Say ‘Awe’

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Big Mouth Unique handmakes clothes, more

By Michael Giotis


Known first as a custom fabric arts atelier, the artist collective known as Big Mouth Unique started to get ideas of grandeur during recent successful โ€œopen studioโ€ nights at the multi-tenant Studio 2410 in Santa Rosa.

โ€œA nice little community version of Art Trails,โ€ explained Matilda Amiot, one half of the seat-of-the-pants art power couple.

โ€œPeople were always like, โ€˜What you’re making is so cool, where can I buy it?โ€™โ€ said Amiot. โ€œAnd we were like, โ€˜Uh, just come on over.โ€™โ€

The informal setting was not always working. It was time for a change. For the last year, Big Mouth Unique has been available on Etsy and at one or two local pop-up markets each month.

I saw the work in the volume of cloth when I visited the multi-level, indoor-outdoor atelier, workshop, chill-pad. โ€œMind if I look around?โ€ I asked.

Joshua Thwaites smiled, โ€œYou can touch everything.โ€

The professional and romantic couple have gathered several lifetimes worth of upcycledโ€”we will come back to that term laterโ€”odds and ends, from clothing to wood work and ceramics.

Or as Thwaites said with a glimmer in the eye, โ€œFabric and thread, and buttons, and googly eyes and glitter, and like all the things.โ€

Amiot and Thwaitesโ€™ studio is an explosion of fabric across the spectra of material weight and good taste. It is clear it is all there to get reused.

โ€œThe whole fashion industry [is] totally not environmentally conscious โ€ฆ โ€˜zero wasteโ€™ or the โ€˜recycledโ€™ [get used as] words, but they don’t really mean anything anymore,โ€ said Amiot, adding, โ€œthere’s no way to check.โ€

Big Mouth makes more than just clothes. Many projects are custom orders created to the whims of the buyer. Custom pieces need not be clothes. Said Amiot of Thwaites, โ€œHe’ll make canopies and awnings and more.โ€

Some of that work was on display when I visited the Big Mouth Unique at HEAD WEST at The Barlow in Sebastopol. They had the most impressive of the many booths I visited.

โ€œGenuinely at The Barlow we especially stand out because [we are] the only people that get to put up an umbrella,โ€ said Thwaites. Actually, the booth had three umbrellas, each with tassels. โ€œWe also push out into the row.โ€

โ€œI believe that what we’re doing is really wonderful and that people enjoy it,โ€ Thwaites said.

Like, hanging behind me during the interview, were floating eyeballs everywhere on a sheer, full length cape. Oh I see you, fabulous.

โ€œWhat can you say to other makers about how to work?โ€ I asked Amiot.

โ€œI make things that I wish I had already,โ€ she answered. โ€œI only make things that I think are cool.โ€

One favorite approach is to develop whole cultures as a backdrop for the creation of original pieces.

โ€œPretend traditional clothes, cultures that are fanciful. [I imagine] cultures that don’t actually exist and like, pretend that I’m making their traditional garments from their country,โ€ is how Amiot described her process.

Given the amount of upcycledโ€”another โ€œgreenwashingโ€ word Big Mouth prefers not to useโ€”material on hand, cloth often drives creativity. โ€œIt’s the materials that I have that often Iโ€™m like, oh this is a nice texture; it would be good as a jacket. I don’t really plan it out ahead of time. The material dictates the thing.โ€

โ€œThat sounds hard,โ€ said Thwaites.

โ€œYeah, he doesn’t work the same way,โ€ Amiot laughed.

It is clear that these two makers have something truly unique they are bringing into the world. Thwaites and Amiot have different ways for creating and talking about art, and thatโ€™s their strength. They clash just right, like freakishly weird swaths of cloth pulled together into a radiant garment.

Follow Big Mouth Unique on instagram: @bigmouthunique and Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/BigMouthUnique.

Trivia

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1 The first Catholic college in California to grant the B.A. degree to women, in 1917, was what school in Marin County?

2 What is one million minus one?

3 What four-letter โ€œHโ€ word is a term in basketball, boxing, golf and fishing?

4 The stone arch London Bridge, built in 1831, was dismantled in 1967 and rebuilt where?

5 Most people know the Dutch settlers in the New World purchased the rights for Manhattan from an indigenous tribe, for $24 worth of traded goods. Can you name two other settlements, currently northeastern states, that were purchased from indigenous peoples in honest business transactions by English settlers?

6 What musical instrument, first popularized and sold at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, was later banned from sports events around the world due to its annoying droning sound?

7 Can you list the worldโ€™s five oceans, according to size, largest first?

8 These land animals can travel 1,000 miles in eight days, the farthest any land animal can travel in such a short time. What are they?

9 Can you name the two most recent black-and-white movies to win the Best Picture Oscar, one from 1993 and the other from 2011?

10 Who was the youngest of the original Grateful Dead band members, and who was the oldest?

BONUS: French nun, Lucile Randon, also known as Sister Andrรฉ, is considered the worldโ€™s oldest living person today.  How old is she?

You are invited to a live Trivia Cafe team contest at the Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley, at 5pm, Sunday, May 29, hosted by Howard Rachelson. Event is free, with a food and drink menu available.

ANSWERS:

1 Dominican College, now Dominican University

2 999,999

3 Hook: a boxer’s uppercut with bent elbow, a curving golf shot, a basketball shot with an upraised straight arm and a small curved tool for catching fish

4 Lake Havasu, on the California-Arizona border

5 Pennsylvania, purchased by William Penn, and Rhode Island, purchased by Roger Williams

6 Vuvuzela

7 Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic, Southern (Antarctic)

8 Inuit sled dogs, Canadian or Alaskan Eskimo dogs, or Siberian Huskies, used in sled racing Thanks for the question to Tom Truchan from San Anselmo. 

9 Schindlerโ€™s List, 1993, and The Artist, 2011

10 Bob Weir, born in 1947, and Phil Lesh, 1940

BONUS ANSWER: Sister Andrรฉ is 118, born in February, 1904.

Weed Weekend

Cannabis Trail

By Michael Giotis

As the weather warms up and our coastal forest is blanketed in that summer smell of redwoods, have I got an idea for you. Go west, young human, for an afternoon of cannabis consumption at one of the sweetest, most historically significant spots in the new world of cannabis.

Weโ€™re talking about Riverside Wellness Collective in Guerneville, one of the cultural landmarks along the Cannabis Trail, a non-profit project commemorating the people and places that helped to establish the legal cannabis we know and love today.

I spoke with the Cannabis Trail founder, Brain Applegarth, about the legacy of Riverside Wellness and the Cannabis Trail Project.

โ€œCurrently there are 10 cultural landmarks along the Cannabis Trail that are installed and ready for visitors โ€ฆ all the way from San Francisco up to Humboldt County,โ€ Applegarth told me during a recent phone chat. So far, Sonoma County is home to two of those landmarksโ€”one is Riverside Wellness.

โ€œRiverside Wellness is a cultural landmark that honors [not just the dispensaryโ€™s importance in] cannabis history,โ€ he said, but also the story of Brownie Mary and what they call โ€œthe bust heard around the world.โ€ This occurred when the medicinal activist Mary Jane Rathbun, already famous for providing cannabis to AIDS patients in the Castro, was arrested at the home of a pot grower in Cazadero.

The national attention given to the bust โ€œopened up a huge dialogue around medicinal cannabis, and lo and behold four or five years later, [the bust] led to Proposition 215,โ€ said Applegarth, referring to Californiaโ€™s Compassionate Use Act of 1996, which legalized the sale and use of cannabis for medical purposes.

To get to Riverside Wellness, drive west along River Road from Santa Rosa. Just as you enter Guerneville, the dispensary is on your left. Youโ€™ll find that Riverside Wellness is situated in one of the most beautiful places in the world, right along the Russian River, in the little resort town known for a mix of hippy counter culture, farm-to-table foodie-ism and queer chill.

โ€œThey have a beautiful location with all kinds of sitting areas by the river. You can’t get a much better environment to be relaxed and enjoy nature,โ€ Applegarth said. Right next door youโ€™ll find the lovely Farmhand Cafe for bites and bevies.

Ah yes, I think soon Iโ€™ll go get a half gram pre-roll and walk into town for some ice cream in Guerneville. Sounds perfect. I canโ€™t imagine a more fitting tribute to the work of the pioneers celebrated by the Cannabis Trail than for buying a joint on a summer afternoon to be the most normal thing in the world.

Cold War Redux

Cold War Redux

The war in Ukraine is proving that the future of the human race looks very grim, unless the United States and Russia can end the ugly Cold War between us. This angry rivalry has divided much of the world into two enemy camps and has kept humankind on the brink of nuclear war for over 60 years.

Those who have supported the nuclear arms race have argued that the โ€œbalance of terrorโ€ between our intensely competitive nations is the only way that peace between our two nations can be maintained. However, the present war in Ukraine is pushing the world beyond all acceptable limits of danger. It is time to recognize that the constant threat of nuclear war is not going to save us from an eventual outbreak of that nuclear war. And it is irrational and suicidal to remain hoping that world peace can be maintained from our mutual terror of that always possible Third World War.

If we in the West truly want to extend freedom and human rights in the world, then our fanatic competition with Russia (and China) must be replaced with a genuine and reliable friendship with these current enemies.

Rama Kumar

Fairfax

Letters

Over-repped

The striking photo of the beautiful blonde young ladies in the “Teen Time” article on page 9 of the Pacific Sun, dated May 11-17, really caught my eye. I think it is wonderful that the Marin Chapter of the National Charity League is doing so much to help those in need. It gives me hope for the future to see young people actually doing something tangible instead of just trying to outlaw plastic straws. These young ladies are making the world a better place.

However, I was struck by the over-representation of what must be Marin’s upper crust. Where are the Black and brown people?

In the name of diversity, equity and inclusion, we here in Marin have removed sculptures and changed the names of schools and roads, making people feel more comfortable and giving the appearance of real societal change. But things haven’t really changed. Rich white men marry beautiful white women and raise beautiful white children in the segregated neighborhoods of Marin. Let’s see a little color at the Corinthian Yacht Club.

Dino Colombo

Stinson Beach

Real Enemy

Are you paying attention? The party that purports to care about democracy is creating a national censorship board through the Department of Homeland Security and the party that purports to care about your rights is trying to remove the rights of women to control their own bodies. Both parties are driving us toward World War 3 while failing to help everyday Americans. Our biggest enemy isn’t Russia or North Korea or China, it’s our own government. Stop voting for them. Stop donating to their re-election campaigns. And turn off cable news.

Jason Kishineff

American Canyon

San Rafael

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Beatlesโ€™ Night

Relive the โ€™60s when the Beatles Guitar Project Rock Orchestra comes to the North Bay on Saturday, June 11, to play live in concert. The 40-piece professional rock orchestra with special guest vocalists will play two Beatlesโ€™ albums, Rubber Soul and Revolver, in their entirety, using a rhythm section, strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion and a choir. The performance will also include a special graphical film and light show to honor George Harrison. The show begins at 7pm at the Marin Veterans’ Memorial Auditorium in San Rafael. Tickets, priced at $102, $86, $64 and $42, include Marin Center fees. Proceeds from the show will benefit the Beatles Guitar Project and Scholarship Fund and the iHeartMusic.Org Scholarship Fund. Tickets available at www.tinyurl.com/3rxch27c.

San Anselmo

Bringing the โ€™60s Back Home

Experience music and community this July when a 13-piece band, under the direction of local musician and producer Joe Bagale, kicks off the first Beatles in the Park in two years. An annual tradition for more than a decade, the act was derailed by Covid but is officially back on for Saturday, July 23. The show, which starts at 6pm and goes until 9pm, will be held at Creek Park, 249 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. Tickets are $35 for adults and $12 for youths 12 years and younger. Children under two are free. Tickets are available at Eventbrite.

Santa Rosa

Swing Legends Return

Kick off Luther Burbank Center for the Artsโ€™ new 16-show lineup with a swinginโ€™ live musical performance this summer when Big Bad Voodoo Daddy comes to town. In 1993, this band, named after an autograph by blues legend Albert Collins, introduced swing to a new generation of Americans with its unique horn-powered blend of jazz, Dixieland and swing. Now internationally famous, their high-energy show will rock the LBC house on Friday, Aug. 5, at 8pm. Donโ€™t miss out. All tickets are General Admission and are priced at $39.

Sonoma County

Museum-Go-Round

Catch up on history of all kinds by taking advantage of this yearโ€™s Museum Member Swap Weekend. Thatโ€™s right, on May 21โ€“22 participating Sonoma County museums will offer free admission to members of all other participating museums. The list of participating museums includes California Indian Museum & Cultural Center, Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, Childrenโ€™s Museum of Sonoma County, Museum of Sonoma County, Pacific Coast Air Museum, Petaluma Historical Library/Museum, Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, Luther Burbank Home & Garden and Sebastopol Center for the Arts. Participants must bring proof of membership.

โ€”Mark Fernquest

Trivia

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1 Marin County generally gets 75% of its water supply from Mt. Tamalpais reservoirs; most of the remaining 25% comes from where? 

2 What lively, whirling Italian dance was thought to be caused by, and a cure for, the bite of a spider?

3 The Greeks invented the name of this unusual animal, from two words meaning nose and horn. What animal is this?

4 What red-hot chili pepper is named for the capital city of French Guiana?

5  What two actors, whose last names begin with K, have starred in the movie role of Batman?

6 From the Italian word for bench comes what word, meaning a ceremonial feast to celebrate a person or event?

7 What consumable product was introduced around the year 1560 into France (and later the rest of Europe) by Jean Nicot?

8 What Spanish-speaking country has the largest population?

9 Debuting in 2015 was what dramatic TV series about a small-time, hustling attorney, a spinoff of Breaking Bad?

10 When dissolving salt in a glass of water, does the water temperature remain the same, warm slightly or cool slightly?

BONUS QUESTION: The three northernmost teams in the NBA have names that begin with T (city or team name). What are they?

Correction from last weekโ€™s column: the Grateful Deadโ€™s final concert, at Soldier Field in Chicago, was on July 9, 1995.

Have a great question? Send it in with your name and hometown, and if we use it we’ll give you credit. ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 Russian River watershed

2 Tarantella, after the tarantula spider

3 Rhinoceros = Rhinokerลs, from rhin=nose + keras=horn

4 Cayenne pepper

5 1989: Michael Keaton and 1995: Val Kilmer

6 Banquet. Thanks for the question to Marty Albion from Lagunitas.

7 Tobacco, supposedly intended for healthy and medicinal use. The word nicotine comes from his name.

8 Mexico

9 Better Call Saul

10 Cools slightly

BONUS answer:

1.  Portland Trailblazers (45.5 latitude, the northernmost)

2.  Minnesota Timberwolves (45.0)

3.  Toronto Raptors (43.6)

Ibsen Sequel

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โ€˜A Dollโ€™s House, Part 2โ€™

By Harry Duke

Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsenโ€™s A Dollโ€™s House premiered in 1879 to great controversy. His look at the limitations and restrictions placed on women in a patriarchal society was considered quite scandalous at the time. Many consider it to be the beginning of modern feminist literature, though Ibsen himself denied that. Suffice it to say that a play that ended with a wife and mother walking out on her family (cue door slam) was not the norm.

Not content to let the sound of a slamming door be the last โ€œword,โ€ playwright Lucas Hnath picks up the story of Nora and Torvald 15 years later with A Dollโ€™s House, Part 2. The Novato Theater Company has a production running through June 12.

Itโ€™s now 1894, and the stately silence of the Helmer household is interrupted by a knock at the door. Nanny-turned-housekeeper Anne Marie (Shirley Nilsen Hall) opens the door and admits Nora (Alison Peltz) into the household she abandoned long ago. Nora has spent the last 15 years living an independent life as a successful writer. Her latest book challenges the very concept of marriage, much to the consternation of the powerful men whose wives have walked out on them after reading it. Under a threat of blackmail, Nora is shocked to discover that she is still married as Torvald (Mark Clark) never filed for divorce. She seeks to enlist the aid of Anne Marie and eventually her own daughter Elly (Jannely Calmell) to convince Torvald to file. He has his own ideas.

You donโ€™t need to be familiar with the Ibsen original to get this show, and folks fearing a stuffy 19th-century Norwegian drama will be presently surprised to find that Hnath has taken a very modern approach to the material. The dialogue is peppered with expletives and the humor is sharp and pointed, but the essence of Ibsen remains.

Energetically directed by Gillian Eichenberger, the show zips along and packs a lot in its 85 intermission-less minutes. Each character gets their moment, and each performer delivers their moment with verve. Peltz in particular does a nice job of balancing Noraโ€™s ambitions with her imperfections.

By showโ€™s end, we still donโ€™t know what lies ahead for Nora. Maybe in another 138 yearsโ€ฆ

โ€˜A Dollโ€™s House, Part 2โ€™ runs through June 12 at the Novato Theater Company, 5420 Nave Drive, Ste. C, Novato. Fri & Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $12โ€“$27. 415.883.4498. Proof of vaccination and masking are required to attend. novatotheatercompany.org

Pot-a-luma

Cannabis convenience

By Michael Giotis

Fellow Petalumans, tired of bolting up to Mercy Wellness after work and still trying to get home in time to cook dinner?

I will have you know that the most highly rated delivery service in Sonoma County considers Petaluma its โ€œtop area to deliver, no doubt,โ€ according to Richard Trieber, CEO of the PowerPlant Park in Richmond, a development of cannabis enterprises that is projected to create hundreds of local jobs when it is completed.

For now, the Park is focused on current operations like their delivery service. โ€œWe’re about to scale up our delivery service to coincide with our first [full scale] harvest,โ€ said Trieber. There will be โ€œ50 to 75 drivers in our delivery service selling our brands from PowerPlant Park operations.โ€

At the moment, the delivery service focuses on the North Bay. Soon it will reach much broader than that, and quickly.

โ€œWe have a very definitive model for delivery. It’s unlike any other model that is out there,โ€ Trieber said. Itโ€™s a model that values taking the time to help customers find the right product.

โ€œWe have a medical staff person doing dispatch, so if you wanted to know a strain for a specific condition, even if it took 20 minutes, we would take time to talk [through it],” he explained.

It’s financially possible to take the extra time because PowerPlant Park Delivery bonds their drivers, allowing them to carry more inventory, and to fill orders while on the road.

โ€œDrivers usually go back to the hub every time to pick up the orders,โ€ explained Richard. โ€œWith extra inventory on hand, we had half hour to 45 minute delivery times, which blew everyone out of the water.โ€

Now, if you’re the type who needs to look a budtender in the eye and dare them to suggest something to satisfy a strong willed character like yourself, consider the very hidden yet super convenient Down Under Industries Dispensary, helpfully positioned on Ely Road, just about a yard outside of Petaluma city jurisdiction.

Jamie Reagan and her crew of happy-go-lucky stoner faerie godmothers now make running to the dispensary for supplies between drop off of one kid and pick up of another actually feasible, instead of a fantasy. The choice is between that and 10 miles of traffic-free freeway, with a dream of hitting every light on the way between little league and karate. [1] [2] 

Once all the running around is done, itโ€™s time to smoke up and relaxโ€”thanks to these two lesser known options for Petaluma potheads. As they say, convenience kills.


You could maybe split this sentence into two. I assume the second half is referring to another dispensary which is about ten miles away…

Yes, tricky fix, but I managed it. See what you think.

Pride for All

Axiom for a new civilization

By Michael Giotis

Itโ€™s Pride Month yโ€™all! Did I say that โ€œqueerโ€ enough? Iโ€™m working on it; itโ€™s still new to me. See, this was the year that I started talking openly about my own queer sexuality. But why?

Unsurprising for a white guy in his late 40s, coming out has been easy for me. Even though I present as a hetero-normative cis white male, there really havenโ€™t been any consequences for bringing up that Iโ€™m queer. Instead, draw your attention to how difficult it can be for some young adults to speak openly about their sexuality. That in some places openly proclaiming that you are gay could have legal and even fatal repercussions. Today. Yesterday. Tomorrow.

In contrast, I have come to realize that the idea of Pride is one of the reasons I am not keeping all this private business to myself. It is about celebrating yourself in a loving community.

Over several generations, LGBTQIA+ communities have used the term to connote many things. These might include: 1) Take pride in who you are, and 2) Proudly bring your full self to whatever you do. Thatโ€™s pretty cool. It could be an axiom for a new civilization.

Imagine a civilization which values all life, teaches its young to be proud of who they are and challenges them to grow and give. A government that organizes resources in support of these goals, gets those resources to homes, schools, communities in development. Comprehensive mental and medical service is not just available, but is a top priority of such a society.

Life is complicated, and being proud of who you are takes support and time. It takes work for you and the people around you. Value created by caretakers, massage therapists, artists, teachers, is the economy our civilization could be supporting, one that cares for and develops fully realized humans as a priority. And here we are caring for and developing oil.

In that imaginary but possible society, they would be there for you when you need it, and you would be there for them. Thatโ€™s gay as f***.

Michael Giotis is a writer and poet, father and lover, based in Petaluma.

Say ‘Awe’

Big Mouth Unique handmakes clothes, more By Michael Giotis Known first as a custom fabric arts atelier, the artist collective known as Big Mouth Unique started to get ideas of grandeur during recent successful โ€œopen studioโ€ nights at the multi-tenant Studio 2410 in Santa Rosa. โ€œA nice little community version of Art Trails,โ€ explained Matilda Amiot, one half of the seat-of-the-pants art...

Trivia

1 The first Catholic college in California to grant the B.A. degree to women, in 1917, was what school in Marin County? 2 What is one million minus one? 3 What four-letter โ€œHโ€ word is a term in basketball, boxing, golf and fishing? 4 The stone arch London Bridge, built in 1831, was dismantled in 1967 and rebuilt where? 5 Most people know...

Weed Weekend

Photo by Michael Giotis TRAIL MIX A stop on the Cannabis Trail.
Cannabis Trail By Michael Giotis As the weather warms up and our coastal forest is blanketed in that summer smell of redwoods, have I got an idea for you. Go west, young human, for an afternoon of cannabis consumption at one of the sweetest, most historically significant spots in the new world of cannabis. Weโ€™re talking about Riverside Wellness Collective in Guerneville,...

Cold War Redux

Cold War Redux The war in Ukraine is proving that the future of the human race looks very grim, unless the United States and Russia can end the ugly Cold War between us. This angry rivalry has divided much of the world into two enemy camps and has kept humankind on the brink of nuclear war for over 60 years. Those...

Letters

Over-repped The striking photo of the beautiful blonde young ladies in the "Teen Time" article on page 9 of the Pacific Sun, dated May 11-17, really caught my eye. I think it is wonderful that the Marin Chapter of the National Charity League is doing so much to help those in need. It gives me hope for the future to...

San Rafael

BIG BAD VOODOO DADDY The internationally famous swing band rocks Luther Burbank Center on Aug. 5 at 8pm.
Beatlesโ€™ Night Relive the โ€™60s when the Beatles Guitar Project Rock Orchestra comes to the North Bay on Saturday, June 11, to play live in concert. The 40-piece professional rock orchestra with special guest vocalists will play two Beatlesโ€™ albums, Rubber Soul and Revolver, in their entirety, using a rhythm section, strings, woodwinds, brass, percussion and a choir. The performance...

Trivia

1 Marin County generally gets 75% of its water supply from Mt. Tamalpais reservoirs; most of the remaining 25% comes from where?  2 What lively, whirling Italian dance was thought to be caused by, and a cure for, the bite of a spider? 3 The Greeks invented the name of this unusual animal, from two words meaning nose and horn. What...

Ibsen Sequel

Photo by Jere Torkelsen SEQUEL Jannely Calmell and Alison Peltz in 'A Doll's House, Part 2.'
โ€˜A Dollโ€™s House, Part 2โ€™ By Harry Duke Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsenโ€™s A Dollโ€™s House premiered in 1879 to great controversy. His look at the limitations and restrictions placed on women in a patriarchal society was considered quite scandalous at the time. Many consider it to be the beginning of modern feminist literature, though Ibsen himself denied that. Suffice it to...

Pot-a-luma

Yu Hosoi DELIVERANCE Weed to go.
Cannabis convenience By Michael Giotis Fellow Petalumans, tired of bolting up to Mercy Wellness after work and still trying to get home in time to cook dinner? I will have you know that the most highly rated delivery service in Sonoma County considers Petaluma its โ€œtop area to deliver, no doubt,โ€ according to Richard Trieber, CEO of the PowerPlant Park in Richmond,...

Pride for All

PQ Imagine a civilization which values all life, teaches its young to be proud of who they are and challenges them to grow and give. Photo by Carlos de Toro PROUD Writer Michael Giotis speaks openly about his queer sexuality.
Axiom for a new civilization By Michael Giotis Itโ€™s Pride Month yโ€™all! Did I say that โ€œqueerโ€ enough? Iโ€™m working on it; itโ€™s still new to me. See, this was the year that I started talking openly about my own queer sexuality. But why? Unsurprising for a white guy in his late 40s, coming out has been easy for me. Even though...
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