World Class Pianist Ilya Yakushev in Mill Valley

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Mill Valley

Truly Classic

The 2023-24 Chamber Music Concert Series will run Oct. 8 through May 19. Hosted by Chamber Music Marin, the new season celebrates 50 years of presenting intimate concerts with world-renowned musicians in classical music. The lineup of national and international touring musicians includes Bay Area native Jon Nakamatsu. First up is pianist Ilya Yakushev, a former world champion who has played with the San Francisco Symphony. $48 general admission or $190 for a season subscription. 18 and under free. To purchase tickets, visit chambermusicmarin.org. 5:30pm, Sunday, Oct. 8. Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley.

Santa Rosa

Local Stories

“Sonoma County Stories” opened at the Museum of Sonoma County recently with the intention of “collecting and telling stories for years to come.” The exhibition presents stories from various perspectives through the recordings of the Press Democrat’s Gaye LeBaron, a technique that supplements oral history with other sources. The permanent exhibition intends to engage visitors with Sonoma County history through stories from diverse cultures of the county. Members Only Private Reception and Q&A with deputy director and history curator Eric Stanley, 5-7pm on Oct. 6. Exhibition, 11am-5pm every Wednesday through Sunday. Museum of Sonoma County, 425 7th St., Santa Rosa.

Petaluma

Fandango Tango

Feed well and feel good at the Friends of the Petaluma River’s fundraiser dinner. “Come enjoy the beautiful sunset, a farm-to-table dinner, live music and fun games at Steamer Landing Park and help raise funds for our work to protect and preserve the Petaluma River,” say organizers. Local beer and wine, flora, local music and a gem of a spot, all in support of environmental education and care of the watershed. Sunset Fandango at the Barn, 4-7pm Sunday, Oct. 8. Steamer Landing Park, ​​6 Copeland St., Petaluma. Dinner and drinks for $100.

 
Larkspur / Zoom

Popular Online

For the happily or otherwise homebound movie buff, one great option is the Lark Theater’s film discussion series featuring film historian and Marin resident Harry Chotiner. The series has been called “an enriching and fulfilling movie club.” Members watch the movies at home, then meet weekly on Zoom to discuss. Chotiner is an assistant professor of film at New York University who has worked with Zoetrope Studios, 20th Century Fox and Interscope Communications. A teacher by creed, his mastery comes through in his discussions. No wonder he received the NYU School of Professional Studies Teaching Excellence Award. Six Zoom classes. 5-6:30pm each Tuesday through Nov. 7. $120. larktheater.net/movie-category/special-events/moviesharry.

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: “Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?” I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not believe in the ‘mystical woo-woo’ I have spent my adult life studying and teaching!” But here’s my polite answer: “I love and revere the venerable spiritual philosophies that some demean as ‘mystical woo-woo.’ I see it as my job to translate those subtle ideas into well-grounded, practical suggestions that my readers can use to enhance their lives.” Everything I just said is the prelude for your assignment, Aries: Work with extra focus to actuate your high ideals and deep values in the ordinary events of your daily life. As the American idioms advise: Walk your talk, and practice what you preach.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I’m happy to see the expanding use of service animals. Initially, there were guide dogs to assist humans with imperfect vision. Later, there came mobility animals for those who need aid in moving around and hearing animals for those who can’t detect ringing doorbells. In recent years, emotional support animals have provided comfort for people who benefit from mental health assistance. I foresee a future in which all of us feel free and eager to call on the nurturing of companion animals. You may already have such friends, Taurus. If so, I urge you to express extra appreciation for them in the coming weeks. Ripen your relationship. And if not, now is an excellent time to explore the boost you can get from loving animals.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini author Chuck Klosterman jokes, “I eat sugared cereal almost exclusively. This is because I’m the opposite of a ‘no-nonsense’ guy. I’m an ‘all-nonsense’ guy.” The coming weeks will be a constructive and liberating time for you to experiment with being an all-nonsense person, dear Gemini. How? Start by temporarily suspending any deep attachment you have to being a serious, hyper-rational adult doing staid, weighty adult things. Be mischievously committed to playing a lot and having maximum fun. Dancing sex! Ice cream uproars! Renegade fantasies! Laughter orgies! Joke romps! Giddy brainstorms and euphoric heartstorms!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian comedian Gilda Radner said, “I base most of my fashion taste on what doesn’t itch.” Let’s use that as a prime metaphor for you in the coming weeks. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you will be wise to opt for what feels good over what merely looks good. You will make the right choices if you are committed to loving yourself more than trying to figure out how to get others to love you. Celebrate highly functional beauty, dear Cancerian. Exult in the clear intuitions that arise as you circumvent self-consciousness and revel in festive self-love.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The amazingly creative Leo singer-songwriter Tori Amos gives this testimony: “All creators go through a period where they’re dry and don’t know how to get back to the creative source. Where is that waterfall? At a certain point, you say, ‘I’ll take a rivulet.’” Her testimony is true for all of us in our quest to find what we want and need. Of course, we would prefer to have permanent, unwavering access to the waterfall. But that’s not realistic. Besides, sometimes the rivulet is sufficient. And if we follow the rivulet, it may eventually lead to the waterfall.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Do you perform experiments on yourself? I do on myself. I formulate hypotheses about what might be healthy for me, then carry out tests to gather evidence about whether they are. A recent one was: Do I feel my best if I eat five small meals per day or three bigger ones? Another: Is my sleep most rejuvenating if I go to bed at 10pm and wake up at 7am or if I sleep from midnight to 9am? I recommend you engage in such experiments in the coming weeks. Your body has many clues and revelations it wants to offer you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take a few deep, slow breaths. Let your mind be a blue sky where a few high clouds float. Hum your favorite melody. Relax as if you have all the time in the world to be whoever you want to be. Fantasize that you have slipped into a phase of your cycle when you are free to act as calm and unhurried as you like. Imagine you have access to resources in your secret core that will make you stable and solid and secure. Now read this Mary Oliver poem aloud: “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): An Oklahoma woman named Mary Clamswer used a wheelchair from age 19 to 42 because multiple sclerosis made it hard to use her legs. Then a miracle happened. During a thunderstorm, she was hit by lightning. The blast not only didn’t kill her; it cured the multiple sclerosis. Over the subsequent months, she recovered her ability to walk. Now I’m not saying I hope you will be hit by a literal bolt of healing lightning, Scorpio, nor do I predict any such thing. But I suspect a comparable event or situation that may initially seem unsettling could ultimately bring you blessings.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What are your favorite mind-altering substances? Coffee, tea, chocolate, sugar or tobacco? Alcohol, pot, cocaine or opioids? Psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD or MDMA? Others? All the above? Whatever they are, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to re-evaluate your relationship with them. Consider whether they are sometimes more hurtful than helpful, or vice versa; whether the original reasons that led you to them are still true; and how your connection with them affects your close relationships. Ask other questions, too! PS: I don’t know what the answers are. My goal is simply to inspire you to take an inventory.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In his book, Meditations for Miserable People Who Want to Stay That Way, Dan Goodman says, “It’s not that I have nothing to give, but rather that no one wants what I have.” If you have ever been tempted to entertain dour fantasies like that, I predict you will be purged of them in the coming weeks and months. Maybe more than ever before, your influence will be sought by others. Your viewpoints will be asked for. Your gifts will be desired, and your input will be invited. I trust you won’t feel overwhelmed!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): William James (1842–1910) was a paragon of reason and logic. So influential were his books about philosophy and psychology that he is regarded as a leading thinker of the 19th and 20th centuries. On the other hand, he was eager to explore the possibilities of supernatural phenomena like telepathy. He even consulted a trance medium named Leonora Piper. James said, “If you wish to upset the law that all crows are black, it is enough if you prove that one crow is white. My white crow is Mrs. Piper.” I bring this to your attention, Aquarius, because I suspect you will soon discover a white crow of your own. As a result, long-standing beliefs may come into question; a certainty could become ambiguous; an incontrovertible truth may be shaken. This is a good thing!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If we hope to cure our wounds, we must cultivate a focused desire to be healed. A second essential is to be ingenious in gathering the resources we need to get healed. Here’s the third requirement: We must be bold and brave enough to scramble up out of our sense of defeat as we claim our right to be vigorous and whole again. I wish all these powers for you in the coming weeks.

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: “Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?” I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not believe in the ‘mystical woo-woo’ I have spent my adult life studying and teaching!” But here’s my polite answer: “I love and revere the venerable spiritual philosophies that some demean as ‘mystical woo-woo.’ I see it as my job to translate those subtle ideas into well-grounded, practical suggestions that my readers can use to enhance their lives.” Everything I just said is the prelude for your assignment, Aries: Work with extra focus to actuate your high ideals and deep values in the ordinary events of your daily life. As the American idioms advise: Walk your talk, and practice what you preach.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I’m happy to see the expanding use of service animals. Initially, there were guide dogs to assist humans with imperfect vision. Later, there came mobility animals for those who need aid in moving around and hearing animals for those who can’t detect ringing doorbells. In recent years, emotional support animals have provided comfort for people who benefit from mental health assistance. I foresee a future in which all of us feel free and eager to call on the nurturing of companion animals. You may already have such friends, Taurus. If so, I urge you to express extra appreciation for them in the coming weeks. Ripen your relationship. And if not, now is an excellent time to explore the boost you can get from loving animals.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini author Chuck Klosterman jokes, “I eat sugared cereal almost exclusively. This is because I’m the opposite of a ‘no-nonsense’ guy. I’m an ‘all-nonsense’ guy.” The coming weeks will be a constructive and liberating time for you to experiment with being an all-nonsense person, dear Gemini. How? Start by temporarily suspending any deep attachment you have to being a serious, hyper-rational adult doing staid, weighty adult things. Be mischievously committed to playing a lot and having maximum fun. Dancing sex! Ice cream uproars! Renegade fantasies! Laughter orgies! Joke romps! Giddy brainstorms and euphoric heartstorms!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian comedian Gilda Radner said, “I base most of my fashion taste on what doesn’t itch.” Let’s use that as a prime metaphor for you in the coming weeks. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you will be wise to opt for what feels good over what merely looks good. You will make the right choices if you are committed to loving yourself more than trying to figure out how to get others to love you. Celebrate highly functional beauty, dear Cancerian. Exult in the clear intuitions that arise as you circumvent self-consciousness and revel in festive self-love.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The amazingly creative Leo singer-songwriter Tori Amos gives this testimony: “All creators go through a period where they’re dry and don’t know how to get back to the creative source. Where is that waterfall? At a certain point, you say, ‘I’ll take a rivulet.’” Her testimony is true for all of us in our quest to find what we want and need. Of course, we would prefer to have permanent, unwavering access to the waterfall. But that’s not realistic. Besides, sometimes the rivulet is sufficient. And if we follow the rivulet, it may eventually lead to the waterfall.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Do you perform experiments on yourself? I do on myself. I formulate hypotheses about what might be healthy for me, then carry out tests to gather evidence about whether they are. A recent one was: Do I feel my best if I eat five small meals per day or three bigger ones? Another: Is my sleep most rejuvenating if I go to bed at 10pm and wake up at 7am or if I sleep from midnight to 9am? I recommend you engage in such experiments in the coming weeks. Your body has many clues and revelations it wants to offer you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take a few deep, slow breaths. Let your mind be a blue sky where a few high clouds float. Hum your favorite melody. Relax as if you have all the time in the world to be whoever you want to be. Fantasize that you have slipped into a phase of your cycle when you are free to act as calm and unhurried as you like. Imagine you have access to resources in your secret core that will make you stable and solid and secure. Now read this Mary Oliver poem aloud: “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): An Oklahoma woman named Mary Clamswer used a wheelchair from age 19 to 42 because multiple sclerosis made it hard to use her legs. Then a miracle happened. During a thunderstorm, she was hit by lightning. The blast not only didn’t kill her; it cured the multiple sclerosis. Over the subsequent months, she recovered her ability to walk. Now I’m not saying I hope you will be hit by a literal bolt of healing lightning, Scorpio, nor do I predict any such thing. But I suspect a comparable event or situation that may initially seem unsettling could ultimately bring you blessings.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What are your favorite mind-altering substances? Coffee, tea, chocolate, sugar or tobacco? Alcohol, pot, cocaine or opioids? Psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD or MDMA? Others? All the above? Whatever they are, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to re-evaluate your relationship with them. Consider whether they are sometimes more hurtful than helpful, or vice versa; whether the original reasons that led you to them are still true; and how your connection with them affects your close relationships. Ask other questions, too! PS: I don’t know what the answers are. My goal is simply to inspire you to take an inventory.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In his book, Meditations for Miserable People Who Want to Stay That Way, Dan Goodman says, “It’s not that I have nothing to give, but rather that no one wants what I have.” If you have ever been tempted to entertain dour fantasies like that, I predict you will be purged of them in the coming weeks and months. Maybe more than ever before, your influence will be sought by others. Your viewpoints will be asked for. Your gifts will be desired, and your input will be invited. I trust you won’t feel overwhelmed!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): William James (1842–1910) was a paragon of reason and logic. So influential were his books about philosophy and psychology that he is regarded as a leading thinker of the 19th and 20th centuries. On the other hand, he was eager to explore the possibilities of supernatural phenomena like telepathy. He even consulted a trance medium named Leonora Piper. James said, “If you wish to upset the law that all crows are black, it is enough if you prove that one crow is white. My white crow is Mrs. Piper.” I bring this to your attention, Aquarius, because I suspect you will soon discover a white crow of your own. As a result, long-standing beliefs may come into question; a certainty could become ambiguous; an incontrovertible truth may be shaken. This is a good thing!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If we hope to cure our wounds, we must cultivate a focused desire to be healed. A second essential is to be ingenious in gathering the resources we need to get healed. Here’s the third requirement: We must be bold and brave enough to scramble up out of our sense of defeat as we claim our right to be vigorous and whole again. I wish all these powers for you in the coming weeks.

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

0

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: “Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?” I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not believe in the ‘mystical woo-woo’ I have spent my adult life studying and teaching!” But here’s my polite answer: “I love and revere the venerable spiritual philosophies that some demean as ‘mystical woo-woo.’ I see it as my job to translate those subtle ideas into well-grounded, practical suggestions that my readers can use to enhance their lives.” Everything I just said is the prelude for your assignment, Aries: Work with extra focus to actuate your high ideals and deep values in the ordinary events of your daily life. As the American idioms advise: Walk your talk, and practice what you preach.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I’m happy to see the expanding use of service animals. Initially, there were guide dogs to assist humans with imperfect vision. Later, there came mobility animals for those who need aid in moving around and hearing animals for those who can’t detect ringing doorbells. In recent years, emotional support animals have provided comfort for people who benefit from mental health assistance. I foresee a future in which all of us feel free and eager to call on the nurturing of companion animals. You may already have such friends, Taurus. If so, I urge you to express extra appreciation for them in the coming weeks. Ripen your relationship. And if not, now is an excellent time to explore the boost you can get from loving animals.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini author Chuck Klosterman jokes, “I eat sugared cereal almost exclusively. This is because I’m the opposite of a ‘no-nonsense’ guy. I’m an ‘all-nonsense’ guy.” The coming weeks will be a constructive and liberating time for you to experiment with being an all-nonsense person, dear Gemini. How? Start by temporarily suspending any deep attachment you have to being a serious, hyper-rational adult doing staid, weighty adult things. Be mischievously committed to playing a lot and having maximum fun. Dancing sex! Ice cream uproars! Renegade fantasies! Laughter orgies! Joke romps! Giddy brainstorms and euphoric heartstorms!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian comedian Gilda Radner said, “I base most of my fashion taste on what doesn’t itch.” Let’s use that as a prime metaphor for you in the coming weeks. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you will be wise to opt for what feels good over what merely looks good. You will make the right choices if you are committed to loving yourself more than trying to figure out how to get others to love you. Celebrate highly functional beauty, dear Cancerian. Exult in the clear intuitions that arise as you circumvent self-consciousness and revel in festive self-love.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The amazingly creative Leo singer-songwriter Tori Amos gives this testimony: “All creators go through a period where they’re dry and don’t know how to get back to the creative source. Where is that waterfall? At a certain point, you say, ‘I’ll take a rivulet.’” Her testimony is true for all of us in our quest to find what we want and need. Of course, we would prefer to have permanent, unwavering access to the waterfall. But that’s not realistic. Besides, sometimes the rivulet is sufficient. And if we follow the rivulet, it may eventually lead to the waterfall.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Do you perform experiments on yourself? I do on myself. I formulate hypotheses about what might be healthy for me, then carry out tests to gather evidence about whether they are. A recent one was: Do I feel my best if I eat five small meals per day or three bigger ones? Another: Is my sleep most rejuvenating if I go to bed at 10pm and wake up at 7am or if I sleep from midnight to 9am? I recommend you engage in such experiments in the coming weeks. Your body has many clues and revelations it wants to offer you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take a few deep, slow breaths. Let your mind be a blue sky where a few high clouds float. Hum your favorite melody. Relax as if you have all the time in the world to be whoever you want to be. Fantasize that you have slipped into a phase of your cycle when you are free to act as calm and unhurried as you like. Imagine you have access to resources in your secret core that will make you stable and solid and secure. Now read this Mary Oliver poem aloud: “You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): An Oklahoma woman named Mary Clamswer used a wheelchair from age 19 to 42 because multiple sclerosis made it hard to use her legs. Then a miracle happened. During a thunderstorm, she was hit by lightning. The blast not only didn’t kill her; it cured the multiple sclerosis. Over the subsequent months, she recovered her ability to walk. Now I’m not saying I hope you will be hit by a literal bolt of healing lightning, Scorpio, nor do I predict any such thing. But I suspect a comparable event or situation that may initially seem unsettling could ultimately bring you blessings.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What are your favorite mind-altering substances? Coffee, tea, chocolate, sugar or tobacco? Alcohol, pot, cocaine or opioids? Psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD or MDMA? Others? All the above? Whatever they are, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to re-evaluate your relationship with them. Consider whether they are sometimes more hurtful than helpful, or vice versa; whether the original reasons that led you to them are still true; and how your connection with them affects your close relationships. Ask other questions, too! PS: I don’t know what the answers are. My goal is simply to inspire you to take an inventory.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In his book, Meditations for Miserable People Who Want to Stay That Way, Dan Goodman says, “It’s not that I have nothing to give, but rather that no one wants what I have.” If you have ever been tempted to entertain dour fantasies like that, I predict you will be purged of them in the coming weeks and months. Maybe more than ever before, your influence will be sought by others. Your viewpoints will be asked for. Your gifts will be desired, and your input will be invited. I trust you won’t feel overwhelmed!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): William James (1842–1910) was a paragon of reason and logic. So influential were his books about philosophy and psychology that he is regarded as a leading thinker of the 19th and 20th centuries. On the other hand, he was eager to explore the possibilities of supernatural phenomena like telepathy. He even consulted a trance medium named Leonora Piper. James said, “If you wish to upset the law that all crows are black, it is enough if you prove that one crow is white. My white crow is Mrs. Piper.” I bring this to your attention, Aquarius, because I suspect you will soon discover a white crow of your own. As a result, long-standing beliefs may come into question; a certainty could become ambiguous; an incontrovertible truth may be shaken. This is a good thing!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If we hope to cure our wounds, we must cultivate a focused desire to be healed. A second essential is to be ingenious in gathering the resources we need to get healed. Here’s the third requirement: We must be bold and brave enough to scramble up out of our sense of defeat as we claim our right to be vigorous and whole again. I wish all these powers for you in the coming weeks.

Water Board pursues record-setting $8.6 million fine against BoDean quarry

A Sonoma County building materials company known to tout its environmentally-friendly endeavors is facing an $8.6 million fine for polluting salmon habitat.

On its website, the BoDean Company boasts about its decision to switch its Mark West Quarry to solar power in 2011, reportedly a first-of-its-kind initiative, as well as its installation of a water recycling system at the same facility five years earlier.

However, a review of public documents brings the company’s more recent track record into question.

In mid-September, the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board recommended a record-breaking fine against BoDean for allegedly allowing over 10.5 million gallons of silt-tainted water to run off its 120-acre Mark West Quarry into crucial salmon habitat during rainstorms in the winter of 2018-19 and then failing to adequately reform its storm water management practices in the intervening five years.

The Water Board has a separate case against BoDean relating to the company’s water control practices at its Santa Rosa asphalt production plant. A spokesperson for the company said it is working on resolving both cases.

Lastly, in October 2021, the company reached a legal settlement with the nonprofit California River Watch after the group’s attorneys alleged Clean Water Act violations at BoDean’s various facilities. BoDean did not admit to wrongdoing as part of the settlement, but did agree to update its management practices at its facilities, cover River Watch’s $57,500 in legal fees and pay $57,500 for the nonprofit Forest Unlimited to plant thousands of redwood seedlings in wildfire burn zones around the county, according to court records reviewed by the Bohemian.

Photo by Will Carruthers
Mark West Quarry has been in operation since 1918 and owned by BoDean Co for over 30 years. Photo by Will Carruthers

Quarry Case

The Water Board’s Mark West Quarry case became public in September 2021 when the Water Board published its initial case online.

At the time, the Water Board was pursuing a $4.5 million fine against BoDean for “multiple violations of the Clean Water Act that threaten the survival of endangered salmon populations in tributaries of the Russian River.”

“From December 2018 through May 2019, the quarry discharged more than 10.5 million gallons of highly turbid storm water causing significant amounts of fine sediment to deposit in Porter Creek,” a Water Board press release stated.

Two years later, on Sept. 14, 2023, the Water Board issued an amended complaint, tacking on 67 days to the original 45 days of alleged code violations and nearly doubling the suggested penalty to $8.6 million.

According to Claudia Villacorta, an assistant executive officer at the North Coast board, the proposed fine against BoDean is the largest ever issued in the North Coast region, which stretches from Santa Rosa to the Oregon border.

In a phone interview last week, BoDean’s co-owner, Dean Soiland, said that he was “disappointed in the complaint, because we were surprised. We thought we had made significant inroads in our settlement agreement that we had agreed on, and then that was withdrawn… But we’re committed to getting it resolved, and I think it’s going to work out.”

Asked about the previous negotiations, Villacorta said that the agency reached a settlement in principle with BoDean in 2022 but began drafting an amended complaint after the quarry once again failed to comply with regulations.

“Bo Dean Co., Inc. is alleged to have continued to violate permit requirements and is also alleged to have violated water quality sampling and reporting requirements of an investigative order issued on May 1, 2019,” Villacorta wrote. The Mark West Quarry is still out of compliance with regulations to this day, according to Villacorta.

Photo by Paul Nelson/North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board
A Water Board photo from January 2019 shows storm water “exceeded the capacity of the [Mark West Quarry’s] collection and settling system.” Photo by Paul Nelson/North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board

With the issuance of the amended complaint, BoDean will have until the end of the calendar year to reach a settlement agreement with the Water Board. Failing that, the complaint, along with the record-setting fine, will be sent to the regional board’s four directors for approval sometime next spring.

In an emailed response to further questions last week, Soiland said the company “worked quickly to bring a state-of-the-art water treatment system online in the winter of 2019/early 2020” following the start of the Water Board’s investigation. The company is in negotiations with the Water Board on the cases involving the Mark West Quarry and Santa Rosa facility, according to Soiland.

“We have always worked with the Water Board and all local, state, and federal regulatory agencies in good faith. We will continue to do so,” Soiland wrote.

Still, it’s hard to square the company’s line with the Water Board’s. The agency’s amended complaint, stretching to nearly 100 pages between three documents, alleges in pain-staking detail BoDean’s persistent inability or unwillingness to bring its water quality management practices at the quarry into compliance with environmental regulations for five years.

While the complaint mentions some of BoDean’s efforts at compliance, Water Board investigators repeatedly witnessed quarry staff failing to manage stormwater adequately as recently as this January.

“Regional Water Board staff have inspected the Facility 21 times, issued 18 inspection memos, one Notice of Violation (NOV), two Investigative Orders, one Administrative Civil Liability Complaint (Complaint), and met with representatives of the Discharger [BoDean] numerous times,” the amended complaint states in part.

The sheer amount of staff time the Water Board and other agencies have put into pursuing the quarry case suggests they don’t intend to back down. According to the amended complaint, Water Board staff have spent “at least 3,280 hours” on the case. Officials from California Fish and Wildlife, the Environmental Protection Agency and Sonoma County have all visited the quarry over the past few years, contributing information to the Water Board’s amended complaint.

Crucial Habitat

The Mark West Quarry, which has been in operation for over 100 years, has been owned and operated by BoDean for nearly 35 years. According to a 2013 county permit, the company is allowed to extract up to 750,000 tons of stone products from the quarry each year through 2033.

The 120-acre site sits alongside Porter Creek, a tributary to Mark West Creek, which in turn runs into the Russian River. In 2014, California Fish and Wildlife listed Mark West Creek as one of five priority stream systems covered under that year’s California Water Action Plan because it serves as important habitat for California Coastal Chinook salmon, and Central California Coast coho salmon and steelhead trout.

Illustration courtesy of Sea Grant California
Illustration courtesy of Sea Grant California

According to Don McEnhill, a longtime environmental advocate and the executive director of the nonprofit Russian Riverkeeper, the Mark West Creek watershed is one of a dwindling number of habitats for those struggling species. While there were once 70-80 North Bay streams that supported coho, Chinook or steelhead, only 18 now serve that role, McEnhill said.

As for the possible impacts of the more than 10.5 million gallons of turbid water BoDean allegedly released into nearby waterways, McEnhill explained, “In a stream like Porter Creek, sediment is a huge problem. A fish swimming in water that’s got a lot of sediment is like us trying to breathe in a dust storm or, you know, like vacuuming up a house… and then taking all that fine dust and putting it in a bag and breathing it. I mean, it would cause some pretty immediate and acute health issues.”

McEnhill continued, “In addition, as that sediment settles out, it just smothers aquatic life. The base of the food web in aquatic systems is the bottom of the stream. And most everything that lives in the stream requires oxygen. So having water that flows through clean, loose gravel is a critical component of keeping all these microscopic crustaceans and things that form the bottom of the food chain alive. When you clog all those spaces between the gravel and the larger particles with fine sediment, it’s kind of like Pompeii. I mean, you’re burying everything. Everything’s going to die.”

McEnhill said that BoDean has historically had a pretty good environmental record, leaving him somewhat mystified about the company’s inability to close out the Water Board’s Mark West Quarry case so far.

“It’s kind of a head scratcher. I mean, they seem like a pretty up and up company who tries to do the right thing, so I’m not sure why they didn’t respond; that doesn’t really add up,” McEnhill said.

“I’ve actually inspected a lot of quarry sites and have been involved in litigation against quarry sites. Certainly from what we’ve seen, these issues can be resolved… If they take notice and they start taking action, they can fix these issues,” McEnhill added. “We’re hopeful that [the amended complaint] gets their attention and they do the right thing and sit down with the Water Board, hammer out a settlement and resolve the issues.”

Jethro Tull live at LBC Tonight!

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Jethro Tull takes the stage at the Luther Burbank Center tonight at 8 pm, Oct. 1! Enjoy a preview from last night’s show at Saratoga’s Mountain Winery on Sept. 29, 2023.

Escape to Bliss Organic Day Spa

When a stress-relieving vacation is called for, but going away is out of the question, the serene solution is a daycation escape to the Bliss Organic Day Spa, a tranquil haven tucked away in an expansive second-floor space in downtown Sebastopol.

After spending the day steaming and soaking in their traditional bath house, relaxing on the gemstone infrared mat, experiencing an ultra-comfortable massage with a skilled bodyworker and glowing after a gentle, hands-on, organic aromatherapy facial, all stress will be melted away. And uniquely, at Bliss Organic Day Spa, one can truly relax, knowing that the products used are ethical and organic, and the staff is fairly employed.

“My staff is the real magic of the spa,” explains spa owner Melena Moore. “I’m always inspired by the talented practitioners and support staff I have the honor of working with.”

Moore is committed to creating an inclusive environment for all at Bliss—especially the LGBTQ+ community. Estheticians are professional, kind and create a sense of comfort and safety that allows for full relaxation.

“It’s a true day spa feel; you come in, and it’s soothing and the energy is really good,” says Marissa Terry, an esthetician at Bliss. “We all care for each other here.”

Indeed, clients and employees alike are blissed out at Bliss. “Creating ethical employment in my beloved hometown of Sebastopol is my life’s purpose,” explains Moore. “I always wanted an open and affirming work environment to let my strengths shine, where equity really matters—so I built a place where all are welcome to work and receive services.”

The facial estheticians use a variety of techniques expertly, including: gua sha; facial, neck, arm and shoulder massage; and an abundance of organic and ethical products from the organic skin care line Éminence. Éminence is also a certified B-corp, ensuring high standards environmentally and socially.

Practitioners at Bliss take their time and apply serums, masks, scrubs and mists until one can’t help but emerge from the steam looking radiant and younger. Facials last anywhere from a quick Refresh 30-minute facial to 60 or 90 minutes of literal bliss.

“If you’re stressed out, it can come through in your skin,” Terry explains. “We target based on skin concerns. I make it a whole mind-body experience.”

An upcoming luxury service that will begin in October at Bliss is the Hydrafacial. “The Hydrafacial gently but thoroughly refreshes and revives all skin types,” says Moore. “It will complement our organic facials, providing intense moisture and nourishment to the skin.”

Bliss also offers a variety of must-try massage styles, including signature Swedish, relaxing, deep tissue and warm stone. The massage tables are custom adjusted to create maximum comfort for the client.

“It’s a nice combination between our clients and our coworkers being special,” says Xander Rivas, a massage therapist at Bliss. “Everyone here is really gifted.”

Bliss Organic Day Spa was originally founded in 2012 by Annie Carouba. In 2017, she sold it to Moore, who formerly worked at Osmosis Spa in Freestone before joining Bliss as marketing director and general manager.

The spa thrived under Moore’s care, and in 2020, they added the former Dhyana Center bath house—located next door—to their offerings. One of the only traditional bath houses in Sonoma County, Dhyana’s cozy feel has been preserved, including the wood architecture, soaking tubs, copper cold-water plunge and saunas.

“The bath house came to me from DeAnna Batdorff, founder of the Dhyana Center, when she decided to close her brick-and-mortar operation during the pandemic,” says Moore. “I consider both of these women who supported me in owning Bliss Organic Day Spa and the bath house friends and mentors.”

They also partner with Soft Medicine Sanctuary, a café and yoga studio located in the same building. Clients can partake in combined monthly memberships for the bath house and yoga classes, creating a sustainable opportunity for blissing out on a regular basis.

Tradition: ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ at 6th Street

I have a soft spot for Fiddler on the Roof. The 1971 film adaptation was the first movie musical I saw, and I made my musical stage debut nine years later in a high school production.

Thoughts of those experiences were dancing in my head when I attended a recent performance of the Broadway classic at Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse. The production runs through Oct. 8.

Change is coming to the village of Anatevka. It’s an unsettling time to be Jewish in czarist Russia, so much so that local dairyman Tevye (Steven Kent Barker) compares it to being a fiddler on the roof—trying to maintain one’s balance in a precarious position.

Tevye and his wife, Golde (Ginger Beavers), have five daughters, three of whom are of marrying age. Local matchmaker Yente (Laura Davies) connects oldest daughter Tzeitel (Ella Park) with widowed butcher Lazar Wolf (Dwayne Stincelli), but she’s committed to childhood friend Motel (Jeff Coté).

As soon as Tevye brings resolution to that situation, daughters Hodel (Megan Bartlett) and Chava (Lydia Louviere) have beaus of their own. Perchik (Daniel Silva) is a dissident, while Fyedka (Michael Hunter) is a gentile.

Traditions come crashing down while Russian soldiers come crashing through Anatevka.

Change came to this show in mid-production and it shows. Director Joe Gellura stepped in after the departure of Jared Sakren, and casting was a challenge (partially because of the number of shows simultaneously in production, but that’s a whole other discussion).

On the one hand, veteran performers like Beavers, Davies and Stincelli give their all. On the other hand, Barker, who has given strong performances on larger stages, seemed tired and small in the role.

On the one hand, there are a lot of younger, talented performers in the show. On the other hand, many were asked to play town elders.

On the one hand, the classic score (“If I Were a Rich Man,” “Sunrise, Sunset”) is well delivered by the eight-piece orchestra led by Les Pfützenreuter, and the cast’s vocal work is good. On the other hand, the choreography lacked the talent and precision necessary to really carry it off.

On the one hand, there’s a nice minimalist set by Jenny Brazell enhanced with good projection design by Ben Roots. On the other hand, sound issues continue to plague the playhouse.

On the one hand, I had high hopes after the superb violin work done by Henry Miller in the opening.

On the other hand…

‘Fiddler on the Roof’ runs through Oct. 8 in the GK Hardt Theatre at 6th Street Playhouse, 52 W. 6th Street, Santa Rosa. Fri.-Sat., 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $28–$48. 707.523.4185. 6thstreeetplayhouse.com.

Erin Rae at Healdsburg’s Little Saint

Erin Rae’s career has moved into a certain zone.

She’s got some relatively new releases to promote and is ready to move from a role as a well-regarded support slot performer and into the world of full-set headliners, after stints on the road with a blend of known and highly-regarded folks, like Father John Misty, Hiss Golden Messenger, Jenny Lewis, Jason Isbell and Iron & Wine.

Prominent in sets this fall and winter will be cuts from her latest album. Released in 2022, Lighten Up was the sophomore follow-up to 2018’s Putting On Airs. It was followed in late August of this year by the concert album Lighten Up & Try: Live & From The Heart (Thirty Tigers).

“It’s definitely the longest stretch of headlining dates in a row,” the amiable Rae said in a mid-August interview. “We’re excited to go out there and see who wants to come join us. We’re definitely going to be highlighting the newest record, as well as the two records prior to that. This’ll be a good chance to incorporate more songs into the set, ones that I really love playing, seeing how this all fits together.”

As noted, Lighten Up’s cuts should have a key role.

The initial Lighten Up captured a nice amount of critical acclaim, much of it focused on the broader songwriting styles that Rae and company brought to this album. An example is these kind words via Pitchfork: “Produced by Father John Misty collaborator Jonathan Wilson and recorded at his Topanga Canyon studio, Lighten Up is unabashedly influenced by the vintage sounds of a more famous Los Angeles county canyon: The delicate, organic style of Laurel Canyon legends like Joni Mitchell and Judee Sill is all over this album, as is the light psychedelia of late ’60s and ’70s pop-country. Bobbie Gentry, Lee Hazlewood and Don Williams are among Rae’s named influences, and their heavily-produced, laid-back aesthetic is clearly echoed in her work.”

Rae’s touring band for this round of dates will feature: Ryan Keith, keys; Sean Thompson, guitar; Ben Parks, drums; and Alec O’Connell, bass, while James Wallace (aka Skyway Man) fills in on keys in late September and early October. Because the members of Rae’s band are so active in other projects, they will often have the opportunity to play two sets a night, essentially working as their own openers. As an example, Sean Thompson’s Weird Ears will be featured along the way.

Having played with a variety of players over the years, this tour’s allowing Rae an opportunity to actually flip a member of the group mid-run, a unique thing. That’ll also allow for a new blend of personalities and talents to emerge.

“It’s just a different energy,” she said. “James will be getting married a couple of weeks into the tour, so we’ll come home and see him off from there. Switching it up makes sense logistically, and it’s just kind of fun to play with different folks. I’m very fortunate.”

Rae’s interested to find out what she’ll see from fans new and old in different pockets of the country, having been on the road for a bit now.

“I feel like most places I’ve gone have given us a good experience,” she said. “I’m excited for the Pacific northwest. Maybe it’s in my sound; the singer-songwriter thing seems to work really well there. It’s been cool, over the years, to learn about the music scenes in different places. Between the five of us, we have buds pretty much everywhere that you can play music, and we’re excited to connect with them.”

Growing up, Rae lived in a small town between Nashville and Memphis before moving to Nashville. She confessed that Memphis has had a pull on her over the years and that “I’ve considered moving there a bunch over the years. I really love that town.”

Rae also loves her base of Nashville, although the town’s changed as dramatically as any American city over the past decade. Indie musicians, she suggested, are still able to find their place in a music community that sits alongside the larger, commercial country market.

“Growing up there, after moving in during middle school, really makes me feel that I lucked out in being planted in such a music town,” Rae said. “I wasn’t aware of the local scene until high school, when I started doing open mics and house shows and connected with the music community of people my age. Nashville’s grown and changed a lot over the years, of course, and the development’s meant that a lot of us are spread out all across town. But there’re still some central gathering spaces where a lot of weekly shows still happen.”

Rae emerged from the indie rock/folk/Americana scene. It’s healthy, as she noted, since “these spots really hold a sense of community for all of us. Amidst all the changes and the big business development, there’s still something in the local, Nashville scene that’s still there to be found. There’s something for everybody.”

And this fall, Rae will represent that community to the United States, coast to coast.

Erin Rae performs at 8pm, Tuesday, Oct. 3, at Little Saint, 25 North St., Healdsburg. Free.

Love of dogs continues for iconic star of Lassie TV show

What does a tiny toothless senior pooch living out his golden years in Santa Rosa have in common with Lassie, the most famous Hollywood dog of all time?

Both canines captured the heart of Jon Provost, the actor who played young Timmy Martin on the Lassie television series from 1957 to 1964. Provost was already a veteran actor when, at the age of seven, he began working side-by-side with Lassie, the majestic rough collie.

Actually, Provost co-starred with three different Lassies during his seven-year tenure on the top-rated CBS program. Like all the dogs who played the role of the female Lassie, Timmy’s three faithful companions were males.

“We only had one Lassie at a time,” Provost, 73, told me during an interview earlier this month. “The last dog [Baby], I worked with for five years, so he and I bonded like crazy. I loved that dog. He loved me. But if I told him to do something, give him a command, he’d look at me and say, ‘You’re my buddy, not my trainer.’”

Today, Provost’s love affair with dogs continues. He and his wife, Laurie Jacobson, recently adopted Casper, a 12-year-old Maltese, who had been surrendered to a shelter. The family of three resides in Santa Rosa, where Casper is settling into a new routine filled with affection, lots of treats and leisurely strolls.

RESCUED Jon Provost and Laurie Jacobson recently adopted Casper, a 12-year-old Maltese. Photo courtesy of Jon Provost.

That’s how I had occasion to chat with Provost and Jacobson. Casper came from Muttville, the Bay Area’s senior dog rescue, where I’ve volunteered for years.

Casper’s story certainly pulls on heartstrings. But I couldn’t resist learning more about the fictional little boy, Timmy, and his dog, Lassie. Fortunately, Provost was happy to reminisce about Lassie and his days as a child actor.

His acting career began when he was two years old, while his family was living in Pasadena. Provost’s mother responded to a newspaper ad placed by Warner Brothers. The studio was seeking a two- to three-year-old boy for a film, So Big, starring Jane Wyman and Sterling Hayden.

“My parents were not show business people,” Provost said. “My mother grew up on a farm in Texas, and her idol was Jane Wyman, the actress. Mom took me to the audition because she wanted to meet Jane Wyman and get an autograph. I got the job and then a contract with RKO.”

Before landing the role of Timmy in Lassie, Provost appeared in about 10 movies. He acted alongside Grace Kelly and Bing Crosby in the 1954 film, The Country Girl, and with Rod Steiger and Anita Ekberg in the 1956 film, Back from Eternity. There were also parts in early live television programs.

Then came the role of a lifetime, Timmy Martin. Provost remembers the seven years on Lassie with great fondness, especially his TV mom, June Lockhart. It was Lockhart who instilled in him that although he was a little boy, he was still a professional actor on the same playing field as the adults.

“June is still with us,” Provost said. “She’s 98 years old. We are the only living members from the series and have kept in touch over the years. Every birthday, every Christmas.”

Lassie’s owner and trainer, Rudd Weatherwax, also played a pivotal role in Provost’s life. Weatherwax, a surrogate grandfather to Provost, wasn’t above bribing the young actor.

“Rudd sat me down when we first started shooting, and said, ‘Look, if you don’t bug Lassie—don’t pull his tail, don’t ride him, don’t sit on him—for your eighth birthday, I will give you a Lassie puppy.’ I worked very hard that first year to do everything I was supposed to do,” Provost said.

True to his word, Weatherwax presented Provost with a male rough collie puppy. Provost named him Rudd, to honor Weatherwax.

“That was the only collie I ever owned,” Provost said. “Collies are a lot of maintenance. Lassie was constantly groomed—24/7.”

Provost starred in 249 episodes of Lassie. Week after week, Timmy and Lassie embarked on adventures. Lassie pulled Timmy’s loose tooth, freed him from quicksand and helped him bring an escaped baby circus elephant out of the woods. However, Lassie never rescued Timmy from a well.

“Timmy never fell in the well,” Provost said. “My mother saved every script. Somebody fell into the well, and Timmy and Lassie saved him.”

Jacobson, who helped write her husband’s autobiography, concurs. Although most Americans have heard the “Timmy fell down the well” tale, it never happened.

“We don’t really know where it came from,” Jacobson said. “We know everybody uses it. They use it when their dogs bark. Stephen Colbert on The Late Show uses it once a month. It’s everywhere.”

While Provost still accepts the occasional acting role, he and Jacobson are currently focusing their energy on helping Casper, their senior Maltese, adjust to his new digs.

“Casper has pretty severe separation anxiety,” Jacobson said. “He went through a lot before we got him.”

Indeed, he did. The adorable little Maltese lived with the same person for most of his 12 years, until she was forced to give him up because of a change in her housing situation. After that, Casper went to two different shelters before ending up at Muttville, the senior dog rescue. Along the way, he was diagnosed with severe dental disease.

“Casper lost his original owner and all his teeth within a matter of weeks,” Jacobson said. “It’s no wonder he has separation anxiety.”

Still, Casper captivated Provost and Jacobson when they met him at Muttville, and they instantly knew he was the perfect dog for their family. Coincidentally, the couple has just launched Spray, Mix ’n Go!, a calming CBD product for dogs who suffer from separation anxiety, a condition that causes distress for canines when they’re apart from their humans. 

From Lassie to Casper, Provost has provided friendship to famous dogs and dogs in need. And he doesn’t plan on stopping anytime soon.

“Dogs and Timmy are synonymous,” Provost said. “I learned a lot from Rudd [Lassie’s trainer], his philosophy. Lassie was treated like royalty. All the training was through rewards and respect. That’s what I learned from Rudd—respect. I saw the benefit of what canines can do for people. The rest is history.”

World Class Pianist Ilya Yakushev in Mill Valley

Mill Valley Truly Classic The 2023-24 Chamber Music Concert Series will run Oct. 8 through May 19. Hosted by Chamber Music Marin, the new season celebrates 50 years of presenting intimate concerts with world-renowned musicians in classical music. The lineup of national and international touring musicians includes Bay Area native Jon Nakamatsu. First up is pianist Ilya Yakushev, a former world...

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: "Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?" I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not...

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: "Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?" I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not...

Free Will Astrology, Week of 10/4

ARIES (March 21-April 19): I’ve been doing interviews in support of my new book, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle. Now and then, I’m asked this question: "Do you actually believe all that mystical woo-woo you write about?" I respond diplomatically, though inwardly I’m screaming: “How profoundly hypocritical I would be if I did not...

Water Board pursues record-setting $8.6 million fine against BoDean quarry

Photo by Paul Nelson/North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board
A Sonoma County building materials company known to tout its environmentally-friendly endeavors is facing an $8.6 million fine for polluting salmon habitat. On its website, the BoDean Company boasts about its decision to switch its Mark West Quarry to solar power in 2011, reportedly a first-of-its-kind initiative, as well as its installation of a water recycling system at the same...

Jethro Tull live at LBC Tonight!

https://youtu.be/JgwaTBAcdo0 Jethro Tull takes the stage at the Luther Burbank Center tonight at 8 pm, Oct. 1! Enjoy a preview from last night's show at Saratoga's Mountain Winery on Sept. 29, 2023.

Escape to Bliss Organic Day Spa

When a stress-relieving vacation is called for, but going away is out of the question, the serene solution is a daycation escape to the Bliss Organic Day Spa, a tranquil haven tucked away in an expansive second-floor space in downtown Sebastopol. After spending the day steaming and soaking in their traditional bath house, relaxing on the gemstone infrared mat, experiencing...

Tradition: ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ at 6th Street

I have a soft spot for Fiddler on the Roof. The 1971 film adaptation was the first movie musical I saw, and I made my musical stage debut nine years later in a high school production. Thoughts of those experiences were dancing in my head when I attended a recent performance of the Broadway classic at Santa Rosa’s 6th Street...

Erin Rae at Healdsburg’s Little Saint

Erin Rae’s career has moved into a certain zone. She’s got some relatively new releases to promote and is ready to move from a role as a well-regarded support slot performer and into the world of full-set headliners, after stints on the road with a blend of known and highly-regarded folks, like Father John Misty, Hiss Golden Messenger, Jenny Lewis,...

Love of dogs continues for iconic star of Lassie TV show

What does a tiny toothless senior pooch living out his golden years in Santa Rosa have in common with Lassie, the most famous Hollywood dog of all time? Both canines captured the heart of Jon Provost, the actor who played young Timmy Martin on the Lassie television series from 1957 to 1964. Provost was already a veteran actor when, at...
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