Turn to Bern?

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‘If he wins tonight, we could go to June.” That was Democratic Party strategist Donna Brazile on CNN the night of Bernie Sanders’ upset in the Michigan primary on March 8.

Defying all expectations—even his own—Sanders beat Hillary Clinton by two points in a race that mainstream go-to pollsters such as Nate Silver said he would lose by 20 points, and perhaps more, just the day before the primary.

Brazile’s comment on CNN was code for “This might not be resolved until California,” whose primary is on June 7 and where 546 delegates are up for grabs in the Democratic primary. There are three months to go, and numerous states will vote between now and then, but Sanders’ Michigan upset put the tactical and tautological “inevitability” argument about Hillary Clinton into play—something that nobody saw coming, least of all the two-dozen California Democratic superdelegates who have already pledged their support, and their vote, to Clinton.

So could Sanders actually win in California on his way to an upset win over Clinton for the nomination? And could Sanders’ deep support in the Bay Area help push him over the top? A recent breakdown of Federal Election Commission figures shows that his supporters in Oakland and San Francisco have sent almost $900,000 to Sanders’ small-bucks-only campaign. The most recent polls in California have him in the neighborhood of 10 points down from Clinton, but if the wildly errant polling data in the lead-up to Michigan is any indication, 10 points is well within the margin of statistical error in an election cycle where every prediction has been subject to debate, and is sometimes just flat wrong.

“Of course Bernie can win California,” says Bill Curry, a former speechwriter for Bill Clinton and two-time candidate for governor in Connecticut. Curry, now a political analyst and columnist, notes that polling data on Clinton and Sanders shows that primary voters are with Bernie on the issues—universal healthcare, support for a living wage, an end to pay-to-play politics—and he’s got her beat by a long shot on the favorability factor. “But she has convinced them that she has a better chance of winning.”

Yet all bets are off after the Michigan upset, and that includes the Golden State. “California coming in at the end of the line,” says Curry, “it wasn’t expected to be important six months ago on the Democratic side.”

The question is whether Sanders’ “political revolution” can find its reflection in the delegate count in time for the Democratic convention in Philadelphia this July.

One takeaway from Michigan is that, while Donald Trump may claim to speak for the Nixonian bloc of “silent majority” voters, not only are his supporters not especially silent, they’re not the majority, either—the violent minority is more like it. The voters who pushed Sanders over the top in Michigan may represent an actual silent majority that doesn’t get picked up in polling, Curry says, and is made up of disfranchised citizens who have ditched politics altogether. “The poor, white working class has fled the civic life of the nation,” Curry says.

It’s those voters who are emerging as a possible key to the race, as the “inevitability” argument gets chipped away by Sanders and his slow-roll delegate count (and by Clinton’s gaffes, such as her unspeakably moronic comments about AIDS and the Reagans last week). At last count, Clinton had 1,231 delegates to Sanders’ 576. The winning candidate will need to amass 2,383 delegates.

The push for Bernie is already on in California, even if the vote is three months away. There are numerous events scheduled by supporters in coming days and weeks, lots of phone-banking and door-knocking all over Northern California. This Thursday, March 17, the Western Gate [R]evolutionary Teahouse in far-flung Lagunitas is hosting a pro-Bernie phone-and-computer night of outreach to potential supporters.

One challenge for Sanders supporters and activists in California is to try to get already committed superdelegates to reconsider their support for presumptive nominee Hillary Clinton—not an easy task, given the tendency of liberal voters to view this election through a lens of fear, if not outright terror, at the prospects of any GOP candidate making it to the White House. In that rubric, Hillary is viewed as a “safe” bet for president.

There are about four-dozen superdelegates in California, comprising elected officials at the national level and members of the Democratic National Committee. To date, the superdelegates are basically split down the middle: half have supported Clinton, while half remain uncommitted. None have thrown down for Sanders, at least not yet.

“We are out in front on this,” says Norman Solomon, the West Marin author, former congressional candidate and longtime critic of the pernicious and corrupting influence of corporate money in politics. Bay Area elected leaders, he says, need to be coaxed away from their predictable fealty to Democratic Party establishment expectations, especially now that Clinton’s nomination is emerging as something less than a foregone conclusion.

“We know from experience . . . that the heads of the Sonoma and Marin Central Democratic Committee are going to go with the national party hierarchy,” Solomon says, as he points his waggishly progressive finger in the direction of two-term U.S.
Rep. Jared Huffman.

Last year, I asked Huffman who he was supporting in the Democratic primary, and the popular, progressive-minded congressman said he’d be supporting Clinton. She was going to be the nominee, Huffman reasoned, even as he praised Sanders for bringing a raft of welcome populist ideas into the campaign. Solomon, who ran against Huffman in 2012, is suggesting that the congressman reconsider his support for Clinton, especially given that the “inevitability” argument has been taken down a peg or two in Sanders’ big-state win in Michigan.

“He should withdraw his premature endorsement and pledge for Hillary Clinton at the convention and see how we vote in the June primary,” Solomon says.

Huffman says he’s been talking about the superdelegate issue since before Solomon laid down his challenge, and does not think those voters are going to decide who the nominee is, “nor should they.” Huffman fully expects Clinton to get the nomination, but speaking hypothetically, he notes that, “if for some reason that is not the case, all gets considered. I’m not going to go against the voters…. We’ll see how this plays out.

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According to our friends at Wikipedia, the two-dozen uncommitted superdelegates in California include Gov. Jerry Brown and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi’s daughter, Christine Paule Pelosi, a political strategist and DNC member, has pledged her vote to Clinton, as have U.S. senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, and U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, the other North Bay congressman. Given that Thompson rolls as a conservative “blue dog” Democrat, a switcheroo to Sanders is nearly inconceivable in his case. Brown spokesman Evan Westrup says via email that the governor has yet to make a decision about whom he will endorse for president.

That’s not a problem for North Bay Sanders supporters Anna Givens and Alice Chan. They are lead organizers in the Coalition for Grassroots Progress, founded during Solomon’s run for congress in 2012. Last fall, the organization embarked on a campaign where volunteers were asked to knock on a hundred doors in their neighborhoods to ascertain and encourage support for Bernie Sanders’ presidential run. The organization is poised to kick off another 100-door-knock campaign at the end of March, which may give some indication about whether or not there is a growing base of support for Sanders—whether people are ready to vote with their hopes for a political revolution over their fears of a Trump planet.

“I expect that there will be a difference between the fall and now,” says Givens, who lives in Santa Rosa. “There’s a huge amount of organized enthusiasm for Sanders in this area.” Chan, a Sebastopol resident, says she is hopeful that Sanders can turn the corner with a big push from Sonoma, Marin and Mendocino counties, where enthusiasm for Sanders runs high. “People pay more attention to what their neighbors say to them than they do to glossy fliers in the mailbox,” says Chan of the group’s outreach. “Neighbor-to-neighbor is the best way to change people’s minds.”

But journalist and political campaign veteran Al Giordano isn’t so sure Sanders can take the Golden State. There are too many uncertainties, and too much time before the primary to make a call. Giordano produces an election-season newsletter for subscribers, and so far in 2016 he has accurately projected the winner in 19 of 20 Democratic primaries and caucuses.

“California is almost three months away, so it’s a bit early to tell,” Giordano says. “A big factor will be if Trump has it sewn up before then, in which case independent voters will take Democratic ballots for Bernie instead. It’s also highly possible that Clinton will already have 50-percent-plus of the delegates, so it will be irrelevant, and a Sanders victory would be much like Clinton’s California one eight years ago—symbolic but meaningless. Unless he gets the Trump-Kasich independents voting for him, it’s a tough road because Latinos and black voters are irreversibly against [Sanders].”

There’s another California voting bloc out there that might be smoldering in the wings for Sanders—call it the sativa majority: the pro-legalization brigades of recreational cannabis users who will no doubt come out in favor of this year’s legalization initiative in California. Sanders supports legalization of cannabis; Clinton, like her husband before her, is not inhaling the legalization fumes. Solomon agrees that Sanders’ support for cannabis legalization could push more Californians his way, given that cannabis is just another issue where “Bernie has been way ahead of the progressive curve.”

It’s all very intriguing, but to remain competitive until the California vote, says Curry, Sanders will have to put in a good showing in delegate-rich Florida and Ohio. Voters in those states, and in Missouri, North Carolina and Illinois, were casting ballots as this paper was put to bed on Tuesday. The polls in Ohio had tightened in Bernie’s favor in the lead-up to primary day. He got blown away in Florida and lost to Clinton in Ohio, but ran neck-and-neck with her in Missouri and Illinois.

“He doesn’t have to win, but he does have to make them somewhat close,” Curry says of Ohio and Florida. “If he wins either of those, then no states are out of reach. It will help him enormously to pull out another early victory, another surprise.”

Note: This story has been updated to include the general results from Tuesday’s primary, and with comments from Rep. Jared Huffman.

Writers Picks: Dining

Best Chef We’re Grateful to Still Have Around

Last year, friends and fans of Casino Bar & Grill chef Mark Malicki were saddened to hear he was ill with late-stage Crohn’s disease and was in need of extensive surgery. It didn’t look good. Sonoma County’s restaurant community rallied around Malicki and held fundraisers to help cover his medical bills. Even though Malicki’s weight dropped to the low triple digits, the good news is that he recovered and is back in the saddle creating his eclectic daily menus of West County soul food, genre-jumping meals rooted in locally sourced ingredients served in the coolest venue around, an old bar.

Malicki is not only a great chef, he’s a great person. Humbled by the support he got from the community, he offered down-on-their-luck fishermen hurting from the closure of the Dungeness crab fishery a meal on the house.
That’s the kind of social safety net we need more of. 17000 Bodega Hwy., Bodega. 707.876.3185.—S.H.

Best Humble Food Upgrade

When you open a restaurant that flirts with new Jewish cuisine, a list of schmears is a must. Bird & Bottle, a recent addition to Santa Rosa’s food scene, has just that, with an $11 price tag. The chicken liver schmear arrives as a tiny, concentrated island of fatty goodness with four slices of grilled pumpernickel. The mousse is adorned with pickled shallots, maple syrup, cracklings and smoked salt, and it’s absolutely heavenly with just the right balance of sweet and savory, plus a cool interplay of textures. Spread the precious mix on a lonely piece of bread and congratulate yourself on money well spent. 1055 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707.568.4000.—F.T.

Best Alcohol Alchemist

Aging spirits and cocktails in mini oak barrels isn’t a new trend, but Zazu restaurant mixologist extraordinaire Fred Johnson has taken the technique to new heights. The first Friday of the month, Johnson uncorks all the crazy projects he’s been working on for a night of his barrel-aged cocktails. As with wine, oak mellows spirits and adds new flavors. Johnson barrel-ages classic cocktails like Manhattans and Sazeracs (which are superb), but things get really interesting when he blends cocktails using infusions and decoctions of his own creation, many of them harvested from his backyard (try the Lion’s Mane if it’s available). The results are truly memorable. Add Johnson’s encyclopedic cocktail knowledge and a genuine love of his craft, and you’ve got one delicious drink. Or two. 6770 McKinley Ave., Sebastopol. 707523.4814.—S.H.

Best Unpretentious Cocktail

Ordering a cocktail can be tricky. Order a sophisticated one and you risk sounding like a snob. Stumble through the menu and ask for a martini, and you’ll be suspected of alcohol ignorance. In the soft-lit, stylish space of El Barrio, Guerneville’s more than worthy tequila and mezcal bar, you can avoid all that by simply ordering the michelada. The delicious and straightforward cocktail is based on Modelo Especial, a cheap Mexican beer, with the additions of housemade Sangrita (a chili-blood orange juice) and chile rum. For $7, the unpretentious drink comes decorated with a salt rim and delivers an instant vacation. 16230 Main St., Guerneville. 707.604.7601.—F.T.

Best Reason to Bank With Chase

You don’t generally think of your bank when you’re thinking about that afternoon cup of pick-me-up coffee, but then there’s the Chase Bank in downtown Santa Rosa, a vast emporium of fees and fines and pleasant people, which also happens to offer free coffee and lollipops, and the occasional plate of sugar cookies—with sprinkles, no less. It’s a very welcome gesture. Would you like a balance statement? No, but could you put out some ham sandwiches next time we’re overdrawn and hungry the day before payday? 835 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707.576.3003.—T.G.

Best MultiLevel Dining Experience

Napa’s Ninebark is three restaurants in one. The ground floor is a beautiful bar with classic cocktails and a menu of great snacks like the salt cod beignets. Take the elevator to the third floor and step into a swanky cocktail lounge with an outdoor patio that looks right down on the Napa River and the Third Street Bridge. The cocktails here are a little more upscale than the downstairs bar. (Try the Old Ball Game, $16, a riff on an Old Fashioned made with popcorn and peanut–infused rye—think Cracker Jack and a whiff of leather-steeped grain alcohol served with a single, hand-shaped ice globe. It’s supposed to taste like a baseball game complete with essence of catcher’s mitt.) There’s a great list of sophisticated snacks or “provisions,” too. Grab a drink or a bite here before heading down to the second floor dining room. This is where wunderkind chef Matthew Lightner creates his exciting yet approachable cuisine. 813 Main St., Napa. 707.226.7821.—S.H.

Best Urban Bakery in a Country Setting

Cloverdale doesn’t get the culinary attention that southern neighbor Healdsburg does, but the city’s new Trading Post Bakery is a surprise: bright, delicious and big-city cool. Owned by the team behind San Francisco’s AQ restaurant, the small bakery created quite a buzz when it opened last summer, only to close a few months later, due to construction of the upcoming restaurant portion. No worries, though, the place behind the “7 or More” seeded wheat loaf and the already famous toast with jam is reopening this March with a vengeance—salads, sandwiches and other elevated lunch and dinner options will join the amazing pastries. Stay tuned. 102 S. Cloverdale Blvd., Cloverdale. 707.894.6483.—F.T.

Best Vegan Restaurant That Might
Appeal to Non-Vegans

You know the feeling you get after you get your car’s oil changed? You feel like you did something positive for your vehicle and it runs better and feels happier. That’s what eating at Santa Rosa’s new Seed to Leaf is like—it’s an oil change for your body. The restaurant serves an encyclopedic list of super-foods and fresh organic fruit and vegetables that taste as good as they are good for you. Look for delicious smoothies, nourishing “tonics”—try the Focus tonic made with a tongue-twisting blend of schizandra berries, Siberian ginseng, chuan xiong (a Chinese medicinal rhizome), chrysanthemum, goji berries, reishi mushroom and warm almond milk—salads and meatless entrées like walnut-based “tacos” and a jackfruit “barbecue” sandwich. Yes, it’s all vegan, but mainly it just tastes good and makes you feel good. You won’t miss the meat. 25 Old Courthouse Square, Santa Rosa. 707.978.4043.—S.H.

Best Time to Squeeze Your Cheesemaker

Love the North Bay’s locally made artisan cheese so much you could just hug the cheesemakers? California’s Artisan Cheese Festival, held annually in Petaluma, makes it possible to get up close and personal—at least, with the cows, goats and sheep that contribute the main ingredient to the North Bay’s quiet revolution in quality dairy products. Now in its 10th year, the festival has stepped up its popular tour schedule in recent years, bringing curd-addled thrill seekers across the cow-patty curtain—in those glossy, black Pure Luxury Transportation buses more often seen plying the winetasting routes of Napa Valley—to Sonoma and Marin County farms and creameries for educational tours. At McClelland’s Dairy in Two Rock, participants can try their hand—literally, their hand—at drawing milk the old fashioned way. But the tours also coincide with baby goat season, and it turns out that when the tour leader says, “Does anyone want to hold a baby goat?” everyone wants to hold an adorable baby goat, the tour is forgotten about, and time stops. The 10th annual Artisan Cheese Festival kicks off two days of farm and creamery tours on Friday, March 18, before the Grand Tasting on Sunday, March 20. Sheraton Petaluma, 745 Baywood Drive, Petaluma.—J.K.

Best Convenience Food That’s Actually Good for You

Thanks to the paleo diet fad, bone broth, peasant food if there ever was any, is trendy. It’s nourishing and delicious stuff. It’s easy to make but it takes forever—24 hours is about right. I suggest making a big batch and freezing it for later, but until then, the good news is that there’s the Bone Broth Company. The Sebastopol-based company sells its stuff at the Santa Rosa and Sebastopol farmers markets, but you can also get the broth (beef, pork, chicken, lamb and buffalo) in the frozen section at Community Market, Andy’s Market and Shelton Market. Grab one of the glass jars, and you’ve got a delicious liquid dinner—once you defrost the jar, that is. facebook.com/thebonebrothcompany.—S.H.

Best Marriage of Sweet and Heat

Cider has been trending for a while and 2016 looks like the year of tweaks and creative takes on the classic fermented beverage. Sonoma Cider, the one with the cool graphics and funny names, is a regional star with bearded and beanie-clad Robert Cordtz and James Williams steadily leading the small brand toward national stardom. Out-of-the-box flavors include the bourbon-tinged Anvil and the oddball, root beer–inspired Washboard, but the wildest, boldest option is the limited-edition Crowbar. Flavored with habanero chile and lime, this is, according to the website, “a portable fiesta in a can” or just a wonderfully crisp, tangy and refreshing cider that’s an easy favorite. 30 Mill St., Healdsburg. 707.433.8212.—F.T.

Best Ramen North of the Bridge, South of the Bridge—and Maybe East and West of It

There’s really no contest here. The boys at Ramen Gaijin serve up the best ramen north of the Golden Gate Bridge. In fact, it’s better than lots of places you’ll find south of the bridge. The shoyu ramen, made from largely locally sourced ingredients, is an instant North Bay classic. And now that they’re open again after an extensive remodel and added a Scott Beattie–masterminded cocktail program and an exciting izakaya (Japanese tapas) menu to go with it, the place is a triple threat of Japanese-inspired gustatory delights. 6848 Sebastopol Ave., Sebastopol. 707. 827.3609. www.ramengaijin.com.—S.H.

Writers Picks: Culture

Best Meeting of the Musical Minds

North Bay music fans know the name and voice of Bill Bowker, who has been involved with all aspects of the local music scene since the 1970s and is known best for his Blues with Bowker radio show heard every Sunday night on KRSH 95.9—one of the longest running blues shows in the country.

Fans also should know the name Sheila Groves-Tracey, who has spent nearly 30 years as one of the top music booking agents in the North Bay and who has worked with bands and musicians ranging from Neil Young and Melissa Etheridge to Primus and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Having booked acts for the Mystic in Petaluma and the Uptown Theatre in Napa, Groves-Tracey was most recently the booking agent and co-owner at the popular Twin Oaks Tavern in Penngrove, which she and her partners sold to HopMonk Tavern
owner Dean Biersch late last year.

Now, Groves-Tracey and Bowker are teaming up to form a new musical management company, Notable Artists Management, with the intention of signing and promoting musicians from the North Bay and beyond.

These two know their stuff, and they prove it right off the bat by also announcing that their first signing is rising Americana star David Luning.

Given that Bowker and Groves-Tracey have seen a lot of talented musicians in their combined 60 years in the business, this new venture is sure to collect some of the best musicians from around the region and propel them to new heights. —C.S.

Best Mooove

KOWS-FM had a great run at its little studio in offbeat Occidental, but the gracious owner of that studio-in-a-house said they had to move on from that offbeat West County tiny-town—or moooove on—and the eclectic and entertaining community nonprofit radio station spent months trying to find a suitable location. Wouldn’t you know it but the Sebastopol Methodist Church had a classroom it wasn’t using—complete with chalkboards and a classroom piano, very old-school—and KOWS (107.5 on your FM dial) made the move late in 2015. They’re jamming out the programming from the church, with a volunteer staff of 80-plus, and while KOWS has since been battling with a local neighbor over the city-approved proposal to move its antenna (the neighbor is concerned about EMF radiation), the station is halfway there and ready to ramp the listenership zone by tenfold, from 20,000 to 200,000. As the go-to emergency radio beacon for West County, KOWS has come home. KOWS holds a fundraiser concert featuring Markus James and boogie-woogie queen Wendy DeWitt on March 18 at 7:30pm. www.kows.fm.—T.G.

Best Punk-Rock Podcast

Want to know about the latest and greatest in Sonoma County punk and indie bands? Look no further than Onstage with Jim and Tom, the ongoing rock-and-roll interview and performance podcast that takes place on the stage of the Phoenix Theater in Petaluma. Hosts Jim Agius and Tom Gaffey are the hard-working forces behind the Phoenix. Agius has been booking the Phoenix since 2006, and is a natural showman, as seen in his involvement in the increasingly popular Phoenix Pro Wrestling events. Gaffey is a saintly yet anarchic figure in Petaluma’s music scene, having managed the Phoenix through thick and thin for over 30 years. Together they make the perfect pair to interview local bands like instrumental surf-punk group the Illumignarly and stoner rockers JRR Tallcan. In addition to the interviews, Onstage invites the bands to perform a set of their songs. The sessions are filmed and posted online at onstagepodcast.com.—C.S.

Best Homegrown Appreciation for the Most Famous Playwright on the Planet

Given that most wine descriptions are as verbose as a Shakespeare play, it’s only fitting that old Billy can be found among the grapevines and venues of Napa Valley, in the form of theNapaShakes nonprofit theater group.

Matching Napa Valley’s world-famous wines with world-class theater performances, and modeled after the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, NapaShakes showcases a variety of productions and programs ranging from staged readings, star-studded plays and film screenings streamed from the Shakespeare’s Globe theater in London.

NapaShakes commemorates the 400-year anniversary of the playwright’s death with a host of events in 2016, some of them pretty peculiar. Case in point: at the Napa Valley Opera House, April 22 and 23, the Brown University ensemble Fiasco Theater presents Cymbeline—with a bluegrass vibe! Critics nationwide are hailing it as a marvel.
www.napashakes.org.—C.S.

Best Place to Lose at Pool Over a Crooked Table

These days, dive bars are an ironic destination for city dwellers exhausted by mixology and clever tiled floors. In our parts, however, dive bars are often the only watering hole for miles. Rio Nido Roadhouse, right on the edge of Guerneville’s ongoing stylish revival, is such a place. Proud to be divey, serving roadhouse classics like burgers and Buffalo wings, the Roadhouse shifts effortlessly between summer’s beach vibe and winter’s moody blues. This place has it all, from the feisty bartenders to the crooked billiard table. Come summer, the pool is open, and local bands take to the outdoor stage. The bar is where locals come to gossip and where unassuming, dressed up out-of-towners attempt to have a classy night out. Try the tomato bruschetta and the artichoke dip paired with a way too strong Bee’s Knees and soak in the atmosphere of a Sonoma County classic. 14540 Canyon Two Road, Rio Nido. 707.869.0821.—F.T.

Best Napa County Concert Ever

The late Lux Interior of psychobilly legend the Cramps was famous for performing in a G-string and pouring red wine over himself during the band’s heyday in the 1980s. You always wondered—where’s that wine from? Our bet is on the Napa Valley. See, back in 1978 the band traveled from its New York home-base to the Napa State Hospital, and performed a show there that is one of the weirdest and most abjectly “politically incorrect” things you will ever witness, short of a Donald Trump junk-grab rally for the short-fingered beatdown set. But the Cramps-at-Napa concert is more than just a raw cultural artifact to give the goo-goo eye to on YouTube—it’s stark evidence of how disgracefully milquetoast, fearful and risk-averse our culture has become, especially when it comes to interactions between music and California state institutions. Gone are the days when the likes of Johnny Cash would play Folsom State Prison, let alone the Cramps wailing it out at a mental hospital, with the patients pogoing like it’s the greatest day of their lives, which it may well have been. Watch the video and freak out and pour wine all over yourself as you dance along and have a good ol’ screaming time of it. “I’ve got cramps, what are you gonna do about it,” shouts one patient, and Lux has an answer for her. The band-audience interactions are hilarious, uplifting and totally wild in their primal intimacy. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fat2rswNJ1k.—T.G.

Best Warm-Reekin’, Rich Chieftain
o’ the Puddin-Race

It’s no common thing to find a Burns Supper in the North Bay. The annual event celebrates the life, songs and poetry of Robert Burns, fondly remembered as Scotland’s national poet and the author of “Auld Lang Syne.” Too bad, because once you decipher the colloquial, 18th-century language, Burns reads like a ribald poetry slam. Healdsburg’s Camellia Inn, an 1871 Victorian B&B, hosts a Burns Supper, thanks to proprietor Lucy Lewand’s Scottish husband, Archie McAlpine. Sure, they pair the traditional meal of haggis, neeps and tatties with fine Sonoma County wines, but—what was that? Haggis? Oh, the dread with which even a lapsed vegetarian anticipates the signature moment of the evening: the arrival of the haggis to bagpiping fanfare and a reading of Burns’ salute to the dish he called “warm-reekin, rich,” and the “great chieftain o’ the puddin-race,” a mixture of animal organs and roasted oats traditionally baked in sheep stomach. But when it returns from the kitchen with sides of parsnips, asparagus, roast beef and mashed potato, the haggis is as harmless as a couscous pilaf. My real struggle was trying to sing along with the group, in key, to the so-called original melody version of Burns’ “Auld Lang Syne.” Now that was just offal. 211 North St., Healdsburg.—J.K.

To Be a Man

I volunteer at San Quentin State Prison in a restorative justice program. Many of the men there are lifers, long-term prisoners without much hope of getting out any time soon. I have listened to many stories, many tales of pain and regret. A common thread for all these guys has been “if I only knew then what I know now, maybe things would have turned out differently.” If this is true, then it is up to us to try and make it happen.

What does it mean to be a man? I am sure if I was a young male these days and was bombarded by images on TV, social media and movies, I would be confused and perhaps dangerously misinformed. It’s a time of false bravado and lack of experience combined with the incessant marketing of products promising to make you popular and successful. Peer pressure, poor education, lack of opportunity, few positive role models and generational poverty all conspire against young men. That is the reality faced by many of them today.

I hope you can join me on Saturday, March 19, at Congregation Shomrei Torah (2600 Bennett Valley Road, Santa Rosa) at 7:30pm for a free screening of The Mask You Live In. It is a powerful film that follows boys and young men as they struggle to stay true to themselves while negotiating America’s narrow definition of masculinity. The film and follow-up panel explain how we as a society can raise a healthier generation of young males.

The panel includes Oakland schoolteacher Ashanti Branch, founder of the Ever Forward Club, which provides support for African American and Latino males who are not achieving their potential. Also on the panel will be Karlot Canto from Men Evolving Nonviolently, a local group that addresses issues of male anger against family members. A number of community organizations involved in mental health will be on hand to provide information and support.

Bruce Berkowitz is co-chair of Shomrei Torah’s social action committee.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Readers Picks: Recreation

Best

Bike Shop

Napa

The Hub

2500 Jefferson St., Napa. 707.253.2453.

Sonoma

Trek Store of Santa Rosa

512 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.546.8735.

Best

Gym

Napa

Exertec Health
& Fitness Center

1500 First St., Napa. 707.226.1842.

Sonoma

Parkpoint

1200 N. Dutton Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.578.1640.

Best

Health Club

Napa

Synergy Medical
Fitness Center

3421 Villa Lane, Napa. 707.251.1395.

Sonoma

Airport Health Club

www.parkpointhealthclub.com

Best

Park

Napa

Skyline
Wilderness Park

2201 Imola Ave., Napa. 707.252.0481.

Sonoma

Howarth Park

630 Summerfield Road, Santa Rosa.
707.543.3425.

Best

Pilates
Studio

Napa

Calistoga Pilates

1336-B Lincoln Ave., Second Floor,
Calistoga. 707.396.2442.

Sonoma

Tone

545 Ross St., Santa Rosa. 707.526.3100.

Best

Yoga Studio

Napa

Ekam Yoga & Wellness

1115 Jordan Lane, Napa. 707.836.3526.

Sonoma

Bikram Yoga of Santa Rosa

522 Wilson St., Santa Rosa. 707.545.9642.

Best

Martial
Arts School

Napa

Red Dragon

2000 W. Pueblo Ave., Napa. 707.255.5470.

Sonoma

ATA Martial Arts

1415 Fulton Road, Ste. 225, Santa Rosa.
707.523.1144.

Best

Snow
Sports Shop

Napa

Boardgarden

2740 Jefferson St., Napa. 707.253.7949.

Sonoma

Santa Rosa Ski & Sports

2875 Santa Rosa Ave. B2, Santa Rosa.
707.578.4754.

Best

Skate Shop

Napa

Boardgarden

2740 Jefferson St., Napa. 707.253.7949.

Sonoma

Brotherhood Board Shop

1240 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.546.0660.

Best

Surf Shop

Napa

Boardgarden

2740 Jefferson St., Napa. 707.253.7949.

Sonoma

Northern Light Surf Shop

17191 Bodega Hwy., Bodega. 707.876.3032.

Readers Picks: Family

Best

Baby
Gift Store

Napa

Lemondrops
Children’s Boutique

6525 Washington St., Yountville.
707.947.7057.

Sonoma

Cupcake

641 Fourth St., Santa Rosa.
707.579.2165.

Best

Toy Store

Napa

Toy B Ville

1343 Main St., Napa. 707.253.1024.

Sonoma

The Toyworks

6940 Sebastopol Ave., Sebastopol.
707.829.2003.

Best

Children’s Clothing Store

Napa

Lemondrops
Children’s Boutique

6525 Washington St., Yountville.
707.947.7057.

Sonoma

Little Four

120 Morris St., Ste. 100, Sebastopol.
707.861.9886.

Best

Children’s Consignment Store

Napa

Anew Beginning

2475 Solano Ave., Napa.
707.226.3979.

Sonoma

Wee Three
Children’s Store

1007 W. College Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.525.9333.

Best

Birthday Party Place

Napa

Rockzilla

849 Jackson St., Napa.
707.255.1500.

Sonoma

Snoopy’s Home Ice

1667 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa.
707.546.7147.

Best

Children’s Educational Center

Napa

Scientopia
Discovery Center

www.scientopiadiscoverycenter.com

Sonoma

Children’s Museum
of Sonoma County

1835 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa.
707.546.4069.

Best

Children’s Museum

Sonoma

Children’s Museum
of Sonoma County

1835 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa.
707.546.4069.

Best

Children’s Indoor Sports Center

Napa

Rockzilla

849 Jackson St., Napa.
707.255.1500.

Sonoma

Rebounderz

555 Rohnert Park Expressway W.,
Rohnert Park. 707.416.4445.

Best

Summer
Day Camp

Sonoma

Camp Wa-Tam

Howarth Park, 630 Summerfield Road,
Santa Rosa. 707.543.3010.

Best

Dog
Obedience School

Napa

Canine Construction

www.canineconstruction.com

Sonoma

Incredible Canine

3163 Juniper Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.322.3272.

Best

Doggie
Day Care

Napa

Ruff Dog Daycare
& Hotel

49 Enterprise Court, Napa. 707.258.2020.

Sonoma

Four Paws Pet Ranch

3410 Guerneville Road, Santa Rosa.
707.542.3766.

Best

Dog Park

Napa

Alston Park

2099 Dry Creek Road, Napa. 707.257.9529.

Sonoma

Ragle Ranch Dog Park

500 Ragle Road, Sebastopol.
707.433.1625.

Best

Pet Boutique

Napa

Fideaux

1312 Main St., St. Helena. 707.967.9935.

Sonoma

Fideaux

43 North St., Healdsburg.
707.433.9935.

Best

Pet/
Feed Store

Napa

Wilson’s Feed & Supply

1700 Yajome St., Napa. 707.252.0316.

Sonoma

Western Farm Center

21 W. Seventh St., Santa Rosa.
707.545.0721.

Best

Kennel

Napa

For Animals’
Sake Resort

1136 Hagen Road, Napa. 707.251.9070.

Sonoma

Paradise Pet Resort

5800 Commerce Blvd., Rohnert Park.
707.206.9000.

Best

Animal Adoption Shelter

Napa

Napa Animal Shelter

942 Hartle Court, Napa. 707.253.4382.

Sonoma

Sonoma Humane Society

5345 Hwy. 12 W., Santa Rosa.
707.542.0882.

Best

Animal Hospital

Napa

Napa Small Animal Hospital

517 Lincoln Ave., Napa. 707.257.8866.

Sonoma

Petcare Veterinary Hospital

2425 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.579.3900.

1370 Fulton Road, Santa Rosa. 707.579.5900.

Readers Picks: Romance

Best

Places for Singles to Meet

Napa

Downtown Joe’s Brewery & Restaurant

902 Main St., Napa. 707.258.2337.

Sonoma

Jackson’s Bar & Oven

135 Fourth St., Santa Rosa.
707.545.6900.

Best

Romantic Dinner

Napa

Ninebark

813 Main St., Napa. 707.226.7821.

Sonoma

Farmhouse Inn
& Restaurant

7871 River Road, Forestville.
707.887.3300.

Best

Staycation

Napa

Solage Calistoga

755 Silverado Trail N., Calistoga.
707.266.7534.

Sonoma

Timber Cove Inn

21780 North Coast Hwy. 1, Jenner.
707.847.3231.

Best

Boutique Hotel

Napa

The Blackbird Inn

1755 First St., Napa.
707.226.2450.

Sonoma

Farmhouse Inn
& Restaurant

7871 River Road, Forestville.
707.887.3300.

Best

Lingerie Shop

Napa

Pleasures Unlimited

1424 Second St., Napa. 707.226.2666.

Sonoma

Ma Cherie et Moi

2332 Magowan Drive, Santa Rosa. 707.573.1103.

Best

Erotica Store

Napa

Pleasures Unlimited

1424 Second St., Napa. 707.226.2666.

Sonoma

Milk & Honey

123 N. Main St., Sebastopol. 707.824.1155.

Best

Event Production Services

Napa

Five Star Productions

1952 Iroquois St., Napa. 707.257.2200.

Sonoma

Clementine Eco
Events

40 Fourth St. #215, Petaluma.
707.290.6723.

Best

Wedding Reception Venue

Napa

Hans Fahden
Vineyards

4855 Petrified Forest Road, Napa.
707.942.6760.

Sonoma

Paradise Ridge
Winery

4545 Thomas Lake Harris Drive,
Santa Rosa. 707.528.9463.

Letters to the Editor: March 16, 2016

The 5th Degree

There are a number of inaccuracies in your writing (“Taking the 5th,” March 9), including that Noreen Evans never lived in Bennett Valley, she is not endorsed by all the supervisors except Gore, and she has not bought a house in West County. Jack Piccinini did not drop out after Hopkins joined the race, since Lynda Hopkins launched her campaign before Evans or Piccinini. What is true, though, is that Evans won with 70 percent of the vote in the 5th District in her last election. She is not exactly a newcomer to this area or to these people. Oh, and she is endorsed by four of the five Sebastopol City Council members because they have worked with her and know how competent and dedicated she is.

Via Bohemian.com

While engaging, this description of the 5th District campaign does not explain where either candidate stands on crucial issues like a living wage, affordable housing, unlimited winery events, roads and transportation, conservation, etc., nor does it explain the focus of the organizations supporting the candidates.

Unfortunately, it reminds me of the recent Republican “debates,” in which there is no discussion of substantive issues.

Via Bohemian.com

I was so hoping for a balanced analysis of this crucial race and am quite disappointed that it is not what it is.

Via Bohemian.com

Jonah Raskin responds: I would like to thank Scamperwillow for pointing out errors in my article on the race for the 5th Supervisorial district. It is true that Noreen Evans didn’t buy a house in Sebastopol, as I asserted. She is renting there. But she did own a house on Flat Rock Circle in Santa Rosa. She purchased it in March 2015 and sold it in February 2016. As for endorsements, Sonoma County supervisors Susan Gorin and Shirlee Zane have endorsed Evans; James Gore has endorsed Lynda Hopkins; David Rabbitt and Efren Carrillo have not endorsed a candidate.

Most of the other comments about my story have to do with matters of interpretation rather than fact. In the months I conducted research, I learned that many voters perceive Evans as a political operative who runs for the sake of running, as much as for a set of ideals. At the same time, many voters see Hopkins as a stealth candidate who represents the wine and grape industry, and that she threatens to steal the show that rightly belongs to Evans. The actual differences between the two candidates may not be as great as their supporters believe. They both want to preserve the coast and defend the rights of working people.

The intention of the article was to draw attention to Hopkins and her campaign because she is a newcomer who looks to President Franklin Roosevelt for inspiration and who wants a “new New Deal” for Sonoma County, which means better roads, improved infrastructure and early childhood education.

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

Writers Picks: Everyday

Best Way
to Quell Road Rage

Let’s not kid ourselves: driving down Highway 101 in the North Bay can be stressful, or worse, with a daily parade of cutter-offers, non-signaling lane changers, crap-flying-off-the-back-of-the-rig truckers, tailgating terrorists and lane-swerving dippies yammering into their detestable devices. Leaving the Bohemian office, the 20-odd minutes that it takes to get from Santa Rosa to the Washington Avenue Petaluma exit off of 101 presents daily opportunities to commune with your inner peace-person, but it ain’t easy. Sometimes there just aren’t enough Louis Armstrong tunes on the CD player to ease the hate-grip on the steering wheel.

So we are always happy to pull up to the traffic light at Lakeville and East Washington Avenue to see the legendary Super Sonic Smog Man dancing on the corner with his big sign. Yes, legendary. He’s been at it for years. This middle-aged African-American man has flat-out got the moves, the gestures and the perfect smiling antidote for glum-faced or surly drivers having a bad day, or a bad life, as they pass through Petaluma to points elsewhere.

He wears headphones as he twirls the big turquoise Super Sonic sign and busts out the dance moves as he points in the direction of the nearby smog station, and we always give this guy a happy honk of the horn and a wave as we make our way through town. Next time we need a smog check, Super Sonic’s got our business. But only if there’s a dance-class option with the Smog Man. 322 Lakeville St., Petaluma. 707.762.2700.—T.G.

Best Reason to Listen to the Radio

Radio is mostly bad music and too many commercials. One exception is ‘The Drive’ with Steve Jaxon on KSRO, 1350-AM and 103.5-FM. Tune in from 3 to 6pm on a typical weekday and you’ll get an interview with a local newsmaker, some laughs from one of Jaxon’s comedian friends, a chat with a winemaker or chef and choice words from elected officials. Jaxon, with more than a little help from producer/rainmaker Mike DeWald, creates a distinctly Sonoma County talk show that’s essential North Bay listening—and not just because he features me and my fellow Bohemian editors on the “Boho Buzz” on Wednesdays at 4pm.—S.H.

Best Hardware Store That’s More Than a Hardware Store

Maybe it’s a guy thing, but I love hardware stores. I’m not particularly handy, but I like to know that if I really wanted to build a deck or fix my leaking sink I could find the right tools and supplies for the job at my neighborhood hardware store, Sebastopol Hardware Center. While the Ace-affiliated shop is a national brand, the store is locally owned and feels much homier than a Home Depot. The friendly cashiers call me “Hon,” and on weekends there’s free popcorn. The really cool thing is that it’s more than a hardware store; it’s really a general store. The recently expanded paint and pet shop adjacent to the main store now sells sporting goods—GoPro cameras, fishing poles, pocketknives, bicycle inner tubes and baseballs. They even sell an electric dirt bike. And the main store has a great lineup of kitchen supplies and housewares. Best of all is Super Saturday. On the first Saturday of the month, everything is 20 percent off. Prices can be higher than the big-box stores, but for odds and ends needed for weekend jobs, I’m OK supporting a local business. Twenty percent off for bigger purchases makes the store that much better. 680 Gravenstein Ave. N., Sebastopol. 707.823.7688.—S.H.

Best Gas Station Peanuts

Well, this might seem a little bit of a boutique selection, but on any given midweek afternoon at the Bohemian, the staff may find itself a little on the peckish end of things, growling hatred and irritation at the world, and that’s when someone will raise his head and declare, “It’s time for some gas station peanuts!” At which point someone else will collect a few bucks and trundle down the street to Arco, which is one of the most stress-inducing and overcrowded gas stations we’ve ever encountered, but which always has a choice selection of Planters-in-the-sleeve. They got your dry-roasted, your honey-roasted, your plain ol’ salted. If we’re feeling super-indulgent, we’ll spring for some cashews, too, and head back to the office feeling like one satisfied squirrel. We’re nuts for gas station peanuts! 1010 Fourth St., Santa Rosa.—T.G.

Best Place to Get Something for the Hipster in Your Life

They say the best gifts are things you don’t really need but most definitely want, desired embellishments and delightful luxury items. When in need of an ideal gift, head to Guerneville’s Commerce Fine Goods. The tiny store, which shares the town’s historic bank building with an ice cream parlor and a pie shop, manages to concentrate an impressive amount of beautiful objects in a compact space, and all of them are perfectly giftable. Options include mudcloth pillows and enamel coffee mugs with clever quips, chic candles and artisan flower pots, soft pajama pants and handmade wall art, or in other words—hipster must-haves. Throw in the latest issue of Kinfolk Magazine, and your sophisticated, life-curating friends will be forever grateful. 16290 Main St., Guerneville. 707.510.0051.—F.T.

Best Overheard Conversation That Was Funny, But Now Not So Much

We were at Lawson’s Landing in Dillon Beach last July to see what was going on behind the scenes at the beachside camping resort. It was working to adhere to some rules from the California Coastal Commission about the legacy trailers that give the blue-collar seaside resort its character. At one point, we sat on a bench to take in the sights and sounds, and two women began to engage in a conversation that struck us as really funny at the time—but not now. After one of the women made some generally disparaging remarks about Mexican immigrants, to no one in particular, another woman, who was wandering by, tuned her ear into the comment and the two started to yell about the good old days of immigration. Which happened to be when their families arrived at Ellis Island. They went on and on about it for a few minutes before one of them exclaimed, “Trump was absolutely right!” The other hollered in agreement, “They want Sharia law in Sacramento, there’s going to be a problem!” Well, OK then. See you in Chicago, ladies.—T.G.

Best Comparatively Low-Tech Bike Route Directions—We Said Comparatively—for the App-Averse

No, it’s not the “road signs” to popular road-bike routes that are painted on the wall at Echelon Cycle & Multisport in Santa Rosa. Although that certainly is a place to start. But if you’ve got a dumb phone, or feel you’re just too dumb for your phone, or even if you’re smart enough to realize that halfway into most of the best rides in the North Bay you’ll be well out of range of most wireless service, rendering that hot ride-mapping app you downloaded about as useful as a spare inner tube with no pump, you’ll want to bring a piece of paper called a map. If you can find your way around a desktop computer, the Santa Rosa Cycling Club provides a great introduction to such classic rides as Cavedale-Mt. Veeder and King Ridge on its website, including turn-by-turn instructions with commentary, and printable PDFs. The routes and optional “out and backs” are helpfully outlined in color—if you can get that darned inkjet working right, that is. srcc.memberlodge.com.—J.K.

Best Place to Dispose of Unwanted Junk and Contemplate How Wasteful We Really Are

I’ve always had a strange fascination for the dump. Back when I was kid in San Jose, everything got dumped in one place, and it was OK to wander around picking up odd and ends and occasional dirty treasures. These days it’s all about sorting refuse into useful categories: wood, metal, plastic, garden waste. And no scavenging allowed. Petaluma’s Central Landfill and Transfer Station is a living cultural-archeology exhibit that reveals how much we buy and then throw away. Look there at all those kids’ bikes. See over there all that broken-down outdoor furniture. Is that a VCR? Too bad the dump’s great compost site is no more, that was my favorite. It smelled the best and dumping old wood and green waste didn’t feel so wasteful because you knew it was going to be turned into compost or wood chips. 500 Mecham Road, Petaluma. 707.795.1693.—S.H.

Best-Looking Baristas

You know those quaint, quirky coffee shops featured in shows like HBO’s Girls? They usually employ impossibly good-looking people who are trendier and younger than you’ll ever be. In Sonoma County, such coffee shops are hard to come by, but Taylor Maid in Sebastopol, the coffee parlor/unofficial co-working space for the area’s best freelance talent, has what it takes. The baristas and cashiers there are aware of all the right beard and hair color trends, have a bunch of tattoos, dress whimsically, have great bone structure and generally make for a very attractive bunch. The excellent lattes are just a bonus. 6790 McKinley St., Sebastopol. 707.634.7129.—F.T.

Best Place to Get Lubricated in More Ways Than One

Ernie’s Tin Bar on Lakeville Highway began life as an auto repair shop. Half of it still is, but the other half is a craft-beer mecca in the middle of the hinterlands of Petaluma. There are nearly two dozen great beers on tap, free peanuts and absolutely no wine. And Ernie’s takes its “no cell phone” policy seriously: use your phone and you gotta buy a round for everybody present. This place is for drinking good beer and making good conversation, not updating your
status on Facebook. Act nicely, and
Ernie will perform a card trick for you.
5100 Lakeville Hwy., Petaluma. 707.762.2075.—S.H.

Best Place to Save Some Green Buying Something Green

The Occidental Arts & Ecology Center‘s plant sale comes three times a year: spring, summer and fall. It seems like my yard is never in shape to give their lovingly grown organic seedlings a proper home when the sales go down, but this time I’ll be ready. The spring sale is coming up soon: April 2–3 and 9–10. The list of annual and perennial plants for sale is extensive. There will be more tomato (red, yellow, white, green and purple) and chile pepper varieties than you can imagine. I like checking out the obscure Andean plants, like yacón, a sunflower relative that grows five feet tall and produces crunchy, sweet, jicama-like tubers. Welcome, spring. 15290 Coleman Valley Road, Occidental. 707.874.9591. oaec.org/events/plant-sale.—S.H.

Mar. 10: Mushroom Jazz in Sebastopol

0

Born in Chicago and now based in San Francisco, DJ and producer Mark Farina is held in high regard in the acid jazz and downtempo house-music circles for his series of signature Mushroom Jazz releases. Since the mid-1990s, Farina has combined East Coast urban beats and West Coast organic jazz elements to create an accessible and universally loved sound. This week, local promoter jUkE jOiNt brings Farina to the North Bay to celebrate the release of his Mushroom Jazz 8 with a concert on Thursday, March 10, at HopMonk Tavern, 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 9pm. $15. 707.829.7300.

Turn to Bern?

'If he wins tonight, we could go to June." That was Democratic Party strategist Donna Brazile on CNN the night of Bernie Sanders' upset in the Michigan primary on March 8. Defying all expectations—even his own—Sanders beat Hillary Clinton by two points in a race that mainstream go-to pollsters such as Nate Silver said he would lose by 20 points,...

Writers Picks: Dining

Best Chef We're Grateful to Still Have Around Last year, friends and fans of Casino Bar & Grill chef Mark Malicki were saddened to hear he was ill with late-stage Crohn's disease and was in need of extensive surgery. It didn't look good. Sonoma County's restaurant community rallied around Malicki and held fundraisers to help cover his medical bills. Even...

Writers Picks: Culture

Best Meeting of the Musical Minds North Bay music fans know the name and voice of Bill Bowker, who has been involved with all aspects of the local music scene since the 1970s and is known best for his Blues with Bowker radio show heard every Sunday night on KRSH 95.9—one of the longest running blues shows in the country. Fans...

To Be a Man

I volunteer at San Quentin State Prison in a restorative justice program. Many of the men there are lifers, long-term prisoners without much hope of getting out any time soon. I have listened to many stories, many tales of pain and regret. A common thread for all these guys has been "if I only knew then what I know...

Readers Picks: Recreation

BestBike Shop Napa The Hub 2500 Jefferson St., Napa. 707.253.2453. Sonoma Trek Store of Santa Rosa 512 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.546.8735. BestGym Napa Exertec Health & Fitness Center 1500 First St., Napa. 707.226.1842. Sonoma Parkpoint 1200 N. Dutton Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.578.1640. BestHealth Club Napa Synergy Medical Fitness Center 3421 Villa Lane, Napa. 707.251.1395. Sonoma Airport Health Club www.parkpointhealthclub.com BestPark Napa Skyline Wilderness Park 2201 Imola Ave., Napa. 707.252.0481. Sonoma Howarth Park 630 Summerfield Road, Santa Rosa. 707.543.3425. BestPilates Studio Napa Calistoga Pilates 1336-B Lincoln Ave., Second Floor, Calistoga. 707.396.2442. Sonoma Tone 545 Ross St.,...

Readers Picks: Family

BestBaby Gift Store Napa Lemondrops Children's Boutique 6525 Washington St., Yountville. 707.947.7057. Sonoma Cupcake 641 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707.579.2165. BestToy Store Napa Toy B Ville 1343 Main St., Napa. 707.253.1024. Sonoma The Toyworks 6940 Sebastopol Ave., Sebastopol. 707.829.2003. BestChildren's Clothing Store Napa Lemondrops Children's Boutique 6525 Washington St., Yountville. 707.947.7057. Sonoma Little Four 120 Morris St., Ste. 100, Sebastopol. 707.861.9886. BestChildren's Consignment Store Napa Anew Beginning 2475 Solano Ave., Napa. 707.226.3979. Sonoma Wee Three Children's Store 1007 W. College Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.525.9333. BestBirthday Party Place Napa Rockzilla 849 Jackson St., Napa. 707.255.1500. Sonoma Snoopy's Home Ice 1667 W. Steele...

Readers Picks: Romance

BestPlaces for Singles to Meet Napa Downtown Joe's Brewery & Restaurant 902 Main St., Napa. 707.258.2337. Sonoma Jackson's Bar & Oven 135 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 707.545.6900. BestRomantic Dinner Napa Ninebark 813 Main St., Napa. 707.226.7821. Sonoma Farmhouse Inn & Restaurant 7871 River Road, Forestville. 707.887.3300. BestStaycation Napa Solage Calistoga 755 Silverado Trail N., Calistoga. 707.266.7534. Sonoma Timber Cove Inn 21780 North Coast Hwy. 1, Jenner. 707.847.3231. BestBoutique Hotel Napa The Blackbird Inn 1755 First St., Napa. 707.226.2450. Sonoma Farmhouse Inn & Restaurant 7871 River Road, Forestville. 707.887.3300. BestLingerie Shop Napa Pleasures Unlimited 1424 Second St.,...

Letters to the Editor: March 16, 2016

The 5th Degree There are a number of inaccuracies in your writing ("Taking the 5th," March 9), including that Noreen Evans never lived in Bennett Valley, she is not endorsed by all the supervisors except Gore, and she has not bought a house in West County. Jack Piccinini did not drop out after Hopkins joined the race, since Lynda Hopkins...

Writers Picks: Everyday

Best Way to Quell Road Rage Let's not kid ourselves: driving down Highway 101 in the North Bay can be stressful, or worse, with a daily parade of cutter-offers, non-signaling lane changers, crap-flying-off-the-back-of-the-rig truckers, tailgating terrorists and lane-swerving dippies yammering into their detestable devices. Leaving the Bohemian office, the 20-odd minutes that it takes to get from Santa Rosa to...

Mar. 10: Mushroom Jazz in Sebastopol

Born in Chicago and now based in San Francisco, DJ and producer Mark Farina is held in high regard in the acid jazz and downtempo house-music circles for his series of signature Mushroom Jazz releases. Since the mid-1990s, Farina has combined East Coast urban beats and West Coast organic jazz elements to create an accessible and universally loved sound....
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