Gun Clubbers

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Two years ago, Jennifer Durban and Stephanie Callimanis were coming home from a trap-shooting event in Mendocino County when they decided to organize a gun-safety project near their hometown of Healdsburg.

“We had a strong interest in hunting, from the food perspective, and networking to increase our knowledge about it,” says Durban, “so we pulled community resources together.”

The idea took off and has grown into a different kind of social club: the Dry Creek Gun Club.

Durban is a set decorator who divides her time between Healdsburg and Los Angeles. Callimanis is a project manager and nonprofit coordinator who lives in Dry Creek Valley, home of the club’s unofficial “office”—the Dry Creek General Store bar in Healdsburg.

“We had this goal of hunting a wild boar and breaking it down ourselves,” explains Callimanis. “The club evolved from there. That’s why you see the boar on our logo.”

In the age of Meetup.com, where anyone can find a social club for the most esoteric interests, the Dry Creek Gun Club (DCGC) is deliberately low-key and based on good old word of mouth. Every new member must be endorsed by an existing one, and three hours of volunteering for the club each year are required. An annual membership of $30 partially finances keynote speakers and activities, as well as cool T-shirts. The age of the club’s members ranges from 20 to 70. Half are women. The humble website (drycreekgunclub.com) announces future events, but joining takes more than just filling out one line. Questions range from “What homesteading, survival or other skills can you offer?” to “What do you think about guns?” The latter question addresses the inevitably loaded context surrounding gun ownership and regulations.

“A love of guns is definitely not a requirement,” stresses Callimanis. “Many people in the club do not own guns. However, we do ask that people respect hunting and the right to hunt for food.” Accordingly, some members stress firearm education and diplomatically differentiate “hunting” from “self defense.”

“I never grew up with guns and was scared of them due to lack of information,” says Healdsburg member Lindsay Jackson. “However, DCGC changed my viewpoint on firearms, and safety is key.”

Passion for food and the will to get close and personal with its origins seem to matter more. A gun club meeting is rarely complete without a meat-oriented buffet, with the occasional abalone or seaweed feed thrown in the mix.

“Every event, members bring something they harvested themselves in the area and create mind-blowing recipes to share,” says Jackson. In Ohio, where she grew up, such abundance didn’t come as easy, and certainly not when it came to the wine.

“It’s really homegrown and casual, a good introduction to country living,” says Durban. “Our membership has this specific combination of old-time agrarianism, a streak of independence and creativity, a love of food and farming and an insider’s view on the wine country lifestyle,” adds Callimanis.

This lifestyle is a major draw for the city folk as well. Besides the core local members, the club also has members from San Francisco and Oakland, plus supporters in Los Angeles and Boulder, Colo. All of them, according to Durban, share an “independent spirit” and a knack for homesteading. And while members say they join for community networking and learning new skills, there’s a healthy amount of social interest—friendships and even the occasional spark of romance are not out of the question.

For Carl J. Bowers, a paint salesman and musician from Rohnert Park, it’s not about the activities or people alone. “The DCGC’s core values are much like those that shaped my life throughout my Midwest upbringing, grounded with a strong moral compass, love of the outdoors and self-reliance,” he says. For him, “semi-primitive camping, late-night talks at the campfire, eating to excess and a day at the gun range” is the dream ticket. Other monthly activities could easily satisfy a seasoned Midwesterner: turkey plucking, crawdad catching and bow making are good examples, but kombucha and gravlox workshops keep the California foodie spirit alive.

On the lighter side, there are festive “white elephant” parties, where members often surprise each other with beer holders and carving knives, and the “haunted barn” Halloween party, where a slightly ironic costume might be a turkey or a wild boar.

“At members’ initiation, you have to drink from a gun-shaped [tequila] bottle. We went through the whole bottle already,” says Durban.

Time to reload.

Letters to the Editor: July 9, 2014

CHUCK THE REVOLUTIONARY

Funny to think of Charles “NRA” Heston being an unwitting revolutionary (“Gorilla Warfare,” July 2). Not the first time he played straight man without being aware of the joke (clueless gay crush object in Ben Hur). I don’t disagree with the analysis here, but it should be said that none of the original sequels were exactly good movies. Tim Burton’s Planet is destined for the shelf of “never watch again” next to Ang Lee’s Hulk movie. In fact, it wouldn’t surprise me to hear that Tim Roth is buying up all the copies because he gets a muscle spasm any time someone sees it. Despite any firehose references, the new Rise wholeheartedly replaced genuine political content with CGI. I’ll probably go see Dawn, but my expectations are low.

Via online

FREE TO PEE

Why is this a story (“Camp Koch,” July 2)? Every year, we’re treated to the same conspiracy/99 percent-ers’ rant; i.e., rich white guys who control the world, have shown up to pee on trees, smoke cigars, burn owls an in general, do what guys do. The horror.

Is it that they’re rich? White? Have views that our county in general disagrees with? You mention Dixie cups and Angel Soft toilet paper, but have you looked in your own kitchen and bathroom lately? Frankly, has any of us?

The larger question is always the same: Do we want to reduce our consumerism to purchase only products made by those who supposedly agree with us in every aspect of life. Oh no, just the biggies: healthcare, abortion, same-sex marriage, immigration, coal burning, and Prius buying, of course. Should we change to Democrat and Republican toilet paper? Should we paint our houses and dress our children red and blue? I thought we were supposed to be progressive and open? Earth to the people who are angry that some people are rich, choose to smoke cigars and pee in the woods: there are 7 billion–plus people on the planet, and not all of them see the world as you do!

Last week at the amazing Michael Franti and Spearhead concert in Berkeley, I witnessed a crazy spectacle—young, white (and black) girls, peeing in the mens’ bathroom. All of us peeing together, one big happy family. And I didn’t even check who they voted for. Now that’s a story.

Cotati

PEACE NOT BOMBS

The Peace and Justice Center of Sonoma County supports the peaceful resolution of conflict in Iraq and opposes any U.S. bombing or military intervention. Some of the dispute can be traced to the 2003 U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq. We mourn the deaths of Iraqis, Americans and others. While the resolution is unclear, we hope the U.S. has learned from the recent past, and the pitfalls of military action.

Sebastopol

SOMETHING FISHY

It sounds like George Neillands (“DFW Skeptical of Record Coho Salmon Migration,” June 25, Boho Blog) hasn’t evaluated the data, and yet he’s telling the public to doubt the results. Is he acting as a spokesperson for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, or offering his own opinion? The article doesn’t say. I like seeing the Bohemian report on a scientific debate, but not if it’s just speculation by a scientist not involved in the research.

Via online

ARE YOU LISTENING?

I’ve recently attended two “community listening” meetings by the Palm Drive Hospital District board of directors. Many people expressed dismay that the board seemed to be promoting everything but reopening the hospital. While concerns for teenage smoking and nutrition are important, the parcel tax initiatives specifically direct hospital funds be spent on acute care and local emergency services.

Many people said they want the hospital reopened, and some wondered how much money was spent by the board on attorneys and PR. Constituents want medical professionals on the board, people who are familiar with the issues facing hospitals today and who are committed to resolving them. More than 15 people left because reopening Palm Drive Hospital was off the table. One who asked how long the board was going to block the foundation’s plan to reopen the hospital was ruled “out of order.”

Comments by community leaders in a Sonoma County assessment indicate that public safety officers need the hospital to be reopened. The board maintains that the hospital had to be closed, but financial statements indicate that without excessive administrative salaries and expenditures and elimination of a citizen financial review committee, the hospital could have remained open.

We need a real discussion of the facts, not ancillary, choreographed “brainstorming.” One comment summed it up: a teenager hit by a bus needs immediate ER care, not nutritional or anti-smoking advice.

Sebastopol

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

Fresh Start

John Carney’s follow-up to his 2006 hit Once is similarly slight and caramel-hearted, but it made
me a new fan of things I thought I was over: New York, popular music and Keira Knightley. And unlike Once, Begin Again isn’t in love with hopeless pathos.

The film opens with wooly old A&R man Dan (Mark Ruffalo) at the end of a day spent drinking away his career. At a nightclub, he hears a singer-songwriter named Greta (Keira Knightley), who has been pressured by a friend into performing a song. Greta is a visiting Londoner who’s recently been dropped fast and from a great height as the former consort and collaborator of a world-famous rocker played by Adam Levine of Maroon 5.

Together, Dan and Greta try to heal their own demoralization, working from the ground up. Using a portable studio and New York ambient locations, they make their own demo.

It’s rare in 2014 to see a film with even one determined woman in it, and Begin Again has three: Catherine Keener as Dan’s estranged wife; Hailee Steinfeld, believably fierce as Dan’s angry daughter; and Knightley. Posh and brittle, the too-perfect-looking Knightley shows an aspect of appealing crumbliness as she hits 30.

Begin Again had me at the late-night scene where Greta drunk-dials Dan with a song she’s written titled “Like a Fool,” and the song’s good—Carney is himself enough of a musician to know the difference between something distinctive and popular audio oatmeal.

Like Jersey Boys, Begin Again doesn’t go inflationary about how wowed we’re supposed to be by this music. During the scrappy recording sessions, shot in well-picked, Brooklyn and Manhattan locations, rooftops and alleys, what we hear is a sound, not the sound.

‘Begin Again’ opens July 11 at Summerfield Cinemas. 551 Summerfield Road, Santa Rosa. 707.522.0712.

Free Bird

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It’s a good thing Rich Robinson has never let a little thing like fame get in the way of doing what he loves most: making music.

He achieved an intoxicating level of fame at the tender age of 21 when he formed the Black Crowes in 1984 with brother and snake-hipped, swaggering collaborator Chris Robinson.

In 1990, the band signed with Def Jam Records and released the hit “Shake Your Money Maker. ” A career hell-bent on classic, Southern/electric/blues/rock was born. Songs such as “Hard to Handle,” “Remedy” and “Sometimes Salvation” propelled the band into headliner status. After releasing the 2001 album Lions, the Black Crowes went on an indefinite hiatus.

After a brief respite from the spotlight, Robinson, playing every instrument except drums, released his first solo project, titled Paper, in 2004. The Crowes reformed for a short while, releasing several albums, but went back on to-be-determined status in 2009.

Now Robinson seems to have finally found his niche in the recently released solo album The Ceaseless Sight. He showcases the cumulative efforts that a life devoted to music can produce. He remains true to his Southern roots, while still extolling the sublime virtues of the humble electric guitar.

If you’re a Robinson fan, enter to win tickets to an exclusive meet-and-greet party hosted by the Bohemian. Visit the deals and giveaways page on www.bohemian.com for details.

Rich Robinson plays Saturday, July 19, at the Uptown Theatre, 1350 Third St., Napa. 8pm. Tickets, $20–$30. 707.259.0123.

Welcome to Gun Country

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What a country we live in: In open-carry states, a mostly white group of chubby second amendment “gundamentalists” have taken to carrying actual assault weapons into retail and fast-food outlets with not much pushback from police, while in California, a 13-year-old Latino kid gets shot and killed by police while openly carrying a toy gun in a semi-rough Santa Rosa neighborhood. Meanwhile, there’s a school shooting practically every week—and thus the battle lines are drawn between arming everybody and, gee, how about some sane gun laws?

Indeed, the Andy Lopez shooting last October has highlighted numerous disconnects in how American society is utterly failing to deal with unpredictable and sometimes foolhardy behavior by teens, within a larger edgy framework of school shootings and in a country that has clearly gone quite nuts over gun rights.

Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch entered the firearms firestorm this week as she took a pass on charging Sonoma sheriff’s deputy Erick Gelhaus with any crime in connection with the fatal 2013 police shooting of Lopez, who was shot by Gelhaus, an Army veteran, while carrying a replica AK47 in broad daylight.

Against a backdrop of lone-nut school shootings by mostly young white men of a certain disposition (angry, weird and relatively well-off), and within the larger national argument over gun rights in open-carry states, the Lopez shooting flatly underscored the limits of gun possession as a means of self-expression—what’s good to go at a Target in Texas is a total no-go in a poor and Latino Santa Rosa neighborhood.

Ravitch’s decision came after months of speculation and angry charges leveled at her office that she was slow-rolling the investigation of the October shooting out of a concern for her June electoral prospects. Yet Ravitch made quick work of her opponents in winning another term as district attorney.

The 52-page public report issued by Ravitch sheds some light into the great lengths she went to investigate the shooting free of political pressure, no small feat in a city that has been on edge for months, with activists vociferously demanding justice for Lopez and criminal charges against Gelhaus.

There’s two rough through-lines animating the Ravitch report: It emphasizes the obvious tragedy of a young man’s death, and signals empathy by repeatedly calling him “Andy,” even as the report essentially lays out an argument that Lopez played a major role in the events that led to his death.

Did Lopez “deserve” to die for disobeying police orders to drop the fake weapon?

Of course not!

But numerous John and Jane Doe witnesses contacted by police and investigators after the shooting corroborated Gelhaus’ version of the incident—in particular, the critical moment where Gelhaus and his partner Michael Schemmel told Lopez, twice, to drop the weapon he was carrying.

Instead of complying with the police order, the report says Lopez inexplicably turned to face the officers, and that as he did so, the barrel of the replica weapon started to rise, as though Lopez was prepared to shoot at the police. Gelhaus said he feared for his life, his training kicked in, and he shot at the teen eight times, hitting him with seven bullets fired over about two seconds.

There were a couple other key junctures, Ravitch argues in the report, where the entire episode could have been defused without bodily injury or death:

One John Doe witness told police he had warned Lopez from his car, moments before the fatal encounter, to drop the weapon because the police were right behind him, in a marked cruiser. Lopez ignored him and continued walking down the street.

The Lopez friend who gave him the replica weapon, John Doe #2, worried that the orange plastic muzzle-tip wasn’t on the gun anymore—and says he warned his friend about it. According to the report, John Doe #2 told a police officer, “he felt responsible for Andy’s death because he allowed Andy to borrow the gun even though the orange tip of the barrel was broken off, making it look real, although he’d told his friend not to take it since it was broken.”

And, the report notes that Lopez’ judgment may have been impaired because of the marijuana he smoked within 90 minutes of getting shot.

But it’s also true that Lopez was simply victimized by a “wrong place, wrong time” set of social constructs now wrenching at the core of American society—in particular, the rise of the angry and armed young man hell-bent on some kind of justice against a world that done him wrong.

One of the investigators hired by Ravitch, William Lewinski, noted in the report, tellingly, that “it is unfortunate that the single largest threat facing police officers today and the highest demand for police training is responding to the threat of an active shooter. Law enforcement may be more aware today than [any] other time in history of the threat from the lone, young man with a gun or a knife.”

D.A: No charges for Gelhaus

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After months of rumors and bitter controversy around the 2103 Andy Lopez shooting in Santa Rosa, Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch announced Monday that she would not pursue criminal charges against Sonoma sheriff’s deputy Erick Gelhaus. The announcement came against the backdrop of a protest that had already been planned at Ravitch’s office on Tuesday.

With Ravitch’s decision today, that protest is definitely and obviously moving forward, says activist Mary Moore, who is part of the Justice Coalition for Andy Lopez.

Gelhaus shot and killed the teenage Lopez last October in the unincorporated Moorland Avenue area south of Santa Rosa after a very brief encounter with the child, who was shot while carrying a toy assault weapon that had its orange safety tip removed from the muzzle, rendering the toy difficult to distinguish from an actual weapon.

Ravitch, who was was re-elected to her post in June, told reporters at a Monday press conference that Gelhaus made an understandable split-second decision that fateful day. “While it was an absolute tragedy, it was not a criminal act,” Ravitch told reporters at a press conference Monday.

Ravitch told reporters that she personally reviewed the facts of the case and that “the loss of this young life is a loss for us all.”

She said she personally went through the facts of the case that led her to take a pass on charging Gelhaus.

She said the youth was walking with the toy gun, barrel-down, when officers pulled up behind him. The officers, she said, told Lopez twice to drop the gun, and says a witness testimony bore out that claim.

Lopez turned, and as he did, the barrel rose, Ravitch said.

Gelhaus then fired eight shots from his service revolver, seven of which hit Lopez. Gelhaus was placed on restricted duty as Ravitch reviewed the facts of the case.

Naturally, the parents of Andy Lopez were not happy with the outcome today. Nor the Justice Coalition for Andy Lopez, which planned a Roseland meeting for later in the day Monday to figure out what the group’s next move is, beyond the Tuesday protest.

An outraged Moore says she’s not sure what the group’s options are, other than to “yell at the top of our lungs,” or elect better politicians. Or, get the Department of Justice interested in the civil rights of Andy Lopez, she said.

Ravitch’s slow-roll on the decision to charge or not charge Gelhaus raised eyebrows on several occasions.

A few times in recent months, rumors were floated and batted back that a decision from Ravitch was imminent. Lopez activists were eventually convinced she wouldn’t render a decision on Gelhaus until after the June 2 election, which Ravitch won handily.

Yet the District Attorney’s office appears to have jumped its own gun in announcing the Gelhaus decision today.

Moore says the D.A.’s office sent out an email Monday morning that said Ravitch wouldn’t be pressing charges against Gelhaus. Moments later, a second email went out, to the effect of: Forget that last one, it wasn’t supposed to get sent.

But reporters had already leapt to the story. A press conference was scheduled for 2 pm today, and a weary-looking Ravitch released a 52-page public statement explaining her decision. She couldn’t say that the investigation was “extensive and exhaustive” enough times for reporters and note that, “historically, the DA doesn’t release reports this detailed to the public.”

“Obviously we are deeply disappointed,” says Moore, who adds she was surprised that Ravitch made her announcement today, given the Tuesday protest had already been planned.

“Why would she make it so easy for us by putting it out today?” Moore wondered. “When I first heard this, I thought maybe she would indict. They really goofed—and then they drew attention to their goof.”

The City of Santa Rosa issued a statement Monday afternoon calling for calm in the streets: “We hope our community can come together to keep everyone safe, in particular our young people who were so deeply effected.”

July 3: Ernest Ranglin at 19 Broadway

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Born in 1932, guitar master Ernest Ranglin defined the style of ska and reggae, specifically the signature upward stroke that creates the sound. The Jamaican guitarist got his start as a session musician before moving on to composing and eventually becoming the music director at various Jamaican record labels. Now in Jamaica’s Music Hall of Fame, Ranglin has played alongside iconic figures like Bob Marley and Thelonious Monk, and at age 82 has just released his latest album, Bless Up, to widespread acclaim. This week, Ranglin appears with his band Avila on Thursday, July 3, at 19 Broadway Club.
19 Broadway Blvd., Fairfax. 8pm. $20—$25. 415.459.1091.

July 6: Bill Frisell at City Winery

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Celebrated guitarist Bill Frisell was born one year after his instrument of choice, the Fender Telecaster. A leading figure in jazz since he came on the scene 30 years ago, Frisell has long been inspired by the eclectic, instrumental music that he grew up around, often with the solid-body guitar front and center. Frisell celebrates this music from the ’50s and ’60s when he presents his “Guitar in the Space Age” showcase this weekend. He plays with fellow guitar master Greg Leisz on electric and pedal steel guitars and his trio partners, Tony Scherr and Kenny Wollesen, on bass and drums on Sunday, July 6, at City Winery. 1030 Main St., Napa. 8pm. $25—$35. 707.226.7372.

July 6: Blues Defenders at Twin Oaks Tavern

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If you’ve driven through Penngrove in the last month, you may have noticed the sounds of table saws and the smell of sawdust. That’s because the town’s popular Twin Oaks Tavern has been busy building an outdoor patio. Opening in time for the long days of July, the new deck is the spot for the aptly named Summer Patio Music Series, with hot local bands offering a fresh breeze of jams. This weekend, the patio hosts two shows, with Soul Section playing on Saturday, July 5, and the Blues Defenders cooking it up on Sunday, July 6, at Twin Oaks Tavern. 5745 Old Redwood Hwy., Penngrove. 5pm, both days. Free. 707.795.5118.

July 5: Paper Dolls at Ruth McGowan’s Pub

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paperdolls.jpg

The toe-tapping, ukulele-strumming duo of the Paper Dolls have been singing their delightful harmonies together for over 15 years. The pair of Uni and Em Doll, aka Heather Marie Ellison and Emily Schmidt, began singing together in and around Sonoma County as part of the Savoy Singers before Ellison moved to L.A. and put the duo on hiatus. Once she returned to the Bay Area, the Paper Dolls were formed with the two mixing up little strings and big voices and taking their tunes to the streets. This week, the Paper Dolls play on Saturday, July 5, at Ruth McGowan’s Pub. 131 E. First St., Cloverdale. 6:30pm. Free. 707.894.9610.

Gun Clubbers

Two years ago, Jennifer Durban and Stephanie Callimanis were coming home from a trap-shooting event in Mendocino County when they decided to organize a gun-safety project near their hometown of Healdsburg. "We had a strong interest in hunting, from the food perspective, and networking to increase our knowledge about it," says Durban, "so we pulled community resources together." The idea took...

Letters to the Editor: July 9, 2014

CHUCK THE REVOLUTIONARY Funny to think of Charles "NRA" Heston being an unwitting revolutionary ("Gorilla Warfare," July 2). Not the first time he played straight man without being aware of the joke (clueless gay crush object in Ben Hur). I don't disagree with the analysis here, but it should be said that none of the original sequels were exactly good...

Fresh Start

John Carney's follow-up to his 2006 hit Once is similarly slight and caramel-hearted, but it made me a new fan of things I thought I was over: New York, popular music and Keira Knightley. And unlike Once, Begin Again isn't in love with hopeless pathos. The film opens with wooly old A&R man Dan (Mark Ruffalo) at the end of...

Free Bird

It's a good thing Rich Robinson has never let a little thing like fame get in the way of doing what he loves most: making music. He achieved an intoxicating level of fame at the tender age of 21 when he formed the Black Crowes in 1984 with brother and snake-hipped, swaggering collaborator Chris Robinson. In 1990, the band signed with...

Welcome to Gun Country

How do we make sense of gun laws and attitudes in the U.S.?

D.A: No charges for Gelhaus

After months of rumors and bitter controversy around the 2103 Andy Lopez shooting in Santa Rosa, Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch announced Monday that she would not pursue criminal charges against Sonoma sheriff’s deputy Erick Gelhaus

July 3: Ernest Ranglin at 19 Broadway

Born in 1932, guitar master Ernest Ranglin defined the style of ska and reggae, specifically the signature upward stroke that creates the sound. The Jamaican guitarist got his start as a session musician before moving on to composing and eventually becoming the music director at various Jamaican record labels. Now in Jamaica’s Music Hall of Fame, Ranglin has played...

July 6: Bill Frisell at City Winery

Celebrated guitarist Bill Frisell was born one year after his instrument of choice, the Fender Telecaster. A leading figure in jazz since he came on the scene 30 years ago, Frisell has long been inspired by the eclectic, instrumental music that he grew up around, often with the solid-body guitar front and center. Frisell celebrates this music from the...

July 6: Blues Defenders at Twin Oaks Tavern

If you’ve driven through Penngrove in the last month, you may have noticed the sounds of table saws and the smell of sawdust. That’s because the town’s popular Twin Oaks Tavern has been busy building an outdoor patio. Opening in time for the long days of July, the new deck is the spot for the aptly named Summer Patio...

July 5: Paper Dolls at Ruth McGowan’s Pub

The toe-tapping, ukulele-strumming duo of the Paper Dolls have been singing their delightful harmonies together for over 15 years. The pair of Uni and Em Doll, aka Heather Marie Ellison and Emily Schmidt, began singing together in and around Sonoma County as part of the Savoy Singers before Ellison moved to L.A. and put the duo on hiatus. Once...
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