Covid-19 Continues to Stifle Events

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Last March, Covid-19 forced California to cancel most social gatherings and events through spring 2020. Summer 2020 followed suit and now fall 2020 looks to suffer the same fate as NorthBay organizations and venues continue to cancel or postpone upcoming gatherings.

This season, harvest and culinary events canceling their 2020 gatherings include the annual Heirloom Expo of food providers and enthusiasts and the Sonoma County Harvest Fair’s Grand-Tasting and World Championship Grape Stomp Competition.

Other fall arts events in the North Bay forgoing 2020 include Open Studios Napa Valley’s self-guided art tours, usually planned for two weekends in September, and the Sonoma County Art Trails, normally scheduled for two weekends in October. 

Still other major events canceled this fall include the Sound Summit music festival that celebrates Mount Tamalpais State Park each September at the historic Mountain Theater, and the Napa Valley Film Festival that was slated to happen in November.

“We appreciate the tremendous support and well wishes from our community during these uncertain times,” Cinema Napa Valley Chairman Patrick Davila says in a statement. “Rest assured we will use this time to strengthen our commitment to our mission and develop new avenues to fulfill our vision.”

One of the North Bay’s largest gatherings each fall, the Sausalito Art Festival will pause production due to the uncertainty of the pandemic and other challenges associated with event production. On the festival’s website, the Foundation says it is planning “to meet a shifting arts and entertainment landscape.”

Another North Bay fall staple, the Mill Valley Fall Arts Festival, also recently announced its 2020 fest would be canceled due to Covid-19.

“For over sixty years our little festival has been a wonderful celebration of Mill Valley’s unique culture and community,” executive director Steve Bajor says in a statement. “We are hopeful that the festival will return next year for us all to enjoy.”

In place of live events, many producers are pivoting to online versions of their gatherings, including the folks behind Taste of Sonoma, who are launching an “at Home” event series beginning with a “Sparkling Sonoma” webinar on Sept. 4.

In lieu of Art Trails, the Sebastopol Center for the Arts is gathering local artists online for the SebArts Virtual Open Studios, featuring workshops, studio tours and more throughout September. Also going virtual is the annual Bolinas Museum Benefit Art Auction, which opens online bidding on Aug. 22 and culminates in a virtual live auction on Sept. 12.

As of press time, there are also a few fall events holding out hope for live gatherings, including the Mill Valley Film Festival, which plans to mark its 43rd year Oct. 8–18, and Sonoma’s Huichica Music Festival, scheduled to happen at Gun Bun winery on Oct. 16 and 17.

Eki Shola Finds Power in Her Voice

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Born in London to Jamaican parents, raised in New York City and now living in the North Bay, pianist and songwriter Eki Shola brings a multicultural wealth to her original compositions.

Working primarily on her keyboard, and backed by digital effects, the multiple Norbay Award–winner for electronica is adept at crafting jazzy, ambient tones with ethereal melodies that often carry dreamlike messages of hope and a sense of gratitude for life.

In 2016, Shola first displayed that relaxing blend of jazz and ambient piano on her debut album, Final Beginning. A year later, the Tubbs Fire in Santa Rosa destroyed her home. Shola turned to music after that tragedy, opening the floodgates of her creativity with a torrent of songwriting that led to a trilogy of albums.

That trilogy debuted in the spring of 2019 with the album Possible, followed by the release of Drift in late 2019. Now, Shola concludes the musical journey with the release of Essential.

“I didn’t intentionally set out to create a trilogy, but I was just writing and writing for expression and healing,” Shola says.

Looking back through the compositions that she wrote in the immediate aftermath of the Tubbs Fire, Shola dedicates each album to a particular aspect of her healing process.

Possible represents Shola’s raw, in-the-moment emotions in the months after the fires.

“In the beginning, you’re in survival mode,” Shola says. “You just have to get things done.”

After months of survival, Shola says the fatigue set in. The trilogy’s second album, Drift, is a meditative and musical search for comfort.

“I was craving what I had known, I remember missing home, and I mean home from when I was a child in London,” Shola says. “This intense nostalgia felt safe and warm and soothing. When I look at the songs I wrote in that time period, they’re more like a cocoon.”

Once Shola was done cocooning, a new restlessness emerged, and Essential is an album packed with songs about searching for meaning, taking risks, embracing newness and finding power in her voice.

“Most of my songs have been instrumental,” she says. “But I’ve been encouraged to use my voice more.”

Shola was in the process of mixing and mastering Essential at the beginning of this year when the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the economy.

“The extra time afforded me the time to reflect on our current events, the coronavirus, health care advocacy and Black Lives Matter,” she says. “The album was extended to incorporate some of those events. The message was broadened.”

Shola is donating a portion of proceeds from sales of the album to the Freedom Community Clinic, which offers holistic healing practices for underserved Bay Area people of color.

Shola is also embracing the online platforms many musicians and artists are flocking to until social gatherings can begin again.

“I know live performances are on hold for a bit, but that pushes you to think a little more out of the box,” Shola says. “I’m excited to be doing different things; I’m looking at doing animation with my music and some online shows. I would have never thought I’d be doing that, but this has opened my eyes to other options.”

Ekishola.com

Under Attack

I am an ordinary citizen. I don’t have a high security clearance and get classified information from a large array of expensive government agencies. 

Regardless, it is easy for me to see that my way of life is under attack. By that I mean, the government of The United States of America is under attack. No, not an armed military attack. A concerted effort from not only within the government, but from foreign individuals. 

The man who calls himself President has controllers like the Koch and Mercer families, (and many more); the rich, government people in countries all over the Earth (like Russia and China) and elected officials in our government (like Moscow Mitch, Ted Cruz, and many more) destroying the fabric that holds our country together. Voter suppression, attacks on the Social Security system, destruction of the oldest, most highly supported government agency, The Postal Service, isolating the USA from the rest of the world, leaving WHO (World Health Organization), going against the foundation of the creation of the USA, immigration, promoting White Nationalism, denying health care … it goes on and on. 

I feel like I am being attacked! Leaves a huge hole in my heart as I think of what the future holds for us, the ordinary citizen.

Don Landis

Sebastopol

Harmful

In addition to harming humans, glyphosate is extremely harmful to many pollinators (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug. 5), most notably the honeybee. And we all know what happens when they are gone.

Stevie Jean Lazo

Healdsburg

Chefs Compete to Benefit Napa Food Programs

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Each year Oxbow Public Market’s “Fork It Over” benefit and St. Helena’s “Hands Across The Valley” fundraiser raise money for the Napa Valley Food Bank and other local safety-net food programs such as Meals on Wheels.

This summer these two events canceled due to Covid-19, and the Napa Valley Food Bank and Meals on Wheels stand to lose approximately $250,000 in funding at a time when the number of families using these programs has nearly tripled due to the pandemic.

In place of these canceled live events, the organizers behind both Fork It Over and Hands Across the Valley are working together to create a new virtual event to help close the funding gap.

On Sunday, Aug. 23, Fork It Over and Hands Across the Valley co-host the first-ever virtual Napa Valley Champions Cook-Off, pitting two acclaimed Napa Valley chefs against each other in a friendly challenge. Both of the participating chefs have won national televised cooking contests, and now North Bay viewers are invited to watch the live-streaming event, which will determine the ultimate champion.

Chef Elizabeth Binder and Chef Chris Kollar—both slated to appear in the showdown—each have experience cooking in front of crowds.

Chef Binder, owner of Hand-Crafted Catering in Napa, helped her team “Beat Bobby Flay” on the popular cooking competition show’s seventh episode of Season 23, which aired on Jan. 26, 2020.

Chef Kollar, recently named Yountville’s 2020 Business Leader of the Year, is best known as the owner of Kollar Chocolates. Chef Kollar was named a “Chopped Champion,” winning a sweet and salty challenge on an episode of Food Network’s “Chopped” that also aired in January of this year.

The upcoming Napa Valley Champions Cook-Off will be held at the Culinary Institute of America at Copia.

Radio personality Liam Mayclem, known as the Foodie Chap on KCBS Radio, will host the streaming competition. Chef Ken Frank (La Toque in Napa), Chef Anita Cartagena (Protéa in Yountville) and Chef Tanya Holland (Brown Sugar Kitchen in Oakland) will be on hand to judge the event.

The free Napa Valley Champions Cook-Off fundraiser will stream via Facebook Live, and viewers can donate money throughout the approximately hour-long program to support The Napa Valley Food Bank and Meals on Wheels. Donations received during the event will be eligible to win $500 in OxBucks, redeemable at any Oxbow Public Market merchant.

The Napa Valley Champions Cook-Off streams online Sunday, Aug. 23, at 2pm. Free. Facebook.com/OxbowPublicMarket.

The Dream of the ’90s Comes Alive at Bear Republic Lakeside Brewpub

The year is 1995. Space shuttle Atlantis docks with the Russian Mir space station; Steve Fossett becomes the first person to cross the Pacific Ocean solo in a hot air balloon; millions watch the O.J. Simpson trial; the San Francisco 49ers win their fifth Super Bowl; and third and fourth generation Sonoma County locals, the Norgrove family, establish the Bear Republic Brewing Company.

Twenty-five years later, Bear Republic Brewing Company has become one of the most awarded and beloved independent brewers in the North Bay and across the U.S., best known for their hand-crafted, time-tested beers like the Racer 5 IPA.

In addition to their main brewing facility in Cloverdale, Bear Republic showcases their brews at their Lakeside Brewpub, located at Roberts Lake in Rohnert Park. Visitors to the brewpub enjoy the company’s wide selection of beers, specialty cocktails, pizza, burgers and more.

This summer, in the wake of Covid-19, the Bear Republic Lakeside Brewpub reopened its massive outdoor seating area on the lake for safe and socially-distant dining, and the brewpub now also offers curbside pickup and beer to-go, as well as a home-delivery option.

Now, in commemoration of Bear Republic’s 25-year anniversary, the company is turning the clock back for an anniversary event featuring a ’90s throwback menu on Friday, Aug. 21.

Old-school fans of the brewery will happily welcome back menu items from yesteryear including the Rocket Burger, featuring fire-roasted mild green chili and cilantro aioli, and The Press grilled chicken sandwich with brie, bacon and caramelized onions.

The special menu also features throwback prices on menu items such as the BRBC Wings and garlic fries, as well as Racer 5 IPAs. The ’90s menu is available on Aug. 21 until supplies last. The Lakeside Brewpub is open for outdoor dining, socially-distant indoor dining and to-go service daily from 11:30am to 9pm. Visitors are asked to wear a mask or facial covering and respect social distancing recommendations to help curb the spread of Covid-19.

For those who can’t make it to the 25th anniversary throwback event on Aug. 21, Bear Republic Brewing Company offers an easy way to find BRBC beers closer to home with its online “Bear Tracker,” which lets users search by Zip Code to find bottles and cans at a store near them.

In addition to classic beers like the Racer 5 and the Hop Shovel IPAs, Bear Republic is still creating new, tasty brews, such as the “Hoppy Pilsner” and “Bear Necessities.”

The latest addition to the company’s Brewmaster Series, the “Hoppy Pilsner,” blends clean malt flavor, classic Pilsner bitterness and hoppy aromas, and is described as a “decidedly West Coast take on the classic lager beer.”

The simple and straightforward “Bear Necessities” is an American-style ale brewed with cascade hops and pale barley. Bear Republic says the release “pays homage to the people who show up daily to keep us going.”

Bear Republic Brewing Company’s Lakeside Brewpub is located at 5000 Roberts Lake Rd., Rohnert Park. Open daily, 11:30am to 9pm. 707.585.2722. BearRepublic.com.

Sebastopol Center for the Arts Launches Online Fall Season

Founded in 1988 in a one-room office, the Sebastopol Center for the Arts has grown into a multi-disciplinary organization supporting all manner of arts in Sonoma County. Now located on South High Street, the center boasts a spacious venue that exhibits visual arts and various creative events such as the springtime Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival and the autumnal Sonoma County Art Trails self-guided art studio tours.

In 2020, the Sebastopol Center for the Arts saw most of its available programming erased by the Covid-19 pandemic that has kept social gatherings and events on hold. Determined to continue enriching the North Bay through arts, the SCA is transitioning to several new online and socially-distant endeavors for the fall season.

First up, SCA is offering the community a chance to engage with local artists and creatives in a series of fall classes that launch Aug. 24. The program includes lessons for kids, adults and families, with visual arts classes such as watercolor and pastels; dance classes covering salsa and the Cha-cha; and performance arts classes encompassing singing, ukulele, storytelling and more.

These classes are accessible to beginners or intermediate artists or musicians, and the roster of instructors features community members including “Mr. Music” Jim Corbett, theater and dance artist Starr Hergenrather, local storyteller Georgia Churchill, Berkeley Playhouse founder and artistic director Elizabeth McKoy, Emmy-nominated writer and National Public Radio storyteller Doug Cordell, and others.

Most classes take place over Zoom, though some classes, such as the Introduction to Hula Hooping or Ballroom Dancing Class with Katherine DuVal, will be held outdoors at SCA, following advised safety protocols to allow for outdoor social distancing. Some online classes and gatherings only ask for $10-$15 suggested donations. Other six-week sessions range from $60 to $240. Classes are limited, so early registration is recommended.

In September, the online offerings continue as the Sebastopol Center for the Arts produces the SebArts Virtual Open Studios, which takes the place of SCA’s now-canceled open studios programs Art at the Source and Sonoma County Art Trails.

The SebArts Virtual Open Studios launched a new website in mid-July, featuring more than 140 artist profiles accompanied by visual content. Throughout September, visitors will be able to interact with the artists in a slew of virtual events and live-streaming studio tours. A full schedule of upcoming events will be posted soon.

On its website, SCA writes, “This program was designed for maximum flexibility; artists can adapt to evolving circumstances and still provide a rich experience for both visitors and the online public. During the month of September, the site will also feature an online gallery with works for sale by all of the artists. Participating artists will be available virtually, with the potential for by-appointment or drop-in studio visits in person if public health guidance allows. Safety first, beauty next—we all need art to uplift and support us while we shelter through uncertainty. Support your local artists and bring art into your home!”

In October, the Sebastopol Center for the Arts will present its latest virtual art exhibit, “Who Are You?”, which invites artists to explore identity. Juried by Sebastopol artist Barbara Stout, the exhibit will digitally display works that tackle ethnicity, gender, political or religious affiliation and other cultural touchstones that are increasingly changing in the modern era. “Who Are You?” opens online Oct. 10 and will remain online through November.

Sebarts.org / Sebartsvirtual.org

Documentary Filmmakers Make Their Pitch in Virtual Competition

The California Film Institute brings compelling true-life films to the North Bay each spring in the popular Doclands Documentary Film Festival; though this year’s festival was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

One of the most highly anticipated elements of the annual DocLands festival is the fundraising DocPitch; a forum to support filmmakers with documentaries in production through financial rewards based voting by the public and industry professionals.

This fall, the California Film Institute works to incorporate the DocLands festival in their annual Mill Valley Film Festival, still scheduled to take place in October. Before that happens, CFI hosts DocPitch online this month, beginning with a live stream pitch meeting featuring several filmmakers on Thursday, Aug 13, at 7pm.

For DocPitch, eight filmmaking teams with feature documentary projects currently in early-to-late stages of completion will pitch their ideas, offering details in a pre-recorded video and showing a trailer of the work-in-progress.

After watching the eight documentary pitches, the public is invited to place their vote to help decide which project will receive the $25,000 Audience Choice Award. The jury of industry professionals, including Academy and Emmy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Lee Mock and Grammy Award-winning musician and documentary film producer Speech Thomas, will award filmmaking grants totaling $100,000.

Each year, the DocPitch selection committee in charge of choosing the eight participating films looks for projects that showcase diversity of subject or theme as well as storyteller. They also seek out stories that are surprising or awe inspiring in their narrative as well as cinematic in their approach.

This year’s DocPitch films include 500 Days in the Wild, a feature documentary by Dianne Whelan about her solo journey on the world’s longest trail; American ESPionage, which traces the true story of the United States’ top-secret psychic espionage program as told through the story of Major Paul Smith; Black & Gold, which tells the previously untold stories of African-American gymnasts who must battle racism in the pursuit of Olympic gold, and My Name Is Andrea, covering the life of feminist outlaw and maverick thinker Andrea Dworkin.

Other in–the-work documentaries competing for DocPitch awards are focusing their lens on varied topics of interest such as the darker side of Silicon Valley, the work to disrupt America’s cycle of police violence and a Chilean community fighting to survive as a mining operation drains their water supply.

All DocPitch awards will be announced during a virtual conversation with the filmmakers on Friday, August 21, at 7pm. Participation in these events is free, but registration is required.

The 43rd annual Mill Valley Film Festival is scheduled to take place October 8 through 18. The festival, which holds a reputation for launching new films and creating awards season buzz, is keeping tight-lipped about it’s 2020 schedule for now, though CFI has suspended all public programs light of the circumstances related to Covid-19. The institute will resume regular screenings at its Smith Rafael Film Center when the current directives issued by state and county officials are lifted.

Cafilm.org

Open Mic: PG&E erects unsightly monster

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By Mary Naples

Once again, PG&E is up to its dirty tricks. Without specific prior notice or a public review process, PG&E erected a gargantuan power pole with banks of unsightly transformers and a high voltage electric switch in a densely packed residential street across from a public park in Sausalito. We have been told by PG&E officials that these same power poles will be appearing in residential neighborhoods all over Marin, as a means of combating wildfires by shutting off power with specificity. Who’s next?

Because this neighborhood and our city officials were taken by surprise—PG&E had simply informed us they were doing “routine maintenance”—this pole is obstructing views for many in this middle-class neighborhood occupied by tiny homes with big views. As a result of PG&E’s negligence, many homes in the area now have unsightly views of power transformers where pristine views of the city and the bay once were.

In fact, with this power pole planted in front of it, a recently listed house has had to reduce its sale price substantially as its once pristine view is now obstructed. But aside from obstructed views and impacted home prices, there is a concern about the inherent dangers and possible health hazards from the EMFs this contraption emits so close to homes and directly across from a public park where children play. Lastly, the area of town where this pole was installed is known for its heavy winds—many have already witnessed the transformers swaying in winds that are not considered heavy for this neighborhood.

In order to safeguard our views, Sausalito is known for its tight permit process, yet we have been told by city officials that there is “very little” they can do to help residents combat PG&E’s reckless placement of this monster in our midst. It is indicative of an era of corporate dominance that PG&E has more authority over the quality of our lives than our elected officials do.

Mary Naples lives in Sausalito.

Letters to the Editor: News Talk

People need to continue to speak out against the toxins in our food (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug 5). The only thing I don’t agree with in this article is that people can’t afford to buy organic. I have eaten almost 95 percent organic for the past 4 or 5 years. I can buy an entire box of tomatoes at the organic market near me for 5 dollars. I spend about 50 dollars a week there.

I think people buy too much junk. Our country needs to ban all glyphosate and toxic products. In Europe and Russia they are already banned. Russia is the first country to go completely organic. What’s wrong with our government? It seems to me they care more about money than people’s health.

Patricia Dougherty

Via Pacificsun.com

Thank you for this wonderful article (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug 5). In terms of the history of grapes and wine, glyphosate is a newcomer. We have made wine for centuries without it and I look forward to a time when all grape growers recognize that they don’t need to use it.

Barbara Sattler

Via bohemian.com

Yay for Nikki Berrocal (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug 5). She’s doing great work. We need all the help we can get to help make Sonoma County and Cannabis Growers create a better relationship. It will be a ‘win-win’ for all.

Nancy Birnbaum

Via bohemian.com

“Organic” wineries are among the worst point-source water polluters in American agriculture (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug 5). Their use of copper sulfate—an approved organic pesticide—is the reason. As to “organic” food production—it is more of a contributor to climate problems than modern farming practices. It also results in less food per unit area. Just what a starving World needs.

Ben Thomas

Via Pacificsun.com

‘Grav & Go!’ Pop-Up Replaces Canceled Gravenstein Apple Fair

Sebastopol’s popular Gravenstein Apple Fair has celebrated the locally grown Gravenstein apple for more than 40 years with a weekend gathering every August that always features entertainment, education and lots to eat and drink.

Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic forced the fair to cancel its in-person event for 2020. Agricultural organization Sonoma County Farm Trails, host of the fundraising fair, officially announced the cancellation in June, writing on the fair’s website, “Though we can hardly imagine August in Sebastopol without the Apple Fair, we are fully on board with the County’s decision to cancel large gatherings. We are so grateful for the health care workers and first responders on the front lines and for all of the essential businesses (farmers/producers, nurseries, grocery store workers, postage and parcel services, etc.) who continue to sustain and support our lives during these unprecedented times.”

Even though the Gravenstein Apple Fair is canceled, Gravenstein apples are still falling off of trees in West Sonoma County this month, and Sonoma County Farm Trails is setting up its first-ever “Grav & Go! Gravenstein Pop-Up” event in Sebastopol this weekend so that Gravenstein apple lovers can at least get the fresh Gravenstein apples and related products they love.

The pop-up will take place at the Sebastopol Community Cultural Center on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 15 and 16, the same weekend the fair was originally scheduled. Anyone interested in purchasing apples or apple products must preorder online by Thursday, Aug. 13, at Noon.

Sonoma County Farm Trails farmers and producers make all the available products from local Gravenstein Apples. The apple and apple-related items that can be purchased include fresh organic Gravenstein apples, applesauce, apple juice, apple butter and hard cider (note: cider must be ordered on the Tilted Shed Ciderworks’ site due to alcohol sales rules). Other available apple treats include apple pies, hand pies, cider apple doughnuts and much more.

Upon checkout, shoppers will be guided to select which day and time they would like to pick up their order. Show up at your reserved time for contactless curbside pickup of your Gravenstein apples and related items, and enjoy.

For the health and safety of customers and Farm Trails staff and volunteers, facial coverings, social distancing and thorough hand-and-surface sanitization will be implemented at the “Grav & Go! Gravenstein Pop-Up.” Additionally, Farm Trails asks customers to abide by all County and State public health requirements.

Established in 1973, Sonoma County Farm Trails is a nonprofit promoter of local agriculture, and the Gravenstein Apple Fair is the organization’s largest annual fundraiser. Without the benefit of the fair this year, Farm Trails is in need of financial help to continue its efforts to preserve Gravenstein apples and keep farms a vital part of Sonoma County’s culture.

“We’re doing everything we can to make sure that Farm Trails continues to make good on its mission to preserve farms forever in Sonoma County,” says Farm Trails Board President Vince Trotter, in a statement. “With our main fundraiser off the table, we’re certainly facing some financial challenges this year, but our farmers are fighting through this, and so will we. We’re cutting our expenses to the bone and looking at some creative ways to bring in revenue and make the 2021 fair better than ever.”

“Grav & Go! Gravenstein Pop-Up” takes place on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 15 and 16, at Sebastopol Community Center, 390 Morris St., Sebastopol. Online orders must be placed by Thursday, Aug. 13, at noon. FarmTrails.org.

Covid-19 Continues to Stifle Events

Last March, Covid-19 forced California to cancel most social gatherings and events through spring 2020. Summer 2020 followed suit and now fall 2020 looks to suffer the same fate as NorthBay organizations and venues continue to cancel or postpone upcoming gatherings. This season, harvest and culinary events canceling their 2020 gatherings include the annual Heirloom Expo of food providers and...

Eki Shola Finds Power in Her Voice

Born in London to Jamaican parents, raised in New York City and now living in the North Bay, pianist and songwriter Eki Shola brings a multicultural wealth to her original compositions. Working primarily on her keyboard, and backed by digital effects, the multiple Norbay Award–winner for electronica is adept at crafting jazzy, ambient tones with ethereal melodies that often carry...

Under Attack

I am an ordinary citizen. I don’t have a high security clearance and get classified information from a large array of expensive government agencies.  Regardless, it is easy for me to see that my way of life is under attack. By that I mean, the government of The United States of America is under attack. No, not an armed military...

Chefs Compete to Benefit Napa Food Programs

Each year Oxbow Public Market’s “Fork It Over” benefit and St. Helena’s “Hands Across The Valley” fundraiser raise money for the Napa Valley Food Bank and other local safety-net food programs such as Meals on Wheels. This summer these two events canceled due to Covid-19, and the Napa Valley Food Bank and Meals on Wheels stand to lose approximately $250,000...

The Dream of the ’90s Comes Alive at Bear Republic Lakeside Brewpub

North Bay brewing company celebrates silver anniversary with throwback menu on Friday, Aug. 21

Sebastopol Center for the Arts Launches Online Fall Season

Zoom art classes, virtual studio tours and online exhibits keep local arts visible

Documentary Filmmakers Make Their Pitch in Virtual Competition

California Film Institute hosts DocPitch online Aug 13–21 and awards $125,000 in funds.

Open Mic: PG&E erects unsightly monster

By Mary Naples Once again, PG&E is up to its dirty tricks. Without specific prior notice or a public review process, PG&E erected a gargantuan power pole with banks of unsightly transformers and a high voltage electric switch in a densely packed residential street across from a public park in Sausalito. We have...

Letters to the Editor: News Talk

People need to continue to speak out against the toxins in our food (“Roundup Row,” News, Aug 5). The only thing I don’t agree with in this article is that people can’t afford to buy organic. I have eaten almost 95 percent organic for the past 4 or 5 years. I can buy an entire box...

‘Grav & Go!’ Pop-Up Replaces Canceled Gravenstein Apple Fair

Online orders for curbside pickup in Sebastopol must be placed by Thursday, Aug 13, at Noon.
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