Sonoma County Farm Trails Connect the Public and Local Foods

Before weekly farmer’s markets and local food movements became a staple of the North Bay, Sonoma County Farm Trails connected the public to their local food producers.

Formed in 1973, the nonprofit creates maps and guides for local agriculture, and hosts events such as the popular Gravenstein Apple Fair.

For the last year, connecting the public to the region’s farmers and ranchers became difficult in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. Farm Trails was forced to cancel many of its events in 2020, and moved to an online format for the recent Gravenstein Apple Fair Benefit Concert last August.

This month, as live events return to the North Bay, Sonoma County Farm Trails is getting back on the farm with the upcoming Weekend Along the Farm Trails event on consecutive Saturdays and Sundays, Oct. 23–24 and Oct. 30–31. The self-guided agricultural tours allow families and food lovers to explore ranches, creameries, orchards and much more at several spots that will offer activities for all ages and a bevy of local foods.

“We decided just recently to revive our fall tour, because the infection rates are going down and we thought let’s try to give our farmers and public just a little more taste of normalcy that we all ache for,” Farm Trails Project Manager Ellen Cavalli says.

Cavalli, who co-owns Tilted Shed Ciderworks with her husband, Scott Heath, is a self-described cheerleader for Farm Trails, and she knows firsthand the importance of local connection for the agricultural community’s success.

“Not only do I work for Farm Trails, I’m also a member,” she says.

While the pandemic shuttered many opportunities for face-to-face interactions, Cavalli notes that the last year’s disruptions in national supply chains highlighted the importance of local food.

“There was a lot of scarcity and fear of scarcity that created a dramatic increase in demand for CSAs [Community Supported Agriculture] and local produce,” she says. “We immediately created a shelter-in-place portal on our website so that folks could find fresh food and ways of safely interacting with our members.”

Still, the nonprofit is eager to get the public back on the farms, and the Weekend Along the Farm Trails event boasts varied experiences and offerings from across the county.

“I call it a ‘choose your own agrarian adventure,’” Cavalli says. “Some tour destinations will be open one day, some will be open both, some will have workshops and demonstrations, some will have guided tours, some will have farm animals; it’s going to be really diverse.”

Weekend highlights include two multifaceted lavender farms, Bees N Bloom in Santa Rosa and Monte-Bellaria di California in Sebastopol; sustainable spots like Oak Hill Farm and its Red Barn Store in Glen Ellen (pictured) and Green String Farm in Petaluma; and kid-friendly places like nonprofit horse sanctuary Well Trained Horses in Sebastopol, as well as several pumpkin patches and other popular family destinations.

Online registration for the self-guided tours is free online now. Once participants register, they can map out their routes and see the specific features and Covid-related safety protocols of each farm on the tour.

Weekend Along the Farm Trails takes place Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 23–24 and Oct. 30–31. Register in advance at Farmtrails.org.

Remembering Andy Lopez: Pain Lingers 8 Years After Shooting Death of 13-year-old

From her second-floor window, Concepción Dominguez Galvan watched the neighborhood children play in the open field right next to her home in Moorland, then an unincorporated area of Santa Rosa.

She got to know them well and grew fond of a little boy with light-colored eyes named Andy Lopez. “I would see him and his family around the neighborhood, he was about one year old,” she said. “He was so cute, running around the field and chasing his siblings.”

Some years later, Galvan and the Cruz-Lopez family became neighbors, and she grew even fonder of him. “He was a playful child, full of joy,” she said. “In the evenings, Andy was usually outside, chasing their dog, Coco, around the block.”

On Oct. 22, 2013, Andy, 13 years old, was shot eight times by a Sonoma County sheriff’s deputy while walking down Moorland Avenue towards his old house, holding a toy rifle. Seven of those shots pierced his body.

Photo courtesy of Concepción Dominguez Galvan

His death was a shock to the community and was even more difficult for those who knew Andy well. “I couldn’t believe it,” Galvan said. “To me, he was a good kid. He did not deserve to die like that.”

She recalls going to a park on Hearn Avenue, crying and gathering the strength to go see Andy’s mother. “I didn’t know what I could do to support her,” she said, “but I knew that I needed to be there for her.”

The day after Andy’s senseless murder, community members started to gather and protest. “It gave my goosebumps, seeing how many people had come out to fight for justice for him.”

For the children who grew up alongside Andy, his death was deeply impactful.

Melissa Ortiz, 21, met Lopez in the second grade at Bellevue Elementary, where she was the new kid at school. “He was one of the very first people that befriended me,” she said. They soon became inseparable.

She recalls how playful he was. “When I think of him, one of the first things that comes to mind is how goofy he was,” Ortiz said. “He was the class clown, always trying to make people laugh.”

Although known to be playful, she says he also knew when to be a supportive friend. “At a very young age, he was always a good listener,” she said. “He could sense when something was wrong and would ask if everything was OK.”

As they grew older, their friendship became stronger, and “around the 4th grade, we passed notes to each other and told each other we had a crush.” They became childhood sweethearts. “He was so thoughtful,” Ortiz said. “I don’t think he showed that side to everyone, because he was known as the class clown; but he was super sweet, sunny and loving.”

When Ortiz went to school the day after, she had no idea what had occurred to her best friend. “I didn’t know what everyone was talking about until one of my friends told me that Andy had been killed by a sheriff, and that first second, I couldn’t even react, I didn’t know what to think.”

His loss had a profound impact on her young life, and it’s difficult for her to talk about it to this day. “As a kid, I struggled but I still had hope,” she said. “After losing Andy, I looked at life differently; that bright lens that I saw the world through was tainted.”

She continued, “He was my best friend, the person who I could talk to. I was still so young, and after he was killed, I realized how brutal and real life is.”

Although Ana Salgado did not know Andy Lopez, she was drawn to attend the protests because of the youth who did know him and were grieving.

“There were so many kids there, many with their parents, who said they had gone to school with Andy,” Salgado said.

Photo courtesy of Melissa Ortiz

According to Salgado, the students had walked out of school to protest outside of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office, and the atmosphere was tense. “I was surprised at how they received us, they had officers ready like we were going to attack,” she said. “I was worried that there would be another incident, because the youth had a lot of questions and a lot of rage. We [the adults] were always trying to protect the kids at the marches, while also trying to create a conversation between them and law enforcement. We tried, but it never happened.”

This year marks the eighth anniversary of Andy’s death, and despite some changes following several years of protest, the feeling of loss is still strong. “A lot of us who knew him still sit with so much sadness and pain,” Galvan said.

In 2018, after fighting the case all the way up to the Supreme Court, Sonoma County settled a Civil Rights lawsuit brought by Lopez’s parents, for $3 million. The county and the Sheriff’s Office did not admit any wrongdoing.

Erick Gelhaus, the deputy who shot Lopez, has never faced criminal charges in the case.

A park memorializing Lopez now sits in the area where he was killed, aptly named the Andy Lopez Unity Park.

“A space to honor him is wonderful, but it’s not enough,” Galvan said. “We want to see justice for him—a child is dead, and to this day we can’t understand why.”

Salgado and Galvan, along with other community members, help put together a yearly vigil on Oct. 22, remembering Lopez. “We try to keep it in people’s minds so that they don’t forget what happened in that park,” Salgado said. “We gather to remember Andy, in his neighborhood, where he grew up and played.”

While Galvan has many memories of Andy, there’s one she often remembers when thinking about him. She often saw Andy and his siblings in the mornings, waiting for the school bus.

“Sometimes he was late, and he would come out of his house with his shoelaces untied, trying to catch the bus. When he missed it, his mom would take him to school, and I could tell that he loved those moments alone with his mom, her love all to himself,” she said, her voice choking with emotion.

“He was a really sweet kid who loved his mother so much. I just have that image of him dragging his shoes as he ran towards the bus.” She paused for a moment. “It’s something that still makes me smile to this day.”

On Friday, Oct. 22, a memorial will be held for Andy at the Andy Lopez Unity Park, from 5–7pm. The event is open to the public.

Giving Voice: Peter Coyote Narrates Andy Lopez Documentary

3 Seconds in October: The Shooting of Andy Lopez, Ron Rogers’ stunning documentary about the gunning down of 13-year-old Andy Lopez at the hands of Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy Erick Gelhaus, will be screened again on local PBS stations from Oct. 22–27.

Seven years in the making, the film’s revelations about the tragedy are complemented by the eloquent narration of Peter Coyote, another Sonoma County resident. Coyote—actor, author, poet, activist, Buddhist priest and free spirit of the first order—has narrated more than 200 documentaries, including those of Ken Burns, which have made his distinctive voice instantly recognizable around the world.

Coyote, who just turned 80, has practiced socio-political activism for more than 60 years. In 1962, he and 11 fellow students at Grinnell College went to Washington, D.C., and fasted for three days in front of the White House in protest of the resumption of nuclear testing. The protest made national headlines, and President John Kennedy invited the group into the White House to discuss their concerns. It was the beginning of mass student anti-war protest as a significant political force in the United States.

After moving to the Bay Area in 1964, Coyote soon fell in with fellow writers, artists, actors and peace activists to co-found the Diggers, whose work included feeding some 600 people a day for free, running a free store, publishing a newspaper and putting on street theater performances. Coyote says the Diggers were “cultural warriors” devoted to an “authentic way of living by imagining the peaceful world they wanted to live in and then acting it out.” Their pioneering work attracted the attention of the budding Black Panthers, and they worked together to produce the first Panther newspaper.

Coyote says he was happy to contribute his efforts to 3 Seconds in October pro bono because it’s “stuff that I believe in, that people believe in.” He adds that the film is “completely consonant with my life as a cultural warrior for authenticity, my values and the way I’ve tried to live my life.”  

Regarding Petaluma-based filmmaker Ron Rogers, Coyote says, “I’m in awe of Ron Rogers and the sustained effort he made, and the struggles to get this film produced. And he didn’t stop at Andy, he took the momentum to criticize the [Sonoma County] jail beatings of prisoners and that out of control aspect of the police. So I’m filled with respect and really glad I had a chance to participate.”


3 Seconds in October first aired on KRCB this July. It will be re-broadcast this week on KRCB—PBS affiliate Channel 22 – North Bay—at the following times: Friday, Oct. 22 at 10:30pm; Sunday, Oct. 24 at 11pm and Wednesday, Oct. 27 at 10pm.

Free Will Astrology

ARIES (March 21-April 19): According to my understanding of the upcoming weeks, life will present you with unusual opportunities. I suspect you will find it reasonable and righteous to shed, dismantle and rebel against the past. Redefining your history will be a fun and worthy project. Here are other related activities I recommend for you: 1. Forget and renounce a long-running fear that has never come true. 2. Throw away a reminder of an old experience that makes you feel bad. 3. Freshen your mood and attitude by moving around the furniture and decor in your home. 4. Write a note of atonement to a person you hurt once upon a time. 5. Give yourself a new nickname that inspires you to emancipate yourself from a pattern or habit you want to leave behind.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus poet Donte Collins’ preferred pronouns are “they” and “them.” They describe themself as Black, queer and adopted. “A lover doesn’t discourage your growth,” they write. “A lover says, ‘I see who you are today, and I cannot wait to see who you become tomorrow.’” I hope you have people like that in your life, Taurus—lovers, friends, allies and relatives. If there is a scarcity of such beloved companions in your life, the next eight weeks will be an excellent time to round up new ones. And if you are connected with people who delight in your progress and evolution, deepen your connection with them.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini author Lisa Cron advises her fellow writers, “Avoid exclamation points! Really!! Because they’re distracting!! Almost as much as CAPITALIZING THINGS!!!” I’ll expand her counsel to apply not just to writers, but to all of you Geminis. In my astrological opinion, you’re likely to find success in the coming weeks if you’re understated, modest and unmelodramatic. Make it your goal to create smooth, suave, savvy solutions. Be cagey and cool and crafty.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu told us that water is in one sense soft and passive, but is in another sense superb at eroding jams and obstacles that are hard and firm. There’s a magic in the way its apparent weakness overcomes what seems strong and unassailable. You are one of the zodiac’s top wielders of water’s superpower, Cancerian. And in the coming weeks, it will work for you with even more amazing grace than usual. Take full advantage of your sensitivity, your emotional intelligence and your empathy.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Leo author James Baldwin told us, “You read something which you thought only happened to you, and you discover that it happened 100 years ago to [Russian novelist] Fyodor Dostoyevsky. This is a great liberation for the suffering, struggling person, who always thinks that he is alone.” In that spirit, Leo, and in accordance with astrological omens, I urge you to track down people who have had pivotal experiences similar to yours, either in the distant or recent past. These days, you need the consoling companionship they can provide. Their influence could be key to liberating you from at least some of your pain.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Poet Octavio Paz described two kinds of distraction. One is “the distraction of the person who is always outside himself, lost in the trivial, senseless, turmoil of everyday life.” The other is “the distraction of the person who withdraws from the world in order to shut himself up in the secret and ever-changing land of his fantasy.” In my astrological opinion, you Virgos should specialize in the latter during the coming weeks. It’s time to reinvigorate your relationship with your deep inner sources. Go in search of the reverent joy that comes from communing with your tantalizing mysteries. Explore the riddles at the core of your destiny.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “We must never be afraid to go too far, for truth lies beyond,” declared novelist Marcel Proust. I wouldn’t normally offer that counsel to you Libras. One of your strengths is your skill at maintaining healthy boundaries. You know how to set dynamic limits that are just right: neither too extreme nor too timid. But according to my analysis of the astrological potentials, the coming weeks will be one of those rare times when you’ll be wise to consider an alternative approach: that the most vigorous truths and liveliest energies may lie beyond where you usually go.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Author William S. Burroughs claimed his greatest strength was a “capacity to confront myself no matter how unpleasant.” But he added a caveat to his brag: Although he recognized his mistakes, he rarely made any corrections. Yikes! Dear Scorpio, I invite you to do what Burroughs couldn’t. Question yourself about how you might have gone off course, but then actually make adjustments and atonements. As you do, keep in mind these principles: 1. An apparent mistake could lead you to a key insight or revelation. 2. An obstruction to the flow may prod you to open your mind and heart to a liberating possibility. 3. A snafu might motivate you to get back to where you belong. 4. A mess could show you something important you’ve been missing.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In her novel We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Sagittarian author Shirley Jackson wrote, “Today my winged horse is coming, and I am carrying you off to the moon, and on the moon we will eat rose petals.” I wonder what you would do if you received a message like that—an invitation to wander out on fanciful or mysterious adventures. I hope you’d be receptive. I hope you wouldn’t say, “There are no such things as flying horses. It’s impossible to fly to the moon and eat rose petals.” Even if you don’t typically entertain such whimsical notions, the time is favorable to do so now. I bet you will be pleased with the unexpected grace they bring your way.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn author Susan Sontag wrote about people who weren’t receptive to her intensity and intelligence. She said she always had “a feeling of being ‘too much’ for them—a creature from another planet—and I would try to scale myself down to size, so I could be apprehendable and lovable by them.” I understand the inclination to engage in such self-diminishment. We all want to be appreciated and understood. But I urge you to refrain from taming and toning yourself down too much in the coming weeks. Don’t do what Sontag did. In my astrological opinion, it’s time for you to be an extra vivid version of yourself.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “I am diagnosed with not having enough insanely addictive drugs coursing through my body,” joked comedian Sarah Silverman. Judging from current cosmic rhythms, I’m inclined to draw a similar conclusion about you. It may be wise for you to dose yourself with intoxicants. JUST KIDDING! I lied. Here’s the truth: I would love for you to experience extra rapture, mystic illumination, transcendent sex, and yes, even intoxication in the coming weeks. My analysis of the astrological omens suggests these delights are more likely and desirable than usual. However, the best way to arouse them is by communing with your favorite non-drug and non-alcohol inebriants. The benefits will last longer and incur no psychological cost.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “The truth is,” writes cartoonist Bill Watterson, “most of us discover where we are headed when we arrive.” I sense this will describe your life during the next six weeks. Your long, strange journey won’t come to an end, of course. But a key chapter in that long, strange journey will climax. You will be mostly finished with lessons you have been studying for many moons. The winding road you have been following will end up someplace in particular. And sometime soon, I suspect you’ll spy a foreshadowing flash of this denouement.

Trivia – Oct. 13-19, 2021

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QUESTIONS

1 VISUAL:  This winter we’ll be rooting for the arrival of those strong, warm and persistent flows of heavy precipitation extending from the Hawaiian Islands towards the California coast, commonly known by what fruity 2-word nickname?

2 What two holidays generate the most candy sales in the U.S.?

3 VISUAL:  What actor played the title role of blind genius singer Ray Charles in the 2004 film Ray?

4 How do fish get oxygen?

5 The lowest prevailing interest rate at which banks lend money to corporations and customers with good credit has what 2-word name?

6 The United States Post Office Department inaugurated airmail delivery in 1918, connecting what three cities?

7 The U.S. tennis center in Queens—in Long Island, New York—is named after what female tennis star?

8 What are the world’s two largest islands? (Hint: Not Australia, which is a continent).

9a.  According to the 1968 Three Dog Night song hit, what is … “the loneliest number you’ll ever do”?

9b.  What well-known singer/songwriter (HN) composed that song?

10 Former President Jimmy Carter had these installed on the White House roof, but President Ronald Reagan later had them removed. What were they?

BONUS QUESTION:  VISUAL:  The world’s highest passenger railway reaches 16,627 feet, passing through what country or countries?

Tagline:  Want More Trivia for your next Party, Fundraiser or Special Event? Contact ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 Pineapple Express

2   No. 1: Halloween / No. 2: Easter

3 Jamie Foxx

4 Water passes through their gills, which absorb oxygen and dispel carbon dioxide. 

5 Prime Rate

6 Washington—Philadelphia—New York

7 Billie Jean King

8 Greenland and New Guinea

9a.  “One is the loneliest number that you’ll ever do, Two can be as bad as one, It’s the loneliest number since the number one”

9b.  Harry Nilsson

10 Solar panels for generating electricity

BONUS ANSWER: China/Tibet

Letters to the Editor: Outraged and Unsettled

Outrage

Please thank this author for her measured response to the outrageous column by Mr. Zebulon. I hope the editorial finds a way to apologize and correct his lies. It is not a question of point of view but as outrageous a set of statements as those produced by holocaust deniers. I expect better from the Bohemian.

Richard Burg

Healdsburg

Unsettled

A friend recently expressed dismay that the Bohemian published “Unsettling” by Michael Zebulon because the piece was “so full of lies.” I admire your Open Mic policy. Opinions buttressed by fabrications, lack of historical knowledge and ideology are best kept in the open because this provides a public forum for clarification and refutation. Mr. Zebulon’s article reads like propaganda. After stating the liberal-progressive labels that frame the argument in his favor, Mr. Zebulon states his first lie: “most of the land in the unincorporated territories is still unsettled by anybody.” The lands of the West Bank have been farmed by Palestinians for millennia. Burning Palestinian olive groves and confiscating grazing lands has been par for the course in establishing Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Not to mention terrorism. Just a few weeks ago, 60 masked, armed settlers attacked a West Bank Palestinian village, slicing the throats of three sheep, breaking windows, throwing stones, one of which fractured the skull of a three-year-old boy. Other mis-statements follow. For example, the West Bank territories are recognized internationally as “occupied.” It is the supremacist, colonizer mindset that denies indigenous people the right to live on the lands of their ancestors. Israel is no different than the United States or South Africa in that regard. All are nations that appropriated land from indigenous peoples who neither had nor understood European concepts of private property, nation state sovereignty dictates or manifest destiny.

Cynthia Poten

Sebastopol

Open Mic: Lunch at Eden

Eve 

young beautiful woman

Adam

a gentleman

Eve presented apple

Adam unfilled

Bit

too quick

The couple

shrieked

Ran for cover

God 

robed in purple

Silently 

birding in garden

Observes

Adam 

Aghast

Quaking

in bushes

Adam

idiot

I ordered you not to eat

Adam confesses

Eve tempted me

Snitch

cries Eve

Witch

bellows Adam

Quiet sinners

Cover yourselves

Suddenly

Three white doves

soar to the heavens

singing 

Eden

not so Paradise

anymore

‘Noises Off’ Hits Mark

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There may be no group more deserving of a laugh right now than the theater community, as pandemic-related closures and cancellations led to a general lack of mirth for folks who enjoy going to theater and the artists who create it.

North Bay companies are aiming to bring the funny back by programming several broad comedies in their seasons. Rohnert Park’s Spreckels Performing Arts Center hosts the popular theater farce Noises Off through Oct. 24.

The lights come up on a harried theater company in final dress rehearsal for a touring production of Nothing On. Frustrated director Lloyd Dallas (Matthew Cadigan), his part-time paramour/assistant stage manager Poppy (Taylor Diffenderfer) and his put-upon stage manager Tim (Brandon Wilson) have their hands full with memory-challenged lead actress Dotty (Eileen Morris), her oft-jealous co-star Garry (Zane Walters), his inexperienced and frequently scantily-clad scene partner Brooke (MacKenzie Cahill), overly sensitive co-star Frederick (Kevin Bordi), his level-headed scene partner Belinda (Maureen O’Neill) and veteran performer Selsdon Mowbray (John Craven), who’s always in search of a bottle.

The show(s) are set in the living room of a two-story country home, complete with seven doors, to be slammed; a staircase, to be tumbled down; and plates and plates of sardines, to be slipped upon.

Director Sheri Lee Miller puts her cast through quite a workout as they run, jump, fall and crawl across the massive Eddy Hansen-designed set as the opening scene of Nothing On is presented, not once, but three times.

Act one takes place at the final dress. Act two takes place at a mid-run performance after the entire set has been rotated so that you witness the same scene being done but from a backstage view. The third act finds the set rotated back to its original placement and the final performance begins. Needless to say, little goes right during any of the scenes as egos explode, costumes malfunction and props—and actors—go missing.

Timing is everything in comedy, and that goes double for farce. Entrances and exits must be hit exactly, or the air rapidly deflates from the comedy balloon. The same goes for physical comedy. Accidents must look enough like accidents to be believable, but not so real as to imagine that actor getting hurt. Miller’s cast does well in all these areas.

In other words, the laughs are on at Noises Off.

“Noises Off” runs through Oct. 24 at Spreckels Performing Arts Center, 5409 Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park. Thurs–Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. Tickets $12–$26. 707.588.3400. Spreckelsonline.com. Proof of vaccination and masking are required to attend.

Filmmaker Emmett Brenner Focuses on California Water Stewardship

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On a bright, blustery October day, a day that felt almost like normal fall weather, I had a conversation with filmmaker Emmett Brenner about his latest film, Reflection: A Walk with Water. In the film, Brenner and fellow environmental advocates walk the length of the Los Angeles Aqueduct to raise awareness about the misuses of water in California and the acute effects it’s having on the land. Brenner’s film informs, educates and empowers viewers. Reflection teaches about how water is moved, how that relocation affects the surrounding land and how short-sighted city planning results in shocking and avoidable water waste. It also shows ways, happening in real time, to resolve this mismanagement of water. During the hour and 19 minutes I spent watching Reflection: A Walk with Water, my mind was quietly and beautifully opened. I can’t recommend enough that everyone engage with this film and the insight it affords. 

This discussion with Emmett was as much an appreciation of his work as it was two human beings considering the current state of humanity and our responsibility to participate in its fate. You, the reader, are also part of this dialogue.

Jane Vick: So I watched the film yesterday—

Emmett Brenner: Yay!

JV: Emmett, it was awesome! Really inspiring. My boyfriend and I were talking just the other day about how human beings develop systems. We identify—or create—a problem, endeavor to fix it and end up with another problem. A sort of teeter-totter effect ensues, searching for equilibrium between our innovative inclinations and pre-existing natural cycles. And when we pull away from the natural cycle in an attempt to manifest something on our own, things become destructive. If we used our abilities to steward the land in a participatory way, we could really get somewhere.

EB: Totally. And it’s incredible to me—we live in an unbelievably intelligent system, and all these things we create are attempting to accomplish tasks the natural world has for the most part already accomplished in more efficient methods than we could conceive of. But the beauty is that we don’t need to. We are a part of the intelligence of these natural systems, we have an opportunity to live human life in relationship with that intelligence.

JV: Reflection has so many inspiring examples of this relationship. There are so many brilliant minds in this film, sharing ways we can marry our ingenuity with natural cycles. It’s felt like a strange hubris has worked its way into the human dynamic, where instead of returning to the wisdom of the natural world to correct our missteps, we move further away.

EB: Right, yeah—the idea that natural methods of stewardship are “primitive,” as though that makes them ineffective. It reminds me of when colonizers came to the Americas; they described these landscapes proliferating with fruits and nuts and these incredible, old-growth trees. And they completely omitted—didn’t actually understand—that these places were being tended to by relationships with humans. These forests were being cultivated to have the abundance of food and life that they did. We can’t separate the “wild” as something other that we don’t belong within. We’re deeply connected. We’re part of the complexity of this whole system of life on Earth.

JV: Completely. I love the portion of the film that talks about thatch—tall grass growth, left untrampled—and how grazing elk would stomp it down until it lay flat on top of the soil, fertilizing it and aiding in water transfer, thus avoiding fire conditions. It makes me think about places like Spring Lake, where they now bring goats in to take care of the overgrowth to reduce fire risk. The fires really woke us up.

EB: It’s a struggle in this era of ownership and privatization, when landscapes are cut into boxes. The natural movement of wild grazers is significantly impacted, and it puts much more emphasis on our management of domesticated animals for the time being. We need to look to the patterns of those wild animals in our management of domesticated ones. I’m glad the fires are waking us up in this way … it’s troubling that it takes such catastrophe to initiate change.  

JV: Do you harbor concerns about our future in that way?

EB: I do. On a personal level, my patterns and addictions to technology, the role it plays in my life, concerns me greatly. I don’t know fundamentally where we’re heading, and in order to be resourced with hope I feel that I need to be tending my own relationship with life and love and land. When I’m wrapped up in my phone I feel farther away from that tending. Farther away from the resources to feel possibility and hope. I feel most capable of facing the context of these times when I am present in a quieter way.

JV:  I also frequently confront my own struggle with technology. Trying to gauge an appropriate level of use, wanting to be involved in contemporary society and experiencing incredible anxiety and confusion as our neurochemistry and societal practices change. And it’s true, we don’t know what will come of humanity, or Earth. I think the things we engage in—sometimes benign, sometimes malevolent, often both—must be recognized as imperfect attempts at a cohesive existence. We can’t completely reject what is—i.e. tech, now clearly a part of our lives—we can only continue engaging with our circumstances and ask when things feel wrong and when they feel right. That’s how I deal with so much change and challenge. There’s immense mystery to it, much we can’t explain, but still we engage in real time.

EB: It’s true. Humans struggle with mystery—when we approach something that carries a feeling of not knowing we tend to tighten, to turn towards control and the pretence of knowing. We try to define anything that our mind can’t fully wrap around—to take it apart and categorize it. But we lose the whole picture this way. It’s how we’ve treated water. Water is way more mysterious than we can fathom, so intricately involved in every system, and we’ve done everything we can to control and manipulate it, to devastating outcome. We try to dominate the unknowable instead of finding our place within it.

JV: Right. We forget that we are participating, not directing, and then the balance and understanding are lost. We need active participation in life, but we can’t override it; we have to operate within the larger system.

EB: Exactly. It can’t just be inquiry and openness, nor domination and control. It’s the balance that produces something lasting.

JV: And we have the capacity within us. Reflection is a beautiful testimony to that capacity.

Reflection: A Walk with Water is currently showing at the Mill Valley Film Festival, and tickets can be found at mvff.com. Please take your time with it, and foster a sense of hope for our future.

Healdsburg for the Win

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It was my day to visit Healdsburg, and the drive up from Sebastopol was pleasant enough. I took the Healdsburg Avenue exit off Hwy 101 and parked a half-block from the Plaza. The town was quiet, with sparse traffic, in sharp contrast to the summer months, which draw enormous crowds.

From my truck I wandered past the Plaza, up Center Street, to pay homage to Bravas Bar de Tapas. Every August my brother flies his large London-based brood into San Francisco, and we have an extended family gathering in Healdsburg that includes a massive feast at Bravas with as many as 7 adults and 6 kids. This involves two tables in the back garden and a solid two-plus hours of dining. Every dish—including paella, fried chicken, escarole salad and octopus—is phenomenal.

My nod to one local institution complete, I walked back to the plaza, noting that Healdsburg Running Company, “America’s Wineiest Running Store,” has an elaborate dog-watering/feeding station out front and a friendly pedestrian alley behind it. It’s these details that make Healdsburg so delightful to stroll.

Feeling hunger’s gnaw, I chose to lunch at El Farolito, where I sat down at their on-street shaded seating for chips, salsa and a pair of divine el pastor tacos—which at $3.50 each are one of the best deals in town. Local business people dined at the tables around me, and a lone guitarist wailed “Bridge Over Troubled Waters” from the bandstand across the street in the nearly-empty Plaza.

My stomach happily full, I walked a few doors around the corner to Levin & Company Community Booksellers, dipping in to peruse their fiction and sci-fi sections, as well as their CDs and the Upstairs Art Gallery. I left the store smiling.

Later, I poked my head into Copperfield’s Books because, well, books, books and more books. At this point I must make full disclosure and inform the readership that I have worked for Copperfield’s in the past and am still on the company’s payroll. Books and I go decades back, to childhood evenings spent exploring Kepler’s original Menlo Park location in the late 1970s. These days I own 40 boxes of books. I’ve worked for four different bookstores, a book distributor and a book publisher in my time, and I’ve been voraciously reading and writing since I learned to read and write. Having never met any employees from the Healdsburg location, I introduced myself and took a look around the cozy, well-lighted store, making particular note of the print newspapers they carry.

Back outside, I decided to explore the Plaza itself. On the far side of the square I happened upon a plaque. Lo and behold, it was dedicated to Harmon Gregg Heald, the town’s founder, and marked the location of his cabin, built in 1851 “150 feet west of this spot,” and his store and post office, built in 1857 “100 feet north of here.” Better yet, the plaque itself was placed by the Yerba Buena Chapter of E Clampus Vitus on May 23, 1964. Hmmm … the Clampers have a penchant for trickery, do they not? Perhaps they also plant historic markers? I confirmed the authenticity of the plaque’s information via a Siri query on my iPhone, and crossed the street once again.

Outside Noble Folk Ice Cream and Pie Bar I spied an adorable little silkie Yorky, named Benji, and started up a conversation with his humans, Jose and Ping, who were up from the Bay Area for a fun day in Wine Country. They happily posed for a photo, in which I made sure Benji’s tiny little tie-on moccasins were visible.

But I was vaguely hungry, again. Black Oak Coffee Roasters beckoned. Back across the Plaza I strode. Citing nerves, I ordered a 12-oz. decaf Americano, which proved as rich and black as the cup it was served in. The service was impeccable, and I parked myself by the cafe entrance to take notes for this very article. Was it my frayed imagination, or did I detect a subtle caffeine buzz thrumming the cracks in my nerves? I couldn’t say for sure, because I’d already had a cuppa earlier in the day, and decaf must contain some caf, must it not? The questions we ask ourselves when no one is near enough to hear our speedy thoughts.

My morning stroll through Healdsburg over, I wandered back to my truck the slow way, looping around the far side of the Plaza and pausing to duck into art galleries. I rarely make it as far north as Healdsburg—living as I do in Sebastopol—but I promised myself I’d return, with company next time, to share the experience with a friend.

Ciao, friendly town!

Mark Fernquest lives and writes in a glass house in a West County apple orchard.

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