Your Letters, March 15

Too Big to Fail

While the failure of Silicon Valley Bank is a serious issue to the global financial system, it pales in comparison to the type of astounding loss North Bay citizenry would have to endure should businesses such as Oliver’s Market, Nick’s Cove, Marvin’s Diner, Sol Food, The Silver Peso or the 2AM Club disappear.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Visiting Hours

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA) said she plans to visit jailed suspects of the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot and would focus on what she claimed to be “reports of abuse.” Yes, let’s give aid and comfort to seditionists and murderers.

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

Write Us

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Thanks, The Editor

Dog Crisis: local shelters overwhelmed with pooches needing homes

Overflowing with dogs, local animal shelters and rescues have put out an urgent call for people to adopt or foster. Purebreds, designer breeds and mutts of all ages and sizes await new homes.

The situation is dire, not just in the Bay Area, but also across the country. As dogs languish for many months at shelters, some face euthanasia to create space for the seemingly never-ending influx of strays and pets being surrendered by their owners. It’s an unsettling trend, especially since the practice of putting down adoptable dogs has declined in recent years.

“Shelters are desperate to get perfectly healthy, behaviorally sound animals out the door because there are more coming in than are exiting right now,” said Anna Harrison, admissions manager at the Humane Society of Sonoma County.

While shelters in Sonoma and Marin counties say they’re not forced to make the difficult decision of euthanizing dogs due to overcrowding, most are at capacity. When kennel space opens up, some of the North Bay facilities take in dogs from struggling shelters in Oakland, Contra Costa County and beyond.  

Large adolescent dogs (LADS) make up the majority of canines needing homes. Sadly, they are staying in shelters for extended periods, even up to a year and longer. Siberian huskies and German shepherds are the two most common breeds filling the available kennels, which is a change from the Chihuahuas and pit bulls that inundated shelters prior to the pandemic.

“Huskies, for instance, are super cute as puppies—and then they grow up,” said Brian Whipple, operations manager at Sonoma County Animal Services. “It’s a challenge for folks to keep up with the amount of work the breed requires. These are dogs that need a job or a lot of exercise.”

Proper training can go a long way to help keep LADS with their owners, says Virginia Grainger, Marin Humane’s shelter behavior manager. She spoke with the Pacific Sun while working with Billie, a boisterous two-year-old male husky picked up as a stray.

“When they show up at the shelter, we find that these owner surrenders and strays weren’t trained when they were little,” Grainger said.

As Billie entered the play area, he jumped up on people. However, Grainger quickly had him following commands, using treats as positive reinforcement. Within a few minutes, the beautiful boy calmed down, and then gently approached folks for a back scratch and affection.

Pop culture often plays a role in the proliferation of certain breeds. In the early 2000s, Paris Hilton was frequently seen carrying her Chihuahua in a handbag, starting a fashion wave that eventually landed the breed in shelters at record numbers. Some believe Game of Thrones, the hit Netflix series featuring dogs that look like huskies, is responsible for the current husky craze.

The pandemic also contributed to the population explosion at shelters right now, says Nancy King, executive director of Pets Lifeline, a Sonoma Valley animal shelter.

“There was a phenomenon in dog adoptions during the pandemic,” King said. “Shelters and rescues couldn’t satisfy the number of people that wanted to adopt. We saw a lot more breeding at that time, including the large dog breeds.”

Now, those untrained LADS are helping to drive an unprecedented increase in abandoned and surrendered dogs. That issue, combined with lower adoption rates, has caused what animal welfare experts deem as a national crisis.

They point to a number of other factors, with the economic downturn and housing topping the list. More than 14% of dogs are surrendered due to housing issues, according to Best Friends Society, a national animal welfare agency.

“In our area, it really comes down to affordable housing and the rental market,” said Whipple, of Sonoma County Animal Services. “This is a tough place to find affordable housing that does allow pets.”

Inflation is also wreaking havoc for pet owners. Pet food prices jumped more than 15% year-over-year, while the cost of veterinarian services went up 10.3%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data for February 2023.

A nationwide shortage of veterinarians and technicians is another obstacle for dog owners. Some vets aren’t taking new patients. Spay and neuter procedures are booked out months in advance. Even for people who have long-term relationships with their vet, it’s often difficult to get routine appointments for their dogs.

The best way to curb the shelter overpopulation is to ensure that dogs and their people stay together. In Marin and Sonoma counties, many local shelters have programs to help defray costs for pet owners, including free pet food and supplies; low or no cost spay/neuter services; vouchers for vet care; and vaccination clinics.

The laundry list of pet ownership concerns certainly gives pause to anyone considering adopting a pooch. This leads to fewer adoptions, resulting in dogs staying in shelters longer. For some canines, living in a noisy, fast-paced shelter is extremely stressful.

That’s where dog rescues enter the picture. A rescue is typically a nonprofit that pulls dogs from shelters and places them in foster homes.

Muttville, a Bay Area rescue that rehomes senior dogs, is strained under the current overpopulation crisis. Sherri Franklin, Muttville’s executive director and founder, says the rescue is fortunate to have a physical shelter, its own veterinary staff and a large network of foster homes. Still, they can’t keep up with requests coming in from shelters and individuals who are no longer able to care for their dogs.

Jen Coudron, the mutt manager at Muttville, is on the frontline, making the decisions about which senior dogs they can accept. People are frantic to get their dogs into Muttville.

“I’m staring at my intake box, and I know there are at least 50 requests,” Coudron said. “All of them very, very urgent. When I have to turn away a dog, it’s just heartbreaking because I know these people are out of options. But we’re maxed out, and the resources that I normally send people to are maxed out.”

Experts say more people stepping up to foster dogs will help alleviate the pressure on shelters and rescues. A pooch becomes a member of the family during the foster process, which can last from a few days to a few months. The foster parent gets to know the dog’s personality and works with the animal on socialization and training. Sometimes, the foster nurses the dog back to health as they recover from medical conditions or procedures. Mostly, the foster family provides love and stability.

Keri Fennell, Marin Humane’s vice president of shelter operations, says that in addition to needing fosters, they would love to have more volunteer dog walkers at the shelter. But her biggest wish is for people to provide a permanent home for a dog.

“Anyone who adopts helps the cause,” Fennell said. “Adopt, adopt, adopt.”

Vidi Veni Verde

North Bay

Easy Being Green

Bay Area donut juggernaut Johnny Doughnuts invites those seeking to add a bit more green to their diets to do so not with, say, kale but with a St. Patrick’s Day makeover of its so-called “Sprinkley Guy” donut. Yep—it’s green, thanks to a sea of shamrock green sprinkles, which apparently makes it “leprechaun-approved.” (Editor’s note: leprechauns don’t exist.) No need to search for the end of a rainbow to find this gustatory gold—get those taste buds singing “Danny Boy” at one of three North Bay locations: 2257 Larkspur Landing Cir., Larkspur; 1617 4th St., San Rafael; and 1200 4th St., Santa Rosa. The special Sprinkley Guy will only be available on Friday, March 17. Suggested pairing—Irish whiskey and maybe, I dunno, some insulin?

Tiburon

Fare to Pair

Tiburon’s The Bungalow Kitchen by Michael Mina invites diners whose money doesn’t jiggle-jiggle but folds to indulge in a four-course dining experience featuring wines from Napa Valley’s oldest family-owned grape-growing estate, Larkmead Vineyards. Executive chef Harrison Chernick and sommelier Ian Macdonald partner with the Larkmead team to guide diners through the seasonally curated menu. Here’s a wee taste from the third course: Lambchetta—Olive, Caper, Fingerling Potatoes, Lamb Jus and the Larkmead, Dr. Olmo, Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, 2014. The prix fixe affair runs $250 per person (plus tax and gratuity) and begins with a reception at 6pm, Wednesday, March 22. Reservations can be had via SevenRooms.com, or by calling 415-366-4088. Get a table for two and I’ll see you there.

Sebastopol

‘Before They Take Us Away’

At the commencement of World War II, Japanese Americans residing on the West Coast were confronted with the possibility of being forcibly removed from their homes and detained in concentration camps. To evade this fate, some took matters into their own hands and departed to states located further inland, becoming internally displaced persons in their own nation during a dark chapter of American history. This is the subject of the acclaimed documentary, Before They Take Us Away, which screens as part of the Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival at 7:30pm, Friday, March 17 at Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley Ave., Sebastopol. Tickets available at bit.ly/before-sdff.

Mill Valley

Go to Hell Man

The term “pickin’-and-grinnin’” is one of those American idioms that makes some want to run for the hills…but, of course, The Hills Have Eyes. The Hellman Spring Stomp coming to the Sweetwater Music Hall next week, however, is all ears. Starting at 6:30pm, Sunday, March 19, the Go To Hell Man Band, the children, grandchildren, friends and bandmates of the late, great Warren Hellman, founder of the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival, will throw down a puntastic evening of American roots music configured in five separate Hellman combos. Special guests The Quitters open. Tickets are $20 per person. Sweetwater Music Hall is located at 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. SweetwaterMusicHall.com.

Drag Trivia at Fern Bar

Fern Bar, located in Sebastopol’s Barlow district, is known for its good times.

But its upcoming Drag Trivia Night on Thursday, March 23, from 6–8:30pm, will undoubtedly prove to be an excessively good time. Presented by THTR Productions and Fern Bar, and hosted by Bay Area bombshell Sasha Devaroe, the disco-themed event will include food, drinks, performances and, of course, trivia. The prix fixe menu includes a four-course dinner, and neighboring Barlow businesses will award prizes during the evening.

When I spoke to Fern Bar owner Sam Levy recently, he told me, “People come to Fern Bar to have a good time. We are lucky—we get to host a special night out with wonderful guests who appreciate what our team does. I get to work hard with people I respect, and feel fortunate to be a part of Fern Bar.”

“We have dozens of signature drinks with and without alcohol,” he added. “My favorites right now are our Golden Hour non-alcoholic cocktail and the Neighbors Bounty cocktail. We are donating a dollar from every drink to Food For Thought. We have won Best Cocktails and Bar four years in a row with the Bohemian, and two years in a row with the Press Democrat. We are best known for our Bar Program.”

Like most local businesses, Fern Bar rolled with the punches during the past few disaster-filled years. “Things have been pretty good recently, but it’s been a long few years of endless hurdles,” Levy said. “We went from wildfires and a flood, into COVID. It was crazy for a bit, but we have a wonderful team making incredible food and drinks every night, a very supportive and positive community, and a great space to celebrate life in.”

Live music on Sundays from 6-8pm has proved popular. Upcoming bands include Jazz Gathering: Michael Price & Co., Spike Sikes & His Awesome Hotcakes and the Greg Hester Trio. In his efforts to host a different band each week, Levy is always on the lookout for new talent. The Fern Bar website includes a contact link for interested musicians.

Fern Bar serves brunch on weekends and provides dinner service seven nights a week, and hopes to bring lunches back this spring. While reservations can be made online, Levy also encourages drop-ins.

Drag Queen Sasha Devaroe, a hit in both the Central Valley and the Bay Area, is a high-energy, animated entertainer, judging from video clips on her Facebook page. She also sells her own line of makeup. Her debut at Fern Bar is sure to be a blast.

“All the stuff in the national news recently about the dangerous, fear-based culture war on drag shows and trans youth has made me proud to be a part of a community that celebrates our differences,” Levy said. He added, “I’m sure this Trivia Night won’t be our last.”

Tickets for Drag Trivia Night are $75 and can be purchased at opentable.com/r/fern-bar-sebastopol. Ticket price includes admission and a four-course dinner.

Fern Bar, 6780 Depot St., Ste. 120, Sebastopol. Dinner Mon–Sun, 5–9pm; brunch Sat–Sun, 11am to 3pm. 707.861.9603. fernbar.com.

What’s Up, Doc: The Sebastopol Documentary Film Fest

Perhaps Alfred Hitchcock said it best when he declared, “In feature films, the director is God; in documentary films, God is the director.”

Naturally, this assumes A) a higher power and B) that the Auteur Theory is bunk. No matter what one believes, those who like their truth at 24 per second are in luck—the Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival (SDFF) has what one needs.

Now in its 16th year, SDFF starts Thursday, March 16 with an opening night celebration that will find the West County burg once again teeming with filmmakers, film fans and over 60 films from around the world. SDFF is distinguished by being an Academy Award-qualifying festival, which means viewers can get a rare sneak peak of documentaries on the cinematic horizon long before awards season spurs wider releases.

“What is also unique is that every film that is submitted is vetted, meaning screeners actually watch each film,” says Cynthi Stefenoni, producer and SDFF co-director. “With over 650 films submitted from around the world, the final round is screened by six viewers before being chosen to be in the festival.”

The highly-curated results of these endeavors include both feature-length films and shorts, many of which are followed by conversations with the filmmakers after the screenings.

This year, the fest’s special discussion panels are clustered under three main categories—style, industry and justice.

Opening night kicks off with a reception and a screening of Exposure, which finds a Muslim chaplain, a French biologist, a Qatari princess and eight other women from the Arab World and the West attempting to ski across melting Arctic sea ice to the North Pole. In this tale of resilience and survival, director Holly Morris and her team document the group’s myriad challenges, including frostbite, polar bears, self-doubt and sexism.

This year, the fest’s special discussion panels are clustered under three main categories—style, industry and justice—and will include, among other filmmakers, Nina Nawalowalo, director of A Boy Called Piano (the heart-breaking story of Faʻamoana John Luafutu, detailing his experience as a state ward in New Zealand), and Bernardo Ruiz, director of El Quipo, which chronicles an unlikely meeting between a legendary American forensic scientist and a group of Argentine students.

An Emmy-nominated filmmaker, Ruiz tells through film of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team, which revealed the truth to Argentine families about their “disappeared” loved ones, generating evidence that led to the conviction of hundreds of perpetrators in and out of government.

The evening of the screening, the filmmaker will be in conversation with human rights investigator Eric Stover in a special panel entitled “In Search Of Justice” at 4:15pm, Saturday, March 18, at the Robert Brent Auditorium, Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S. High St., Sebastopol. Tickets are $12, $5 for students with ID.

To learn more about SDFF, including program and ticket information, visit sebastopolfilmfestival.org.

A Raisin in the Sun: Hansberry Classic at 6th Street

A lot of “firsts” were achieved when Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun debuted on Broadway in 1959. It was the first time Broadway produced a play written by a Black woman and the first Broadway show helmed by a Black director.

Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse has been attempting to mount a production for the last few years. The challenges in casting a show requiring 10 of 11 roles to be performed by actors of color, compounded by the pandemic, led to several postponements. The curtain has finally gone up on the playhouse’s Monroe Stage, with a production scheduled to run through Mar. 26.

It was worth the wait.

Three generations of the Younger family occupy a cramped two-bedroom apartment in Chicago. Mama Lena (KT Masala) is awaiting an insurance settlement from the passing of her husband. Her adult son, Walter Lee (Terrance Smith), is tired of his life as a chauffeur and sees the money as an opportunity to move up and own a business. Her daughter, Beneatha (Amara Lawson-Chavanu), dreams of medical school.

Mama Lena wants no part of Walter Lee’s business proposition and decides to use a portion of the settlement to put a down payment on a home, a decision supported by Walter Lee’s wife, Ruth (Ash’Lee P. Lackey). Eschewing the cheaper-built but more expensive homes available in Black neighborhoods, Lena chooses a home in a white development. This prompts a visit from Karl Lindner (Jeff Coté) of the Clybourne Park Improvement Association. It seems the neighbors want to buy Mama out, which may become necessary due to some poor choices on Walter Lee’s part.

First time director Leontyne Mbele-Mbong makes an impressive directorial debut here. The wide casting net thrown throughout Northern California landed an impressive troupe led with a blistering performance by Smith and a moving one by Lackey. Masala was clearly struggling with some lines, but delivered in her most powerful scenes. Lawson-Chavanu’s character may be the most dynamic, as the agent through which Hansberry raises the issue of assimilation, courtesy of two distinct suitors (Rodney Fierce and Mark Anthony).

The genius of A Raisin in the Sun is that Hansberry has the audience identify with the universal challenges faced by the Younger family and then exposes them to the additional weight imposed by systemic and “casual” racism. It’s both a heart-wrenching family drama and a social commentary.

It’s a terrific production of a great American play.

A Raisin in the Sun’ runs through March 26 on the Monroe Stage at 6th Street Playhouse, 52 W. 6th St., Santa Rosa. Thurs-Sat., 7:30pm; Sat-Sun, 2pm. $22–$43. 707.523.4185. 6thstreeetplayhouse.com.

Branford Marsalis Quartet brings the saxxy back to GMC

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Chamber Music Marin

Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. chambermusicmarin.org

Telegraph Quartet and San Francisco Conservatory of Music graduate students make the grade. 5pm, Sunday, April 2. $40.

Elephant in the Room

177 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. elephantintheroompub.com.

The juice is definitely worth the squeeze with Sweet ‘N’ Juicy—and no pulp. 6pm, Friday, March 16. Free.

The Flamingo Resort

2777 4th St., Santa Rosa. vintagespacesr.com.

Shhh—the secret’s out—Don’t Tell Comedy brings its weekly lineup of undercover comedians to the North Bay. 9pm, Thursday, March 16. $20.

Green Music Center

1801 East Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. gmc.sonoma.edu.

The Branford Marsalis Quartet brings the saxxy back to Rohnert Park.

3pm, Thursday, March 16. $25-85.

Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. hopmonk.com.

The Tempest unleashes a storm in a pint glass at Hopmonk.

7:45pm, Friday, March 17. $18

The Lost Church

427 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. thelostchurch.org.

Ric and Bryan Paisley, with special guest Malpica, take their new album, Sideways Trip, on the road. 8:15pm, Saturday, March 18. $12.

Starling Bar Sonoma

19380 Highway 12, Sonoma. starlingsonoma.com.

Friends with Benefits (because why have friends without benefits?) perform live.

3pm, Sunday, March 19. Free.

Sweetwater Music Hall

19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. Sweetwatermusichall.com.

Pardon the Interruption disrupts the ordinary while tackling sociopolitical issues.

9pm, Friday, March 17. $24.

— Desmond Howell

Indigenous groups and allies push for greater acceptance of planned burns

In the last weekend of February, as another rain storm soaked Sonoma County, over 40 people from around California gathered in Santa Rosa to reconnect with fire.

On that Sunday morning, participants gathered at the California Indian Museum and Culture Center before heading to the Heron Shadow, a property used by The Cultural Conservancy as a refuge for Indigenous food and culture.

There, attendees took turns lighting piles of sticks and other plant material. The gathering was the last in a series of five events held throughout northern California, titled “Rekindling Culture and Fire.”

Attendees were drawn together by a desire “to put fire on the land in a healthy way,” Cody Walker, a board member of the California Indian Basketweavers’ Association (CIBA) and member of the Chukchansi tribe, said. “When fire comes down like the Tubbs fire, that’s bad fire. It’s destructive.”

The Rekindling series, organized by CIBA in partnership with other nonprofits, comes at a time of renewed interest and access to cultural and prescribed burns. Many Indigenous attendees of the Santa Rosa event knew the benefits of “good fire” before the Tubbs Fire struck. However, that disaster helped to bring broader attention to the problems with America’s forest management strategies, which, for decades, have greatly restricted the use of intentional fires, allowing fuel to build up, strengthening wildfires.

For much of the 20th century, the U.S. Forest Service implemented “fire exclusion” policies aimed at protecting lumber and structures, according to a February 2021 study in Fire Ecology. In California, this included a ban on cultural burning, a tradition of many tribes long predating the arrival of European colonizers.

“From the 1920s to the 2000s, fire exclusion policies and regulations against cultural burning increased the scarcity of suitable basketry stems for basketweavers,” the Fire Ecology study states.

For thousands of years before the restrictive policies, Indigenous people used cultural burns to enhance the production of basket weaving materials, including producing straight and strong hazelnut stems. Baskets are used for child-rearing, storage and ceremonies. Now, groups like CIBA are trying to reconnect with the entire process, from tending to the land with cultural burns to creating baskets with the resulting materials.

“It really is a way of life, not just a once a year thing. You tend to the land, grow really nice sticks, harvest the sticks and put the sticks and plants together to create a beautiful basket,” Walker said.

Jordan Torres at Heron Shadow Farm. Photo by Chelsea Kurnick
Jordan Torres has worked in project management at Heron Shadow Farm for almost a year. He began as an intern and stayed because he loves working with the land. Torres is from the Chocktaw Nation.

Legalizing Fire

As Indigenous groups continue to reintroduce cultural fires, public agencies and private property owners are warming up to the use of prescribed burns.

A 2020 Stanford University study recommended that California increase use of prescribed burns on private property as a tool to decrease the risk of massive wildfires. The researchers found that, after decades of fuel build-up, the state needed to reduce fuel loads on about 20 million acres, approximately 20% of the state.

However, a variety of factors, including property owners’ insurance concerns, stigma about fire and restrictive regulations, have discouraged the use of planned burns.

In recent years, state lawmakers have eased some rules and set up a pot of money to offset possible costs to private landowners. Last March, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Wildfire and Forest Resilience Task Force announced a plan to burn 400,000 acres per year by 2025 as part of the state’s wildfire mitigation strategy.

“We know that returning good fire to the ground is one of our best tools in the fight against catastrophic wildfire and climate change,” Wade Crowfoot, the state’s Natural Resources secretary, said in a statement announcing the task force’s plan. The federal government has also set aside funding to increase the use of prescribed burns in high-risk areas.

Still, such planned fires aren’t totally without risk. Last summer, for instance, New Mexico suffered the largest wildfire in recorded history, after prescribed burns started by the U.S. Forest Service escaped.

However, Michael Wara, a Stanford researcher, has said that only two of 400 prescribed burns on private property over three recent years escaped, causing minimal damage. Most prescribed and cultural burns on private property are much smaller than the ones the Forest Service uses.

And, despite the small risk planned burns pose, the previous fire management model clearly didn’t work either.

Ron Goode - Photo by Chelsea Kurnick
Ron Goode, tribal chairman of the North Fork Mono Tribe. Photo by Chelsea Kurnick

Standing under a tent at Heron Shadow, Ron Goode, tribal chairman of the North Fork Mono Tribe and a long-time cultural fire practitioner, reflected on the difference between Indigenous and western approaches to wilderness management. Despite recent wildfires burning a huge amount of northern California, Goode said that government agencies still aren’t doing enough to work on areas that didn’t burn, instead focusing on clearcutting areas that did.

“Right now, the United States government says, ‘Wilderness, that’s a good thing, because if we leave it alone, we don’t have to do anything with it. And it won’t cost us anything.’ Those are the two items they’re after: don’t have to do any work on it and don’t have to pay anything for it,” Goode said.

Indigenous groups favor a closer, ongoing relationship with the land, which Goode likened to tending a garden.

“I tell them, ‘Is that how you build a garden? You don’t clean up the ground first, you don’t clean up last year’s crop and then you plant all your plants right next to each other? That’s not how you do a garden, and that’s what the forest is: a garden that needs to be tended,’” he reflected.

“From the Native American standpoint, that’s what we’re saying. We’re here to restore. We’re here to rejuvenate. We’re here to regenerate,” Goode said. “Yes, we still take. We still use the resources, but our impact is nothing like the [government] agencies’ impacts.”

The Santa Rosa Junior College’s Multicultural Museum is currently showing 130 masterfully woven baskets from the Elsie Allen Pomo Basket Collection. ‘Breaking Traditions, Saving Traditions: Elsie Allen & the Legacy of Pomo Basketry’ is open Monday thru Saturday until Dec. 22.

Free Will Astrology, Week of March 8

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Repressed feelings and dormant passions are rising to the surface. I bet they will soon be rattling your brain and illuminating your heart, unleashing a soothing turbulence of uncanny glee. Will you get crazy and wise enough to coax the Great Mystery into blessing you with an inspirational revelation or two? I believe you will. I hope you will! The more skillful you are at generating rowdy breakthroughs, the less likely you are to experience a breakdown. Be as unruly as you need to be to liberate the very best healings.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You finally have all you need to finish an incomplete mission or resolve a mess of unsettled karma. The courage and determination you couldn’t quite summon before are now fully available as you invoke a climax that will prepare the way for your awe-inspiring rebirth. Gaze into the future, dear Taurus, and scan for radiant beacons that will be your guides in the coming months. You have more help than you know, and now is the time to identify it and move toward it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Our sun is an average star in a galaxy of 100 billion stars. In comparison to some of its flamboyant compatriots, it’s mediocre. Over 860 light years away is a blue-white supergiant star called Rigel, which is twice as hot as our sun and 40,000 times brighter. The red supergiant Antares, over 600 light years away, has 12 times more mass. Yet if those two show-offs had human attitudes, they might be jealous of our star, which is the source of energy for a planet teeming with 8.7 million forms of life. I propose we make the sun your role model for now, Gemini. It’s an excellent time to glory in your unique strengths and to exuberantly avoid comparing yourself to anyone else.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): The philosophical principle known as Occam’s razor asserts that when trying to understand a problem or enigma, we should favor the simplest explanation with the fewest assumptions. While that’s often a useful approach, I don’t recommend it in the coming weeks. For you, nuances and subtleties will abound in every situation. Mere simplicity is unlikely to lead to a valid understanding. You will be wise to relish the complications and thrive on the paradoxes. Try to see at least three sides of every story. Further tips: 1. Mysteries may be truer than mere facts. 2. If you’re willing to honor your confusion, the full, rich story will eventually emerge.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “There are no unsacred places,” wrote Leo poet Wendell Berry. “There are only sacred places and desecrated places.” Poet Allen Ginsberg agreed. “Holy! Holy! Holy! Holy! Holy!” he wrote. “Holy the solitudes of skyscrapers and pavements! Holy the cafeteria! Holy the mysterious rivers of tears under the streets! Holy the sea, holy the desert, holy the railroad.” With Berry’s and Ginsberg’s prompts as your inspiration, and in accordance with current astrological imperatives, I invite you to invigorate your relationship with sacredness. If nothing is sacred for you, do what it takes to find and commune with sacred things, places, animals, humans and phenomena. If you are already a lover of sacred wonders, give them extra love and care. To expand your thinking and tenderize your mood, give your adoration to these related themes: consecration, sublimity, veneration, devotion, reverence, awe and splendor.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My favorite Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hanh, wrote the following: “In us, there is a river of feelings, in which every drop of water is a different feeling, and each feeling relies on all the others for its existence. To observe it, we just sit on the bank of the river and identify each feeling as it surfaces, flows by and disappears.” I bring this meditation to your attention, Virgo, because I hope you will do it daily during the next two weeks. Now is an excellent time to cultivate an intense awareness of your feelings—to exult in their rich meanings, to value their spiritual power, to feel gratitude for educating and entertaining you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): How might your life come into clearer focus when you uncover secrets that inspire your initiative and ingenuity? What happens when resources that had been inaccessible become available for your enjoyment and use? How will you respond if neglected truths spring into view and point the way toward improvements in your job situation? I suspect you will soon be able to tell me stories about all this good stuff. PS: Don’t waste time feeling doubtful about whether the magic is real. Just welcome it and make it work for you!

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): It’s not the best time to tattoo a lover’s likeness on your abdomen. Maybe in May, but not now. On the other hand, the coming weeks will be an excellent time to see if your paramour might be willing to tattoo your name on their thigh. Similarly, this is a favorable period to investigate which of your allies would wake up at 5am to drive you to the airport, and which of your acquaintances and friends would stop others from spreading malicious gossip about you, and which authorities would reward you if you spoke up with constructive critiques.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Redwoods are the tallest trees in the world. They may grow as high as 350 feet. Their roots are shallow, though, reaching down just six to 12 feet before spreading out 60 to 100 feet horizontally. And yet the trees are sturdy, rarely susceptible to being toppled by high winds and floods. What’s their secret? Their root systems are interwoven with those of other nearby redwoods. Together, they form networks of allies, supporting each other and literally sharing nutrients. I endorse this model for you to emulate in your efforts to create additional stability and security in your life, Sagittarius.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What’s the best way to be fulfilled? Hard work and discipline? Are we most likely to flourish if we indulge only moderately in life’s sweet pleasures and mostly focus on the difficult tasks that build our skills and clout? Or is it more accurate to say that 90% of success is just showing up: being patient and persistent as we carry out the small day-to-day sacrifices and devotions that incrementally make us indispensable? Mythologist Joseph Campbell described a third variation: to “follow our bliss.” We find out what activities give us the greatest joy and install those activities at the center of our lives. As a Capricorn, you are naturally skilled at the first two approaches. In the coming months, I encourage you to increase your proficiency at the third.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Mackerels are unusual fish in that they must keep swimming nonstop. If they don’t, they die. Do they ever sleep? Scientists haven’t found any evidence that they do. I bring them up now because many of you Aquarians have resemblances to mackerels—and I think it’s especially crucial that you not act like them in the coming weeks. I promise you that nothing bad will happen if you slow way down and indulge in prolonged periods of relaxing stillness. Just the opposite in fact: Your mental and physical health will thrive as you give your internal batteries time and space to recharge.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A financial advisor once told me I could adopt one of three approaches to running my business: 1. Ignore change; 2. always struggle with change, half-immobilized by mixed feelings about whether to change or stand pat; 3. learn to love and thrive on change. The advisor said that if I chose either of the first two options, I would always be forced to change by circumstances beyond my control. The third approach is ultimately the only one that works. Now is an excellent time for you Pisceans to commit yourself fully to number three—for both your business and your life.

Venues, Week of March 8

JaM Cellars

1460 First St., Napa. jamcellars.com.

Folk music from the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains will be performed by Jonathan Foster.

8pm, Thursday, March 9. $10.

Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. hopmonk.com.

From Western Canada, Moontricks is a duo that combines their love of folk, blues and electronic music in a performance this Friday night.

8pm, Friday, March 10. $24.23.

The Phoenix Theater

201 Washington St., Petaluma. thepheonixtheater.com.

A collection of bands will be playing at the Phoenix this Friday. One Armed Joey, Modern Monsters, Legal Disaster and Build Them to Break.

8pm, Friday, March 10. $10.

The Flamingo Resort

2777 4th St., Santa Rosa. vintagespacesr.com.

DJ DYOPS will be hosting LUSH, a LGBTQ+ friendly dance party, at the Flamingo Resort.

9pm, Friday, March 10. $10-15.

Occidental Center for the Arts

3850 Doris Murphy Ct., Occidental. occidentalcenterforthearts.org.

Patrick Ball brings celtic harp music all the way from Ireland.

7pm, Saturday, March 11. $35.

Chamber Music Marin

Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. chambermusicmarin.org.

Chamber Music Marin presents SAKURA Cello Quintet as part of its 50th season at 5pm, Sunday, March 12. Tickets start at $40. 18 and under are free.

Green Music Center

1801 East Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. gmc.sonoma.edu.

Rich music comprised of strings, winds, harp and piano will be played by Israeli Chamber Project with Karim Sulayman.

3pm, Sunday, March 12. $35-95.

Sweetwater Music Hall

19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. sweetwatermusichall.com.

It’s open mic night at the music hall, and rock & roll pioneer Austin DeLone will be playing

7pm, Tuesday, March 14. Free.

—Kainoa St. Germain

Send your gigs to dh*****@*****ys.com.

Your Letters, March 15

Too Big to Fail While the failure of Silicon Valley Bank is a serious issue to the global financial system, it pales in comparison to the type of astounding loss North Bay citizenry would have to endure should businesses such as Oliver’s Market, Nick’s Cove, Marvin’s Diner, Sol Food, The Silver Peso or the 2AM Club disappear. Craig J. Corsini San Rafael Visiting...

Dog Crisis: local shelters overwhelmed with pooches needing homes

Overflowing with dogs, local animal shelters and rescues have put out an urgent call for people to adopt or foster. Purebreds, designer breeds and mutts of all ages and sizes await new homes. The situation is dire, not just in the Bay Area, but also across the country. As dogs languish for many months at shelters, some face euthanasia to...

Vidi Veni Verde

North Bay Easy Being Green Bay Area donut juggernaut Johnny Doughnuts invites those seeking to add a bit more green to their diets to do so not with, say, kale but with a St. Patrick's Day makeover of its so-called “Sprinkley Guy” donut. Yep—it’s green, thanks to a sea of shamrock green sprinkles, which apparently makes it “leprechaun-approved.” (Editor’s note: leprechauns...

Drag Trivia at Fern Bar

Fern Bar, located in Sebastopol's Barlow district, is known for its good times. But its upcoming Drag Trivia Night on Thursday, March 23, from 6–8:30pm, will undoubtedly prove to be an excessively good time. Presented by THTR Productions and Fern Bar, and hosted by Bay Area bombshell Sasha Devaroe, the disco-themed event will include food, drinks, performances and, of course,...

What’s Up, Doc: The Sebastopol Documentary Film Fest

Perhaps Alfred Hitchcock said it best when he declared, “In feature films, the director is God; in documentary films, God is the director.” Naturally, this assumes A) a higher power and B) that the Auteur Theory is bunk. No matter what one believes, those who like their truth at 24 per second are in luck—the Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival (SDFF)...

A Raisin in the Sun: Hansberry Classic at 6th Street

A lot of “firsts” were achieved when Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun debuted on Broadway in 1959. It was the first time Broadway produced a play written by a Black woman and the first Broadway show helmed by a Black director. Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse has been attempting to mount a production for the last few years....

Branford Marsalis Quartet brings the saxxy back to GMC

Chamber Music Marin Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. chambermusicmarin.org Telegraph Quartet and San Francisco Conservatory of Music graduate students make the grade. 5pm, Sunday, April 2. $40. Elephant in the Room 177 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. elephantintheroompub.com. The juice is definitely worth the squeeze with Sweet ‘N' Juicy—and no pulp. 6pm, Friday, March 16. Free. The Flamingo Resort 2777 4th St., Santa...

Indigenous groups and allies push for greater acceptance of planned burns

Heron Shadow reserve - Photo by Chelsea Kurnick
In the last weekend of February, as another rain storm soaked Sonoma County, over 40 people from around California gathered in Santa Rosa to reconnect with fire. On that Sunday morning, participants gathered at the California Indian Museum and Culture Center before heading to the Heron Shadow, a property used by The Cultural Conservancy as a refuge for Indigenous food...

Free Will Astrology, Week of March 8

rob brezsny free will astrology
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Repressed feelings and dormant passions are rising to the surface. I bet they will soon be rattling your brain and illuminating your heart, unleashing a soothing turbulence of uncanny glee. Will you get crazy and wise enough to coax the Great Mystery into blessing you with an inspirational revelation or two? I believe you will....

Venues, Week of March 8

Photo by Yoel Levy
JaM Cellars 1460 First St., Napa. jamcellars.com. Folk music from the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains will be performed by Jonathan Foster. 8pm, Thursday, March 9. $10. Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. hopmonk.com. From Western Canada, Moontricks is a duo that combines their love of folk, blues and electronic music in a performance this Friday night. 8pm, Friday, March 10. $24.23. The Phoenix Theater 201 Washington...
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