April 22: Barbara Ehrenreich at Book Passage

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Writer and political activist Barbara Ehrenreich has written more than 20 books since 1969. She is best known for her eye-opening 2001 account of trying to survive on minimum wage, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, and the author never shies from controversy to explore and expose social strife. Her new book, Living with a Wild God: A Nonbeliever’s Search for the Truth About Everything, is her most ambitious, personal and controversial work to date, as she endeavors to tackle nothing less than the meaning of life. Ehrenreich reads from her book and talks in conversation with KQED Forum radio host Michael Krasny on April 22 at Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 7pm. $10. 415.927.0960.

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The Bite Goes On

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The much-anticipated opening of the California recreational ocean salmon fishing season in Bodega Bay on April 5 started strong but petered out late last week, an unwelcome trend for anglers that continued through the weekend.

Captain Rick Powers runs two boats out of Bodega Bay. He said fishing aboard his 65-foot open boat the New Sea Angler was red-hot all week after the season started until it went cold Friday.

As the saying goes, that’s why they call it “fishing” and not “catching.”

Posted fishing reports from early in the week spoke of a steady pull of king salmon for anglers, and Powers says the online reports coming out of the Bodega grounds prompted boats from Berkeley and Sausalito to make the long trip north to get in on the action. Before the bite crapped out, many of his anglers, Powers says, went home with their bag limit of two king salmon, some in the 20-pound-plus class. On slow days, he supplemented the scant salmon catch for his fares with an offering of Dungeness plucked from his crab pots.

To hear Powers tell it, the 2014 king salmon season started where last season left off.

Powers says that in a half-century fishing North Bay waters, he had never seen a king salmon season like the one enjoyed by local anglers last year. The 60-year-old captain started his career working as a deckhand on San Francisco open boats when he was nine years old. In all that time, he says, “I never experienced the grade, the quality and the size of the salmon.”

Last year’s bite gave him reason to be “very optimistic about this season.”

The 2014 season opener marks something of a watershed year for North Bay anglers and fisheries. This is the tenth year of an intensive restoration program to help save coho salmon from extinction in California. Powers says he starts seeing coho in May and June when he’s trolling for salmon—and stresses that any that are caught are released under state law.

The state has ramped up drought-remediation efforts that may have side benefits of helping restore salmon stocks, and especially the coho, which tend to favor smaller and more environmentally sensitive creeks over larger rivers when it’s time to spawn.

A 2012 state initiative called the Coho Help Act is now underway; it set out to “make it easier for landowners to do good things for the coho,” says Brian Stranko, water program director for the Nature Conservancy of California.

The Coho Help Act pays landowners up to $100,000 to fix up their piece of the creek to make it more amenable to the coho, either by removing impediments or water diversions, or by returning a creek to a more natural state by adding (or not removing) wood debris from the water.

Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposed 2014–15 budget would spend
$113 million on statewide fisheries-restoration programs. A similar proposal from his 2012–13 budget was whittled to $95 million by the time the budget was passed. Another $22 million is included in the proposed 2014–15 budget for an inland hatcheries fund.

For the first time, the state proposed funding a $1.5 million program this year to investigate and enforce marijuana-cultivation water diversions, a growing problem in the state and one that directly affects the coho’s chances of a lasting rebound. The fishery is hovering around 1 percent of its historical numbers in California—a figure that has yet to budge upward despite the various efforts underway.

California enjoys an unusual degree of cooperation among the various players invested in fisheries management: regulators, environmentalists, commercial and recreational anglers, ranchers and farmers. “Everyone sees themselves as being part of the solution for cohos,” says Stranko. “There was a time when everyone was at loggerheads.”

One unaddressed area of concern for Stranko is coho salmon “bycatch,” which refers to fish that are not targeted but wind up on the hook or in the net anyway. The commercial ocean salmon season opens May 1, just around the time Powers says he starts to see off-limits coho hit his baits.

“We do not want to see a coho bycatch problem or mortalities in coho because of the bycatch,” says Stranko. “But the problem is, we don’t have a lot of information on how many coho get caught in bycatch. So it’s hard to say whether it’s a big problem or a little problem.”

Letters to the Editor, April 16, 2014

Vet Smart

This is a very moving and informative story (“Homeless Front,” April 9). I don’t know how any military person returning home after serving on active duty in Iraq or Afghanistan could not have PTSD. The terror of what they did (in the name of our country) and what they experienced over there would really mess up anyone. Then coming home to an entirely different reality and trying to fit into their old lives and relationships is another corkscrew.

IMHO, the problem is at the front end, and that’s really where the focus should be.

Defending our country on our soil is one thing; engaging in an optional war is really unfair to those who we ask to serve as our surrogates. Those who believe in starting such a war should be the ones who serve in it. I understand that all those who serve do so in a volunteer capacity; we don’t have a draft. However, some of them see no other option in their lives, and others naively believe that the benefit they receive (in experience, money, education, personal growth and responsibility) will outweigh the horrific blowback of the experience. Though not all service people serving in war end up with such debilitating PTSD that it’s nearly impossible for them to function normally in our society, I have a hard time believing that most of them don’t have varying degrees of it.

Via online

Dharma Karma

I don’t understand (“Dharma Bummer,” April 9)! Seems to me that Cazadero resident Mike Singer and other residents are taking the same approach the Chinese government did with Tibet. Didn’t we learn a lesson? The residents of Ratna Ling are trying to bring enlightenment and understanding to a dark world, and some want to restrict that freedom? Though it seems many in Sonoma county are very accepting and tolerant, not everyone is, unfortunately. If Dharma Publishing ceases, there will no doubt be another publisher, person or thing that will carry the same principles, just as Tibet did.

Keep on with it, Ratna Ling. You bring us freedom. Cazadero, leave those monks in peace!

Guerneville

I have just one question for Dharma Publishing: What would Buddha think of your barbed wire fences?

Windsor

Jello Shot

Mr. Biafra blames computer whiz kids for raising the cost of San Francisco housing (“Jello-Rama,” April 2). His waxing nostalgic about the ’70s should be adjusted for inflation, lest he become the kind of curmudgeon who starts every sentence with “Why, I remember when . . .”

Rent control had the effect of maxing out rent increases every year, maintaining high baseline rents for empty units and for builders growing reluctant to meet demand. Why, I remember a time when landlords would value a decent renter and not raise rents for years. But those “good old days” ended in 1979—just about the time the Dead Kennedys came on the scene. Coincidence? You decide.

Petaluma

Lawn Liberation

I rented a house for 10 years from a landlord who forced me to waste water on a front and back lawn. What did he care? He doesn’t live in Sonoma County, and we had to pay the water bill.

This past year, we were lucky enough to buy our own place, where we promptly ripped out the lawn and installed low-water-use plants. Unfortunately, there are still many other renters who are forced to waste water to satisfy the whims of an absent landlord. This is an issue that needs to be addressed, from the standpoint of both water conservation and renters’ rights.

Santa Rosa

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

Unknowable Rumsfeld

In head-and-shoulders close-up, Donald Rumsfeld shares some anecdotes from his life as a public servant—first as a Congressman, later as a special envoy and finally, and ruinously, as Secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush administration.

In Errol MorrisKnown Unknown, you get the answer to how Rummy sleeps at night, not that the question is asked in so many words. Rumsfeld was right, and when he wasn’t right, it was because the definition of the phrase “he was wrong” is too restrictive. Besides, no one could have foreseen what was over the hill. So again he was right.

If necessary, Rumsfeld can cast a passive sentence so that the “he” in it vanishes utterly. A wasted moment in the film occurs during the revisitation of Rumsfeld’s meeting with Saddam in 1983, when he’s seen greeting the dictator with a smile and a handshake. Asked about the incident, Rumsfeld shifts the ground without opposition from his questioner. Morris loses the chance to prompt Rumsfeld back from his memories as Man of Diplomacy to the matter of the consequences of encouraging Saddam.

Known Unknown is a minor and sometimes agonizing film, not just because of the eel-like subject or because we endured the Rumsfeld Show for years. There are tedious stylistic quirks Morris recycles from previous efforts, such as the time-lapsed sun, rising and falling, as cars zizz by on the Koyaanisqatsi Expressway and as Danny Elfman pays tribute to Philip Glass.

In the end, it seems there’s too much that’s been put off-limits here. We’re never treated to what it was like for this political animal to be locked out of power. Instead, we get Rumsfeld shedding a few grateful tears at our luck as a nation. Our nation will not survive much more of Rumsfeld’s kind of luck. Rather than telling it to the camera, Rumsfeld should be telling it to a judge.

‘The Known Unknown’ is screening at Summerfield Cinemas,
551 Summerfield Road, Santa Rosa. 707.522.0719.

March for Rights

Since 2006, when hundreds of thousands marched nationwide, including 10,000 in Santa Rosa, the local May Day march has focused on immigrant and workers’ rights, universal healthcare, family unity and an end to deportations. This year brings an additional focus on police accountability, brought to prominence in Sonoma County with the killing of 13-year-old Latino youth Andy Lopez by sheriff’s deputy Erick Gelhaus.

Historically, the Santa Rosa May Day march, organized by the May 1st Coalition of Sonoma County, has been largely an expression of the Latino community, but the killing of Andy Lopez has brought together a wider response. Many communities have been fearful of the police in recent years, and policing has become a prominent issue in Sonoma County, where many people avoid involving law enforcement in resolving problems because of a perception that the presence of police only escalates the problem.

There have been nearly 60 fatalities involving law enforcement in Sonoma County since 2000. The statistic reflects an increasing number of police killings throughout the United States in recent years, which seems to have become epidemic with the advent of police militarization.

Still, insistence on workers’ rights is the guiding focus of this year’s May Day march. Nationwide demonstrations at fast food restaurants and Walmart highlight the increasing disparity between rich and poor, and the reality of a rapidly vanishing American middle class.

This year’s Santa Rosa May Day march begins at Roseland Plaza, in the old Albertson’s parking lot at 665 Sebastopol Road, near Dutton Avenue. Marchers will gather at 4pm for a short rally, then proceed to Courthouse Square downtown at 4:45pm, where the event continues with speakers and music.

Attila Nagy, of Comité VIDA, and Michael Rothenberg, founder of 100 Thousand Poets for Change, are both members of the May 1st Coalition, which yearly sponsors the May Day march.

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.

Pastie Treats

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It’s an American tradition often misunderstood and maligned, but there’s nothing wrong with burlesque.

Back in the days of vaudeville, it was a spectacle to be seen—all feather boas and bawdy humor, with exotic variety shows and striptease dances that leaned heavily on the tease.

Only after the advent of Playboy and adult entertainment did the “tease” lose out to the “strip” and burlesque become taboo. But that’s been changing in the past decade, as a new empowered generation of dancers and performers have taken burlesque back and revived its glory days—which is exactly what Eva D’Luscious is doing now in the North Bay.

A life-long dancer, D’Luscious discovered burlesque while living in San Francisco. Pioneering troupes in the ’90s like the Hubba Hubba Revue and L.A.’s Velvet Hammer brought back the glamour in full and left their mark on D’Luscious.

“There was a Tease-O-Rama [show] that I went to years ago in the City,” she says. “And just seeing the ladies up there, how much fun they were having and how clever they were in their acts, I decided when the time is right, I’m going to go do that.”

The mother of two now lives in Sebastopol, and began her burlesque career just five years ago. Her first lessons in burlesque came from legends like Satan’s Angel and Bombshell Betty. D’Luscious now teaches workshops herself and has performed everywhere from the Bay Area to Burning Man.

“It just hooked me,” says D’Luscious of her first foray into burlesque. “To go into a place where you’re so vulnerable and open but everybody’s cheering for you and supporting you—that’s what I try to pass along, too.”

Three years ago, she co-founded Cabaret de Caliente, producing burlesque events in cooperation with community-minded groups and venues around Sonoma County. Just this year, the group began its latest event series, at Christy’s on the Square in downtown Santa Rosa.

“I was trying to figure out, ‘What does Sonoma County like?’ and then I had this ‘a-ha’ moment, like ‘Oh, they like booze and food! Of course!'” says a laughing D’Luscious. “Specifically wine—and I like sparkling wine. And it goes so well with burlesque.”

On April 17, Cabaret de Caliente presents its new, disco-themed “Bubbly Burlesque” show at Christy’s on the Square, pairing local sparkling wines from Chandon with cupcakes from Cupcravery. D’Luscious serves as master of ceremonies.

“Bubbly Burlesque” joins a schedule of shows that also includes the “Solstice Seduction” revue at Hopmonk Sebastopol and the “Shake for Me” Led Zeppelin tribute.

In contrast to those who see burlesque as exploitive, D’Luscious believes it emboldens those who perform it. “We all create this atmosphere of encouragement, and I think that’s still kind of a revolutionary thing in our society.”

Back Yard Rambles

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When it comes to fun stuff to do and places to go, the North Bay is loaded. Great food and drink destinations? We’ve got that covered and then some. Ocean, mountains, hill, trails, rivers and winding roads? Check. Lively music venues and cultural attractions? We’ve got them in spades, too.

Our annual Resident Tourist issue celebrates our land of plenty with three themes—food and drink, outdoor recreation and music. We’ll leave many of the more well-known attractions to the real tourists. This insider’s guide is by no means exhaustive. We’ve had to pick and choose some of our favorites, lest we get started and never stop.

I’ve lived here just over three years, and I am very much a resident tourist myself, eagerly discovering new things about the North Bay that make me continually thankful I live here.

How do you play resident tourist in your own back yard? Let us know at le*****@******an.com.

—Stett Holbrook

Our Great Outdoors

In the Whitmanian sense of the expression, the North Bay contains multitudes when it comes to outdoor adventures. Thing is, there are so many outdoors destinations, you might as well pick a few, get in the car and save some for next time. Life’s short, but let’s hope it’s not that short. And jeez, there’s more than enough natural splendor to enjoy just looking out the window of your car.

Walt Whitman, who coined the multitudes phrase in his poem “Song of Myself,” was an inveterate beachcomber in his 19th-century day. Ol’ Walt would have flipped out over the 70,000 sublime and accessible acres of Point Reyes National Seashore, the vast and rugged coastal redoubt in Marin County where one can spend a day or a month or a life getting blissfully lost and found in nature.

A recent morning found your Bohemian scribe on a hike out to Limantour Beach. It’s an exquisite, white-sand stretch of total abject pleasure along Drakes Bay. And it’s just a few steps from parking lot to beach. On a recent visit to Point Reyes, and despite the warning signs, I did not encounter any Fukushima flotsam (or jetsam, for that matter) as I walked a mile or so down the beach. But it was very cool to score a large piece of weathered, blue beach glass, a rarity for collectors of such things. Limantour beach is friendly to families and free-spirited nudists alike, if the light crowd on a recent weekday morning was any indication.

Another nearby bonus for an overnight sensation, if you are so inclined, is the nearby Point Reyes National Seashore Hostel, the only on-site lodging in the park, where a bed can be had for as little as $25 a night. But I had miles to go before sleep on this daylong, three-county roundabout adventure.

Next stop, Bodega Bay. Before heading up the coast, I pulled in to Point Reyes Station for some coffee from the legendary Bovine Bakery. Now I was ready to hit the highway, jacked on caffeine with the Dead Kennedys cranking in the cassette deck, and the fog rolling across the coast.

When you get to Bodega Bay, we suggest you drive out to the marina area and wander for a while among the fleet here, but don’t bother the crows—they’re deadly, sayeth Hitchcock. Just as you’re heading out of town to the north, keep an eye for the Bodega Dunes Campground. It’s a state campsite and you’ll need to book it in advance, but the campground is centrally located and provides a great and inexpensive ($35 a night) launch point if you’re spending a few days in Bodega Bay and don’t want to drop $275 on a tony B&B experience (though we recommend that, too, if you can swing it).

Now that you’ve got Bodega Bay in the rearview mirror, the rugged Sonoma coastline beckons for a few more miles northward—and then there it is, the mighty Russian River and, with it, a fork in the road. As Yogi Berra famously said, take the fork. Scenic Route 116 runs along the river awhile before you hit the fringes of civilized Sonoma County, and there are lots of places to stop off and hike, bike, swim or whatever suits your fancy. There are canoe rentals in Forestville and there’s Armstrong Redwood State Park in Guerneville, where you can also rent kayaks, or head to Steelhead Beach on the river.

The road was long and winding as I made my way toward Napa County, and the final destination of the day: the Petrified Forest in Calistoga.

Oh darn, it was closed.

Instead, I regretfully reflected back to the petrified wood I saw in the nude section of Limantour beach. When you’re playing resident tourist, it pays to plan ahead.—Tom Gogola

Ear Candy

The North Bay is home to some outstanding music destinations. The most recent addition, Sonoma State University’s Green Music Center, is truly a masterpiece of sonic architecture. Modeled after the famed Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood in Massachusetts, the main hall at the GMC is the aural equivalent of a cashmere blanket. Warm, rich, luxurious sound emanates from the maple stage, filling the 2,000-seat hall with the sounds of a trio, solo piano or full symphony orchestra with choir. The likes of Yo-Yo Ma and Lang Lang have graced the stage, and on April 27 violinist Hilary Hahn (the 34-year-old virtuoso was named Time magazine’s best young classical musician in 2011) come to play.

But it’s not just about high society here. There are plenty of student and faculty ensembles taking the stage, with ticket prices sometimes in the single digits. In a stunning transformation, the home of the Santa Rosa Symphony opens its rear wall to a sloped grass field for afternoon picnic performances, giving a view of the musicians inside, without having to worry about a toddler’s impatience ruining the mood.

At the opposite end of the spectrum is the Bottlerock festival in Napa, running May 30–June 1. Music festivals are not unique, especially in California, but with headliners this year like the Cure and Outkast (who also headlined Coachella), it’s an event that many are planning vacations around. After a popular success (and business disaster) in its first year, the show is back with a renewed focus on music and, vendors hope, paying its bills on time. Add to it the location—the center of world-renowned Napa Valley—and there arises the niche.

Winetasting and culinary adventure await festivalgoers, and we’re not talking three-buck Chuck and greasy pizza. There will be sushi, there will be artisan tacos with handmade tortillas, there will be boutique wine. Of course, winetasting in Napa isn’t a new concept, but having dozens of wineries and high-end food choices at a music festival setting sure is. And to top it off, it’s at the Napa Expo Center, officially making it the coolest thing ever to happen at the Napa Expo Center.

Napa’s summer music scene is not just about expensive music festivals. Take, for example, the wonderful walking tour that is Porchfest. That veranda isn’t just for sittin’ anymore; it’s for pickin’, grinnin’, strummin’, bowin’, drummin’ and singin’. The historic porches of Napa are a sight on their own, but add some ol’ timey music, and they become a musical delight.

Fifty porches in the city are on the books for this year’s free festival on July 27, and so far, more than 70 bands have signed up to play—that’s right, bands just sign up for a spot and they’re in. No booking agents, no radio payola, no radius clauses—just music. Some are intimate concerts to passersby, some are full-blown blanket-and-chairs events, depending on the location and musical guest.

Picnics are encouraged, as there are no $3 bottles of water for sale, nor are there souvenir hats or foam fingers. This is about the music, plain and simple. Young bands, old bands, folk bands, rock bands—with so much music going on, there’s bound to be something everyone can enjoy.

If all this feel-good acoustic music stirs dead memories to life—Grateful Dead memories, that is—there are a couple pf great spots in Marin County to reminisce: Terrapin Crossroads, founded by Dead bassist Phil Lesh, and Sweetwater Music Hall, opened by Dead guitarist Bob Weir. The two spots have featured former Dead members and their friends regularly, and you never know when Lesh or Weir might be feeling saucy enough to jump on the stage and jam with the band.

But the entertainment extends beyond just the Dead—both feature big names on a weekly basis, like the Chris Robinson Brotherhood, who play a three-evening residence at Terrapin at the end of April, and Michael Franti with members of RatDog, playing Sweetwater on April 30. Both feature local favorites, too, like the Easy Leaves and Dirty Cello. With music served up nightly (and during daylight hours on weekends), it’s time to get truckin’ down Shakedown Street to Terrapin Station with a friend of the devil.—Nicolas Grizzle

Food & Drink

What and where to eat and drink are important questions that carry special significance in the North Bay. The choices are bewildering. Here are a handful of places on my short list. I’ll start from western Sonoma County, head down to Marin County and cross over in Napa County.

Eating at the Casino Bar and Grill for the first time nearly four years ago helped seal the deal on my move to the area. The Bodega restaurant-in-a-75-year-old-bar is run by a changing lineup of chefs who whip up a new menu every night from a tiny kitchen in the town’s watering hole/gathering place. I’m partial to Mark Malicki. Simply check Casino’s Facebook page to see what’s for dinner. Recent standouts include rabbit rillettes, Sriracha chile crab, short rib pot stickers and smoked salmon. That’s a far cry from the peanuts and pretzels served at most bars. On sunny days, eating barbecued oysters and sipping cold IPA out on the little patio is a quintessential West County experience.

I’ve long been a fan of the Tomales Bakery, but K&A Take Away is my new favorite. The 240-square-foot shop was once the town’s post office, but now the diminutive space is a showcase for Amy Carpenter’s inventive sausage sandwiches. The self-taught sausage maker always has Italian links and bratwurst on the menu, but she saves the third slot for something creative like date and orange chicken sausage or curry-potato chicken sausage. Don’t miss her great side dishes like the sweet potato and poblano chile salad or quinoa, roasted carrot and black bean salad. The name is more than a rhyme. K&A Take Away has nowhere to sit, so you will be taking your food to go.

Western Marin and Sonoma counties have become a destination for cheese lovers. But if you call this place home, your trip to cheese nirvana is a short one. Point Reyes Station’s Cow Girl Creamery is justly known as a cheese wonderland, and Santa Rosa’s Oliver’s Market has an equally strong cheese selection, particularly when it comes to local cheese. Freestone Artisan Cheese is the newest cheesemonger on the block . The little shop specializes in local cheeses, including some hard-to-find ones like the excellent Bleating Heart and Barinaga Ranch sheep’s milk cheese. The other thing that gets me into the shop is the Olive Tree Hills olive oil on tap. The Sebastopol-grown oil is delicious and affordable. Bring your own bottle and fill ‘er up.

Kombucha is a great alternative to soda pop, and Windsor’s Revive kombucha is my favorite by far, but did you know there is another probiotic beverage made in Sebastopol? Get in on the trend early and check out the Kefiry, makers of a great assortment of water kefir. You’ve probably had milk kefir, but water kefir is dairy-free and has the same beneficial bugs in it. I don’t go for the stomach-friendly bacteria but, rather, the great flavors they swim in—O.M.G. Chocolate, Guayusa Cola and Tulsi Rose are some of my faves.

Next stop, Thistle Meats. The seven-week-old butcher shop in downtown Petaluma is a beauty. While many people will focus on the fact that the butcher shop is run by the lovely Molly Best and Lisa Modica (I can already see the glossy Sunset and Bon Appétit magazine spreads), it’s the quality meat and sausage that will earn them a reputation. The impeccably clean, white-tiled shop specializes in whole animal butchery from a who’s who of local, responsibly minded meat producers. In addition to house-aged cuts of meat and sausage, they serve a hearty sandwich of the day made on crusty Della bakery ciabatta.

Further down the road in Larkspur, Bel Campo Meats is another meat palace. The butcher shop and restaurant sources all its meat from its own ranch in Mt. Shasta, giving new meaning to the term farm-to-table. Like Thistle, the meat is pricey, but that’s how it should be. Just eat less of it. So-called cheap meat exacts a much higher price on the environment and on animal welfare. Bel Campo’s burger with beef fat-fried fries will make you a believer.

Heading east to Napa County, the attraction is, of course, wine. But how does one avoid the tour bus crowds and all those nonresident tourists? You gotta know where to go.

Velo Vino Clif Family Winery, the winery from the Clif Bar folks, caters to enophiles and cyclists alike with cycling maps to various Napa Valley bikes routes and a cycling theme. St. Helena’s Raymond Vineyards has a guest house for dogs and lots of funky, cool stuff like the crystal cellar tasting area. The rustic feel of Rustridge Ranch and Winery isn’t painted on. It’s real. The winery is on a horse ranch and offers a guesthouse if you want to spend the night.

If you appreciate serious Cabernet Sauvignon, make a pilgrimage up to Spring Mountain to Cain Vineyard and Winery. Stagecoach Vineyard offers winetasting, of course, but it also has 60- or 90-minute tours of the stunning 1,100-acre property. On a clear day, you can see all the way to San Francisco.

While many of the best things in life are free, some are definitely not. To my fellow resident tourists I’d argue that it’s worth dining at St. Helena’s Meadowood restaurant at least once. Along with French Laundry, which will soon reopen in a new location, Meadowood is the only North Bay restaurant with three Michelin stars. Executive chef Christopher Kostow’s cooking is hard to pin down, but let’s go with cerebral and madly, creatively, out-of-this-world delicious.

Happy travels.—Stett Holbrook

Powerful Chords

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When I first heard the original cast recording of Next to Normal, Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt’s Pulitzer-winning rock musical about mental illness and pharmacology, I was knocked out by it.

A couple years later, when the touring production came to San Francisco, with original star Alice Ripley in the role that won her a Tony, I was underwhelmed by the phoned-in performances and slick blandness of the enterprise. But since my first impression came from listening to the album, I held firm to the belief that, under the right circumstances, Next to Normal could be as good onstage as it was in my headphones.

Turns out I was right.

Under the brilliant direction of Kim Bromley, Novato Theater Company’s staging is intimate, accessible and raw—and the cast performs the hell out of the show. In Bromley’s hands, the bombast of the touring production gives way to an understated yet intense experience, keeping the humor alive while never blinking in the glare of the play’s harsher observations.

Diana Goodman (Alison Peltz) is a wife and mother who seems fairly typical as the play begins: a little bored with her life, amiably at odds with her teenage children, unable to sleep some nights but otherwise OK. Then, without warning, she has a full-on psychotic break, manically making sandwiches on the kitchen floor.

The episode is witnessed, with weary dismay, by her overachieving daughter, Natalie (Julianne Thompson), and her husband, Dan (Anthony Martinez), and we realize that this is not the first time Diana has gone around the bend.

After 16 years of daily medicinal treatment, her bipolar disorder is beginning to exhibit schizophrenic symptoms as well, and against the protests of her son, Gabe (Fernando Siu), Diana agrees to try a new doctor, the rock-star psychiatrist Dr. Madden (Sean O’Brien). It’s part of the play’s power that Diana’s subsequent journey through a series of therapies—including electroshock, portrayed as a power-rock, dance-dream sequence—is treated with a stunning lack of judgment or preachiness.

These are real, identifiable people, and their pain—and biting sense of humor—is both highly relatable and deeply inspiring. The remarkably strong music, under the excellent direction of Lucas Sherman, is tight and rock-solid, carrying Next to Normal to its bittersweet ending on a powerful wave of sheer, beautiful, fully electric passion and power.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★½

‘Next to Normal’ runs Friday–Sunday through April 27 at the NTC Playhouse. 5420 Nave Drive, Novato. Friday–Saturday, 8pm; 3pm matinees on Sunday. $15–$25. 415.226.9353.

Pension Tensions

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City Situation

Frustrated with stalled negotiations with the city, the Santa Rosa City Employees Association (SRCEA) showed its displeasure, with dozens of members wearing white shirts at Tuesday night’s Santa Rosa City Council meeting. The union has been working without a contract since July, and has rejected offers from the city. They have asked for a 2 percent cost of living adjustment, followed by a 2 to 5 percent raise the following year. The city has reportedly offered annual increases of 2 and 2.5 percent in a two-year contract, but asked for employees to contribute more to pensions. The union voted in February to join the larger Teamsters Local 856, for “professional support,” as SRCEA president Mike Reynolds told the Press Democrat. The planned demonstration is not a strike, nor a threat to strike, but is meant to show SRCEA’s dissatisfaction with negotiations.

Virtual Training

The Community and Local Law Enforcement Task Force was asked Monday to look into virtual-reality training for the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office. The technology, sheriff’s officials say, would cost roughly $100,000 and could help officers avoid deadly scenarios like the Andy Lopez tragedy. A study conducted in 1992 found that interactive video, a likely precursor to virtual reality, ranked high in effectiveness by officers “in terms of their ability to facilitate use of force decision making.” The task force also heard a plea to increase the number of nonlethal-impact projectile launchers from five to 35. The Task Force put off any action recommending the options, citing the need for public feedback. (We’d like to hear your opinion at le*****@******an.com.) The task force was created to address issues raised after Lopez, 13, was shot by a Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputy in October.

The Hootenanny State

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Josh Windmiller is striving to bring the North Bay sound to the world.

The frontman of folk-punks the Crux, Windmiller is increasingly involved in the music community, from the stage to behind the scenes, booking shows around the area under the umbrella of the North Bay Hootenanny. Since 2010, the Hoot’s been a part of several local festivals, such as Petaluma’s Rivertown Revival, and regularly occurring shows at venues like the now defunct Last Day Saloon.

When the Saloon went belly up, Windmiller had to make other arrangements. He met Sheana Davis, owner of the Epicurean Connection in Sonoma in 2013. Davis was interested in throwing parties at her cafe, and the Hootenanny was the perfect match.

Now the Epicurean Connection has become the new home base of many Hootenanny events, integrating the county’s lively local scene into one exciting venue. This weekend, the North Bay Hootenanny presents Marin songwriter and flutist Keady Phelan (April 18), Sonoma County Cajun rockers T-Luke and the Tight Suits (April 19) and Americana master Dave Hamilton (April 20).

The Hootenanny continues with local-music showcase events through the year at the Epicurean Connection. Check our calendar listings for future events.

April 22: Barbara Ehrenreich at Book Passage

Writer and political activist Barbara Ehrenreich has written more than 20 books since 1969. She is best known for her eye-opening 2001 account of trying to survive on minimum wage, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, and the author never shies from controversy to explore and expose social strife. Her new book, Living with a Wild...

The Bite Goes On

The much-anticipated opening of the California recreational ocean salmon fishing season in Bodega Bay on April 5 started strong but petered out late last week, an unwelcome trend for anglers that continued through the weekend. Captain Rick Powers runs two boats out of Bodega Bay. He said fishing aboard his 65-foot open boat the New Sea Angler was red-hot all...

Letters to the Editor, April 16, 2014

Vet Smart This is a very moving and informative story ("Homeless Front," April 9). I don't know how any military person returning home after serving on active duty in Iraq or Afghanistan could not have PTSD. The terror of what they did (in the name of our country) and what they experienced over there would really mess up anyone. Then...

Unknowable Rumsfeld

In head-and-shoulders close-up, Donald Rumsfeld shares some anecdotes from his life as a public servant—first as a Congressman, later as a special envoy and finally, and ruinously, as Secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush administration. In Errol Morris' Known Unknown, you get the answer to how Rummy sleeps at night, not that the question is asked in so...

March for Rights

Since 2006, when hundreds of thousands marched nationwide, including 10,000 in Santa Rosa, the local May Day march has focused on immigrant and workers' rights, universal healthcare, family unity and an end to deportations. This year brings an additional focus on police accountability, brought to prominence in Sonoma County with the killing of 13-year-old Latino youth Andy Lopez by...

Pastie Treats

It's an American tradition often misunderstood and maligned, but there's nothing wrong with burlesque. Back in the days of vaudeville, it was a spectacle to be seen—all feather boas and bawdy humor, with exotic variety shows and striptease dances that leaned heavily on the tease. Only after the advent of Playboy and adult entertainment did the "tease" lose out to the...

Back Yard Rambles

When it comes to fun stuff to do and places to go, the North Bay is loaded. Great food and drink destinations? We've got that covered and then some. Ocean, mountains, hill, trails, rivers and winding roads? Check. Lively music venues and cultural attractions? We've got them in spades, too. Our annual Resident Tourist issue celebrates our land of plenty...

Powerful Chords

When I first heard the original cast recording of Next to Normal, Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt's Pulitzer-winning rock musical about mental illness and pharmacology, I was knocked out by it. A couple years later, when the touring production came to San Francisco, with original star Alice Ripley in the role that won her a Tony, I was underwhelmed by...

Pension Tensions

City Situation Frustrated with stalled negotiations with the city, the Santa Rosa City Employees Association (SRCEA) showed its displeasure, with dozens of members wearing white shirts at Tuesday night's Santa Rosa City Council meeting. The union has been working without a contract since July, and has rejected offers from the city. They have asked for a 2 percent cost...

The Hootenanny State

Josh Windmiller is striving to bring the North Bay sound to the world. The frontman of folk-punks the Crux, Windmiller is increasingly involved in the music community, from the stage to behind the scenes, booking shows around the area under the umbrella of the North Bay Hootenanny. Since 2010, the Hoot's been a part of several local festivals, such as...
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