Santa Rosa Paella Restaurant Ends Service

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Citing a lack of city support and foot traffic, Gerard Nebesky ended an 18-month run of daily restaurant service at his 4th Street restaurant, Gerard’s Paella Y Tapas, on Monday, Feb. 3.

“It just breaks my heart to make this decision,” Nebesky said, of the closure. “People love our food but there is just not enough of them in this part of town. The beautiful thing about a restaurant is that it enables you to meet a community—and that part of this project has been a total success!”

Luckily for Nebesky—and his fans—he’ll still get plenty of opportunities to serve up his paella, a saffron-infused rice dish of Spanish origin, throughout the North Bay. Nebesky plans to reopen the restaurant intermittently for special events, including Sonoma County Restaurant Week between Feb. 21 and March 1.

Sheriff Responds

The Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office has responded to a community advisory group’s calls for changes to the law enforcement agency’s Use of Force policies. The answer? In short, the agency says its current policies are compliant with current case law and adequate to protect the public and law enforcement officers.

It all started in December, when a group of community members serving as members of the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach Community Advisory Committee (CAC) formally submitted a lengthy document recommending changes to the Sheriff’s policies for dealing with—or hopefully avoiding all together—potentially dangerous situations.

The Sheriff’s Office responded to CAC’s 20 recommendations in a four-page letter.

Many of the Sheriff’s responses—all brief—cite the agency’s compliance with current standards set by laws and legal precedent as a reason not to pursue the recommendations. Other responses indicate that the Sheriff’s Office considers its current policies adequate.

In response to questions about the use of the Carotid Hold, a neck restraint banned by some law-enforcement agencies, and Tasers, the Sheriff’s Office cited the need for more data and possible alternatives if they decide to end the use of either method. IOLERO’s director, Karlene Navarro, has said she is gathering additional data about the use of Carotid Holds.

Former CAC members who worked on the recommendations have voiced frustration that the Sheriff’s Office did not communicate with CAC while it was working on its recommendations. The CAC members also say they spoke to other law enforcement agencies while crafting the Use of Force recommendations in order to understand what was feasible.

Kiss and Tell

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Despite the old warning that one should never “kiss and tell,” the exact opposite has happened for the past six years at Bump Wine Cellars, located just off of Sonoma Plaza. The sixth annual “Kiss and Tell,” a poetry-performance event presented by the Sonoma Writers’ Workshop, proclaims love in all its dimensions on Thursday, Feb. 13 at 6:30pm.

What began as a loose consortium of writers, poets, screenwriters and novelists, coalesced into the Sonoma Writers’ Workshop, an enclave of productivity, mutual criticism and cheerleading, which in turn morphed into a performance group. That group now overflows Bump Wine Cellars with a rapt crowd for, of all things, poetry shows. With names like “Dry is the New Wet,” “Things that Go Bump in the Night” and the aforementioned “Kiss and Tell,” the events are a surprisingly boisterous take on the traditional art form of poetry.

“It started with several of us bemoaning the lack of a hip literary scene in Sonoma,” says cofounder Lisa Summers. “It was that or Bunco. Or worse—book groups.”

The initial event occurred in 2015.

“There’s been a real magic to our performances—from the first event we called ‘Naked and Drunk Poets,’ when none of us knew what to expect or how we’d be received,” says cofounder Stacey Tuel. “It turned out to be a packed house and so much fun. That inaugural performance brought something very different, and needed, to sleepy little Sonoma. It was a place to reveal ourselves with our words—of course, Jonah took the revealing quite literally.”

Proclaiming his poetry as if from high on a mountaintop, Bohemian cannabis-columnist and author Jonah Raskin often attends in drag and occasionally naked.

“There is no better place than Bump to perform poetry: terrific poets, fantastic audience, lovely hosts, sensational musicians,” Raskin says.

To say the poetry event is a raucous take on Sonoma’s literary scene is an understatement, as year after year it opens minds and hearts, not to mention poetry books.

An affectionate crowd appreciates the special house vintages offered by Bump Wine Cellars proprietors and hosts, Mieko Imai and Geordie Carr. Steve Della Maggiora, on accordion, and Steve Shane, on stand-up bass, are available to accompany the poets. The general vibe is reminiscent of the old Beat poetry readings in San Francisco.

Tuel is often at the mic with a guitar around her neck and a toddler at her feet, serenading her rapt audience with one of her original songs. Tuel gave an especially poignant performance just after the 2017 fires.

“Our annual ‘Bump in the Night’ event in 2017 was right after I’d lost my house in the fire,” she says. “We didn’t cancel the event and it became an important gathering for our collective grief. That night, through lots of tears, I read my poem, ‘The Call of the Phoenix,’ for the first time. There was so much healing through our writing that year. Maybe that’s what I like so much about the performances: we can both reveal and heal ourselves.”

Emceeing the spectacle is Bohemian-editor Daedalus Howell, who introduces the Sonoma Writers’ Workshop–poets during Act I of the evening, then hosts an open mic for Act II. Those who want to participate in the open mic must catch Howell before the event, when he’s taking down names in his reporter’s notebook.

Originally called the Writers’ Workshop and comprised of Tuel, Summers, Howell, Raskin and AJ Petersen, the group met weekly to critique their writing. Raskin, the most well-established writer in the group, with dozens of published works to his name, had recently wrapped up his career as a Sonoma State University professor. Petersen, a former instructor at the Iowa Writers Workshop, was likewise ready for a new challenge. Summers was completing an MFA, Howell was on the home stretch of his second novel and Tuel was a riot of poetry and songwriting.

“What I remember most about our ‘workshop’ era was that I felt a sense of alchemy in the way our ideas, stories and poems evolved when we shared them,” Tuel says. “It felt like a big cauldron of ideas, words, synchronicities. There was the real work of reading, editing and commenting on each other’s work, but the creative spark ignited when we met together. And I’m infinitely smarter with the collective intelligence of that crowd.”

Before long, it became obvious they all wanted to get their work out there. They started a collective press, called FMRL, to publish their books, and began organizing poetry events. It became important for them to share their work with the community and invite others to do the same.

“We realized that the events are what keep us writing,” Summers says. “You have to have an audience, otherwise you risk—like my favorite creative-writing teacher used to say—’becoming the Unabomber.'”

“Our annual ‘Kiss and Tell’ has a special importance to me because my personal love story started at our first ‘Kiss and Tell,'” Tuel says. “That was my first real date with Taylor. I’ve missed some events over the past few years because of the birth of our son and getting lost in babydom, but at last year’s ‘Kiss and Tell,’ he and our two-year-old were there listening to me read the poem that started it all. That’s pure magic. I’m looking forward to what magic will happen this year as we keep ‘Kissing and Telling.'”

Howell sums up the group, and the event, with a quote from a John Hughs film: “What we found out is that each one of us is a brain, and an athlete, and a basket case; a princess and a criminal. Does that answer your question? Sincerely, the Breakfast Club.'”

Celebrate Valentine’s Day at the Sixth Annual Kiss & Tell Poetry and Music Extravaganza Thursday, Feb. 13. at Bump Wine Cellars, 521 Broadway, Suite A, Sonoma. 6:30pm. Free.
www.bumpwine.com.

Starry Night

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This year, the Oscars are like the cocktail bars at too many of today’s receptions: no-host.

One by one, some two-dozen stars will climb up and squint at the teleprompter in the Academy’s effort to keep any one figure from bearing responsibility for the trainwreck. Meanwhile, millions will throw things at the TV and shout in rage at the “In Memoriam” section, when they snub someone cool like Robert Forster in favor of some slimy MCA executive.

If the Oscars were fair, each category would have two, and only two, nominees—to make the voting more agonizing. It’s not enough that Parasite must win. Some lesser, but just as good movie (Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood), must fail in order to give us all a lesson in the bitterness of defeat and the madness of awards.

As always, the most fascinating category is best supporting actress. An Excel spreadsheet would probably show this was the single-most diverse category in age and artistic approach, a category in which the nominees may be suckling babies or tottering crones.

The Academy has nominated Laura Dern three times and she hasn’t won, and she’s Laura Dern; chemical and intelligent and witty, the savior of more bad movies than popcorn itself. Her Marriage Story performance was a glittery bit of acting, shrewd and hilarious.

Best actress: Judy, such as it was. Give her the award and get it over with.

There isn’t an undeserving name on the best actor’s list, although, as my nephew said, re: Joker, “It’s supposed to be best acting, not most acting.” If Joaquin Phoenix goes home empty-handed (never go full super villain), Antonio Banderas is one of the most consistently underrated actors of our time.

Split the best supporting actor award between Al Pacino for that weird, contrary, doomed Jimmy Hoffa in The Irishman, and Brad Pitt’s enigmatic stuntman in Once Upon A Time.

As for best director: Scorsese. The Irishman put people who saw it at home on the sofa to sleep. In a theater, however, it was his best work in years; it was clear the studious banality was a choice, not a flaw. Anyone lost and mystified at the state of the United States of today needs to watch this, to trace back the way to how we got here.

The Oscars airs live on Sunday, Feb. 9, on ABC.

Mood for Love

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No one can sing a love song like Johnny Mathis.

The legendary vocalist—whose career spans more than 60 years, 70 albums, 200 singles and three separate inductions into the Grammy Awards Hall of Fame—is best known for his silky-smooth vibrato, which can be heard on his chart-topping recordings of romantic hits such as “Chances Are,” “Misty,” “It’s Not For Me To Say” and others. He will perform live in a special Valentine’s concert on Sunday, Feb. 16, at Marin Center in San Rafael.

“I had a wonderful voice teacher,” Mathis says. “And she just said, ‘You seem to be suited, the sound of your voice, to sing songs like ‘My Funny Valentine.’ I guess also it’s a matter of my temperament that comes through with the songs that I sing. I think we all have elements of our personality that come out in different situations, and yes, without bragging, I’m kind of romantic.”

Another Valentine’s weekend concert in the North Bay is a headlining performance by gender-fluid indie-rock star Ezra Furman on Saturday, Feb. 15, at the Arlene Francis Center in Santa Rosa.

In the time since Furman’s last appearance in the North Bay, the singer-songwriter has gained international notoriety after composing the soundtrack for the Netflix series “Sex Education,” which premiered its second season last month.

He has also released an acclaimed album, Twelve Nudes, which marks his most punk-rock effort yet, with brash music that reacts directly to the tumultuous state of America and the world. Local art-rock outfit Hose Rips and queer folk-punk trio Gender Trash and San Francisco psychedelic rocker Kelley Stoltz open the show.

Also on Feb. 15, newly-formed North Bay instrumental band Bronze Medal Hopefuls releases a new single, “Pain Au Chocolat,” with a show at Elephant in the Room in Healdsburg.

The quartet consists of bassist Gio Benedetti (Toast Machine, The Brothers Comatose), guitarist Alex Leach (Kingsborough), keyboardist Nathan Dittle (The Crux) and drummer Zach Morris (Gabby La La), and they combine their talents to make a freewheeling blend of acid jazz, classic funk and indie-rock that they describe as “mini-soundtracks to imaginary movies about cardboard rocket ship adventures, puppets that travel to the North Pole and small-town, coffee-sipping detectives named Wedemski.”

Also an accomplished artist, Benedetti has animated a music video for “Pain Au Chocolat” that the band will unveil at the show, and Portland-based folk artist Jeremy James Meyer will join the Bronze Medal Hopefuls to play off his new Matt Costa–produced EP, Bobbie’s House.

Trafficking Uptick

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Sonoma County residents don’t appreciate the scale of a crime happening all around them, despite an increased effort at public outreach over the past decade, according to a local nonprofit director.

“Human trafficking happens every single day in Sonoma County,” says Christine Castillo, the executive director of Verity, a Sonoma County nonprofit that offers services and support to trafficking victims and sometimes coordinates with law-enforcement agencies conducting enforcement operations.

Human trafficking, which requires the use of force, fraud or coercion to obtain some type of labor or commercial sex act, is a multibillion-dollar international industry. The worldwide problem is far more prevalent locally than most Sonoma County residents realize, Castillo says.

“Many people in our county just don’t understand. Many people think it’s a foreign problem, that it’s ‘over there,'” Castillo, who has worked at Verity for 13 years, says.

Due to the nature of the crime, it tends to be more difficult to enforce than drug dealing, the largest category of international crime.

While drug dealers are often caught holding hard evidence, human-trafficking victims may be coerced or threatened into telling law-enforcement officers that they are with their trafficker willingly, Castillo says.

But, despite the lack of general recognition—or maybe because of it—the human-trafficking industry is booming across the country, Castillo says.

As a result, government agencies and nonprofits are partnering to spread awareness about the issue.

In 2012, President Barrack Obama designated January as National Slavery and Human Trafficking Awareness Month. Each year, nonprofits and government agencies attempt to draw attention to the scale of human trafficking—and the resources available to victims—with press releases, advertisements and billboards.

Last week, multiple North Bay law-enforcement agencies announced recent programs targeting human-trafficking operations.

The Santa Rosa Police Department partnered with Homeland Security Investigations, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Petaluma Police Department, the Rohnert Park Department of Public Safety, the Healdsburg Police Department, Sonoma County Probation and VERITY, a nonprofit focused on human trafficking.

All told, the detectives contacted six women victims and arrested two men—one suspected of trafficking, the other of aiding and abetting the effort.

In their operation, the Santa Rosa Police Department attempted to offer support services to all of the victims, according to a press release.

In 2018, the National Human Trafficking Hotline received 1,656 reports of human trafficking in California. The vast majority of the cases—1,226 of the total—were for sex trafficking; 169 cases involved unspecified kinds of trafficking; and 151 cases involved labor.

In 2017, the national hotline recived notification of 6,244 cases of sex trafficking, a 13 percent jump from 2016.

County-level data is more difficult to come by. Arrest rates by law enforcement offer a hint but don’t offer the full picture since a large amount of trafficking goes undetected.

The Sonoma County District Attorney’s Office pursued 200 human-trafficking cases between 2011 and 2018.

In January 2019, the courts sentenced David Romesburg, a Rohnert Park man, and his mother for running a prostitution ring involving dozens of women over a period of 10 years, according to prosecutors.

“It is fitting that today’s sentence was handed down during Human Trafficking Awareness Month,” Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch said in a statement at the time. “The problem of sex trafficking is not exclusive to (the) Third World and large urban settings. It can and does happen in this community.”

In addition to supporting the increased attention and resources allocated towards solving the problem, Castillo and other advocates also support changes in the language used to describe trafficking operations—and the people law-enforcement agencies target.

For instance, Castillo says urges law-enforcement agencies not to arrest or ticket trafficking victims.

“What’s the point?” Castillo says.

Victims likely won’t be able to pay the fine or show up for a court date, she points out. Instead, law enforcement should target traffickers and offer support to victims. Local agencies are moving in this direction, she says.

In the Santa Rosa operation last week, the six trafficking victims were not cited, according to the police department’s press release.

Local goups coordinate their efforts through the Sonoma County Human Trafficking Task Force (SCHTTF), a group of which meets monthly and attempts to coordinate law-enforcement efforts with recovery-service providers.

When Super Bowl 50 came to San Francisco in 2016, law enforcement increased its efforts, anticipating an increase in prostitution as fans flooded into the Bay Area ahead of the big game.

This trend happens like clockwork every year, no matter where the Super Bowl takes place. Last year, when the game was held in Atlanta, government agencies ramped up enforcement and outreach efforts, although they acknowledged that trafficking was a year-round problem.

However, there is no evidence to support the media-fueled idea that trafficking increases significantly with big sports events like the Super Bowl, representatives of the Polaris Project and International Human Trafficking Institute told CNN last February.

The slight uptick in calls to the Trafficking Hotline is in part due to the fact that nonprofits and law-enforcement agencies tend to increase their outreach efforts during large events, including the Super Bowl.

In fact, trafficking happens throughout the country all year round, FBI spokesperson Kevin Rowson told CNN last February.

“The problem exists not just at major sporting events but throughout the year in communities all around the country,” Rowson said.

Preserve Open Space

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The City of Sonoma is moving forward to renew its existing Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) for another 20 years by placing a ballot measure before voters in November 2020. This is great news for open space and agricultural lands and climate-wise, city-centered growth for the next generation.

After a robust discussion and hearing from a crowd who cared deeply about the community and environment, city leaders agreed unanimously to ask city voters to renew the existing UGB as is. Next steps will be to finalize the ballot measure text with public review at upcoming City Council and Planning Commission meetings.

Mayor Logan Harvey and Chair Robert Felder presided over the special joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission on Jan. 27 at Vintage House where the UGB was discussed. The Citizens to Renew the City of Sonoma’s Urban Growth Boundary were there to make a solid case for the 20-year UGB renewal and City Manager Cathy Capriola and her staff provided a draft UGB measure for public review.

The UGB is simply a line around the city that protects open space and ag lands. It prevents urbanization and development beyond the boundary without a majority vote of approval by its citizens. The UGB can be revised if needed at any time by going back to the voters. It gives the community a direct voice in the future of the city.

The city will be updating its General Plan, Housing Element and Zoning Code in coming years to determine how the community will grow. For those concerned about affordable housing, the renewed UGB is slated to contain stronger provisions requiring 100-percent affordable housing if the City Council finds a need to allow an exemption from the UGB under certain conditions.

If the UGB is not renewed in 2020, its boundary can be modified by the vote of a simple majority in the City Council. This would put the future size of Sonoma on the ballot in every city council election, every two years.

Teri Shore is Regional Director of North Bay Greenbelt Alliance. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

SMART Vote

I have read the information re: the SMART vote for an extended tax. SMART has failed to deliver what it promised. Watching 7 or 8 people sitting on a train anytime outside of the current commute time upsets me (putting it mildly), especially when the taxpayers are supplementing the fare. SMART “leadership” asks us to continue this farce. The print media supports SMART. Why? I don’t know. Of course, we see letters praising the train going to Larkspur and then the leisurely ride on the ferry to S.F. to spend the day or a few days in a swanky hotel. Well, maybe they are the 7 or 8 people riding it in the midday.

The SMART board needs to go back to the drawing board to look at salaries (and publish the position of how much is being paid; you can figure out the names), expenses, anticipated future costs and overruns. Until that happens, I will be voting “NO” on SMART. Tired of seeing the debacle being rewarded for shoddiness.

Petaluma

Gazette Troubles

It looks like editor Vesta Copestakes was lied to by Darius Anderson, whose Sonoma County Investments (SMI) group just bought up the Sonoma County Gazette (“Bought Up,” Jan. 8).

Per the article: “In a Press Democrat article about the purchase, representatives of SMI implied that they intend to keep Gazette’s content largely the same while expanding the paper’s online presence.

‘We will continue the fine tradition of local community content that Vesta [Copestakes] has nurtured for many years,’ Darius Anderson, SMI’s lead investor, told the Press Democrat.”

What a joke. Normally, the Gazette is on the newsstands on the first of each month. I checked a few locations yesterday, and all I found were empty boxes. I checked again today and found the same thing. Next, I went to the website. The only updates since last month were endorsements for Democratic candidates for the upcoming election, or stories that sound more like political ads (i.e., “Transit is Good for Your Health — Sonoma Marin Area Rail Transit”). In other words, the new content is pushing the agenda of SMI and its ilk, and
that’s about it.

Normally, TPTB implement changes incrementally so that the public isn’t even aware of what’s happening until it’s too late. Not this time.

So, Vesta, there goes your legacy. Your newspaper has simply been snuffed out.

Via Bohemian.com

Zin Debate

“People aren’t willing to pay what it costs to farm Zinfandel.” (“Future Ex,” Swirl, Jan. 29) That’s not what some vineyard owners told me. They told me that wineries stopped buying their zin grapes, and stated they won’t buy in the future either (unless you are Maple).

I love zin, but the truth is that the younger generation likes lighter wines, and the industry has already made the switch away from zin.

Santa Rosa

Via Bohemian.com

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Weed Bouquet

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Want to boost your romantic life this Valentine’s Day? Try eating dark chocolate, and ingest some locally grown cannabis. The cannabis might briefly increase your heart rate and lower your blood pressure, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing on Valentine’s Day. If you’re worried, ask your primary-care physician, or better yet, an informed dispensary salesperson.

A woman at my local pot shop said, “Hippies weren’t as dumb as they sometimes looked and sometimes acted. Beneath the long hair, there was real smarts, though it didn’t take rocket science to recognize that marijuana made for better sex.” Indeed, trial and error proved that a joint boosted one’s libido and made for fewer inhibitions. I remember, I was there: Getting stoned helped uptight folks relax.

Famed astronomer Carl Sagan, who smoked pot, came to the same conclusion as the hippies and recorded his findings in an article he wrote in 1969 and published anonymously in 1971. After his death in 1996, the year medical marijuana finally became legal in California, his friend Lester Grinspoon—a medical doctor and Harvard professor—gave Sagan the credit he didn’t receive in his lifetime. In his article, Sagan reported that with marijuana, sex was more enjoyable than without it, and that it improved his appreciation of art and music. His conclusion: marijuana was desperately needed in an “increasingly mad and dangerous world.” Imagine how he’d feel today!

Jeff Hergenrather, the Sebastopol doctor with an international reputation as a cannabis expert, argues that people vulnerable to schizophrenia and addiction should say “No” to marijuana. But he insists that, on the whole, cannabis is not harmful to the heart.

“Anytime someone says that they were able to get eight hours of peaceful sleep because they used a little bit of marijuana, their cardiovascular health will likely be better off with the use of marijuana,” Hergenrather wrote in an email to me.

He added that smoking cannabis “seldom results in chest tightness, coronary insufficiency, and wheezing.” He urges pot smokers not to accept claims that a joint will make your heart race dangerously fast and lead to life-threatening palpitations.

“Cannabis smoke contains the same compounds that are found in cigarette smoke and that are associated with heart disease and cancer, but there is no evidence that cannabis smoke has the same effect,” Hergenrather told me. He doesn’t sell marijuana. He just tells it like it is. Everyone ought to hear his message this Valentine’s Day.

Jonah Raskin is the author of “Dark Day, Dark Night, A Marijuana Murder Mystery.”

Girls on Stage

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The travails of women at the opposite ends of life are the focus of two very entertaining productions running now at opposite ends of Sonoma County. Healdsburg’s Raven Players presents Sarah DeLappe’s
The Wolves through Feb. 9 while Petaluma’s Cinnabar Theater presents David Lindsay-Abaire’s Ripcord through Feb. 16.

The cavernous Raven Performing Arts Center has turned its stage into an intimate, black-box theater and that’s been turned into an indoor soccer facility where The Wolves, a high school girls soccer team, practice and play. The audience sits in stands on opposite sides of the field and observes the team’s warmups over a six-week period. They stretch, they dribble, they kick and they talk. Boy, do they talk.

DeLappe’s dialogue has the sting of accuracy as the girls converse about the competition, college, boys, family, friendship and loss, with language that is often amusing, occasionally heartbreaking and frequently coarse.

Director Katie Watts-Whitaker’s ensemble of nine young performers (Willow Orthwein, Katerina Flores, Grace Reid, Abby Miranda, Lily de Laney, Ashley Matteoni, Candice Penland, Seana Maclure and Andi Luekens) gives very credible performances and gets an emotional and physical workout over the show’s 85 uninterrupted minutes.

Parents, take your teens to this one. It could lead to some very interesting post-show conversations.

The Cinnabar Theater is transformed into a Senior Living Center where perpetually sour resident Abby Binder (Laura Jorgenson) plots to keep her two-bed unit a private room. Perpetually sunny new arrival Marilyn Dunne (Kate Brickley) will have none of that. As a matter of fact, she wants Abby’s bed by the window. A battle ensues.

With Ripcord, playwright Lindsay-Abaire (Good People) takes the mismatched-roommates plot and gives it a 21st-century makeover. More than just The Odd Couple with the internet, novice director James Pelican brings a deft comedic hand to the material.

He also has a great cast, with the two leading ladies well-complemented by a charming Kyle Stoner as an orderly, and John Browning, Sarah McKereghan and Chad Yarish in multiple roles. Outside of the many laughs generated in the ladies’ room, there are hilarious scenes with lots of physical comedy in a haunted house and a sky-jumping plane.

Teens, take your grandparents to see this laugh-out-loud show.

Rating for both (out of 5): ★★★★

‘The Wolves’ runs Fri–Sun through Feb. 9 at the Raven Performing Arts Theater, 115 North St., Healdsburg. Fri–Sat, 8pm; Sun, 2pm. $5–$28. 707.433.6335. raventheater.org
‘Ripcord’ runs through Feb. 16 at Cinnabar Theater, 3333 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. Fri–Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $20–$32. 707.763.8920.
cinnabartheater.org

Making It

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As I traipse up and down a strip of Commerce Blvd., the first question I have about Old Caz is not whether the brewery’s namesake is a “who” or a “what,”—it’s a “where?” Where, oh where is Old Caz?

Rohnert Park’s first homegrown microbrewery isn’t easy to find. They’ve temporarily lost the street sign that I’m looking for somewhere in the vicinity of where I last thought I saw it. But I do find a sign of changing times for this light-industrial, former-nowheresville when I have to pop my head into a craft distillery to ask directions to the microbrewery.

Old Caz cofounders Tom Edwards and Bryan Rengel say they’re mostly welcomed by the city, which has big plans to give this part of town a “there.” They’re certainly welcomed by the small crowd in the shoebox taproom, filling up on hazy IPA at barely past 3pm.

“It has to be a crushable beer,” says Rengel, regarding his top concern when showing a beer to new accounts. Their RPX hazy pale ale is crushable enough, while the Free Craig’s hazy IPA takes it up to grapefruit-shandy-level crushability. Edwards, who’s worked as a brewer at Bear Republic Brewing Co., says that the haze comes from lots of oats and wheat, not adjuncts. The hopping style is juicy and low in bitterness.

The two friends met on the Sonoma State University rowing team, and also explored the county by bicycle. That’s where Old Caz comes in. Old Cazadero Road is a little Russian River lane that wends through the woods and is said to offer primo cycling, when it’s not washed away down the hillside.

Cavedale porter is named after a vertiginous Sonoma Valley route that’s best tackled in the cooler seasons. Light on the roast, it’s a mild brown ale—think Lost Coast Downtown Brown or the near-impossible-to-find Pyramid Brewing Snow Cap—well suited to post-ride refreshment in almost any season.

The easy-drinking Upcycle West Coast IPA is a nod to the business model: almost everything here was free on craigslist, or procured on the cheap. Rengel uses a makers’ space to create do-it-yourself signage. And the fallout from some else’s overheated moment in brewing nets them great equipment, with comparatively little investment from friends and family.

Meanwhile, Edwards brews at Fogbelt in Santa Rosa, while they put together a brewery, one step at a time, with hard work and no frills.

“We’ve suffered like dogs,” says Edwards.

“But you can do pretty well on coffee and beer,” adds Rengel.

Old Caz Beer, 5625 State Farm Dr., Suite 17, Rohnert Park. Open daily except Tuesday, 3–10pm; Sat–Sun, noon–10pm. 707.978.3974. www.oldcaz.com

Santa Rosa Paella Restaurant Ends Service

{image-1] Citing a lack of city support and foot traffic, Gerard Nebesky ended an 18-month run of daily restaurant service at his 4th Street restaurant, Gerard's Paella Y Tapas, on Monday, Feb. 3. "It just breaks my heart to make this decision," Nebesky said, of the closure. "People love our food but there is just not enough of them in this...

Kiss and Tell

Despite the old warning that one should never "kiss and tell," the exact opposite has happened for the past six years at Bump Wine Cellars, located just off of Sonoma Plaza. The sixth annual "Kiss and Tell," a poetry-performance event presented by the Sonoma Writers' Workshop, proclaims love in all its dimensions on Thursday, Feb. 13 at 6:30pm. What began...

Starry Night

This year, the Oscars are like the cocktail bars at too many of today's receptions: no-host. One by one, some two-dozen stars will climb up and squint at the teleprompter in the Academy's effort to keep any one figure from bearing responsibility for the trainwreck. Meanwhile, millions will throw things at the TV and shout in rage at the "In...

Mood for Love

No one can sing a love song like Johnny Mathis. The legendary vocalist—whose career spans more than 60 years, 70 albums, 200 singles and three separate inductions into the Grammy Awards Hall of Fame—is best known for his silky-smooth vibrato, which can be heard on his chart-topping recordings of romantic hits such as "Chances Are," "Misty," "It's Not For Me...

Trafficking Uptick

Sonoma County residents don't appreciate the scale of a crime happening all around them, despite an increased effort at public outreach over the past decade, according to a local nonprofit director. "Human trafficking happens every single day in Sonoma County," says Christine Castillo, the executive director of Verity, a Sonoma County nonprofit that offers services and support to trafficking victims...

Preserve Open Space

The City of Sonoma is moving forward to renew its existing Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) for another 20 years by placing a ballot measure before voters in November 2020. This is great news for open space and agricultural lands and climate-wise, city-centered growth for the next generation. After a robust discussion and hearing from a crowd who cared deeply about...

SMART Vote

I have read the information re: the SMART vote for an extended tax. SMART has failed to deliver what it promised. Watching 7 or 8 people sitting on a train anytime outside of the current commute time upsets me (putting it mildly), especially when the taxpayers are supplementing the fare. SMART "leadership" asks us to continue this farce. The...

Weed Bouquet

Want to boost your romantic life this Valentine's Day? Try eating dark chocolate, and ingest some locally grown cannabis. The cannabis might briefly increase your heart rate and lower your blood pressure, but that's not necessarily a bad thing on Valentine's Day. If you're worried, ask your primary-care physician, or better yet, an informed dispensary salesperson. A woman at my...

Girls on Stage

The travails of women at the opposite ends of life are the focus of two very entertaining productions running now at opposite ends of Sonoma County. Healdsburg's Raven Players presents Sarah DeLappe's The Wolves through Feb. 9 while Petaluma's Cinnabar Theater presents David Lindsay-Abaire's Ripcord through Feb. 16. The cavernous Raven Performing Arts Center has turned its stage into an...

Making It

As I traipse up and down a strip of Commerce Blvd., the first question I have about Old Caz is not whether the brewery's namesake is a "who" or a "what,"—it's a "where?" Where, oh where is Old Caz? Rohnert Park's first homegrown microbrewery isn't easy to find. They've temporarily lost the street sign that I'm looking for somewhere in...
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