Theater Lives Again in Cloverdale

With the lifting of most restrictions on in-door gatherings, the curtain continues to slowly rise on live, in-person theater in the North Bay. Many companies, having made their season announcements, plan to welcome audiences into their houses with productions opening from mid-August to early September.

The Cloverdale Performing Arts Center gets an early jump on the season with Sam Shepardโ€™s The God of Hell. Originally planned as a streaming production, the show now runs live, onstage Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons through Aug. 1.

Capacity at the 99-seat theater will be limited to 50%, and groups will be safely spaced apart. Masks must be worn while moving around the theaterโ€”but may be removed while seated for the 90-minute show, which is what every one of the 30-plus opening-night attendeesโ€”except meโ€”did.

Playwright Shepard, whose better-known works include True West, Buried Child and Fool for Love, wrote this play in 2004 in reaction to the events of 9/11 and the then-impending presidential election. Its focus on ultra-patriotism places connections to our current political environment within easy reach.

Wisconsin dairy farmers Frank (Christopher Johnston) and Emma (Elizabeth Henry) find their quiet, pastoral lives upended with the arrival of a mysterious man in black named Welch (Jonathan Graham), whose briefcase is stuffed with American flags and red, white and blue cookies. He takes particular interest in the number of rooms in the farmhouse, and exhibits an almost obsessive curiosity about the basement.

Residing in that basement is Haynes (Matt Farrell), a friend of Frankโ€™s who seems to be on the run from something, and whose electrifying presence is the real reason for Welchโ€™s visit. The slick salesman of all-things-American, whose jingoism is initially mildly amusing, soon morphs into a sadistic torturer. By the showโ€™s end, Frank has bought into the program, while Emma literally sounds a warning bell.

Shepard wrote this farce in a hurry, and it shows. Director Athena Gundlach brings a light touch to the occasionally heavy-handed materialโ€”and being reminded of the Abu Ghraib atrocities is about as heavy-handed as comedy gets.

The cast of four is solid, and obviously relished the opportunity to be back on stage in front of an audienceโ€”almost as much as the audience relished the opportunity to be back in a theater. 

Welcome back, everyone, but please think about keeping the masks on.

โ€œThe God of Hellโ€ runs through Aug. 1 at the Cloverdale Performing Arts Center, 209 N. Cloverdale Blvd., Cloverdale. Saturday, 7:30pm; Sunday, 2pm. $12โ€“$25. 707.894.2219. Recommended for ages 18+. Strobe effects and pyrotechnics. cloverdaleperformingarts.com

Wine of the Times: Upcoming events showcase the North Bay’s tastes

Several North Bay organizations invite the public to raise a glass in both virtual and in-person settings this summer for events that celebrate the regionโ€™s vintner culture and support local wineries, local youth and the fight against cancer.

Founded in 1944, Sonoma County Vintners represents more than 200 wineries and affiliated businesses throughout Sonoma County. Each summer, the group gathers many of these wineries for the annual Taste of Sonoma event.

This summer, Sonoma County Vintners pivots to virtual events and partners with Wine.com to present โ€œTaste of Sonoma at Home,โ€ presented by Visa Signature, featuring a lineup of online events in July.

โ€œWe wanted, out of an abundance of caution, to not move forward with a (live event) until we could do so in a safe and healthy manner for our wineries and community,โ€ says Sonoma County Vintners Director of Events Vanessa Renee. โ€œIt also allows us to put the spotlight on the wineries who are welcoming guests back in smaller numbers to their tasting rooms.โ€

This week, โ€œTaste of Sonoma at Homeโ€ digitally joins Kendall-Jackson Winery on Thursday, July 22, for an interactive virtual garden tour and culinary class hosted by Executive Chef Justin Wangler and Master Culinary Gardener Tucker Taylor. 

โ€œThe idea was to bring back that food and wine focus, and thatโ€™s such a big part of the Kendall-Jackson DNA,โ€ Renee says. โ€œThey have these beautiful grounds surrounded by vineyards and these great gardens. This is a way for them to show that off and to get people excited about when this event comes back, because it will be at Kendall-Jackson.โ€ 

The following week, on July 29, Wine.com hosts an online rotation of local red wines ranging from Russian River Valley pinot noir to Dry Creek Valley zinfandel and Alexander Valley cabernet sauvignon featuring participating wineries Pedroncelli Winery, Francis Ford Coppola Winery and La Crema. tasteofsonoma.com

In San Rafael, nonprofit organization Youth In Arts will close down C Street for an outdoor fundraiser, Sip & Bid: Dancing in the Streets, on Friday, July 23. Youth In Arts has plenty of reason to celebrate, as it marks a 50-year milestone of helping Marin County youth build visual and performing arts skills.

For the upcoming event, Chef Lisa Hinesโ€”also known as โ€œthe Food Fashionistaโ€”of Bella Luxe catering will serve food and drinks alongside live music by Marin band Pop Rocks and performances by famed YIA mentor artists.

In addition to the entertainment, the Sip & Bid benefit also boasts an extensive wine auction that includes rare vintages, wine trips and other experiences. youthinarts.org

In Napa Valley, the V Foundation Wine Celebration, benefitting the V Foundation for Cancer Research, goes live in August. The three-day soiree, running Aug. 5โ€“7, includes highlights like the โ€œRock The V Partyโ€ on Aug. 6; which boasts a barbecue showdown and North Bay vintners offering samples of their latest vintages and perfectly aged selections.

On Aug. 7, the weekend celebration gathers some of the nationโ€™s leading physicians and research scientists for the โ€œAnswer for Cancerโ€ research symposium. The free event features top minds discussing current advances in immunotherapy and discoveries into alternative treatments for cancer.

Also on Aug. 7, the V Foundation Wine Celebration culminates in a gala dinner and live auction at Nickel & Nickel Winery in Oakville. Recently, V Foundation announced that a generous matching grant will challenge bidders in the fund-a-need portion of the eveningโ€™s auctions.

โ€œWith this generous matching grant, we are poised to raise a significant amount of money to advance immunotherapy research,โ€ says Julie Maples, V Foundation board member and co-chair of the Wine Celebration, in a statement. โ€œWe are working to bring our vision of victory over cancer closer to reality every single day.โ€ winecelebration.org

The North Bay Marks the Spot for TreasureFest This Year

Ten years ago, North Bay residents Angie and Charles Ansanelli launched one of the Bay Area’s largest, most diverse and most popular flea markets, TreasureFest.

Originally named the Treasure Island Flea and renamed TreasureFest in 2016, the event indeed flocked to Treasure Island, connected to San Francisco via the Bay Bridge, for its outings.

For several years, the monthly open-air market drew in-demand indie designers, artists, craft makers, local eateries, musicians and other creatives, along with thousands or shoppers and their dogs to the island.

Last year, the Ansanellis realized the event was outgrowing the island, and were planning to move to Marin County to turn the monthly gathering into a massive annual event that could further showcase art, music, top-rated local eats and other treasures amongย more thanย 400 curated vendorsย selling their goods.

While the 2020 TreasureFest was canceled due to Covid-19, the Ansanellis were able to go online for a virtual market last year.

Now, the in-person event is back on the books for 2021, and North Bay attendees are invited to the Marin Center in San Rafael for the 10th anniversary TreasureFest on September 18-19.

The outdoor event will take over a massive lawn that’s perfect for a picnic or sunbathing, and the two-day showcase will feature live music from popular local acts, mouth-watering local eats, craft brews, wine and cocktails, art installations and live art demonstrations and hundreds of local vendors.

The one-of-a-kind crafts and items that will be available at TreasureFest includes up-cycled furniture, clothes, art and jewelry, and more from both emerging designers and vintage collections.

“We are so excited to bring TreasureFest to Marin,” says Angie Ansanelli. “We have expanded the original concept of TreasureFest to be even more of a premium outdoor festival experience. The 2021 TreasureFest is going to be our best yet and and as always, fun for all ages and well-behaved pooches on leashes!”

“Our goal is to showcase the immense talent found throughout the bar area, connecting the maker or collector directly to the shopper,” Ansanelli says. “This way the shopper not only walks away with a treasure but the story behind it, to share with others for years to come.”

On the TreasureFest website, organizers also note that, “We are relieved and hopeful to see the COVID-19 situation improving across the country but we are still monitoring matters closely. We will follow the recommended health and safety guidelines put forth by the authorities. In the meanwhile, please help us achieve our goals by continuing to wear masks and get vaccinated when it is your turn to do so.”

TreasureFest comes to the North Bay on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 18โ€“19, at Marin Center in San Rafael. 10am to 6pm both days. All ages. Early Bird tickets to the event are sold-out and $15 tickets expire on July 31. Tickets will be $20 on August 1, and $25 at the door. Treasurefest.com.

Sonoma County Library Invites Locals to Share Covid Memories

In September of 2020, Sonoma County Library launched Sonoma Responds: A Community Memory Archive, inviting Sonoma County residents to share their stories and preserving these memories in an online archive, theย Sonoma Responds community collection, 2020-2021.

The collection preserves a local historical record of living through Covid-19 and the past year’s events such as the Black Lives Matter movement, wildfires, the most recent presidential election, and everyday life.

By sharing and preserving these stories in the archive, the library gives the North Bay a place to collectively reflect on the past years’ experiences while building a record of life in the new age of social distancing.

This summer, the library will conclude collecting digital submissions on August 31, 2021. Community members are encouraged to share their memories and experiences, both in English and in Spanish, on the library’s online portal before time runs out.

โ€œThe stories we leave behind will shape the way future generations understand this period in history. All of us have a story to tell,โ€ says Zayda Delgado, Special
Collections Librarian and one of the project leads, in a statement.

Digital submissions of all types are welcome, including anonymous submissions. The Sonoma Responds project is accepting images, videos, audio recordings and writings, as well as other online content for the web archive and materials and objects for the physical archive.

Already, the Sonoma Responds archive has collected photographs, videos, letters, zines, signs, blog and social media posts, and creative works such as novels, poetry and drawings, even an album of coronavirus-related songs.

Recently, the California Library Association recognized Sonoma Responds with ‘Best in Show’ at the PRExcellence Awards, stating it was โ€œa timely and meaningful project for this unusual time.โ€

The libraryโ€™s efforts to preserve this material is part of the Internet Archiveโ€™s Community Webs program, which supports public libraries around the country in building and maintaining web archives that reflect local culture and events.

Through a collaboration with Sonoma State Universityโ€™s Center for Community
Engagement, the library is also archiving over 600 student submissions. A broad range of classes including communications, education, history, chemistry, nursing, psychology and sociology participated in this initiative.

โ€œAt a time when community-based work was slowing down, we expanded, and students in over 40 service-learning classes were able to contribute to the historical record about their experiences during covid, the racial justice movement, the election, and the fires,โ€ says Merith Weisman, Director of Community Engagement and Strategic Initiatives, in a statement.

The archive is online now in the Sonoma County Libraryโ€™s digital collections. To tell your story and become part of the historical record, visit sonomalibrary.org/sonoma-responds-community-archive.

SOMO Concerts Comes Back with New Booker and Superstar Shows

Since 2014, Rohnert Park’s 3,000 capacity solar-powered outdoor venue SOMO Concerts has presented international artists and dynamic events each summer.

The list of headliners who’ve graced the stage at SOMO Concerts includes E-40, Lucinda Williams, Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Ziggy Marley, Los Tigres del Norte, Billy Currington, Playboi Carti and Social Distortion.

Last summer, SOMO Concerts went dark along with every other North Bay venue due to the pandemic. Now, the sustainable venue is reopening for major concerts, and doing so with the help of a new independent event promotion firm.

Last month, Nederlander Concerts was selected to exclusively book and promote SOMO Concerts, effective immediately.

This multi-year agreement with the venue’s manager, Second Octave Entertainment, aims to broaden the venue’s reach and booking capabilities with Nederlander’s national expertise. 

“With the resurgence of the live entertainment industry, we are thrilled to expand our footprint and offer music and events to the fans of Sonoma County,” says Rena Wasserman, Nederlander Concerts Senior Vice President of Production & Operations.

Nederlander Concerts will present an annual series of music, comedy, and family entertainment events, which will take place from April through November each year. Already, Nederlander is booking major music acts to usher in the return of shows at SOMO Concerts.

On August 29, eight-time Grammy-winning musician and producer Stephen Marley brings his โ€œBabylon By Bus Tourโ€ to the North Bay. On September 23, Mexico-based superstars Los รngeles Azules play the venue as part of their long-awaited “40 Aรฑos” Tour.

The second son of music icons Bob and Rita Marley, Stephen Marley is a legend in his own right, producing a robust collection of prolific music that infuses reggae with hip hop, soul, jazz, doo-wop and much more.

A portion of the proceeds from the August 29 concert will benefit Ziggy and Stephenโ€™s Ghetto Youths Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating social change and equity with a focus on providing opportunity to young people, seniors, and families from compromised communities and challenging situations.

Hailing from Iztapalapa, Mexico, Los รngeles Azules are the largest exponents of the Latin America folk tradition of Cumbia. Formed four decades ago by the siblings of the Mejรญa Avante family, the band has played some of the biggest stages in the world and international festivals such as Vive Latino and Coachella. In this new tour, fans will be able to enjoy classic hits as well as many more surprises.

“We are excited about the opportunities Nederlander Concerts can bring to continue the growth of SOMO Concerts,” says Second Octave Entertainment CEO Morty Wiggins in a statement. “Their reputation, resources, and experience in the industry are important to us as we usher in this new era of entertainment and return to hosting events safely.”

In addition to SOMO Concerts, the Rohnert Park venue is also continuing to highlight North Bay artists and bands this summer with the second round of the SOMO Grove Dinner Series.

Last May, the series first paired locally sourced meals with local bands for several socially-distanced, seated outdoor shows. The seriesโ€“curated by event producer, booker and promoter Bryce Dow-Williamsonโ€“was a major success. This month, a new lineup of local stars come out for more SOMO Grove Dinner Series shows.

On Friday, July 16, North Bay vocalist Stella Heath and some of the Bay Areaโ€™s finest Jazz musicians perform as The Billie Holiday Project. The ensemble draws from some of the Jazz legend’s most recorded tunes and also revives some of the earlier and lesser known tunes she interpreted.ย 

On July 31, classic rock-and-roll duo Luvplanet and funk-rock outfit The Dylan Black Project team up for a one-two punch of good vibes and amazing musicianship. SOMO Grove Dinner Series continues with a hip-hop showcase featuring North Bay stars Tru Lyric and Kayatta on August 13. The series wraps its secound round of shows with longtime local favorites The Pulsators and Awesome Hotcakes on August 27.

Dinner from Heirloom Cafรฉ included in price of ticket for all four SOMO Grove Dinner Series shows. Groups that would like to be seated together need to purchase as a group. Get tickets to all of these shows at somovillage.com/events.

Petaluma Ousts Committee Member Stefan Perez After Racist Social Media Posts Surface

An internet-fueled controversy over the social media posts of a member of a Petaluma committee formed in the wake of last yearโ€™s racial justice protests came to a contentious end at a city council meeting on Monday, July 12.

The Petaluma City Council voted 5-1 to remove Stefan Perez, a Petaluma resident, from the recently-formed Ad Hoc Community Advisory Committee (AHCAC). Councilmember Mike Healy, the lone vote opposed to removing Perez, implied that the city was infringing Perezโ€™s First Amendment rights. The rest of the council, the city attorney and most residents who spoke at the meeting disagreed with Healyโ€™s concerns.

The city council appointed Perez to the AHCAC at a March 15 meeting. The AHCAC is tasked with discussing what makes community membersโ€”particularly those from marginalized groupsโ€”feel unsafe in Petaluma, and with providing recommendations to the city council on city and police policies aimed at improving race relations.

At the time of his appointment, several Petaluma residents spoke in support of Perez. Others raised concerns about his social media posts and online interactions during the past year, including comments Perez made on the Nextdoor app raising alarm about racial justice protests by alleging that BLM activists and โ€œantifaโ€ members were dangerous.

In late May, Perez rose to infamy after Chad Loder, an influential Twitter user, shared social media posts made by Perez featuring Nazi imagery, and racist and misogynistic humor. Loder also alleged that Perez managed several Golden State Nationalist social media accounts which harassed local racial justice activists last year. Perezโ€™s attorney has denied that his client is behind the Nationalist accounts and stated that Perezโ€™s personal social media posts were meant as โ€œjokes and dark humor.โ€

Last week, after remaining largely silent about the allegations against Perez, the council added an item to their July 12 agenda to remove Perez from the AHCAC. The agenda was published on the evening of July 8 with the Perez item on the consent calendar, a section of the meeting intended to group together non-controversial items which can be passed without much discussion between councilmembers.

The only thing critics and supporters of Perez seemed to agree about at the Monday night meeting was that it was cowardly of the city council to add the item to the agendaโ€™s consent calendar, rather than make their perspectives on the matter known.

Indeed, it appears the city council attempted to kick Perez off the committee as quietly as possible. A 7-page staff report explaining the decision in front of the council first mentions Perezโ€™s name on page 6. The report does not specify the reason behind the cityโ€™s decision to remove Perez from the committee. Instead, it states that the city council โ€œhas the inherent power to remove and replace members of the AHCAC in the Councilโ€™s discretion, with or without cause,โ€ then refers to that in its resolution to remove Perez from the committee and abolish his seat.

Councilmember Mike Healy, who said that there was no โ€œlegally defensible rationaleโ€ for removing Perez from the AHCAC, moved to take the item off the consent calendar, in order to allow for more discussion.

โ€œSometimes the First Amendment requires government agenciesโ€ฆ to do things they are uncomfortable with, and would prefer not to have to do, but thatโ€™s pretty much what the First Amendment was intended to do. Iโ€™m not prepared to evade Mr. Perezโ€™s First Amendment rights by voting to remove him for no particular reason at all,โ€ Healy said. Later in the meeting, city attorney Eric Danly, who drafted the agenda item, stated that he believed there โ€œis a legally defensible rationale for the action.โ€

Between written and spoken comments, about 25 members of the public expressed their opinions on the removal of Perez. The majority of commenters supported the move on the grounds that Perezโ€™s views seemed opposed to the work of the committee. Other commenters said that other AHCAC members were uncomfortable with Perezโ€™s presence.

During his comments to the council, Perez did not allege that his First Amendment rights were being infringed. Instead, he accused the council of โ€œtaking the easy way outโ€ by bowing to the โ€œspecial interest groupsโ€ who appointed other members of the AHCAC.

In public comment, Paloma Fautley offered a counterpoint to Perezโ€™s take, stating that she feels that identifying designated community groups to select representatives for appointment on the AHCAC was a sound process. 

โ€œ[The city] talked to a lot of local groups and said, โ€˜Who do you want to represent you?โ€™ and [those groups] gave you their bestโ€”they gave you the people they thought would address this [topic] for their specific groupsโ€”and they trusted those people to support them. And so, saying โ€˜Hey, this person who was not appointed by any group actually isn’t qualified, wasn’t vetted properly and should have gone through that normal processโ€™โ€”I see nothing wrong with that,โ€ Fautley said.

On Monday, Perez told the council, โ€œI joined the committee because I saw a lack of proper representation, and I donโ€™t just mean ethnic representation. Iโ€™m talking about diversity of thought.โ€

Back in March, when Perez made his appeal to the council to join the committee, he said that his perspective as an Indigenous person who had not had any negative interactions with Petaluma police would be a valuable perspective to include. However, at the July 12 meeting commenters noted that the police department already sends representatives to AHCAC meetings, making it redundant to have a police supporter on the committee, which is tasked with finding ways in which the police can improve at serving and protecting marginalized communities.

โ€œ[The AHCAC] exists to address power imbalance that exists between marginalized people and society and law enforcement. And the conduct of Mr. Perez in the meetings so far has demonstrated that heโ€™s โ€ฆ unapologetically pro-police and his presence on the committee is not helping balance this power imbalance that exists within society,โ€ Christopher Neugebauer told the council.

Other Petaluma residents pushed back on Healyโ€™s First Amendment concerns.

โ€œThe way that weโ€™re talking about the First Amendment is not actually what the First Amendment is โ€ฆ You canโ€™t be silenced completely, but you donโ€™t get a right to every platform; when you submit a letter to the editor, they donโ€™t have to publish it,โ€ Sarah Casmith said during public comment. 

In comments before voting, Mayor Teresa Barrett said she was not convinced by the free speech argument either.

โ€œThere are many people in that group that I have no idea where they stand [with regard to] what their personal values are, but what I do want is to remove any impediment to that group moving forward in a very timely fashion and working at the highest level they can,โ€ Barrett said.


This article is part of a series. Read the previous installments here and here.

Thoughts, tips or comments? You can reach Will Carruthers at wc*********@*****ys.com.

Shaโ€™Carri Richardsonโ€™s Weed Debacle

How can you not love 5-foot-1-inchโ€™ Shaโ€™Carri Richardson, the amazing Black athlete with the cool name, bright orange hair, tattoos up and down her muscular arms, and her use of marijuanaโ€”which eliminated her from this summerโ€™s Tokyo Olympics? Richardson was suspended from competition for a month, which knocked her out.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)โ€”which regulates drug use in global sportsโ€”bans โ€œall natural and synthetic cannabinoids.โ€ That includes weed. And thatโ€™s dumb. U.S. Anti-Doping CEO Travis Tygart says, โ€œThe rules are clear, but this is heartbreaking.โ€ Indeed it is.

Richardson is one of the fastest humans on the planet. In June 2021, she ran the 100 meters in 10.86 seconds. Thatโ€™s tops.

At 21, her career is just beginning, and her big mouth shows no signs of going quiet. โ€œI am it,โ€ she says. โ€œI am who I say I am.โ€ And also, โ€œTalent is talent. If you got it, you go fast.โ€ Richardson also says sheโ€™s sorry.

โ€œI apologize for the fact that I didnโ€™t know how to control my emotions or deal with my emotions during that time,โ€ she says.

She used marijuana to deal with her motherโ€™s death. That news hit her hard, plus she was stressed about the competition for the Olympics.

I say the anti-doping officials should have given Richardson a pass. After all, weed isnโ€™t heroin, steroids or cocaine. According to sport experts, marijuana can relax an athlete and improve performance. Let all the sprinters smoke weed, get loose and run fast. On social media, many fans of the Olympics were behind Richardson. Actress Patricia Arquette says, โ€œThis is ridiculous. What are they thinking.โ€ Another fan says, โ€œShe should get extra points for winning while on the weed.โ€

Hereโ€™s my all time favorite comment from Richardson: โ€œThis is the last time the Olympics donโ€™t see Shaโ€™Carri Richardson. This is the last time the U.S. doesnโ€™t come home with the gold in the 100 meters.โ€

Perhaps Richardson runs fast and talks wild, because she grew up poor in Texas. She played some basketball and football in school, but by the age of 9 she knew she wanted to be a sprinter and win medals. She has exceeded her wildest dreams.

Track aficionados have told her to cut her hair, cut her nails and get rid of her eyelashes, because they slow her down. Richardson is Richardson, from her size 8 shoes to her bright orange hair.

Along with Muhammad Ali, sheโ€™s the greatestโ€”in my book. Iโ€™ll tie her shoe laces, bring her water, clock her when she runs the 100 meters and point out once again the absurdity of the laws against marijuana.

Jonah Raskin is the author of โ€œMarijuanaland: Dispatches from an American War.โ€

Divine Honeymoon

In our last Spirit column, we explored the esoteric concept of the sacred marriage of opposing energies, best represented through astrology with Sun and Mars on the masculine side and Moon and Venus on the feminine. Now itโ€™s time for the honeymoon. Our soundtrack is the 1983 New Wave hit โ€œSexโ€ by the band Berlin.

In the pop duet, the female singer refers to herself as a virgin, goddess, bitch and geisha, while the male singer simply repeats the same response: โ€œIโ€™m a man.โ€ Whether purposefully or not, the lyrics thus express a fundamental teaching of the wisdom tradition, which distinguishes between two dimensions of reality: the world of being and the world of becoming.

The world of becoming is considered feminine and to it belongs birth and death, changes of season and everything pertaining to the sphere of nature and human events. In contrast to this dynamic playing field was posited an unchanging metaphysical reality ruled by a Sky Father, be it Zeus in Greek mythology, Ahura Mazda in Zoroastrianism or Allah in Islam.

In Hinduism, the goddess Shakti represents the feminine principle, or everything that is dynamic energy within the world of becoming. In contrast, her celestial consort Shiva enacts the male principle of immutable power,  just as a stone in a creek causes the current to flow fastest even though the stone does nothing but simply be there. Shaktiโ€™s changeability, shape-shifting as in the song lyrics from one feminine guise to another like the phases of the moon, is drawn to Shivaโ€™s steadfastness like steel to a magnet.

A curious difference between East and West is that European civilization created the scientific study of sex, but never produced a sacred handbook such as The Pillow Book from China or Kama Sutra from India. Is it possible Westerners have misunderstood the dynamics of sex for millennia?

The classic Tantric sexual position known as the lotus places the woman, embodying the goddess Shakti, in the lap of the man, who sits cross-legged and plays the role of Shiva. In their divine embrace, Shakti gyrates with her dynamic energy while Shivaโ€™s role is to sit like a stone in a creekโ€”or a king on a throneโ€”and โ€œhold the centerโ€ or โ€œdo without doing,โ€ acting as the fixed axis around which the sexual energy turns. In this dynamic fusing of being and becoming, we may say that the female role is actively passive while the male role is passively active.

After voicing their opposing parts in the cosmic union, the singers in our โ€™80s New Wave tune intone the final line in unison: โ€œAnd we make love together.โ€

Christian Chensvold blogs about the worldโ€™s wisdom traditions at trad-man.com.

Drought Challenges Dry Farmers

As the drought drags on with no end in sight, California farmers face the sobering prospect of springs and wells drying up.

But at Red H Farm in Sebastopol, that isnโ€™t a consideration, much less an option, because their well collapsed six years ago. Thatโ€™s when farmer Caitlin Hachmyer turned to dry farming. Now, she relies on the rain to feed her crops, and obsesses over the soil to keep it moist through the dry season. It works; most of her fields donโ€™t need any irrigation, and while yields are lower, less water makes for a more concentrated flavorโ€”a bite of her dry-farmed tomatoes is a reminder that they are, in fact, a fruit.

But after two years of meager rain, the ground is parched. Blasting heat waves serving up triple-digit temperatures, and fleeting coastal fog, are beginning to take a heavy toll. โ€œIโ€™m at about 50% of my usual harvest this time of year,โ€ Hachmyer says. Clearly, thereโ€™s only so much dryness that even dry farming can take. Sheโ€™s anxious about the long, hot months ahead, and hopes the remaining crops nestled in her lower-lying fields fare better.

Given the regionโ€™s arid climate, the sustainable ethos of dry farming seems like a no-brainer. Heavy rains soak loamy and clay fields in the winter, and cool summer fog helps to lock it in during the dry months. Meanwhile, drought-tolerant, early maturing crops sip moisture through deep roots while developing rich, intense flavors. But as seasonal precipitation gets stingier and less reliable, its long-term sustainability in the North Bay is starting to look uncertain. Local farmers are abandoning dry fields as they contemplate shutting down for the season, or moving altogether to greener, more water-secure pastures up north.

Seasonal patterns were consistent on Hachmyerโ€™s 1.2-acre family farm for as long as she can remember. โ€œI grew up here,โ€ she says, her slender frame capped by a no-nonsense bun, โ€œso I have a 37-year relationship with this particular place.โ€ Fields flooded in winter, and foggy mornings rarely pushed summer temperatures past the high 80s. By fastidiously working the soil with absorbent organic matter and protecting it with woven tarps and thick mulch, her crops thrived without irrigation, even during past droughts.

โ€œUsually, June is the most lush, beautiful time on the farm,โ€ Hachmyer says. โ€œThings start drying out in July and August, but in a regular year, Iโ€™d still be harvesting broccoli florets from a February planting.โ€ Typically, sheโ€™d have a summer bounty of vegetables, leafy greens and squash, followed by a fall crop of flavor-rich tomatoes. โ€œBut this year, thereโ€™s just no water,โ€ she says. And an early summer heat wave left many of her plants withering. โ€œEven in [previously dry] years, my soil has still had tons of moisture, but this extreme drought is like โ€˜next level.โ€™โ€

North Bay rainfall has averaged 13 inches this yearโ€”about a third of normal. That sounds extreme, even for dry farming, but the volume of rain is only one factor, says Paul Vossen, an agricultural consultant based in Santa Rosa. Filling the soil profile with moisture also requires consistent and cumulative precipitation.

โ€œIf you get 13 inches all in a few rains, particularly if one was in late spring, then youโ€™d have your soil profile full,โ€ he says, โ€œand everything would be pretty good, actually.โ€ Intermittent sprinkles can turn the hills grassy in the spring, but crops require deeper, consecutive soakings.

Vossen recently retired as the University of California Cooperative Extension farm advisor, where he specialized in farming in drought conditions. After 35 years on the job, heโ€™s seen it allโ€”but agrees that this year is exceptional. And the rise in seasonal temperatures only adds to the challenges. โ€œItโ€™s one thing to dry farm when itโ€™s in the 80s [during the day] and cool at night,โ€ he says, โ€œand another when itโ€™s 100 degrees every day.โ€

On a 10-acre farm outside of Petaluma, Jesse and Moira Kuhn of Marin Roots Farm are down to their last harvest of dry-farmed greens. They didnโ€™t get their usual profusion of native crops like chickweed and minerโ€™s lettuce this spring, says Jesse Kuhn, and their fields are crackling dry. โ€œWeโ€™ve got a little bit of chamomile, lambโ€™s quarters, dandelion and spring onionsโ€”maybe one last pick.โ€

Kuhn, who grew up in San Geronimo, enlisted his fatherโ€™s help in digging a deeper spring, which heโ€™s using to irrigate herbs and microgreens inside two greenhouses. โ€œItโ€™s still very, very little water,โ€ he says, shaking freshly dug pebbles out of his pockets. โ€œBut we have to rely on it to carry whatever we plant through the remainder of the season, because whatever little water is left in the soil is going to go quickly.โ€ He grins solemnly beneath his handlebar mustache.

The Kuhns have resisted the siren call of more water security, in less-pricey regions up north. โ€œWe both have family here,โ€ he says, โ€œalong with all of our restaurant accounts and farmers markets, [largely within] a 50-mile radius.โ€ But with no signs of the drought easing, theyโ€™re looking to plant new roots in Marin, in fields with better access to water.

Twenty miles northwest, towards Bodega Bay, David Little has dry-farmed potatoes and tomatoes on nearly 50 acres of coastal land for the past quarter century. The San Anselmo native runs Little Organic Farm with his daughter, Caressa, and her fiancรฉ, Anthony Giaccobe, on fields cobbled together on five different ranches across the Marin-Sonoma border.

Little is quick to note that he fallows nearly half of his acreage, often for two to three years at a time, to allow the soil to recharge with moisture and nutrients. He also sites his fields carefully, planting crops at the base of slopes and hills, where water tends to collect underground. Itโ€™s a long-term investment in land management, and this year, the odds seem a bit tenuous. 

Loquacious and eccentric, Littleโ€™s presence is as big as his personality. โ€œAlice Waters came by my [farmers market] booth and asked me how I was doing with the drought,โ€ he says. He and the famous Chez Panisse owner go way back, apparently. โ€œI just told her, โ€˜less yields, smaller potatoes, more flavor, less waste.โ€™โ€

Indeed, his tubers are compact, ranging in size from marbles to golf balls, perfect as sides to a fancy dish. Little digs up an entire plant, shaking the clumpy-but-dry soil off the roots to pick a cluster of baby Crimson Kings. He harvests about six per plant, explaining that were he to leave them longer, they would continue to grow in size and yield upwards of 14. โ€œWeโ€™re robbing the cradle to get new potatoes for the sweetness and texture, and also to get back in the market because weโ€™re strapped for money.โ€

For farmers, โ€œthe struggle is real,โ€ Giaccobe says. โ€œNormally, our tomato crop pays for the harvest of the potatoes, but I donโ€™t even know if [theyโ€™re] going to grow this year.โ€ He was surprised at the number of customers who balked at their 25% price hike last year. โ€œThereโ€™s a disconnect between whatโ€™s going on in nature, how hard the work is and how much everything elseโ€”paper bags, boxes and laborโ€”is going up in price.โ€ He and Caressa hope to boost business by venturing into potato chips. โ€œItโ€™s a great way for us to utilize everything; all the ugly potatoes that people donโ€™t want to buy.โ€

The farm also experienced an unexpected blow in late May, when a freak frost hit a low-lying field and destroyed three acres of potatoes. It came on the heels of plummeting restaurant sales during the Covid pandemic, and a two month market hiatus during a dip in yields. โ€œIf I sound disgruntled, itโ€™s because I am,โ€ Little says. โ€œItโ€™s just crazy times for small farms.โ€

As the dry season continues, farmers pray for emergency relief, which looks as elusive as the next rainfall. Currently, federal and state drought relief is limited to livestock and perennials, not diversified annual crops, says Red Hโ€™s Hachmyer, adding that immediate funds are desperately needed to keep family farms afloat. โ€œItโ€™s slim margins as it is,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s really important to make sure that small-scale farmers donโ€™t throw in the towel this year.โ€

Meanwhile, Hachmyer is considering raising funds to dig a new well. โ€œThereโ€™s really not a whole lot more adapting that I can do,โ€ she says. โ€œAt some point, my plants just need at least a little bit of water.โ€

Naoki Nitta is a food and sustainability writer based in San Francisco.

North Bay Theaters Plan In-Person Seasons

After a year of performing to virtual audiences, North Bay theater companies are ready to welcome people back to the theater, and several local companies have announced their 2021โ€“2022 seasons of shows, ranging from classics to world premieres.

Earlier this summer, Left Edge Theatre in Santa Rosa became the first organization to perform indoors again, at the production of the comedy Slow Food

Now, Left Edge is taking advantage of the return of social gatherings by premiering a season entirely made up of both local and world premieres. Opening the season, North Bay playwright Kelly Gray pens the new experimental one-act play Beautiful Monsters, succinctly described as an โ€œobituary for the year 2020 with music and dance.โ€ The one-act actually makes its world premiere outdoors at Horse & Plow Winery in Sebastopol Aug. 20โ€“22, before moving indoors to Left Edge Theatre Sept. 4โ€“19.

When Beautiful Monsters does premier indoors in September, it will join another one-act, I and You, written by Bay Area playwright Laura Gunderson, about two classmates who bond over Walt Whitman. leftedgetheatre.com

Also in Santa Rosa, 6th Street Playhouse is planning a full in-person season with five shows in the 184-seat GK Hardt Theater and five in the 99-seat Monroe Stage Theater. The season, which opens Aug.12 with the Nora and Delia Ephron-written comedy Love, Loss and What I Wore, is curated for mass appeal and features classic plays like A Raisin in the Sun, zany murder whodunnits like Murder for Two and crowd-pleasing musicals like Scrooge in Love in the holiday season. 6thstreetplayhouse.com

Sonoma Arts Live, which performs on the Rotary Stage in Andrews Hall in the Sonoma Community Center, is calling this a season to celebrate. 

โ€œGovernor Newsomโ€™s June 15th announcement was such a celebratory day for all of us,โ€ says Sonoma Arts Live Artistic Director Jaime Love. โ€œIt was then that we knew we could finally announce what weโ€™d been hoping for; the ability to open our doors and provide entertainment for a live audience. I feel that people are ready to gather safely and share an experience again.โ€

The season will begin Sept. 24 with Sunset Boulevard, directed by Carl Jordan and featuring local star Dani Innocenti Beem (Mermanโ€™s Apprentice, Hello, Dolly!) as the silent film star Norma Desmond. Sonomaartslive.org

Sebastopolโ€™s Main Stage West will also re-emerge from the unexpected hiatus with a season of six plays that all speak to the post-pandemic landscape. The season opens with the workplace comedy Patty from HR on Aug. 27. mainstagewest.com

Marin Theatre Company is still putting the final touches on its 2021โ€“2022 season, though the season is starting strong with its September opening production, the Ivy-league dramatic mystery The Sound Inside, penned by Pulitzer Prize finalist Adam Rapp and directed by Marin Theatre Company Artistic Director Jasson Minadakis. marintheatre.org

Also in September, the Ross Valley Players kicks off its 92nd season with the clash-of-wills comedy Ripcord, running Sept. 10 to Oct. 10. Next, Ross Valley Players teams with Marinโ€™s longrunning Mountain Play Association for an indoors production of the musical Camelot in November. rossvalleyplayers.com

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