends in September. This year, ARTour features painters, photographers, sculptors, fiber artists and more. Guidebooks and artist information will be available at North Tahoe Arts. The tour will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. from Sept. 4 to 6 and Sept. 11 to 13. North Tahoe Arts galleries will showcase artwork by all artists participating in ARTour thought Sept. 28. An opening reception for ARTour and its corresponding ARTour Showcase exhibit will be on Sept. 3 from 5 to 7 p.m. The reception is free and open to the public. Come enjoy a glass of wine and meet the ARTour artists. See the feature in this issue. | northtahoearts.com
Truckee artists showcase work A group exhibition featuring artists who participated in the Truckee Open Art Studios Tour is on display at the Tahoe Donner Recreation and Parks District Community Recreation Center through Sept. 28. | creativetruckee.org
Crossen on display at Riverside Enjoy the work of Chris Crossen at Riverside Studios through September. Crossen works with traditional watercolors to create large abstract paintings. | (530) 587-3789 or riversideartstudios.com
September 3-9, 2015
Skaff featured at Wolfdale’s
Look for the newest exhibit
Learn the art of interior design
Wolfdale’s Restaurant in Tahoe City is featuring oil paintings by Andy Skaff through January 2016. Skaff ’s love of the West provides the inspiration for his lightfilled, vibrant landscapes. His paintings have been exhibited at the Napa Valley Museum, the Oil Painters of America Western Regional exhibit in Santa Barbara, Sunset Magazine Western Idea House in Truckee and are part of the permanent collection of Martis Camp Lodge, the Ritz Carlton Lake Tahoe, the Tahoe Forest Cancer Center and the Larkspur Hotel Group. | askaff.com
Tahoe Donner Parks and Recreation District will offer a new art exhibit on display from Oct. 10 to Jan. 10, 2016 at the Community Recreation Center. An opening reception will be on Oct. 9 from 5 to 7 p.m. | tdrpd.org
Instructor Teri Raphael will teach color principles, the psychology of color, color in design, how to read blueprints and make layouts. The class is on Mondays from 9:30 to 11 a.m. or Tuesdays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Kitchen Design is on Oct. 2 to Oct. 26.
10382 Donner Pass Road, Truckee | (530) 587-2873
Backstreet Framers
10099 Jibboom St., Truckee | (530) 587-1409
The Bolam Gallery
10396 Donner Pass Road, Truckee | (530) 550-5388
Carmel Gallery
9940 Donner Pass Road, Truckee | (530) 582-0557
Dreamscapes Studio & Gallery
923 Tahoe Blvd., Incline Vlg. | (801) 413-9697
The Eadington Gallery
589 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City | (530) 583-9000
Frank Rossbach’s Glasforms
Truckee Depot, Truckee | (530) 587-8460
Gallery Keoki
Village at Squaw Valley, Olympic Valley | (530) 448-1500
Garrels Gallery
868 Tahoe Blvd., Christmas Tree Village, Incline Vlg. (775) 831-7077
Handmade at The Lake
873 Tahoe Blvd., Suite 3, Incline Vlg. | (775) 833-0637
James Harold Galleries
Boatworks Mall, Tahoe City | (530) 581-5111
JoAnne’s Stained Glass
10064 Donner Pass Road, Truckee | (530) 587-1280
Julie Wainscoat Art Gallery
8710 N. Lake Blvd., Kings Beach | (530) 546-2431
Celebrate Industrial Art
“Glass Quartet” showcases the many ways glass can be manipulated into art on display from Sept. 29 through Nov. 2 at the North Tahoe Art Center. Four featured artists working with glass offer pieces ranging from artistic visions to functional beauties. The group, Toni Rockwell, Catherine Strand, Pam Sutton and William Hutchinson, will be on display in NTA Main Gallery. In the Corison Loft from Sept. 29 to Nov. 2, Howard Friedman’s oils, “Lake Tahoe & The Sierras,” will be exhibited. He paints exclusively with a palette knife, applying many layers that give his oils a three-dimensional quality. NTA will host an opening reception on Sept. 30 from 5 to 7 p.m. Refreshments will be served. All are welcome. | northtahoearts.com
Artisans Market Place
10128 Donner Pass Road, Truckee | (530) 386-2700
Elizabeth Carmel and fellow photographer Jerry Dodrill are teaching a three-day workshop on Eastern Sierra Fall Colors from Oct. 1 to 4. The workshop is designed to give photographers a deeper understanding of exposure, composition, how to make the most of natural light, and the tools that professional nature photographers use to create their best work. | mountainlight.com
From glass to oils at North Tahoe Arts
10015 West River St., Truckee | (916) 257-8222
Atelier
Photograph fall colors
“Reflections on Pyramid Lake” celebrates the history of the lake and the people who have called it home. It features a variety of paintings, photographs and other artifacts at the Mathewson-IGT Knowledge Center at the University of Nevada, Reno, through Sept. 15. | unr.edu
Art Obsessions
artsinwellness.org | (530) 277-3669
North Tahoe Arts: A Gathering of Art program meets on the first and third Wednesdays of every month at the Corison Loft from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The program is designed to allow artists and novice artists to work on individual projects. Bring equipment, easels and supplies (tables and chairs provided). There will be no instructor. A Gathering of Art is open to the public. There is no charge, but a donation to North Tahoe Arts would help defray the costs of supplies for Kids’ Art Saturday programs. Donations are tax deductible. | (530) 581-2787
On display at UNR
Galleries
Arts in Wellness
Join Gathering of Art Wednesdays
Embracing the design and manufacturing community in Carson City, the Capital City Arts Initiative announces its exhibition “Industrial Art” at the CCAI Courthouse Gallery through Sept. 17. “Industrial Art” presents the design work of five manufacturers in the Carson City area that manufacture products with innovative design in an array of commercial applications. | arts-initiative.com
THE ARTS
Kindred Art and Folk Institute
10046 Church St., Truckee | (530) 205-7336
Untitled Matt Tucker | Truckee Community Recreation Center
Kris Moose Art Gallery
868 Tahoe Blvd., Suite II, Incline Vlg. | (775) 831-7077
New local artists needed The North Tahoe Arts ARTisan Shop is currently accepting applications for new artists. The ARTisan Shop is a co-op-style retail space for local artists to exhibit and sell their artwork year round. All art must be juried and accepted and must be handmade, original and/or created by the artist. | northtahoearts.com
Ritz-Carlton features regional art The Ritz-Carlton Lake Tahoe has joined with SLATE Art Consulting to feature a rotating exhibition of Northern California artists’ work throughout the hotel’s lobby and public areas. Two sixmonth exhibitions of contemporary art inspired by the Lake Tahoe lifestyle and made by artists living and working in Northern California will be on display. Each exhibit will have a seasonal theme and will continue through 2015. Artists featured in the exhibition include Lisa Fernald Barker, Maria Burtis, Carol Inez Charney, Pauletta Chanco, Robin Denevan, Joanne Fox, Melissa Herrington, Andrzej Michael Karwacki, Michele de la Menardiere, Elise Morris, David Ruth and James Shay. The rotational exhibition will include pieces that may be purchased from SLATE. Weekly tours will be offered at 2 p.m. on Thursdays. Private tours may be arranged for groups of 10 or more. Notes for self-guided tours are available at Hotel Concierge. | slateart.net
Interior design with bath design is Nov. 2 to Nov. 23 and Holiday Décor is on Nov. 30. The class fee is $125, plus $25 for materials. | (530) 582-7200 or tdrpd.org
North Tahoe Arts Center
Reynolds highlights in black & white
The Painted Vine
Carson City Community Center will exhibit “Tow’ring High,” the black and white photography of Deon Reynolds through Nov. 10. Reynolds’ landscape photos depict the small moments of human activity amongst the vast empty landscapes of Nevada. | arts4nevada.org
Holiday fair offers original gifts North Tahoe Arts Annual Holiday Art and Gift Faire, “Holly Arts,” will feature locally made jewelry, glasswork, knitwear, fine art, photography and other handmade items for holiday gift giving. NTA members receive a 10 percent discount. Holly Arts will be on display from Nov. 9 to Jan. 4, 2016. A holiday open house and reception will take place on Dec. 5 from noon to 4 p.m. | northtahoearts.com
380 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City | (530) 581-2787
Pablo’s Gallery & Frame Shop
475 N. Lake Blvd., Suite 205, Tahoe City | (530) 583-3043 10770 Donner Pass Rd., #103, Truckee (530) 214-8935
Salvaged
585 W. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City | (530) 583-1025
Tahoe Arts & Gifts
923 Tahoe Blvd., Incline Vlg. | (801) 413-9697
Tahoe Gallery
Prim Library, Sierra Nevada College, Incline Vlg. (775) 831-1314
Trunk Show
475 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City | (530) 584-7554
Vista Gallery
8338 North Lake Blvd., Kings Beach | (530) 546-7794
RENO Arte Italia
442 Flint St. | (775) 333-0313
Liberty Fine Art Gallery
100 W. Liberty St. | (775) 232-8079
Nevada Museum of Art
160 W. Liberty St. | (775) 329-3333
Stremmel Gallery
1400 S. Virginia St. | (775) 786-0558
Wilbur D. May Museum
Rancho San Rafael Regional Park | (775) 823-6500
25
FUN & GAMES
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Puzzles
Strange but true
by Samantha Weaver
During World War II, money was smuggled into German POW camps using Monopoly games -- the real stuff was stashed in among the fake cash. The story that’s been adapted to film more than any other is the fairy tale “Cinderella.”
Suppose you do some math and proceed to vanquish an enemy. Have you divided and conquered?
Differences: 1. Shirt is different, 2. Firewood is missing, 3. Arm is moved, 4. Hot dogs are missing, 5. Trash can is missing, 6. Strap is shorter.
Tails in Tahoe Bloom
26
Mowgli
Sasha
Raja
I’m a quiet, little girl, but I also have a quiet curiosity. I like to quietly observe everything that’s going on and if it seems fun, I’ll join in. I’m affectionate and easy going, and I get along with other cats.
Mowgli is a charming young fella that loves to frolic, learn, play and cuddle. This delightful 1-year-old pittie mix is loads of fun to watch, especially when he’s chasing after a ball.
A 4-year-old, black, spayed female, chipped and current on her shots. She is an indoor only cat and has never been around small children or other pets. She can be shy at first.
All these looks, all this charm and diplomacy, I just need someone willing to cater to my wishes: golden platters full of food and plenty of attention, not to mention spa days, and a flying carpet thrown in. as well, please.
Pet Network (775) 833-0273 www.petnetwork.org
Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe (530) 587-5948 www.hstt.org
WARF Contact Stacy | (775) 841-6479 arbours@sbcglobal.net www.tahoewarf.com
Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe (530) 587-5948 www.hstt.org
September 3-9, 2015
Puzzles for kids
Horoscopes
FIRE
FUN & GAMES
EARTH
AIR
WATER
Michael O’Connor is an astrologer, counselor and life coach | SunStarAstrology.com
Virgo (Aug 23-Sep 22) Working both within and without might characterize your current process. Some might simply call it double time. This is an expansive time for you and one during which you just might advance to the next level or two, or three. Well, each one takes time but that is what Jupiter in your sign is all about. But don’t expect anyone else to do it for you. Get inventive for best results.
Pisces (Feb 19-Mar 20) An expansive cycle has begun. Yet, as for many, the influences of Venus Retrograde continue to weave a complex plot. You are among those who may feel especially challenged by it. There is a way out however. The key is to exercise gratitude as fully as you can and, as well, your ability to enjoy other people’s success. Such wisdom is categorized as timeless.
Aries (Mar 21-Apr 20) Libra (Sep 22-Oct 22) A period of fun and frolic, yet perhaps also with some heavier drama too continues. Yet now you are a little less inclined to stir things up. Circumstances are pushing you to seek retreat, rest and perhaps solace behind the scenes. Still, you remain willing to express your thoughts with anyone you deem able to actually engage in sincere conversation.
Balancing work and play and is an ongoing challenge and this may prove especially true this week. Especially in the love department the desire to engage in meaningful exchanges is running high. Love, passion, fairness, equality and the politics of all of the above are center stage. Whether as a consequence of this focus or based on an inspirational push for it improving, your health is featured.
Taurus (Apr 20-May 21) Scorpio (Oct 22-Nov 21) You have begun to show more of your true colors. Some may be surprised at just how intellectual you can be and psychologically perceptive as well. At least some of your communications, however, are reserved for your own inner council. Deciphering which tools and methods you require and which you are wise to set aside, at least for now, is a core theme.
You are in a sporting mood. Describing it as simply playful, however, may not suffice. You are eager to dig deep, to reach for levels beyond your usual scope. Although determined to play fair, your focus is sharp and may even have an added edge. In simple terms, you are determined to get to the heart of the matter. This is where the line between work and play blurs.
Gemini (May 21-Jun 21) Sagittarius (Nov 21-Dec 21) You have arrived at an interesting turn. On one hand, you feel enthusiastic to expand your scope and influence. Yet, calculated risks will work better than cavalier leaps, which might otherwise work at different turns. In the very short term the challenge remains to clear the old to make way for the new, still. Very soon now the impulse to take deliberate action will be triggered. Get ready.
Your confidence levels should be on a steady rise. Along with them, so too are your passions gaining altitude. It has perhaps been a while but dormant desires are re-awakening. You may have to contend with some lingering health concerns but there too you likely have reason to feel optimistic. As well, returns for efforts in the past, even one’s you forgot, are filling your sails.
Cancer (Jun 21-Jul 22) Capricorn (Dec 21-Jan 19) Your wings are stretched and you are in full flight. Some complex situations continue to rumble on the ground below, however. These will continue for a couple of weeks anyway, so heads up. They are linked to love, romance and affection, on one hand, and to money, power and control, on the other. Expressions of mutual respect, where actions speak louder than words, is the key.
Aquarius (Jan 19-Feb 19) You have entered a time of returns. These stand to be especially evident now and over the coming weeks but in some respects for months to come. Contending with a bit of turbulence on relationship fronts however, or coming from a significant other, is part of the plot for now. But this will not last and the storm clouds they may produce will be spliced with and followed by rainbows.
While feeling good is a no brainer, the desire for it has suddenly spiked. Deciphering between what you feel you truly need and want is up for you. As if suddenly, you may feel a little overwhelmed with what constitutes your best choices. You may reason that you cannot afford to ‘not’ buy the best. One thing seems clear: you especially want big returns on your efforts and investments at this time.
Leo (Jul 22-Aug 23) You are in an ambitious mood. It has been steadily rising and is now shifting to the next higher gear. But this is where the real work begins. The inspiration, enthusiasm and excitement were a great start but now the game is on and in full force. Your main task now is to break through your fears. Ironically, we can be as afraid of success as of failure. Think less and act more to build a promising momentum.
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Ask about our Free Whole House Plumbing Inspection | RooterConnection.com 27
THE MUSIC SCENE
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Music SCENE The
LIVE MUSIC, SHOWS & NIGHTLIFE
Foam Fest Fun Music, beer & a whole lotta dancing
CALENDAR September 3-10, 2015
by Priya Hutner
CASINO SHOWS
Sept. 5 | 2-6 p.m. | $30 advance includes beer tasting | $35 at the event | $10 entry only | Free for kids
Evening at The Improv | Harvey’s Lake Tahoe Budd Friedman’s legendary comedy showcase brings in two new comics weekly, plus host Howie Nave with Bob Zany and Kat Simmons until Sept. 6, Nick Griffin and Ronnie Schell from Sept. 9 to 13, and Amir K and Johnny Laquasto from Sept. 16 to 20. Wed.Sun. at 8:30, 9:30 & 10:30 p.m. Starting at $25.
S many of us there is nothing better than to ummer in Tahoe is festival time. And, for
Matt Palmer | Squaw Valley
pair a great day of music with a wide selection of ice-cold beer. The 26th Annual Foam Fest at Squaw will deliver just that on Sept. 5. With unlimited tastings from more than 40 breweries, proceeds from the event will support Disabled Sports USA Far West, which provides sports rehabilitation and therapeutic recreation programs to people with disabilities. Two Tahoe favorites are performing – headlining the event are The Dead Winter Carpenters and opening for them, Zebuel’s Smoked Out Soul. Memphis-born musician, Zebuel Early, named after his great-great-great grandfather, spent many years living and playing music in Tahoe and currently resides in San Francisco. While going to school in Colorado, he was a radio DJ who eventually purchased two turntables and hit the clubs. “I was going to college in Colorado when the first band I was in took off and we all moved to Tahoe together,” Early said. He toured with Mama’s Cookin’ for 10 years.
ZEBUEL EARLY
by Early at the helm on guitar, vocals and deejaying “we each do the work of two people giving us the sound of 6 or 7 people,” explained Early. What is Smoked Out Soul? “What started as a mix tape has morphed into a party with live musicians and DJ music. We play at the Monarch Club in the Bay area every two weeks. It’s a funk and soul celebration,” he said. Early released “Cadillac Throwback Remix” last year and is about to release “River City Sunset” on Sleeveless Records, due out in September. “The album was produced by Stylust Beats and recorded on his label. The album has super soulful vibes,” said Early. Opening for the Dead Winter Carpenters, “Zebuel’s Smoked Out Soul DEAD WINTER WINTER CARPENTERS CARPENTERS DEAD will be performing a mix of original songs from the up“We are excited to return to Foam Fest coming album and give back to the community. It’s great and songs that we come to perform a benefit in our hometown.” up with on the spot,” he added. A guitarist and vocalist his love of music And, in DJ fashion there will is eclectic, He fuses his musical worlds be remixes of friends, as well. together with his love of funk, soul and live “The common goal is creating music while deejaying. Inspired by a diverse a good soulful vibe for people. range of music from Gramatik, Pretty We’ll get the crowd ready for Lights J-Lah to BB king, James Brown Dead Winter Carpenters.” and Stevie Wonder, Early grew up listening Tahoe darlings to classic rock, then world and reggae in college and spun blues on the radio. The Dead Winter Carpen“I take a bit of each thing I was ters are truly Tahoe darlings. influenced by and draw it into what I do, A Truckee local, Jenni Charles which is what Smoked Out Soul is,” he said. creates magic with her vocals Drummer Paul Oliphant, who also rocks and fiddle. She’s been playing an electronic drum pad, and keyboardist music and involved in a number and trombonist Tristan Selzler are joined of bands over the years. The band 28
formed in 2010 and they’ve been on a whirlwind tour of success. “We had a strong foundation when we formed Dead Winter Carpenters and along with the help of the Tahoe Community,” said Charles. The band members met in the Bay Area years ago and include lead guitarist Bryan Daines, a native of Reno, drummer Brian Huston, upright bassist Dave Lockhart and Jessie Dunn on rhythm guitar. All of the members of Dead Winter Carpenters are vocalists, as well. With two, full-length albums and one EP, the band is set to release a new album early next year. “This album takes a bit of a new direction, it’s a little less country and a lot more rock and roll. We weren’t trying to go in a new direction it happened organically,” Charles explained. “I’m inspired by people that come out to our shows and enjoy the music. I love that they are able to let go, dance and have fun despite what’s going on in their lives,” she adds. The Dead Winter Carpenters are no stranger to the upcoming Foam Fest, “We are excited to return to Foam Fest and give back to the community. It’s great to perform a benefit in our hometown,” she said. After a short stay in Tahoe, the band hits the road and won’t be back until the fall where they’ll perform at Hangtown Festival. “It’s so fun we’ve played there every year, ” she added. The bands tour will culminate at the end of this year when they perform New Year’s Eve at Sierra Valley Lodge. In the meantime, catch the band at Foam Fest along with Zebuel’s Smoked Out Soul for a cause. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit dwusafw.org.
“Frank Marino’s Divas” | Harrah’s Reno “Frank Marino’s Divas” featuring superstar female impersonators take the stage at Harrah’s Reno. These incredible impersonators not only recreate, but also duplicate the likeness of stars ranging from Lady Gaga, to Cher, to Diana Ross and many more. Shows are at 8 p.m. Thurs.-Mon. until Sept. 28. $30-$40. Laugh Factory | Silver Legacy One of the most recognized comedy club brands in the country, The Laugh Factory hosts two comics weekly. Laugh Factory will be open Tues-Sun. at 7:30 p.m. and late shows on Fri.-Sat. at 9:30 p.m. See Tom Wilson until Sept. 6, Paul Rodriguez from Sept. 10 to 13, and Bobby Slayton from Sept. 22 to 27. Starting at $21.95. “Saltoriya” | Eldorado Casino “Saltoriya” is a new show comprising aweinspiring, internationally acclaimed performers, acrobats, daredevil stunts and comedy in an exhilarating, uplifting experience. The show combines feats of athleticism, comedy, original music and choreography. It celebrates magnificent physical movements of world-class performers with universal and timeless appeal. Cirque-style productions bring amazing elements of the traditional circus to another level of excitement and aesthetics. “Saltoriya” features a cast of incredibly talented American and European performers including acrobats, clowns, jugglers and dancers. The audience will see comedians, unicycle masters, a ladder balancing act, contortion-hand balancing, a hula-hoop act and a daring motorcycle globe act. Show times are at 7 p.m. Tues.-Sun. and 9:30 p.m. on Saturday until Nov. 15. Starting at $26.95.
SEPT. 3 | THURSDAY AT THE LAKE Chris Costa Tahoe Biltmore 7 p.m. The Socks Cottonwood 7 p.m. Rustler’s Moon Bar of America 8 p.m. Stan Charles Pastime Club 10 p.m. DJ Parties Time Splitter Thursdays Moe’s 8 p.m. Hard Rock 9 p.m. DJ David Aaron MontBleu 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Fat Cat Bar & Grill 9 p.m. Hard Rock 9 p.m. The Grid 9:30 p.m. Rookies 10 p.m. RENO & BEYOND Megan Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Jessie Leigh Band JA Nugget 5 p.m. Jazz Night w/Cece Gable & John Shipley We Olive and Wine Bar 5:30 p.m. Terri Campillo & Craig Fletcher Glen Eagles 6:30 p.m. Jam w/Dean Brownell Carson Station Casino 7 p.m.
September 3-9, 2015
Sammy Hagar and The Circle
TAKE A PRIVATE TOUR OF TAHOE
Sept. 5 | 7:30 p.m.
WITH HISTORIAN & AUTHOR
MARK MCLAUGHLIN
Harvey’s Outdoor Arena | Stateline, Nev.
ROCK & ROLL Hall of Famer Sammy Hagar will be joining forces with Michael Anthony, Jason Bonham and Vic Johnson on his “A Journey Through The History of Rock” tour. Fans will have a rare opportunity to experience music spanning more than 40 years of Hagar’s career. And, with Jason Bonham on board, they can also expect a few of Led Zeppelin’s biggest hits added to the mix. | ceasars.com
• Field trips • In-home talks • Group presentations
Super Diamond
Sept. 4 | 9 p.m. | $20-$25 Crystal Bay Casino | Crystal Bay Nev.
SUPER DIAMOND HAS long since transcended the label of tribute band by passionately immersing themselves in Neil Diamond’s huge repertoire and delivering a high-octane show of unforgettable classics. Front man Randy Cordeiro, aka The Surreal Neil, astonishes audiences with his live impersonation. Super Diamond’s mission involves adding serious guitar wattage to Diamond’s catalog. They recreate the Diamond classics at the same time putting their own tonguein-cheek spin on it. | crystalbaycasino.com
Julie Courtney & Doug Nichols
Sept. 4 | 7 p.m. | Free | Cottonwood | Truckee
THIS SAN FRANCISCO-BASED acoustic duo features vocalist Julie Courtney who has appeared twice on ABC’S “Live! With Regis and Kelly.” Courtney is currently working on a solo recording project with Bay Area music producers Jim Bedford and John Cordeiro. The project is yet to be completed, but a sampling of the songs from the project is at juliecourtneymusic.com. She will be joined by Doug Nichols on guitar, mandolin, keyboards and ukulele. | cottonwoodrestaurant.com
THE MUSIC SCENE
Pick up a copy of Mark’s books • Geared for Games • Gratitude Gifts • Visitor Center • Bookshelf Books Tahoe City • Mind Play Fred Gonzales Singer Social Lounge 7 p.m. Jamestown Revival Eldorado Casino 7 p.m. Keyser Soze Showcase Peppermill Casino 7 p.m. Jimmy Malley & Jack Clifton Living the Good Life 7:30 p.m. River Road Carson Valley Inn 8 p.m. Tallent Brothers Studio on 4th 8 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. Garage Boys Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. DJ Parties DJ Teddy Silver Legacy 9 p.m. Honky Tonk Thursdays with DJ Jamie G Grand Sierra Resort 10 p.m. Locals Night w/DJ 2wice Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. DJ Montague Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Plan: b Microlounge 7:30 p.m. Club Cal Neva 8 p.m. Bottom’s Up Saloon 9 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Special Events Best in the West Nugget Rib Cook-Off Victorian Square Sparks 11 a.m.
SEPT. 4 | FRIDAY AT THE LAKE Live music Village at Northstar 5 p.m. Brad Perry River Ranch Lodge 6 p.m. Julie Courtney & Doug Nichols Cottonwood 7 p.m. Rustler’s Moon Gar Woods 8 p.m. Party w/Arty Harrah’s Lake Tahoe 8 p.m. Jackie Dauzat Riva Grill 8 p.m. Seraphin Pastime Club 9 p.m. West Bay Rhythm Hard Rock 9 p.m. Super Diamond Crystal Bay Casino 9 p.m. Chris Costa Tahoe Biltmore 9 p.m. Cash Only Beacon Bar 9 p.m. Jo Mama Bar of America 9:30 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Tourist Club 9 p.m. MontBleu 9 p.m. RENO & BEYOND Pipes on the River Trinity Episcopal Church 12 p.m. Flight Restaurant & Bar Jessie Leigh Band JA Nugget 5 p.m. Mary Margaret Niebuhr, Clair Humphrey Buona Sera 6 p.m. Lynne Colvig & Kevin Tokarz Rapscallion 6 p.m. Mark Castro Band Wolf Creek Restaurant 6 p.m. Soundwriters in the Round Comma Coffee 6 p.m. Terri Campillo & Craig Fletcher Glen Eagles 6:30 p.m. Reno Music Project Showcase Walden’s Coffeehouse 7 p.m. Fred Gonzales Vassar Lounge 7 p.m.
Dishwalla Eldorado Casino 7 p.m. Linda Newberg Nightingale Concert Hall 7:30 p.m. Corky Bennett & The 9th St. Band Reno Senior Center 8 p.m. Incubus Silver Legacy 8 p.m. Jamie Rollins Living the Good Life Lounge 8 p.m. Keyser Soze Showcase Peppermill Casino 8 p.m. River Road Carson Valley Inn 8 p.m. Gil Roxy’s Eldorado 8:30 p.m. Husalah Jub Jub’s Thirst Parlor 9 p.m. Palmore Remix Atlantis Casino 10 p.m. Garage Boys Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. DJ Parties DJ I Harrah’s Reno 9 p.m. DJ Roni V NoVi at Eldorado 9 p.m. DJ Rick Gee Grand Sierra Resort 10 p.m. Boots & Daisy Dukes w/DJ Jamie G Grand Sierra Resort Boggan and guest DJs 1 up 10 p.m. Mario Lopez Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. DJ Montague Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. DJ Chris English Peppermill Casino Edge 1 a.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Club Cal Neva 8 p.m. Bottom’s Up Saloon 9 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. The Point 9 p.m. Spiro’s Sports Bar & Grille 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Live Band Karaoke Grand Sierra Xtreme Sports Bar 10 p.m. Theater, Comedy & Dance Jackie Flynn Carson Nugget 7:30 p.m. Bob Newhart Atlantis Casino 8:30 p.m. Steve Hytner Pioneer Underground 9 p.m. Special Events Best in the West Nugget Rib Cook-Off Victorian Square Sparks 11 a.m.
SEPT. 5 | SATURDAY
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(Making Adequate Nutrition Accessible)
AT THE LAKE Dead Winter Carpenters & Zebuel’s Smoked Out Soul Village at Squaw 2 p.m. Tom Appelbaum Band Donner Ski Ranch 5:30 p.m. Under the Radar Jason’s Sand Bar 6 p.m. Sammy Hagar and the Circle Harvey’s Outdoor Arena 7:30 p.m. Linda Newberg Sand Harbor State Park 7:30 p.m. Rustler’s Moon Gar Woods 8 p.m. Party w/Arty Harrah’s Lake Tahoe 8 p.m. Jackie Dauzat Riva Grill 8 p.m. Dueling Pianos Tahoe Biltmore 8 p.m. Skid Row Hard Rock 9 p.m. Deep Fried Mojo Beacon Bar 9 p.m. Bar of America 9:30 p.m. Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash Crystal Bay 10 p.m. Live music Hyatt Cutthroat’s Salon 10 p.m. Live music Hyatt Lone Eagle Grille 10 p.m. continued on page 30
Emergency Hunger Relief Organization serving the North Shore and Truckee since 1991 Our mission is to reduce the incidence of hunger and its detrimental effects upon individuals, families, the community and the region.
(775) 298-0008 & (530) 214-5181 WEEKLY FOOD DISTRIBUTION LOCATIONS AND TIMES: MONDAYS TAHOE CITY | 3:00pm to 3:30pm Fairway Community Center, 330 Fairway Drive TUESDAYS TRUCKEE | 3:00pm to 3:30pm Community Arts Center, 10046 Church Sttreet WEDNESDAYS KINGS BEACH | 3:00pm to 3:30pm Community House, 265 Bear Street THURSDAYS INCLINE VILLAGE | 3:00pm to 3:30pm DWR Center, 948 Incline Way
ProjectMana.org
29
THE MUSIC SCENE
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Primus and the Chocolate Factory
SEPT. 6 | SUNDAY
Sept. 7 | 8 p.m. | $37.50 | Grand Sierra Resort | Reno, Nev.
AT THE LAKE
IT SEEMED EQUAL PARTS
genius and obvious when Les Claypool decided to throw a Willy Wonka-themed Primus show on New Year’s Eve last year. During the second set, Primus performed the soundtrack in its entirety. It felt so good, in fact, that he decided to take Primus into the studio to prepare the soundtrack for an album release. Rather than try to recreate the album note for note, the band utilizes classic elements of the music while reflecting some of the darker undertones of Roald Dahl’s books. They pull it off by making something that is truly their own, without taking anything away from the movie. Enjoy the show as part of the Great Depressurization Chamber featuring three days of music and parties at Grand Sierra Resort. | grandsierraresort.com
Devon Allman Band Commons Beach 3 p.m. Big Band Jazz Sugar Pine Point State Park 5 p.m. Guitar Strings & Chicken Wings Squaw Valley 6 p.m. Live music “Tahoe Gal” 6 p.m. Party w/Arty Harrah’s Lake Tahoe 8 p.m. Jo Mama Beacon Bar 9 p.m. Spiritual Rez Crystal Bay Club 10 p.m. DJ Parties DJ JBird Cabo Wabo Harvey’s 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Pastime Club The Grid 9:30 p.m. Theater, Comedy, Dance McAvoy Lane Casey’s Round Hill Center 7 p.m. RENO & BEYOND
Jackie Flynn
Sept. 4 | 7:30 p.m. | $13-$15 Carson Nugget | Carson City, Nev.
Sept. 5 | 9 p.m. | $14-$17 Pioneer Underground | Reno, Nev.
JACKIE FLYNN HAS emerged as one of the funniest and most talked about comedians to come out of Boston, joining the ranks of Steven Wright, Denis Leary, Lenny Clarke and Jay Leno. He has quickly parlayed his success as a stand up to firmly establish himself in the film and television arena. Early on in his career, Flynn was discovered on stage in Boston by the Farrelly Brothers, who have since cast him in back to back roles in “King Pin,” “There’s Something About Mary,” “Me, Myself and Irene,” “Shallow Hal” and “Stuck on You,” where he played opposite Cher. He has often been called a “comics comic.” He is also a proud winner of the San Francisco Comedy Competition. His refreshing unique brand of sarcastic, observational humor puts him in a class of his own. Audiences young and old appreciate his wit and rapid fire, take-noprisoners delivery. | renotahoecomedy.com
SEPT. 5 | SATURDAY CONTINUED...
DJ Parties Rookies 10 p.m. DJ SN1, DJ Rick Gee Harrah’s Peek Nightclub 10:30 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke MontBleu 9 p.m. RENO & BEYOND
NOW PLAYING
Tahoe 3-D Movie Science Center
Lake Tahoe in Depth See it at the UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center 291 Country Club Drive Incline Village, Nevada
Phone: (775) 881-7562 Email: tercinfo@ucdavis.edu Hands-on science activities, Web: terc.ucdavis.edu
Guided tours & 3-D movies Open Tues.—Sat., 1—5 p.m. (or by appointment, closed all holidays)
TahoeScienceCenter.org (775) 881-7566
Not just Pizza!
HAPPY HOUR Daily 3-7pm SALADS •SANDWICHES •BEER/WINE
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Live music every Wednesday evening 6–9pm
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30
Hallie Kirk Comma Coffee 1 p.m. Megan Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Jessie Leigh Band JA Nugget 5 p.m. Corky Bennett Bavarian World 6 p.m. Mark Castro Band Wolf Creek Restaurant 6 p.m. Terri Campillo & Craig Fletcher Glen Eagles 6:30 p.m. Thunder Cover Harrah’s Reno 7 p.m. Locash Eldorado Casino 7 p.m. Wade Bowen Knitting Factory 8 p.m. Ritual Industrial Gothic Underground Studio on 4th 8 p.m. River Road Carson Valley Inn 8 p.m. Keyser Soze Showcase Peppermill 8 p.m. Gil Roxy’s Eldorado 8:30 p.m. Audio Sky 3rd Street Bar 10 p.m. Palmore Remix Atlantis Casino 10 p.m. Garage Boys Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. DJ Parties DJ I Harrah’s Reno 9 p.m. DJ Jamie G Grand Sierra Resort 10 p.m. DJ Roni Romance, DJ Dragon Eldorado Novi 9 p.m. DJ Montague Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. DJ Chris English Peppermill Casino Edge 1 a.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Club Cal Neva 8 p.m. Bottom’s Up Saloon 9 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. The Point 9 p.m. Spiro’s Sports Bar & Grille 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Theater, Comedy & Dance Jackie Flynn Pioneer Underground 9 p.m. Bill Engvall Silver Legacy 8 p.m. Special Events The Great Civil War Days Virginia City 9 a.m. Best in the West Nugget Rib Cook-Off Victorian Square Sparks 11 a.m.
Sunday Jazz Wild River Grille 2 p.m. Megan Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Deep Groove Red Dog Saloon 5 p.m. Jessie Leigh Band JA Nugget 5 p.m. Mark Castro Band Wolf Creek Restaurant 6 p.m. Mark Sexton Band Peppermill 6 p.m. Lorrie Morgan Boomtown Casino 7 p.m. Foghat Eldorado Casino 7 p.m. American Discord Jub Jub’s 8 p.m. Moon Gravy 3rd St. Blues 8 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. Gil Roxy’s Eldorado 8:30 p.m. Jamie Rollins Silver Legacy Silver Baron Lounge 9 p.m. Palmore Remix Atlantis Casino 10 p.m. Garage Boys Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Club Cal Neva 8 p.m. Bottom’s Up Saloon 9 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Special Events The Great Civil War Days Virginia City 9 a.m. Best in the West Nugget Rib Cook-Off Victorian Square Sparks 11 a.m. Labor Day Parade Virginia City 12:30 p.m.
SEPT. 7 | MONDAY AT THE LAKE Open Mic & Karaoke Himmel Haus 9 p.m. RENO & BEYOND CW & Mr. Spoons Comma Coffee 12 p.m. ALO Nugget Casino 3 p.m. Mark Sexton Band Peppermill 6 p.m. Carson City Music Club Brewery Arts Center 7 p.m. Primus Grand Sierra Resort 8 p.m. Steppen Stonz Atlantis Casino 8 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. Afterburn Sands Regency DJ Parties Rob Garza Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Open Mic Java Jungle 7:30 p.m. Gold Hill Hotel 7 p.m. Open Mic w/Tany Jane Sidelines 8:30 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Live Band Karaoke Eldorado Brew Brothers 10 p.m. Special Events The Great Civil War Days Virginia City 9 a.m. Best in the West Nugget Rib Cook-Off Victorian Square Sparks 11 a.m.
THE MUSIC SCENE
September 3-9, 2015
CALENDAR | September 3-10, 2015 SEPT. 8 | TUESDAY AT THE LAKE Unplugged Jam Session Cottonwood 7 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Open Mic w/Lucas Arizu Fat Cat Bar & Grill 9 p.m. RENO & BEYOND Daniel Gaughan Genoa Lakes Golf Course 4 p.m. Kevin Tokarz Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Mark Sexton Peppermill 6 p.m. Mile High Jazz Band Comma Coffee 7:30 p.m. Mark West Carson Valley Inn 8 p.m. Black & Blues Jam Sidelines 8:30 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. DG Kicks Big Band 3rd Street Blues 9 p.m. I Skream You Skream Rubin’s Cantina 9 p.m. DJ Parties Thomas Jack w/Pumpkin Grand Sierra Resort 8 p.m. DJ Chris English Eldorado Brew Brothers 10 p.m. Ardalan w/Digital Rust Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Silver Legacy 9:30 p.m.
SEPT. 9 | WEDNESDAY AT THE LAKE Dave Matthews Band Harvey’s Outdoor Arena 7 p.m. DJ Parties Bass Heavy The Grid 10 p.m. DJ Chris English Cabo Wabo Harvey’s 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Open Mic Mellow Fellow Truckee 8:30 p.m. Auld Dubliner 9 p.m. RENO & BEYOND John Shipley Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Russell Ketenjian Brugo’s Pizza 6 p.m. Mark Sexton Peppermill 6 p.m. Richie Ballerini & Lee Edwards Living the Good Life 6:30 p.m. Terri Campillo & Craig Fletcher Glen Eagles 6:30 p.m. Corky Bennett Reno Polo Lounge 7 p.m. Rick Metz Blues Jam 3rd Street Lounge 7 p.m. Josh Procaccini and Jenera Batten Firkin & Fox 7:30 p.m. Mick Valentino & Lynne Colvig Living the Good Live 7:30 p.m. Mark West Carson Valley Inn 8 p.m. Steppen Stonz Atlantis Casino 8 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. The Lucent Dossier Experience Knitting Factory 8:30 p.m. Cash Presley Eldorado 10:30 p.m.
Afterburn Sands Regency DJ Parties DJ Jamie G John Ascuaga’s Nugget Cabaret 7 p.m. DJ Terry Melody Grand Sierra’s Xtreme Sports Bar 8 p.m. Justincredible Carson Station 9 p.m. DJ Country Rock Silver Legacy 9 p.m. Little John and Miss Cooper Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Billy Star Open Jam Red Dog Saloon 6:30 p.m. Alfonso’s 8 p.m. Gong Show Karaoke Rum Bullions Silver Legacy 8 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. Open Mic Ruben’s Cantina 9 p.m. The Point 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m.
SEPT. 10 | THURSDAY AT THE LAKE Dave Manning Cottonwood 7 p.m. Rustler’s Moon Bar of America 8 p.m. Stan Charles Pastime Club 10 p.m. DJ Parties Time Splitter Thursdays Moe’s 8 p.m. DJ David Aaron MontBleu 10 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Fat Cat Bar & Grill 9 p.m. Hard Rock 9 p.m. The Grid 9:30 p.m. Rookies 10 p.m.
forming Arts Series at University of Nevada, Reno begins Sept. 17 with a showing of DakhaBrakha. Bringing some of the finest performers in the world to Nightingale Concert Hall and Redfield Proscenium Theatre, the series is offering season ticket discounts for its package of five and six performances, for substantial savings over individual prices. Performances include The Academy of St. Martin in the Fields Chamber Ensemble, Grim & Fischer by Wonderheads and Red Chamber. Season tickets start at $119 for a single adult or $165 for a family pack. | unr.edu
We’ve Got Your LABOR DAY Weekend Covered!
DINNER
Café Biltmore Stop in and try our new Café Menu featuring All Natural Durham Ranch Beef Burgers, Chicken Fried Steak, Free Range Chicken Sandwiches and more...
$2.22
RENO & BEYOND In Stride Comma Coffee 12 p.m. Megan Eldorado Roxy Bistro 4:30 p.m. Jason McGuire Trio Brewery Arts Center Terri Campillo & Craig Fletcher Glen Eagles 6:30 p.m. Open Mic w/Dale Poune Plan b: Microlounge 7 p.m. Jam w/Dean Brownell Carson Station Casino 7 p.m. Fred Gonzales Singer Social Lounge 7 p.m. Jimmy Malley & Jack Clifton Living the Good Life 7:30 p.m. Steppen Stonz Atlantis Casino 8 p.m. Bobbie Reynon & Paul January Eldorado Roxy Bistro 8:30 p.m. DJ Parties DJ Teddy Silver Legacy 9 p.m. Honky Tonk Thursdays with DJ Jamie G Grand Sierra Resort 10 p.m. Locals Night w/DJ 2wice Lex Nightclub 10 p.m. DJ Montague Eldorado Brew Brothers 10:30 p.m. Open Mic & Karaoke Plan: b Microlounge 7:30 p.m. Club Cal Neva 8 p.m. Bottom’s Up Saloon 9 p.m. El Cortez Lounge 9 p.m. The Point 9 p.m. West Second Street 9:30 p.m. Theater, Comedy, Dance Sean Peabody Pioneer Underground 8 p.m.
M USIC N OT ES Performing art series | The 2015-16 Per-
Lodgg ann Casinn
Theater education | Reno Little Theater
launches a new Education Program that will include workshops, classes, camps, school tours and teaching guides, as well as school and community outreach. Information will be available at a kick-off event at 11 a.m. on Sept. 7 at Reno Little Theater. Families are invited to bring school-aged children to participate in the Education Festival where there will be games and fun activities. | (775) 813-8900
Monday Breakfast !!!
BILTY’S BREW & Q Try our New Bilty’s Menu featuring Angus Ribeye Steak, Grilled Swordfish and more ... Chris Costa is
back!
11pm m p 7 y a d urs Sept. 3 - Th - 1am m p 9 y a d i r Sept. 4 - F
a t s o C s i Chr e casino floor! live on th
ONLY every s o n a i P g Duelin Lake Tahoe’s
ht at Saturday nig
8pm
GAMING
(800) 245.8667 #5 Highway 28 - Crystal Bay NV
TahoeBiltmore.com 31
LOCAL FLAVOR
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Local
TA S T Y
flavor
RESTAURANTS, RECIPES, FEATURES & MORE
Tidbits
Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for a complete list of tasty tidbits.
Enjoy Autumn Food & Wine Festival
The 30th Annual Lake Tahoe Autumn Food & Wine Festival at Northstar will pair epicurean adventures with Northern California’s regional food and wine. Master chefs and winemakers invite foodies to enjoy three days of cooking seminars and demonstrations, culinary competitions, wine-tastings and food-themed experiences from Sept. 11 to 13 in The Village and at The Ritz-Carlton. | northstarcalifornia.com
Festival features flavors of the Sierra The 6th annual Sample the Sierra, Lake Tahoe’s only farm-to-fork festival is on Sept. 6 from noon to 5 p.m. at Bijou Community Park in South Lake Tahoe. Festival guests will enjoy a range of culinary offerings from regional restaurants, wineries, distilleries, breweries and producers, as well as live music and an extensive festival marketplace. The 4th annual Sierra Chef Challenge features regional chefs battling one another in a rapidfire cook-off using a mystery box of local produce. Tastings end at 4 p.m. and tickets are $40. | Tickets samplethesierra.com
Save with Dining for Schools card The Dining for Schools card is on sale from Excellence in Education Foundation. The card entitles the bearer to 50 percent off an individual dinner entree at 45 participating restaurants. The card is nontransferable, but may be used an unlimited number of times at any participating restaurant during the valid period. Visit the Web site for a list of participating restaurants. The cards are $50 each and may be purchased at SaveMart in Tahoe City and Truckee, Safeway in Kings Beach and Truckee, Mountain Hardware in Truckee, The Store in Tahoe City and online. | exined.org
Northstar hosts brew events Craft brew connoisseurs and foodies may enjoy Northstar’s Brewmaster Dinner on Sept. 5 alfresco on the deck of the Martis Valley Grille under the direction of Executive Chef Steve Anderson. Each dinner will feature a customized menu comprised of California’s finest meats and produce paired with craft brews and seasonal specialties from Barrel Brewing Co. A Brew Walk on Sept. 5 will give guests the opportunity to try specialty craft brews from the noted Anheuser-Busch family including tastes from 10 Barrel Brewing Co. and Goose Island. Tickets for guests, age 21 and older, include a commemorative 32
Grant Barta | Northstar
tasting glass and are available for $25 when purchased in advance or $32 on the day of the event. | northstarcalifornia.com
which includes wine and beer pairings, is $150 per person, with a limited number of reservations. | RSVP skihomewood.com
Enjoy dinner at Lake Mary
Dine at Shakespeare Ranch
Sugar Bowl hosts the return of the Lake Mary Cabin Dinner Series to benefit local nonprofits this summer. Enjoy a delicious meal on the patio overlooking Lake Mary atop Donner Summit. Dinner dates are on Sept. 6 and 13. Seating is limited and reservations are recommended. | RSVP sugarbowl.com
The 2015 Community Table returns on Sept. 11 at the Shakespeare Ranch in Glenbrook, Nev., to benefit the Parasol Foundation. This year’s event features Chef Roland Passot of La Folie in San Francisco. Tickets are $500. | parasol.com
Saturday night barbecue at Tahoe Donner Tahoe Donner Equestrian Center will be hosting a Saturday barbecue from 5 to 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 5. The evening will feature games, crafts, contests, dress-up, food, rope throwing and more. Cost per person varies from $34 to $45, with discounts for children. | RSVP (530) 5879470 or tahoedonner.com
Join Summer Mixology Six Peaks Grille’s Summer Mixology Series on Sept. 5 will offer dinner and cocktails highlighting Hangar One Vodka. The menu will feature ahi tuna tartar, chilled mango bisque, cardamomseared duck breast and lime crème brûlée. Cocktail hour begins at 6 p.m.; dinner is at 7 p.m. The cost is $80 for adults, which includes dinner and paired cocktails, and $60 for children, which includes dinner and non-alcohol mocktails. Seating will be community-style. | squawcreek.com
Dine at Farm to Peak Homewood’s Farm to Peak dinners will return this summer with a mountaintop seating on Sept. 6. Guests will experience a scenic ride on Homewood’s Quail chairlift before sitting down to a fivecourse meal prepared by West Shore Café’s Executive Chef Kristi Ritchey. Dinner,
Take a walk on a garden tour Slow Food Lake Tahoe is hosting an edible garden tour on Sept. 13 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. These High Sierra gardens will range from beginner container gardens to multi-production, permaculture greenhouses. The tour starts at Truckee Demonstration Garden at Regional Park and continues, caravan-style, to a variety of Truckee home gardens. Light refreshments will be provided along the tour, which will end at the Truckee Community Farmers’ Market. Picnic Catering will provide a snack. Tickets are $10 for Slow Food Lake Tahoe members or $15 for nonmembers and may be purchased online. Checkin begins at 8:30 a.m. at the Truckee Demonstration Garden. Children are welcome to participate free of charge. | slowfoodlaketahoe.org
Slow Food hosts workshops Slow Food Lake Tahoe is offering a Skillshare series with Truckee Donner Recreation and Parks District from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on select days at the Community Recreation Center kitchen. Upcoming sessions will include Homemade Herbal Remedies on Sept. 13. The sessions are $10 per class with a $15 materials fee. | Register (530) 582-7720 or tdrpd.org
Become a Hubster Tahoe Food Hub is launching a new membership program on Sept. 24 from
4:30 to 8 p.m. outside their Farm Shop in Alpine Meadows. Called Farm Truck Thursday, the fundraising community event will feature a food court of food trucks, including Mountain Roots Food Truck, Starkey’s Wood-fired Pizza Truck and The Souper Wagon. The Crest Café will be rolling up sushi, plus local beers and wines will be available. Chi McLean will provide music. Hubster is the name for the membership program and to join buy raffle tickets: donate $25 get two raffle tickets, donate $35 get 4 raffle tickets and donate $50 get 8 raffle tickets. Or, opt to become a member by donating $5 to $25 per month. Corporate memberships start at $300. A complete list of Hubster membership benefits is on the Web site. Raffle prizes include ski passes, gift certificates, staycation packages and outdoor gear. Tahoe Food Hub is a nonprofit working to restore local food distribution by building a regional food system. | tahoefoodhub.org
Thunderbird hosts fundraising dinner Thunderbird Lake Tahoe hosts its final summer dinner series on Sept. 13 featuring Crystal Bay Steakhouse Chef Evan Carsman paired with Miner Family Winery featuring vignettes by founder and owner Dave Miner and Chef Evan Carsman. | RSVP thunderbirdtahoe.org
Estee offers food classes Celebrity chef Mark Estee and head butcher Damon Ewasko guide participants through an anatomy lesson of the “Meat We Eat” in partnership with Atelier. Participants will learn the parts that make up the whole, recipes on how to cook different sections and take home a special house-made condiment or rub. Classes are being held at Reno Provisions on Sept. 23 and Oct. 28. Classes start at $85. | ateliertruckee.com
Vendors sought for Oktoberfest The annual Tahoe City Oktoberfest will be held on Oct. 3 from noon to 6 p.m. on the grounds of the Gatekeeper’s Museum. Food and beverage vendors are invited to participate in this event. Business vendors are also welcome. This annual event offers activities for the family, even the dogs. Guest will enjoy live music, cold beer, barbecue sausages and wieners, as well as games and crafts for kids of all ages. | visittahoecity.org
Cooking classes offered Chef Jacob Burton is teaching the Stella Culinary Boot Camp, an intensive culinary course designed to break the bonds of recipes and unleash one’s creativity. Take your cooking to the next level on Sept. 28 to Oct. 2, Oct. 19 to 23, and Nov. 2 to 6. Space is limited. | stellaculinary.com
September 3-9, 2015
LAKE VIEW DINING
Dining Guide KINGS BEACH
TAHOE VISTA
Jason’s | American
Old Range Steakhouse
Jason’s Beachside Grill, a local’s favorite for more than 30 years offers casual dining in a rustic atmosphere. Savor American classics like Slow Roasted Prime Rib, Teriyaki Chicken, Pasta, Blackened Salmon and Jason’s famous Baby Back Ribs, along with nightly specials. Jason’s boasts the largest salad bar on the North Shore and gourmet half-pound burgers and sandwiches. There’s a kid’s menu, and a large selection of spirits, wine and microbrews.
open every day
| Vintage Steakhouse
Originating in Chicago, Old Range offers the meat and potatoes crowd huge steaks featuring Midwestern, heavy-aged, corn-fed beef. Try the barbecue ribs and rotisserie chicken combo, filet mignon, king crab legs, giant fresh Iowa pork chops or the house specialty – oldfashioned, salt-roasted prime rib. Enjoy the welcoming, cozy redwood interior, pewter tableware and beautiful lake view from every table. Private cabin room available.
8338 N. Lake Blvd., Kings Beach, next to the North Tahoe Event Center | Daily 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. | M/C, VISA, AMEX, Diners, Discover | (530) 546-3315
7081 N. Lake Blvd., across from the beach, Tahoe Vista | Dinner starting at 5 p.m. | Reservations advised | VISA and AMEX | (530) 546-4800
Lanza’s | Italian
TRUCKEE
Traditional Italian food since the 1930s, and Lanza’s has been a long-time favorite with locals, as well as visitors. It’s been voted best Italian restaurant for many years. Guests will find a great family atmosphere featuring family recipes and large portions. Most dinners are between $12 and $19. Lanza’s also offers a nice selection of Italian and California wines. Lanza’s now offers gluten-free pizza and spaghetti. Offsite catering available. 7739 North Lake Blvd., King’s Beach (next to Safeway) | No reservations | Dinner at 5 p.m. | Full Bar and Happy Hour 4:30 p.m. | MC and VISA | (530) 546-2434
Las Panchitas | Mexican
Serving fine Mexican food since 1975 and at Lake Tahoe since 1982, delicious ChingaLingas head the appetizer list. Authentic Chili Relleños are made from fresh-roasted chiles stuffed with jack cheese, and Fiesta Tostadas are created from a flour tortilla with beans, ground beef, chile colorado, chile verde, lettuce, sour cream, guacamole and cheese. The Chicken, Shrimp and Sirloin Fajitas are enough for two. 8345 North Lake Blvd., Kings Beach | Full bar with delicious margaritas | Dinners from $10.95 | All major credit cards accepted | (530) 546-4539
LOCAL FLAVOR
El Toro Bravo | Mexican
This is outstanding Mexican cuisine with recipes that have made El Toro Bravo a favorite in Truckee for 25 years. Located in a quaint, oldtime, Truckee house, with a friendly ambience to go with your meal. Happy Hour Monday to Friday from 4 to 6 p.m. Topping the menu are tender Steak and Chicken Fajitas, Chimichangas, Tacoladas, Chili Relleños, Snapper Santa Cruz, Grilled Prawns and the unusual Oysters 444. Patio dining, weather permitting. 10816 Donner Pass Road, on the west end of Commercial Row, downtown Truckee | Service from 11:30 a.m. | Full bar | VISA, MC, AMEX, Discover | (530) 587-3557
Featuring new chef
CHACO!!
Labor Day weekend hours Friday - Monday » open at 12 pm tuesday - thursday » open at 3 pm
Happy Hour 3-5 pm daily Facebook.com/HaciendaDelLago
HacDelLago.com
BOATWORKS MALL AT TAHOE CITY MARINA ·· (530) 581-3700 760 NORTH LAKE BLVD. SUITE #30 ·· TAHOE CITY, CA
Pianeta | Italian Cucina
One of the Tahoe area’s best, Pianeta transports the palate with sophisticated, yet rustic Italian food in a warm, cozy atmosphere. The Antipasti features Bruschetta Olivata, Filet Mignon Carpaccio, Housemade Grilled Sausages & Crab Cakes. Pianeta makes most pasta in house with dishes like Veal Meatballs with Pesto & Linguini Pasta, Chicken & Prosciutto Cannelloni with Porcini Cream Sauce & Ravioli della Casa. 10096 Donner Pass Road, along Commercial Row, downtown Truckee | Open for dinner nightly | Full bar and wine list | Happy Hour at the Bar Mon.-Fri. from 5 to 6:30 p.m. | (530) 587-4694
TAHOE DONNER
The Lodge Restaurant & Pub | Fine & Casual
Happy Hour is now offered daily at The Lodge Restaurant & Pub from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Located in the heart of Tahoe Donner, The Lodge chef and staff pride themselves in using only the finest ingredients for their bistro-style menu, including organic meats, locally grown produce, and no trans fats. Dine fireside next to floor-to-ceiling windows offering spectacular views of the High Sierra. Or, meet up with friends to catch the game in the cozy Pub; perfect for Happy Hour drinks and small plates. 12850 Northwoods Blvd. | Dinner served from 5 to 9 p.m. daily. | AMEX, MasterCard, Visa | (530) 587-9455
To be included in the Dining Guide, call (530) 546-5995, ext. 100. 33
LOCAL FLAVOR
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Restaurant Directory Alpine Meadows CREST CAFÉ
Gourmet Deli
150 Alpine Meadows Rd.
(530) 581-3037
RIVER RANCH
Variety Grill
Hwy 89 at Alpine Mdws Rd. (530) 583-4264
B L D L D RA
Carnelian Bay
VILLAGE PUB
American
848 Tanger St.
(775) 832-7212
L D
WILD ALASKAN SEAFOOD REST.
Seafood
930 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 832-6777
L D
WILDFLOWER CAFÉ
Variety
869 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-8072
B BR L RA
ANNIE’S DELI
Deli
8369 N. Lake Blvd. (Inside Chevron) (530) 546-3265
L D
APIZZA BELLA
Pizza
8160 N. Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-2301
L D B L
Kings Beach
C.B.’S PIZZA & GRILL
Pizza/Grill
5075 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4738
L D
BROCKWAY BAKERY
Bakery/Ice Cream 8710 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-2431
GAR WOODS
California Grill
5000 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3366
BR L D RA
CALIENTE
Southwestern
8791 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-1000
L D RA
OLD POST OFFICE
Homestyle Café
5245 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3205
B L
CHAR PIT
Burgers/Ice Cream 8732 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3171
L D
WATERMAN’S LANDING
Café/Eclectic
5166 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3590
B L
CHINA EXPRESS
Chinese
8501 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-7788
L D
THE GRID
Bar & Grill
8545 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-0300
L D
HIRO SUSHI
Sushi/Japanese
8159 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4476
D
Crystal Bay BILTY’S BREW & Q
BBQ Smokehouse The Tahoe Biltmore
(775) 833-6748
D
JASON’S BEACHSIDE GRILLE
Variety Grill
8338 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3315
L D
BISTRO ELISE
Italian Bistro
Crystal Bay Club
(775) 833-6333
B L D
JAVA HUT
Café
8268 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 556-0602
B L
CAFÉ BILTMORE
24-Hour Café
The Tahoe Biltmore
(775) 831-0660
B L D
KINGS CAFE
Cafe/Ice Cream
8421 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3663
B L
LAKEVIEW DINING ROOM (closed for renovations) California Cuisine Cal Neva Resort
(775) 832-4000
B BR L D
LANZA’S
Italian
7739 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-2434
D
MELLOW FELLOW
Gastro Pub
9980 N. Lake Blvd.
(530) 553-1333
L D
LA MEXICANA
Mexican
8515 Brook Ave.
(530) 546-0310
B L D
SOULE DOMAIN
Variety
9983 Cove St.
(530) 546-7529
D RA
LAS PANCHITAS
Mexican
8345 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4539
L D
STEAK & LOBSTER HOUSE
Steak & Seafood
Crystal Bay Club
(775) 833-6333
D RA
LOG CABIN CAFÉ
American/Ice Cream 8692 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-7109
B L
SPINDLESHANKS
American
400 Brassie Ave.
(530) 546-2191
B L D RA
8290 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-2218
L D
Donner Summit
STEAMERS BEACHSIDE BAR & OVEN Pizza
THE DINING ROOM (winter)
French California
The Village Lodge, Sugar Bowl (530) 426-9000 x754 B L D RA
SWEET TAHOE TIME
Ice Cream
8636 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-9998
TAHOE CENTRAL MARKET
Deli
8487 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-8344
THE CHOCOLATE BAR
American
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-1800
L D RA
EARTHLY DELIGHTS
Gourmet Deli
The Village at Northstar
(530) 587-7793
B L D
EURO SWEETS
Frozen Yogurt/Candy The Village at Northstar
(530) 581-0600
B L D
ICE LAKES LODGE (winter)
Upscale Dining
1111 Soda Springs Rd.
RAINBOW TAVERN
American
50080 Hampshire Rocks Rd. (530) 562-5001
(530) 426-7661
BR L D
SUMMIT RESTAURANT & BAR
American
22002 Donner Pass Rd.
B L D
(530) 426-3904
L D
Incline Village
B L D
Northstar
ALIBI ALE WORKS
Brewery
204 East Enterprise
(775) 298-7001
ART’S COFFEEHOUSE
Café/Bakery
770 Mays Blvd.
(775) 832-5655
B L
MANZANITA
Calif/French
Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe
(530) 562-3000
L D RA
AUSTIN’S
American
120 Country Club Drive
(775) 832-7778
L D RA
MARTIS VALLEY GRILL (summer)
American
At Northstar Golf Course
(530) 562-3460
B BR L
AZZARA’S
Italian
930 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-0346
D
MIKUNI
Japanese
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-2188
L D
BAR BAR BAR U-BAKE PIZZA
Pizza
760 Mays Blvd.
(775) 831-2700
L D
PETRA
Wine Bar/Tapas
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-0600
BR L D
BIG WATER GRILLE
Variety
341 Ski Way
(775) 833-0606
D RA
RUBICON PIZZA
Pizza
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-2199
L D
BITE
Tapas
907 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-1000
BR L D RA
TACOS JALISCO
Mexican
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-1125
L D
BLUE WATER CAFE & DELI
Cafe
120 Country Club Dr., #28
(775) 298-2199
B L
TAVERN 6330’ (winter)
American Grill
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-3200
L D
At Championship Golf Course (775) 832-1178
L
TC’S PUB (winter)
American
The Village at Northstar
(530) 562-2250
L D
Chinese
882 Tahoe Blvd.
L D
CHINA WOK
Chinese
120 Country Club Dr.
(775) 833-3663
L D
CHUCK WAGON OF TAHOE
American Comfort 930 Tahoe Blvd., #904
(775) 750-4875
B L D
ALEXANDER’S (winter)
Eclectic
High Camp, Squaw Valley
(530) 452-7278
L
CROSBY’S GRILL PUB CASINO
American
868 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 833-1030
L D
AULD DUBLINER
Irish Fare
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6041
L D
CUTTHROAT’S SALOON
Sports Bar
High Camp, Squaw Valley
THE GRILLE AT THE CHATEAU (summer) Grill CHINA VILLAGE
(775) 831-9090
Olympic Valley
Inside the Hyatt Regency
(775) 832-1234
L D
BAR NORTH SPORTS (winter)
Casual
(530) 452-7278
L
ERNIE’S INTERNATIONAL PASTRIES Hungarian/European 120 Country Club Dr., #65
(775) 831-3933
B L D
BAR ONE (winter)
Seasonally inspired Bar One, Olympic House
(530) 452-8750
D
FREDRICK’S
Fusion
907 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 832-3007
D RA
CASCADES
Casual
Resort at Squaw Creek
(530) 583-6300 x6621 B
GUS’ OPEN PIT BARBECUE
Barbecue
930 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-4487
L D
CORNICE CANTINA
Mexican
The Village at Squaw
(530) 452-4362
L D
HACIENDA DE LA SIERRA
Mexican
931 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-8300
L D RA
DAVE’S DELI (winter)
Deli
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 581-1085
B L
I.V. COFFEE LAB
Cafe
907 Tahoe Blvd., Suite 20A
(775) 298-2402
DORINDA’S
Handmade Chocolates The Village at Squaw
INDU’S ASIAN NOODLES & CURRIES Chinese/Vietnamese 868 Tahoe Blvd., Ste. 1849
(775) 831-8317
L D
EURO SWEETS
Frozen Yogurt/Candy The Village at Squaw
(530) 581-0600
L D
JACK RABBIT MOON (summer)
American/Wine Bar 893 Tahoe Blvd., Suite 600
(775) 833-3900
BR D
FIRESIDE PIZZA
Gourmet Pizza
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6150
L D
KOI SUSHI
Sushi
874 Tahoe Blvd., Unit 26
(775) 298-2091
L D
GRAHAM’S
European
1650 Squaw Valley Rd.
(530) 581-0454
D RA
LA FONDUE
Fondue
120 Country Club Dr.
(775) 831-6104
D RA
THE K’TCHEN (winter)
Pizza/Deli
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 452-8750
L
LE BISTRO
French
120 Country Club Dr.
(775) 831-0800
D RA
KT BASE BAR
American
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 452-8750
L D
LONE EAGLE GRILLE
Fine American
Inside the Hyatt Regency
(775) 832-1234
BR L D RA
LE CHAMOIS (winter)
Bar & Grill
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 583-4505
L D
LUPITAS
Mexican
754 Mays Blvd.
(775) 833-4141
L D
MAMASAKE
Sushi/Japanese
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-0110
L D
MOFO’S PIZZA AND PASTA
Pizza/Pasta
884 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-4999
L D
MOUNTAIN NECTAR
Deli
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6161
L D
MOUNTAIN HIGH SANDWICH CO.
Gourmet Deli
120 Country Club Drive, #28 (775) 298-2636
L D
MOUNTAIN PIZZERIA (winter)
Casual Italian
Resort at Squaw Creek
(530) 583-6300
L
NINE 41 EATERY & BAR
Grill
941 W. Lake Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 832-0941
L D
OLYMPIC PLAZA BAR (winter)
Grill
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 452-8750
L
PADDLE WHEEL SALOON
Grill
120 Country Club Dr.
(775) 831-2022
L D
PLUMPJACK CAFE
Mediterranean
Near the Cable Car
(530) 583-1576
L D RA
PANADERIA DEL LAGO BAKERY
Bakery
901 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 232-8775
POOLSIDE CAFÉ (spring & summer)
American
High Camp, Squaw Valley
(530) 583-6985
L
ROOKIES
Sports Bar
930 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-9008
L D
ROCKER@SQUAW
American
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6080
L D
SAND HARBOR BAR & GRILL
Grill
At Sand Harbor State Park
L D
SANDY’S PUB
Sports Bar
Resort at Squaw Creek
(530) 583-6300 x6617 B BR L D
SIERRA CAFÉ
Casual American
Inside the Hyatt Regency
(775) 832-1234
B BR L D
SILVEY’S CAFÉ
Café/Deli
High Camp, Squaw Valley
(530) 452-7278
SUNSHINE DELI
Deli
919 Incline Way
(775) 832-2253
B L D
SIX PEAKS GRILLE
Fine American
Resort at Squaw Creek
(530) 583-6300 x6621 BR L D RA
B L
SUSIE SCOOPS ICE CREAM
Ice Cream
869 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-8181
SOUPA
Gourmet Deli
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6190
T’S MESQUITE ROTISSERIE
Mexican
901 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-2832
L D
SWEET POTATOES
Deli
Resort at Squaw Creek
(530) 583-6300 x6621 B L D
TAHOE PROVISIONS
Gourmet Deli
Inside the Hyatt Regency
(775) 832-1234
B L D
THE TERRACE (winter)
American
High Camp, Squaw Valley
(530) 452-7278
L D
THAI RECIPE
Thai
901 Tahoe Blvd.
(775) 831-4777
L D
22 BISTRO
New American
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6170
L D
TO GO FORK
Deli/Juice Bar
930 Tahoe Blvd. #701B
(775) 833-3463
D
UNCORKED
Wine Bar
The Village at Squaw
(530) 584-6090
TOMAATO’S PIZZA & PASTA
Pizza/Pasta
120 Country Club Drive, #61 (775) 833-2200
D
WILDFLOUR BAKING CO.
Bakery/Deli
Olympic House, Squaw Valley (530) 583-1963
TUNNEL CREEK CAFÉ
Café
1115 Tunnel Creek Rd.
B L
34
(775) 298-2502
L D
B L D
September 3-9, 2015
Tahoe City
THE LODGE AT TAHOE DONNER
American
12850 Northwoods Blvd.
LOCAL FLAVOR (530) 587-9455
BR D RA
BACCHI’S INN
Italian
2905 Lake Forest Rd.
(530) 583-3324
D RA
MAKI ALI
Sushi/Asian Fusion 11357 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-1144
L D
BLUE AGAVE
Mexican
425 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-8113
L D
MARG’S WORLD TACO BISTRO
World Flavors
10164 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-6274
BR L D
BRIDGETENDER
American
65 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-3342
B L D
MARTHA’S KITCHEN
Mexican/Italian
15628 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-1425
L D
THE BURRITO WINDOW
Mexican
255 N. Lake Blvd. Suite 18
(530) 583-3057
L
MARTY’S CAFE
Cafe
10115 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 550-8208
B L
CEDAR HOUSE PUB (winter)
Grill
Granlibakken Resort
(530) 583-4242
D
MELLOW FELLOW
Gastropub
10192 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 214-8927
L D
CHRISTY HILL
California
115 Grove St.
(530) 583-8551
D RA
THE MILL JUICE SHOP
Juice Bar
10825 Pioneer Trail, #100
(775) 745-1807
B L
COFFEE CONNEXION
Coffee/Café
950 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-6023
B L
MOODY’S BISTRO BAR & BEATS
California
10007 Bridge St.
(530) 587-8688
L D RA
DAM CAFÉ
Café/Ice Cream
55 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 581-0278
B L
MORGAN’S LOBSTER SHACK
Seafood
10087 West River St.
(530) 582-5000
L D
DOCKSIDE 700
Bar & Grill
At Tahoe City Marina Mall
(530) 581-0303
L D
PIANETA
Italian
10096 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-4694
D RA L D
DOMA SUSHI MET GALBI
Korean/Japanese 877 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-2880
L D
PIZZA BAR
Pizza
10164 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 550-8056
FAT CAT CAFÉ
American
599 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-3355
B L D
PIZZA ON THE HILL
Pizza
11509 Northwoods Blvd.
(530) 582-9669
D
FREE HEEL CAFÉ
Café
at Tahoe Cross Country
(530) 583-5475
L
PIZZA SHACK
Pizza
11782 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-3456
L D
FRONT STREET STATION PIZZA
Pizza
205 River Rd.
(530) 583-3770
L D
THE POUR HOUSE
Wine Bar
10075 Jibboom St.
(530) 550-9664
GEAR & GRIND CAFÉ
Café/Ice Cream
690 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-0000
L D
PJ’S BAR & GRILL (summer)
N. California
At Gray’s Crossing Golf Course (530) 550-5801
B L D
At Tahoe City Golf Course
(530) 583-1516
B L D
RED TRUCK
Café
At the Truckee-Tahoe Airport (530) 386-0257
B L
GRILL AT TAHOE CITY GOLF COURSE Grill (summer) HACIENDA DEL LAGO
Mexican
In Boatworks Mall
(530) 581-3700
D FB
SANCHOS MEXICAN
Mexican
11357 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-4847
B L D
JAKE’S ON THE LAKE
Grill
780 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-0188
BR L D RA
SMOKEY’S KITCHEN
BBQ
12036 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-4535
L D
MOE’S ORIGINAL BAR B QUE
BBQ
120 Grove St.
(530) 583-4227
B L D
SPICE
Indian
11421 Deerfield Dr.
(530) 550-9664
L D
PFEIFER HOUSE
Continental
760 River Rd.
(530) 583-3102
B L
POPPY’S FROZEN YOGURT & WAFFLES Yogurt/Waffles
521 North Lake Tahoe Blvd. (530) 581-0885
D RA
SQUEEZE IN
American
10060 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-9184
B L
SWEET’S HANDMADE CANDIES
Dessert/Ice Cream 10118 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-6556
RIVER GRILL
California Bistro
55 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 581-2644
D RA
TACO STATION
Mexican
11782 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-8226
L D
ROSIE’S CAFÉ
Variety
571 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-8504
B L D
TACOS JALISCO
Mexican
11400 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-1131
L D
STONEYRIDGE-UNCOMMON KITCHEN Ethnic Food
505 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-3663
L D
THAI DELICACY
Thai
11253 Brockway Rd.
(530) 550-1269
L D
SUGAR PINE CAKERY
Bakery
2923 Lake Forest Rd.
(530) 363-3076
B L
THAI NAKORN
Thai
10770 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 550-0503
L D
SYD’S BAGELRY
American Café
550 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-2666
B L D
TOGO’s
Deli
11991 Brockway Rd. (Hwy. 267) (530) 550-7220
L D
475 N. Lake Blvd.
(530) 581-4677
L D
TREAT BOX BAKERY
Bakery/Ice Cream 11400 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-6554
TROKAY CAFE
New American
10046 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-1040
B L D
L D
TRUCKEE BAGEL COMPANY
Bagels
11448 Deerfield Dr.
(530) 582-1852
B L D L D
B L D
TAHOE MOUNTAIN BREWING CO.
Pub Fare
TAHOE CITY CHOCOLATES
Ice Cream/Dessert In Boatworks Mall
(530) 583-6652
TAHOE CITY SUSHI
Sushi
(530) 581-2004
TAHOE HOUSE
Bakery/Deli
625 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-1377
B L
TRUCKEE PIZZA BAR
Pizza
10164 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 550-8056
THAI KITCHEN
Thai
255 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-1784
L D
TRUCKEE RIVER WINERY
Winery
10151 Brockway Rd.
(530) 587-4626
L D
UNCORKED
Wine Bar
475 N. Lake Blvd., Suite 151 (530) 581-1106
TRUCKEE TAVERN & GRILL
New American
10118 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-3766
D
WOLFDALE’S
California
640 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-5700
D RA
TUFF BEANS
Café
1005 Palisades Dr.
(530) 587-5191
B
ZA’S
American
395 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-9292
L D
UNCORKED TRUCKEE
Wine Bar
10118 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 550-9800
ZIA LINA RISTORANTE
Italian
521 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 581-0100
L D
VILLAGE PIZZERIA
Pizza
11329 Deerfield Dr.
(530) 587-7171
L D
690 North Lake Blvd.
THE WAGON TRAIN COFFEE SHOP American
Tahoe Vista BOATHOUSE AT CAPTAIN JON’S
Casual Fine Dining 7220 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4819
B L D
10080 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-7574
B L
WILD CHERRIES
Coffee House
11429 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-5602
B L D
WONG’S GARDEN
Chinese
11430 Deerfield Dr.
(530) 587-1831
L D
ZANO’S
Italian
11401 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-7411
L D
L D
CABLE CAR ICE CREAM (summer)
Ice Cream Parlor
Across from Sandy Beach
JIFFY’S PIZZA
Pizza
6883 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-3244
L D
OLD RANGE STEAKHOUSE
Vintage Steakhouse 7081 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4800
D RA
THE RUSTIC LOUNGE (at Cedar Glen Lodge) Casual Fine Dining 6589 North Lake Blvd.
(530) 546-4281
D
CHAMBER’S LANDING (summer)
Calif. Café
6400 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-9190
(530) 546-7744
B L D
FIRESIGN CAFÉ
American
1785 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-0871
B L
MOUNTAIN VIEW BBQ
BBQ
Homewood Mtn. Resort
(530) 525-2992
L D B L
SANCHO’S
Mexican
7019 North Lake Blvd.
Truckee
West Shore
OBEXER’S GENERAL STORE
Deli/Café
5300 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-6297
1882 BAR & GRILL
Barbecue
10009 East River St.
(530) 550-9222
L D
PDQ DELI
Deli
6890 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-7411
L D
BAR OF AMERICA
Mediterranean
10042 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-2626
BR L D RA
SPOON
New American
1785 West Lake Blvd. #5
(530) 581-5400
L D
BEST PIES PIZZERIA
N.Y. Italian
10068 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-1111
L D
SUNNYSIDE
Variety Grill
1850 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-7200
L D RA
BILL’S ROTISSERRE
Rotisserre
11355 Deerfield Dr.
(530) 582-5652
L D
SWISS LAKEWOOD
European
5055 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-5211
D RA
BLUE COYOTE BAR & GRILL
Comfort food
10015 Palisades Dr.
(530) 587-7777
L D
WA SHE SHU GRILLE (summer)
Grill
Meeks Bay Resort
(530) 525-6946
L
BLUESTONE JEWELRY & WINE
Wine Bar
10046 Donner Pass Rd., #3
(530) 582-0429
WEST SHORE
New American
5160 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-5200
L D
BUCKHORN ESPRESSO & GRILL
American
11253 Brockway Rd.
(530) 582-9800
L D
WEST SHORE MARKET
Deli
1780 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 583-7626
L D
BUD’S ICE CREAM & FOUNTAIN
Ice Cream
10108 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 214-0599
L D
WEST SIDE PIZZA
Pizza
7000 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-4771
D
BURGER ME!
Gourmet Burger
10418 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-8852
L D
WHERE WE MET
Café/Gelato
7000 West Lake Blvd.
(530) 525-1731
CAKE TAHOE
Bakery/Ice Cream 9932 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-1701
CASA BAEZA
Mexican
(530) 587-2161
L D
Food Trucks
COFFEE AND
American
10106 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-3123
B L
ELECTRIC BLUE ELEPHANT
Vegetarian/Vegan Facebook
COFFEEBAR
Café
10120 Jiboom St.
(530) 587-2000
B L
HOT AND HEALTHY FOODS
Crepes
hotandhealthyfoods.com
B L D
COFFEEBAR THE BAKERY
Bakery/Eatery
12047 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-1554
B L
MTN ROOTS
Eclectic
Alpine Meadows base area
B L
The Village at Squaw
10004 Bridge St.
(530) 414-4836
L
COTTONWOOD
American
10142 Rue Hilltop
(530) 587-5711
D RA
MTN ROOTS
Eclectic
COYOTE MOON BAR & GRILLE
American
10685 Northwoods Blvd.
(530) 587-0886
B L D
PHO REAL
Modern Vietnamese Facebook
THE CRESCENT CAFÉ
Gourmet Deli
Inside New Moon Natural Foods (530) 587-7426
L
RED TRUCK
Eclectic
(530) 587-1394
L D
DARK HORSE COFFEE ROASTERS
Café
10009 West River St., Suite B (530) 550-9239
SOUPER WAGON
Soup & Sanwiches Facebook
(775) 240-9998
L D
SUPER SWIRL
Ice Cream
(775) 313-8689
DIEGO’S
Mexican
10130 West River St.
(530) 550-9900
L D
DONNER LAKE KITCHEN
American
13720 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 582-4040
B L
DRUNKEN MONKEY
Asian/Sushi
11253 Brockway Rd. #105
(530) 582-9755
L D RA
EL TORO BRAVO
Mexican
10186 Donner Pass Rd.
(530) 587-3557
L D
FIFTYFIFTY BREWING CO.
Upscale Pub
11197 Brockway Rd.
(530) 587-BEER
B L D
FULL BELLY DELI
Deli
10825 Pioneer Trail Rd.
(530) 550-9516
B L
JAX AT THE TRACKS
Comfort Food
10144 West River St.
(530) 550-7450
B L D
B L (518) 637-4996
KEY B : Breakfast BR : Brunch L : Lunch D : Dinner RA : Reservations Advised 35
LOCAL FLAVOR
TheTahoeWeekly.com
Tastes
by Priya Hutner
Mexican with a view at Hacienda Kings Beach
House Margarita served with the Grilled Chicken Caesar Salad with crushed walnuts and tortilla strips and the Street Style Tacos.
Lunch Specials Daily Early Bird Special 4-6pm
Dinner Special 4-10pm
$3.50 Margaritas $3.50 Dos Equis $2.50 Draft Bud
25% Off Mexican Combo Dinners
We Now Offer A Full Bar!
Open 11:30am-10:00pm (530) 546-4539 8345 North Lake Blvd. - Across from the State Beach
view Lake ining D o Pati
Boc ci Cou Ball rts
Relocated to Old Brockway Golf Course Breakfast 8:00am, Lunch 11:30am and Dinner 5:00pm
Call for Live Music, Special Events & Dinner Reservations
Happy Hour
4-6pm - Everyday All night on Tuesdays !!!
Martini Mondays ! $6 all night
www.spindleshankstahoe.com
400 Brassie Ave, Suite B - Kings Beach - (530) 546.2191
Antipasti, Homemade Pastas & Rustic Regional Entrées Dinner served nightly in an ingenious Italian atmosphere HAPPY HOUR
Monday-Friday 5-6:30 p.m. In Downtown Truckee - (530) 587-4694
pianetarestauranttruckee.com
Try our Fish and Chips or take a Fresh Catch home to cook yourself! Serving fresh fish, salads, chowder & more.
Everyday 11 a.m.– 8:00 p.m. 10089 West River Street · Truckee
(530) 582-5000 · morganslobstershack.com
36
H serves up delicious Mexican fare acienda Del Lago in Tahoe City
with a fantastic view. General Manager Rhonda Gramanz and Chef Chaco became partners at the Hacienda this past July. They served up myself and colleague and friend Alyssa Ganong, art director of Tahoe Weekly, a festive feast. Chips and salsa were set on the table. Gramanz delivered the newest house special and one of the hottest selling items on the menu – the Shrimp Ceviche, beautifully presented in an over-sized wineglass. I love Ceviche and this was delicious, tangy, fresh and perfect on a warm day.
“I love Ceviche and this was delicious, tangy, fresh and perfect on a warm day.” And, what’s a Mexican meal without Margaritas? We had the house specialties The Organic and the Pinarita; both were fabulous. Ganong leaned toward the 1800 Coconut Tequila Margarita, prepared with lime and pineapple juice. This reminded me of summer on the beach. I sipped on the delicious Organic, made with Casa Noble Organic Agave Reposado mixed with agave nectar and lime juice. The Guacamole was tasty, as well. We needed to slow down the chip nibbling
to save room for our meal. The food kept coming. Ganong loved The Grilled Chicken Caesar Salad served with crushed walnuts, jack cheese and tortilla strips and tossed with Caesar dressing. The Street Style Tacos were a hit. We enjoyed one Steak Taco and one of Hacienda’s Grilled Fish Tacos with mango salsa and cilantro; one can never have too much cilantro. The menu offers a wide selection of Mexican fare and considers all types of dietary palates including traditional rice and beans, burritos, quesadilla, enchiladas, chimichangas and all combination thereof. Hacienda Del Lago is a great place to host party, gathering or event. And, one can also catch some late-night entertainment. Rambo Productions hosts a number of fun events throughout the year where you can eat and dance till the wee hours. Hacienda Del Lago is located at 760 N Lake Blvd. in the Boatworks Mall, Tahoe City, for dinner and Happy Hour served in the bar everyday. For more information, call (530) 581-3700 or visit hacdellago.com.
LOCAL FLAVOR
September 3-9, 2015
By the Glass
by Lou Phillips
Great summer sippers
friends, which leads to sharing, which in turn requires affordable juice.
“Red wine on warm days? You bet. We’re talking
• Because we want to spend our sunny days at play, and not searching for wines, our selections have to be widely available.
Beaujolais … the zingy raspberry-strawberry elixir
• And it’s gotta be delicious, because what good are crisp, light and value-priced vinos if they’re not yummy?
that comes from quality Gamay grapes.”
Wine crew member Vanessa Von Twistern enjoying a summer favorite.
A Good Times Wine Crew firing up recent trip to the beach had the
the barbecue, throwing Frisbees and ruminating over just what makes a great summer sipper aka a GSS. So bursting with liquid muse, we decided to specify what qualifies as a GSS and pass on some of our favorites. By the way, a good rule of thumb is to always get the youngest vintage available of these selections. Summer wine rules • A GSS must be refreshingly light on its feet, not just because it’s hot out, but also because whether visitor or local, Lake of the Sky people are likely to be active in summer and the vino should add energy to the festivities. • It must take to a chill, therefore only wines that are better at cooler temperatures, whether white or red, make the grade. • GSSs must also be available for less than a sawbuck, aka $10, because we know that when you are doing the Carpe Diem thing you often make new
The summer list Depending on climate, grape clone and winemaking technique, Sauvignon Blanc runs the gamut from dry and crisp, to round and rich. We’re clearly on the hunt for the former and a sure bet is the lipsmacker from Mason Winery called Pomelo. Pomelos are large grapefruits originally from China, and this wine lives up to the name delivering a beam of energetic grapefruit and sweet grass flavors. Also on the wine list at value-beach is Pinot Gris from Oregon. King Estate is one of the original Oregon pioneers and their Pinot Gris brings spicy pear and peach loveliness balanced on a smooth body. The kind of wine that invites you back for another sip. From Argentina’s Alamos Winery comes a bright Torrontes with notes of green apple, white flower and zingy lemon. Try a squeeze of fresh lime in this for a true wine cooler. Red wine on warm days? You bet. We’re talking Beaujolais, but not the bubble gum, Nouveau-type, rather the zingy raspberrystrawberry elixir that comes from quality Gamay grapes. How Louis Jadot makes this jewel in France and gets it across the pond at this price is one of wine’s great mysteries. For maximum summer pleasure, chill this almost like a white wine. These wines are available everywhere, so grab a bundle of bottles, chill ’em up, make some summer wine memories, and don’t be surprised if you make some new BFFs. Lou Phillips is a Level 3 Advanced Sommelier and his consulting business WineProwest.com assists in the selling, buying and managing wine collections. He may be reached at (775) 544-3435 or lou@ wineprowest.com. Visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for more wine columns.
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Demi glace questions answered
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H recently, I was asked about articles
Kiwanis Club North Lake Tahoe Wild West Communications
and what was coming out, as well as some recent ones already published. When the demi article came up (visit TheTahoeWeekly.com for the recipe), we started talking about it and one of the guys, who is also a chef, called me out on it. He told me that mine was not really a true demi and I guess in a technical way he’s right, but at the same time in another way, so am I. At any rate, I want to set the record straight as to why I do it the way I do. Technically speaking, demi means half. For the sauce in question, it is reduced by half, so in that manner, I am correct in calling it a demi. A true demi glace, according to cooking rules or whatever you want to call them, is made by combing half brown stock with half Española sauce. The brown stock is the liquid you end up with after placing the roasted bones and veggies in the stock pot, covering with water and reducing to your desired concentration level. I reduce mine by half, but you can stop earlier for a little less intense flavor.
Making an Española sauce
The Española sauce is made by browning more of the carrots, onions and celery in butter, adding flour to create a roux, then adding your stock while whisking hard to avoid lumps. Add some tomato puree, a few peppercorns, and some thyme, parsley and a bay leaf to the sauce and let it slowly reduce by about one-third. You will want to strain this through a fine strainer and a piece of cheese cloth. So what is the main difference between using an Española sauce and doing a straight reduction? Basically, the thickening with roux is left out in my version. All the other ingredients are still there. Yes, there is a little more tomato puree added that may add a little more tomato flavor, but in essence, the difference boils down to thickening half of your demi with roux; and oh yes, another round of cooking and pots and pans to clean.
Handling gluten problems
Also, how many people these days have a gluten problem? By adding flour to your sauce, you effectively end up with a sauce that some of your intended guests may not be able to enjoy. I prefer to thicken
the sauces I use the demi for at the end as needed with cornstarch. This will result in a much darker and clearer sauce than one with roux, which I think also looks better on the plate. In the end, it comes down to personal preference. Yes, in the old days, there were rules of cooking that you were expected to follow. If I had to take a test again, I would probably use an Española sauce, especially if the tester was older and looked French.
“I prefer to thicken the sauces I use the demi for at the end as needed with cornstarch. This will result in a much darker and clearer sauce than one with roux.” Escoffier might roll over in his grave with the omission of roux, but as I so often say: “There are no rules in cooking.” To me, if you are going to spend that much time making something, you might as well make it so the most people possible can enjoy it.
Modifying the demi glace
Here are a few other reasons I do certain things when making a demi. I try not to use the celery leaves because if you try one, they can be bitter and that will get imparted in your end flavor. I will use some onion peel because it adds some nice, dark brown coloring, but I will only use a little because it, too, will be bitter. Lastly, the reason I want to rub the tomato paste on the bones and not just add it into the whole mix is because the acid of the tomato will help break down the marrow, giving you that nice gelatinous end result of your demi. Yes, Tony was wicked smart when it came to anything food. Enjoy. Smitty is a personal chef specializing in dinner parties, cooking classes and special events. Trained under Master Chef Anton Flory at Top Notch Resort in Stowe, Vt., Smitty is known for his creative use of fresh ingredients. To read archived copies of Stir it Up, visit chefsmitty.com or TheTahoeWeekly.com. Contact him at smitty@chefsmitty.com or (530) 412-3598.
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