THC TLC

The cannabis-infused candies from the Garden Society look delicious and they’re safe for Maureen Dowd to consume. Recall that the New York Times columnist overconsumed an edible in Colorado a couple of years ago, and wound up in a half-panicked stupor.

Company founder Erin Gore (pictured) suggests that Dowd should have consulted with her women-owned cannabis startup, which offers low-dose chocolates (the Bliss Blossom) and chewies (the Bright Blooms) to dispensaries and through delivery services. And the Garden Society offers educational workshops for medical-cannabis novices to guarantee a “safe way for women to experience cannabis for the first time,” Gore says.

“We need to respect the lack of experience that they have,” she adds—and the company goes to lengths to help new pot consumers find their tolerances for the product, and triple-tests the potency levels to make sure there’s not too little or too much THC in the mix.

As ever, the urgent suggestion is to take more later if the effects don’t manifest within a couple of hours to avoid a Dowdian outcome.

“The columnist will probably never try edibles again,” Gore says of Dowd, adding that her hotel-room meltdown would have been preventable with a responsible guide to her first encounter with medical edibles.

Gore says she started to use medical cannabis to understand and address various “pain points” associated with being a married and ambitious women (she worked 10 years as an executive in the corporate world) with various roles as supportive sister and aunt, friend to her partner, “everything that women are responsible for in our day-to-day lives.”

Gore turned to cannabis, she says, “to help me get through the rigors of life,” which meant finding a holistic avenue to a good night’s sleep and a low-stress day, and soon realized a critical need was not being addressed by the industry. “I felt there was a real gap in the industry for women-oriented products,” she says, which extended to the branding and the product itself. She starting hosting baking parties with female friends, and realized that all these women, no matter how successful they were, “all had these pain points, whether it was the job or their personal lives—everyone had a different reason for the pain.”

The parties grew exponentially, and a business was born. “There is a real need in this market to de-stigmatize and offer products targeted to women’s health and needs,” Gore says. And of course men can enjoy the confections, too, whose extracts are drawn from Mendo county’s Shine On Farms.

“Men are very supportive of women in this space,” Gore says, highlighting the male-dominant pioneers of California cannabis “who set the foundation for a new industry that really supports women.”

Letters to the Editor: July 19, 2017

Head Trips

I am glad that Silicon Valley billionaires are investing money into life extension (“Eternity 2.0,” July 12). Big Pharma only wants to make drugs for diseases. We need people with vision and millions to fund researchers. And, yes, freezing heads is definitely too old-school.

Two great fiction books to read on the subject of extending life and ending disease as we know it are Cory Doctorow’s Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. I am sure that the pioneer boys in the chip valley all read this when they were younger. It’s all about having a copy of yourself and rebooting into a newer body. The other book is Unwind by Neal Shusterman. It’s a dystopic teen novel about harvesting parts from young adults—a much darker vision.

Sebastopol

“It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.”—Albert Einstein

“We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.”—Albert Einstein

So comically sad the tech billionaires chase such a vain and empty fountain of youth. All their wealth cannot conceal their fundamentally primitive, ignorant and arrogant conceits that are too typical of hubris-laden Homo sapiens. Technology is integral to the multitude of crises that surround all 7-plus billion of us, and yet they believe the same technologies will save us? Or at least their own sorry-assed sociopathic selves? They are so barking up the wrong tree.

Humanity’s design contains so much inherent untapped potential. A wiser earthling would invest in how to “install the drivers” that will activate so many wondrous yet still dormant faculties built into each and every one of us. Surely a quantum leap in evolution may potentially be nigh, but this sure isn’t it!

“Be grateful for death, grasshopper, without death, life has no value.”
—Reverend Ra Rabbi Roshi Rinpoche Ji

Occidental

Beautiful Place

Reuniting Courthouse Square has created a magical place in downtown Santa Rosa! I toast the city council members who finally made it happen! Most great cities have a downtown space that people love: Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, Central Park in New York City—and now the reunited Courthouse Square in Santa Rosa.

Anyone who’s been to Wednesday Night Market in Santa Rosa this summer, can see how people are drawn to it. While the homeless have needs for city funds, as well as single moms, addicts, mentally ill, veterans, and the elderly, spending money to create a beautiful public space will have far-reaching returns. It diverts traffic, and humanizes the downtown core, to create a place where people can slow down and enjoy this beautiful place.

Sebastopol

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

July 14: Showstoppers in Santa Rosa

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The North Bay’s long-running experimental theater troupe the Imaginists are putting the (bicycle) pedal to the metal again this summer for their annual bike-powered, bilingual Art Is Medicine Show at several park locations in Santa Rosa. This year’s original production, Stop That Show!, is a topical affair, as President Corn and Sen. Cracker sabotage the Imaginists in order to perform their own “Let’s Make America Pretty Good Again Summertime Extravaganza.” The touring show hits Juilliard Park and Howarth Park this weekend, and kicks off with a fundraiser on Friday, July 14, at 461 Sebastopol Ave., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $5–$100. theimaginists.org.

July 14-15: Family Fantasy in Glen Ellen

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The spectacular Broadway Under the Stars summer series from Transcendence Theatre welcomes theater lovers of all ages for their upcoming Fantastical Family Night, happening among the ruins of Jack London’s estate for one weekend only. Show up early and indulge in pre-show activities, great food and wines from several local vendors. Then enjoy a show of Broadway classics, Disney musical numbers and more, performed by nearly two dozen nationally touring vocalists and actors, under the canopy of stars on Friday and Saturday, July 14–15, at Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Road, Glen Ellen. Doors, 5pm; show, 7:30pm. $32 and up. transcendencetheatre.org.

July 14-15: One-Two Punch(lines) in Santa Rosa

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Two of today’s best and best-selling standup comedians are taking the same stage for two nights of laughs. First up, veteran comedian Brian Regan returns to the North Bay to perform his brand of broad, family-friendly comedy that’s made him a favorite on television. The next night, a very different brand of laughs comes from Australian star Jim Jeffries, who’s made his name in the last few years with edgy material and a no-holds-barred approach. Regan appears on Friday, July 14, and Jeffries performs on Saturday, July 15, at Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, Santa Rosa. 7pm. Prices vary. 707.546.3600.

July 16: Classical in the Sonoma Valley

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Valley of the Moon Music Festival
co-founders Tanya Tomkins and Eric Zivian know that the best way to hear classical music is to hear it in the style of the times. That’s why their annual festival utilizes authentic period instruments, played by masterful performers in the charming setting of Sonoma Valley. This year’s festival celebrates the life and works of Romantic composer and critic Robert Schumann, with concerts of his music and of works that he championed in his lifetime. The festival’s opening concert, “Deserving of a Laurel Crown,” features selections from Schumann, Chopin and Mozart on Sunday, July 16, at Hanna Boys Center, 17000 Arnold Drive, Sonoma. 4pm. $22–$40. valleyofthemoonmusicfestival.org.

The NorBays Strike Back

A North Bay tradition more than a decade in the making, the annual NorBays are now open for our 2017 write-in voting. This year, we’ve expanded our voting to include several new genres and musical categories to better represent the broad and diverse array of music in our region.

In addition to longtime categories such as reggae and jazz, our online poll is zeroing in on some of our favorite, though often overlooked genres. So, this year, we’ve got punk in its own league, as well as spots for metal and indie rock. We’re also splitting up the blues and R&B departments, as well as the country and folk listings, hip-hop and electronica groupings to better represent these sounds. Readers will also find new categories to honor local radio disc jockeys, local venues or clubs, open mic events, music festivals and music promoters, because those who support the scene deserve some love, too.

Anyone can vote, though we ask that
you only vote once. If you’re a band, tell
your fans; if you’re a fan, tell your friends. Voting will be available on Bohemian.com through Aug. 7. We’ll announce winners in our Aug. 9 issue. Look for the NorBays icon
at Bohemian.com, and cast your votes today.

Spread the Word

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When master percussionist Onye Onyemaechi isn’t leading mystical journeys in the deserts of Morocco or presenting weeklong sessions on the spirituality of drumming in Germany, he leads the dynamic Afrobeat band Onye & the Messengers in the North Bay, where he’s lived for the last 25 years.

Known for a dance-inducing repertoire of African rhythms blended with jazz, funk and splashes of reggae, Onye & the Messengers get the crowd moving at the Redwood Cafe in Cotati on July 15.

Born in Nigeria, Onyemaechi studied business in Boston, but ultimately chose a musical life over a corporate one in the early 1980s. “Now my business is to make people happy,” he says.”

Onyemaechi moved to the North Bay in 1989 and founded Village Rhythms as a way to present drumming and music in a multitude of educational programs for individuals, businesses, schools and other organizations around the world.

Seeing music as a tool for community building and self-empowerment, Onyemaechi often performs at school assemblies and promotes a joy of learning in his youth programs. One of Onyemaechi’s most popular offerings is African Village Celebrations, a public program he brings to libraries and museums throughout Northern California. These 60-minute workshops feature African drumming, dancing, songs and stories presented in their historical and cultural context. Participants learn to value and integrate their own heritage into the experience.

In addition to his work with Village Rhythms, Onyemaechi is also a celebrated performing and recording artist, spreading positive values through the rich tradition of Afrobeat from his native Nigeria.

“I am inclusive of diversity in all aspects,” Onyemaechi says. “Music is a very powerful medium to bring that message to people all over the world. Music is full of love and kindness; it allows us to be free and de-stress from all our problems.”

Made up of several seasoned Bay Area musicians, Onye & the Messengers excel at showcasing not only the technicality of Afrobeat’s polyrhythmic sound, but also the genre’s intuitive and creative flair, and the group expands on that creativity with jazz and world music embellishments.

“What I do with the band is to allow them to be free, to be available within their own creative means,” Onyemaechi says, “to let the music speak for itself.”

Makes Sense

One smart comment about the late Jonathan Demme’s 1984 Stop Making Sense, justly described as the greatest rock concert movie made, was critic Blake Goble’s line, “The plot is the performance.”

Stop Making Sense is a collage from a series of shows at the Pantages Theater in Hollywood in December 1983. The performance’s plot is about the way call and response works in popular music. The too-thin Mr. Coffee Nerves singer David Byrne has the starch taken out of him by his band, as they grow around him and envelop him. The concert builds from Byrne’s opening solo performance on acoustic guitar and beat box, squawking out “Psycho Killer,” until the show’s end, when the whole gang is out and roaring.

Made for the price of a mainstream music video (with money borrowed by the band against their royalties), Stop Making Sense set a new standard in concert films through its simplicity and lack of distracting video effects. A large yet invisible camera crew never dictate the action or go in for the Triumph of the Will exaltation of the rock star. “We wanted the camera to linger so you could get to know the musicians,” said drummer Chris Frantz to Rolling Stone in 2014.

A key scene is when back-up singers Edna Holt and Lynn Mabry sprint out of the wings for “Slippery People”—an ’80s anthem if there ever was one. They come in for the response—”He’s all right!”—as Byrne calls out, “Whatsa matter with him?”

I saw Stop Making Sense at Burning Man last year, projected on a bed sheet from a ladder-mounted projector, with the dust swirling around. The passersby, looking in curiously, brought out in me the impulse that made me a critic in the first place: the urge to blurt out, “Come see this wonderful movie, good people!”

Dirty Water

It’s become part of summer along the Russian River: the weather warms up, and people flock to the water—only to be warned to stay away because of elevated levels of contamination.

Monte Rio Beach—the popular summer swim-and-sun spot on the Russian River, better known to locals as Big Rocky—was closed last week due to high levels of bacterial pollution, with E. coli levels briefly registering at four times the state standard. Coliform levels were also 10 percent higher than state and county protocols permit.

Both bacterial counts indicate the presence of “fecal waste” in the water.

On Thursday, July 6—following some of the largest crowds ever recorded over the extended Independence Day weekend—the Environmental Health & Safety division of Sonoma County’s Department of Health Services issued a press release saying that it had ordered staff to post “warning-closure signs” at Monte Rio advising the public against “swimming, wading or water contact.”

“At significant levels, this bacteria could indicate that other disease-causing agents are present,” the press release stated. “Additionally, these pathogens at certain levels can sicken swimmers and others who use the river.”

None of the county’s nine other public beaches on the river where weekly sampling occurs—from Cloverdale Park to Johnson Point—were closed. County officials had anticipated that the levels would diminish by the weekend, but follow-up tests indicated no such dissipation. As of Monday afternoon, Sonoma County health officer Karen Milman said that Big Rocky was still closed to swimmers.

“Additional test results are still elevated,” Milman said, “so the current recommendations to stay out of the water are the same.

“We don’t have a source identified,” Milman added in a phone interview. “It’s complicated, because there is elevated coliform, but the E. coli is going back down. We will update our website when test results come back later in the week.”

Don McEnhill, executive director of Russian Riverkeeper, says the source of those high levels could come from a number of places.

“Livestock, such as cows, pigs, goats, that are frequently fenced so they have direct access to waterways, could be part of it,” McEnhill speculates. “Dog waste from careless owners, leaking sewer-collection pipes, leaky or malfunctioning septic tanks, illegal dumping, unsanitary homeless camps—though we have more sanitary ones—birds, marine mammals and other wildlife and kids in diapers playing in water” can all contribute.

“Grab tests,” such as those conducted by the county, McEnhill adds, “really don’t give a very accurate reading on the state of the river. It’s like shining a flashlight in a dark room for a few seconds where everything is moving. It doesn’t provide sufficient detail for a full scientific assessment.” A grab test comes from a single water sample.

On hearing that the numbers were still elevated, McEnhill noted that it would be hard “to pin the cause on high use” over the holiday. “It seems more consistent than that, so likely a discrete source like a leaking pipe or maybe all those folks jamming into Bohemian Grove and their beach camp area for [their] annual confab.”

The Sonoma County Tourism website calls Big Rocky a “vacation wonderland,” but the popular beach has been a less than idyllic spot in recent weeks—for reasons other than fecal pollution. During the last weekend in June, Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputies broke up a gang-related brawl that left five people injured. Two arrests were made at the scene and others are pending.

In the summer of 2015 there was a large bloom of blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) at various places on the river that also presented environmental concerns. A dog was believed to have died because of the outbreak.

McEnhill, who has been actively engaged in the watershed since his childhood in the 1960s, is generally optimistic about the river’s water quality. “For the amount of development and human activity,” he says, “the Russian River is in fairly good shape, is safe for swimming 99 percent or more of the time and is much cleaner than 40 years ago, before the Clean Water Act regulations.”

He adds that the county is doing a better job of protecting the river than in years past—especially with human waste.

“Helping our river stay clean is like keeping a kitchen clean—if you make a mess, clean it up. Half of dog owners go to the river without bags. Parents need to use waterproof diapers. And we still have a ways to go with agricultural and livestock contaminants.

“We can always do better.”

THC TLC

The cannabis-infused candies from the Garden Society look delicious and they're safe for Maureen Dowd to consume. Recall that the New York Times columnist overconsumed an edible in Colorado a couple of years ago, and wound up in a half-panicked stupor. Company founder Erin Gore (pictured) suggests that Dowd should have consulted with her women-owned cannabis startup, which offers low-dose...

Letters to the Editor: July 19, 2017

Head Trips I am glad that Silicon Valley billionaires are investing money into life extension ("Eternity 2.0," July 12). Big Pharma only wants to make drugs for diseases. We need people with vision and millions to fund researchers. And, yes, freezing heads is definitely too old-school. Two great fiction books to read on the subject of extending life and ending disease...

July 14: Showstoppers in Santa Rosa

The North Bay’s long-running experimental theater troupe the Imaginists are putting the (bicycle) pedal to the metal again this summer for their annual bike-powered, bilingual Art Is Medicine Show at several park locations in Santa Rosa. This year’s original production, Stop That Show!, is a topical affair, as President Corn and Sen. Cracker sabotage the Imaginists in order to...

July 14-15: Family Fantasy in Glen Ellen

The spectacular Broadway Under the Stars summer series from Transcendence Theatre welcomes theater lovers of all ages for their upcoming Fantastical Family Night, happening among the ruins of Jack London’s estate for one weekend only. Show up early and indulge in pre-show activities, great food and wines from several local vendors. Then enjoy a show of Broadway classics, Disney...

July 14-15: One-Two Punch(lines) in Santa Rosa

Two of today’s best and best-selling standup comedians are taking the same stage for two nights of laughs. First up, veteran comedian Brian Regan returns to the North Bay to perform his brand of broad, family-friendly comedy that’s made him a favorite on television. The next night, a very different brand of laughs comes from Australian star Jim Jeffries,...

July 16: Classical in the Sonoma Valley

Valley of the Moon Music Festival co-founders Tanya Tomkins and Eric Zivian know that the best way to hear classical music is to hear it in the style of the times. That’s why their annual festival utilizes authentic period instruments, played by masterful performers in the charming setting of Sonoma Valley. This year’s festival celebrates the life and works...

The NorBays Strike Back

A North Bay tradition more than a decade in the making, the annual NorBays are now open for our 2017 write-in voting. This year, we've expanded our voting to include several new genres and musical categories to better represent the broad and diverse array of music in our region. In addition to longtime categories such as reggae and jazz, our...

Spread the Word

When master percussionist Onye Onyemaechi isn't leading mystical journeys in the deserts of Morocco or presenting weeklong sessions on the spirituality of drumming in Germany, he leads the dynamic Afrobeat band Onye & the Messengers in the North Bay, where he's lived for the last 25 years. Known for a dance-inducing repertoire of African rhythms blended with jazz, funk and...

Makes Sense

One smart comment about the late Jonathan Demme's 1984 Stop Making Sense, justly described as the greatest rock concert movie made, was critic Blake Goble's line, "The plot is the performance." Stop Making Sense is a collage from a series of shows at the Pantages Theater in Hollywood in December 1983. The performance's plot is about the way call and...

Dirty Water

It's become part of summer along the Russian River: the weather warms up, and people flock to the water—only to be warned to stay away because of elevated levels of contamination. Monte Rio Beach—the popular summer swim-and-sun spot on the Russian River, better known to locals as Big Rocky—was closed last week due to high levels of bacterial pollution, with...
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