This is an unusual entry. It is, more or less, a job listing for the directorship of one of our most important local service organizations—GoLocal Sonoma County.
GoLocal is a messaging and marketing co-operative of over 400 locally owned or stewarded businesses and nonprofits. That’s a fair piece of our local economy and middle class. GoLocal brands them and fights for them in an embattled time of transition affected by global ecommerce and a millionaire’s Congress.
Now, after 14 years at the head of this co-op and movement, Janeen Murray is stepping down so someone in the community can step up. Maybe you! The search for a new team to take on GoLocal in 2025 concludes Aug. 15.
CH: Janeen, describe your ideal candidate for this job.
JM: A person, team or organization that is passionate about the GoLocal mission. Other requirements include a desire and ability to invest in relationships, a capacity for strategic planning, creative collaboration, deep listening skills, smart financial planning and business development skills including sales, membership, new and existing revenue lines, marketing and communications. It takes inspiration and motivation to energize the local business community.
CH: That lengthy list of skills and that volume of work suggests to me a team or a superhero. What would this team receive besides endless hi-fives?
JM: A lot. This is not a sale. This is an opportunity to take responsibility for existing assets. GoLocal is strong, with great membership retention growth and revenue generating media assets.
CH: A strong business for strong businesses.
JM: New leadership is encouraged to create new offerings. We are not wanting to have somebody just do the same thing. This is a new beginning for GoLocal. But it is nice to have some revenue you can count on!
CH: What is next for you, Janeen? Are you going to be working on your golf game?
JM: (laughs) Hardly. I’m not retiring. Looking forward to continuing working with our local businesses as a consultant. But I haven’t had much time to think about it. I have to take care of this baby first.
Help with the candidate search! Share this story and its linktree QR. It has links to an interview with Murray, which is a primer on the importance of local, as well as the job listing and a master list of all 400 local businesses in the co-op.
The extreme heat that recently blanketed the United States is a clear sign of climate change. But rising temperatures are fueling more than just hotter summers. Climate change is contributing to the spread of drug-resistant infections. And alarmingly, the medicines we use to fight those pathogens are losing their effectiveness.
Antimicrobial resistance, or AMR, occurs when bacteria, viruses and other pathogens evolve to resist the effects of medications, making common infections harder to treat and increasing the risk of disease spread, severe illness and death. Recent figures link AMR to nearly 5 million deaths annually—far more than the combined death toll of AIDS and malaria. By 2050, more people will die of drug-resistant infections than currently die of cancer.
Climate change is accelerating the spread of these superbugs, providing favorable conditions for pathogens to grow and spread. Warmer temperatures can increase the reproduction rates of bacteria and viruses, extend the range of habitats suitable for pathogens and even heighten the chances of gene transfer among bacteria, leading to more robust strains of drug-resistant microbes.
We are in a race with ever-evolving bacteria—and we are losing. The main hurdle is financial. It costs nearly $1 billion to shepherd a new antibiotic through clinical trials.
But successfully developing an antibiotic is often financially ruinous. Most new antibiotics target small patient populations with specific drug-resistant infections, and the new medicines to treat those infections are rightly used sparingly, only as a last resort—since the more one uses antibiotics, the more likely bacteria will eventually become resistant.
Combating climate change requires new technologies and new economic models. The same is true of AMR. We must rethink how we incentivize antibiotic research. Subsidies, tax credits or direct funding for early-stage R&D can provide relief to companies developing new antibiotics. Faster FDA approval pathways can help reduce the time and cost of clinical trials.
Ultimately, the fight against antimicrobial resistance requires a multifaceted approach, integrating scientific innovation, policy reform and global collaboration. By addressing both climate change and AMR with the urgency and resources they demand, we can protect public health and secure a safer, healthier future for all.
Howard Dean is the former chair of the Democratic National Committee and former governor of Vermont.
Commentators of all stripes will now try to make sense of the recent shooting at a Trump rally in Pennsylvania.
Some will call his clenched fist signal an expression of defiance, a suggestion of strength of character under fire.
But you can’t claim strength or character when none exists. He is the same person. He will still be a degenerate imbecile, incapable of any expressions that are not lies, distortions, delusions or derangements. He cares about one thing, being King of the Cult. Beyond that, there is nothing there.
Craig J. Corsini
San Rafael
Waiting Game
Ann Troy’s letter regarding the DMV (“DMV DOA,” July 24) described my April 2024 experience exactly. I was also left wondering why I bothered to get an appointment, especially since to get the appointment in the first place, I’d spent an inordinate amount of time negotiating their website.
I hope our letters will make a difference.
Aviva Shiff Boedecker
Marin County
Hilarious Headlines
I just want to credit all you great guys and gals who edit—I get it! I love all your puns, rhymes so many times, and adore alliterations. “Help Kelp” made me yelp! You jerks make me smirk…Keep up all the good work!
In the summer of 2018, trumpeter/vocalist Paul Schneider and guitarist Hannes De Kassian began their musical journey, exploring jazz and funk in clubs, bars and wineries across Sonoma and Marin counties. Their progress was disrupted by the global pandemic in 2020. But Paul reconnected online with his close friend and renowned drummer, Atma Anur, leading to a personal musical revelation. They began collaborating on new songs, enlisting De Kassian and other talented musicians remotely. Their efforts resulted in Funkalypse, released in summer 2023, which quickly gained nationwide airplay and nearly a quarter million streams on Spotify. The Heard Eye performs as part of the “Fridays at the Hood” concert series from 7 to 9pm, Friday, Aug. 9 at William Hood House, 389 Casa Manana Rd., Santa Rosa. Doors open at 6pm. Advance tickets are $15, and day-of-show tickets are $20. Visit theheardeye.com for more details.
Sausalito
Dead Art
A Jerry Garcia art exhibition is taking place at the Sausalito Center for the Arts all throughout August. For those who don’t know, Garcia was a beloved local celebrity known for singing, songwriting and playing guitar in a band everyone knows: The Grateful Dead. Alongside Garcia’s musical creativity, he was a consummate visual artist. And, now through Sept. 1, fans of The Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia and art in general can come out to the Sausalito Center for the Arts and enjoy an array of Garcia’s artistic collection, as well as photography and memorabilia to match the theme. The exhibition is open to visitors Wednesday through Sunday from 11am to 5pm, at the Sausalito Center for the Arts, located at 750 Bridgeway.
Healdsburg
Misterioso
THE 222 presents the World Premier of the 75-minute multi-media composition Misterioso, written and performed by acclaimed pianist Vijay Iyer and celebrated trumpeter Graham Haynes. Misterioso, an exclusive two-night performance commissioned by THE 222 and funded in part by the National Endowment of the Arts, is a dynamic contemporary conception informed by the two artists’ lifelong indebtedness to the artistry of Thelonious Monk. The duo construct a fantasia of electroacoustic music and images influenced by the spirit of Monk and his music. Tickets for the 6pm, Saturday, Aug. 10 season opener performance of Misterioso, which includes a Champagne reception and hors d’oeuvres, are $100 to $200. The concert begins at 7pm and will be followed by a Q&A. Tickets for the 7pm, Sunday, Aug. 11 concert are $45 to $85.
Yountville
Rock the V
The 2024 V Foundation Wine Celebration weekend is fast approaching and is continuing its legacy of fundraising for cancer research (the foundation has raised nearly $160 million since 1999). Rock the V, the biggest party of the Wine Celebration Weekend, will be held from 6 to 10pm, Friday, Aug. 2 at Estate Yountville, 6481 Washington St. The event features famed restaurateurs and award-winning chefs paired with wines from renowned regional vintners, a barrel auction, and music and dancing under the stars. Rock the V supports the V Foundation for Cancer Research’s mission to accelerate victory over cancer and save lives. Register at winecelebration.v.org.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): One meaning of the word “palette” is a flat board on which painters place a variety of pigments to apply to their canvas. What would be a metaphorical equivalent to a palette in your life? Maybe it’s a diary or journal where you lay out the feelings and ideas you use to craft your fate. Perhaps it’s an inner sanctuary where you retreat to organize your thoughts and meditate on upcoming decisions. Or it could be a group of allies with whom you commune and collaborate to enhance each other’s destinies. However you define your palette, Aries, I believe the time is right to enlarge its size and increase the range of pigments you can choose from.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The star that Westerners call Arcturus has a different name for Indigenous Australians: Marpeankurrk. In their part of the world, it begins to rise before dawn in August. For the Boorong people of northwest Victoria, this was once a sign to hunt for the larvae of wood ants, which comprised a staple food for months. I bring this up, Taurus, because heavenly omens are telling me you should be on the lookout for new sources of sustenance and fuel. What’s your metaphorical equivalent of wood ant larvae?
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Seventy percent of the world’s macadamia nuts have a single ancestor: a particular tree in Queensland, Australia. In 1896, two Hawaiian brothers took seeds from this tree and brought them back to their homestead in Oahu. From that small beginning, Hawaiian macadamia nuts have come to dominate the world’s production. I foresee you soon having resemblances to that original tree, Gemini. What you launch in the coming weeks and months could have tremendous staying power and reach far beyond its original inspiration.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ketchup flows at about 0.03 miles per hour. In 35 hours, it could travel about a mile. I think you should move at a similar speed in the coming days. The slower you go, the better you will feel. The more deeply focused you are on each event, and the more you allow the rich details to unfold in their own sweet time, the more successful you will be at the art of living. Your words of power will be incremental, gradual and cumulative.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Astrologer Chris Zydel says every sign has superpowers. In honor of your birthday season, I’ll tell you about those she attributes to you Leos. When you are at your best, you are a beacon of “joyful magnetism” who naturally exudes “irrepressible charisma.” You “shine like a thousand suns” and “strut your stuff with unabashed audacity.” All who are lucky enough to be in your sphere benefit from your “radiant spontaneity, bold, dramatic play, and whoo-hoo celebration of your creative genius.” I will add that of course you can’t always be a perfect embodiment of all these superpowers. But I suspect you are cruising through a phase when you are the next best thing to perfect.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo-born Friedrich August Kekule (1829–1896) transformed organic chemistry with his crucial discovery of the structure of carbon-based compounds. He had studied the problem for years. But his breakthrough realization didn’t arrive until he had a key dream while dozing. There’s not enough room here to describe it at length, but the image that solved the riddle was a snake biting its own tail. I bring this story to your attention, Virgo, because I suspect you could have practical and revelatory dreams yourself in the coming weeks. Daydream visions, too. Pay attention! What might be your equivalent to a snake biting its own tail?
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Please don’t succumb to numbness or apathy in the coming weeks. It’s crucial that you don’t. You should also take extreme measures to avoid boredom and cynicism. At this particular juncture in your amazing life, you need to feel deeply and care profoundly. You must find ways to be excited about as many things as possible, and you must vividly remember why your magnificent goals are so magnificent. Have you ruminated recently about which influences provide you with the spiritual and emotional riches that sustain you? I encourage you to become even more intimately interwoven with them. It’s time for you to be epic, mythic, even heroic.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Historically, August has brought many outbreaks of empowerment. In August 1920, American women gained the right to vote. In August 1947, India and Pakistan wrested their independence from the British Empire’s long oppression. In August 1789, French revolutionaries issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man, a document that dramatically influenced the development of democracy and liberty in the Western world. In 1994, the United Nations established August 9 as the time to celebrate International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. In 2024, I am officially naming August to be Scorpio Power Spot Month. It will be an excellent time to claim and/or boost your command of the niche that will nurture your authority and confidence for years to come.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): August is Save Our Stereotypes Month for you Sagittarians. I hope you will celebrate by rising up strong and bold to defend our precious natural treasures. Remember that without cliches, platitudes, pigeonholes, conventional wisdom and hackneyed ideas, life would be nearly impossible. JUST KIDDING! Everything I just said was a dirty lie. Here’s the truth: August is Scour Away Stereotypes Month for you Sagittarians. Please be an agent of original thinking and fertile freshness. Wage a brazen crusade against cliches, platitudes, pigeonholes, conventional wisdom and hackneyed ideas.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’re never too old or wise or jaded to jump up in the air with glee when offered a free gift. Right? So I hope you won’t be so bent on maintaining your dignity and composure that you remain poker-faced when given the chance to grab the equivalent of a free gift. I confess I am worried you might be unreceptive to the sweet, rich things coming your way. I’m concerned you might be closed to unexpected possibilities. I will ask you, therefore, to pry open your attitude so you will be alert to the looming blessings, even when they are in disguise.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A friend of a friend told me this story: One summer day, a guy he knew woke up at 5am, meditated for a while and made breakfast. As he gazed out his kitchen window, enjoying his coffee, he became alarmed. In the distance, at the top of a hill, a brush fire was burning. He called emergency services to alert firefighters. A few minutes later, though, he realized he had made an error. The brush fire was in fact the rising sun lighting up the horizon with its fiery rays. Use this as a teaching story in the coming days, Aquarius. Double-check your initial impressions to make sure they are true. Most importantly, be aware that you may initially respond with worry to events that are actually wonderful or interesting.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): At least a million ships lie at the bottom of the world’s oceans, lakes and rivers. Some crashed because of storms, and others due to battles, collisions or human error. A shipwreck hunter named Sean Fisher estimates that those remains hold over $60 billion worth of treasure. Among the most valuable are the old Spanish vessels that sank while carrying gold, silver and other loot plundered from the Americas. If you have the slightest inkling to launch adventures in search of those riches, I predict the coming months will be an excellent time. Alternately, you are likely to generate good fortune for yourself through any version of diving into the depths in quest of wealth in all of its many forms.
Sonoma/Marin exports and purveyors of the Pink Floyd sound, Pete Floyd, have been playing all around these parts lately and have proven themselves a veritable headliner. Fronted by vocalist/guitarist Pete Delaney and the ambidextrous Pete Hale, this is one tribute that delivers on all fronts.
Although only active for a couple of years, it’s their electronic press kit that caught the attention of countless curious in-house talent buyers. At present, the band is rounded out by vocalist Teal Collins (Mother Truckers), veteran Terrapin Crossroads contributor Paige Clem, keyboardist Bob McBain, bassist Toby Tyler, saxophonist Alex Garcia, and drummer Sean England.
For those tired of the countless Pink Floyd tributes who have no soul and play the same set list every night, the band is somewhat of a revelation in the genre. Expect different song choices and selections from nearly every important Pink Floyd era.
We caught up with bandleader Pete Delaney as the band prepared for a handful of live shows in and around the Bay Area and Sonoma County.
Bohemian: How is the tribute scene these days?
Delaney: It’s been proliferating. Locally, we have such an amazing group of talented musicians and we all support each other. Many of our close friends and former band mates play the same venues and we all get along very well. A lot of us have been playing live music for 30 plus years doing both original and cover songs. I can’t describe the tremendous energy that fills the room when hundreds of people come together seeing their favorite songs performed and singing along.
Bohemian: At this stage, are you having regular band practices or are you all pretty much playing the same set each night?
Delaney: We have regular sectionals and rehearse before every weekend run of shows. We feel like we owe it to the fans, venues and, especially Pink Floyd, to do their music justice. It is challenging to present their sound properly as we have eight musicians onstage and a variety of instruments featured at every show. We also mix up the set list and are constantly adding and taking away tunes. Our drummer Sean England is the master of creating these and finely tunes the song list to match the venue and vibe.
Bohemian: Pink Floyd died the minute we lost keyboardist Richard Wright. He was such a force. What is your take?
Delaney: All of the band’s members are incredible, but Richard Wright was the soul of the band. David Gilmour said Wright had “an elusive quality, let’s call it soul, that created a sound that glued the whole Pink Floyd thing together. You notice it when it’s gone.” I imagine ‘’Meddle,’ ‘Dark Side Of The Moon.’ or ‘Wish You Were Here’ wouldn’t be as iconic as they are without him. Once more, the song “Echoes” is a highlight of our set. I always feel Wright’s magic when we play it.
Bohemian: What is your favorite Pink Floyd album?
Delaney: Ha! The never ending conundrum of a favorite album. My favorite is everything from ‘Meddle’ to ‘The Wall.’ I know there are a lot of folks that love the old Syd Barrett (pre- David Gilmour) albums and the post Roger Waters works, but this is my Pink Floyd wheelhouse. ‘Meddle’ encompasses the old Pink Floyd (goofy, odd, psychedelic) and the breakthrough albums that came after (dark and dreamlike). I think my least favorite was ‘The Final Cut.’ It seems like that album signaled the end of that era and was an afterthought.
Bohemian: Your band features some great players and singers. How long has this exact configuration been in existence? Do you ever play shows with a smaller group?
Delaney: We are very blessed to have the folks we have. They are all amazing musicians and have long careers writing, recording and performing. The exact configuration has been in place since November of 2021, but we never play without all the members. Our show is finely tuned and it requires all the pieces to make this music work. This isn’t a tribute band with one or two main members that pull together other players and configurations. We have so much fun together and play so well with each other that, like Richard Wright, it wouldn’t be proper to perform as Pete Floyd without all the pieces.
Doors open at 6pm and the show kicks off at 7pm, at the Rio Nido Roadhouse at 14540 Canyon 2 Road in Rio Nido. All ages are welcome. Advance tickets are $20 and can be found at rionidoroadhouse.com.
Frustrated with the negative response to ceasefire resolutions by the majority of Sonoma County cities, pro-Palestine activists July 23 declared a “People’s Resolution.”
Cotati is the only city in the county to approve a resolution calling for an end to Israel’s ten-and-a-half-month assault on Gaza, which has left an estimated 40,000 Gazans dead and many more injured or buried under rubble. Activists failed in their attempts to pass similar resolutions in Sonoma, Santa Rosa, Petaluma and Sebastopol,
So activists, under the banner of Sonoma County for Palestine, took it upon themselves to put forward their own resolution. To mark the occasion, they held rallies in Sebastopol and in Santa Rosa, where they read the resolution in the courtyard of Santa Rosa City Hall.
The declaration states at its beginning, “We, the people of Sonoma County, living on the stolen land of the Coast Miwok, Southern Pomo, Kashaya and Wappo people — the people who stewarded this land for millennia before being subjected to displacement and genocide by European settler-colonizers — believe that all life is precious and that all suffering and loss of life is tragic.”
Some 50 resolution supporters gathered at the Sebastopol Living Peace Wall in the early afternoon of July 23, where they held signs promoting ceasefire and listened to speakers, including Sebastopol Vice Mayor Stephen Zollman and former Sebastopol Mayor Una Glass. The former mayor said she would have voted for the resolution if she had still been on the council.
Zollman remarked, “We stand here in solidarity with everyone who continues to be marginalized. He then added a quote from Australian Indigenous activist Lilla Watson, also included in the People’s Resolution.
“If you come here to help, you are wasting your time. but if you have come here because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.”
Vice Mayor Stephen Zollman had put a ceasefire resolution on Sebastopol’s agenda in April for a second time and withdrew it when it was clear it did not have enough support among council members.
Tarik Kanaana, a Palestinian American who helped craft the resolution, said, “I never imagined we would be standing here 10 months later.”
Israel began its assault on Gaza on Oct. 7 after Hamas militants breached the fence that separates Israel from Gaza and attacked both soldiers and civilians, leaving some 1,200 Israelis dead and taking 250 hostages. Since mid-October, Sonoma County for Palestine has been holding Gaza support rallies in Santa Rosa’s Court House Square.
“We can only do this (end the siege of Gaza) if we stand together,” Kanaana added, looking out at the crowd of Jews, Palestinians, Latinos, and others gathered at the Peace Wall.
Following the Sebastopol rally, attendees motored to Santa Rosa in a car caravan to bring the People’s Resolution to that city council during its regular Tuesday afternoon meeting. Arriving in the downtown area about a half hour later, the rally crowd waved Palestinian flags and honked their horns before regrouping in the city hall courtyard.
Choosing to present the resolution in the courtyard, rather than disrupting the council’s meeting and risking arrest, they began the rally with a peace ritual featuring the Aztec Dancers. The dancers then joined the circle of activists, listened to a reading of the resolution, and invited everyone present to speak. While the 30 or so remaining participants were speaking, the city council turned on its outside speakers, piping the meeting into the courtyard. But the speaking circle continued until everyone was finished.
Commenting on the small numbers gathered for the presentation, one of the Aztec Dancers said, “It doesn’t matter that there are only a few of us. Each one of us represents 100 people who would like to be here but can’t.”
Asked to explain why their councils did not pass ceasefire resolutions, none of the Santa Rosa council members responded, and only Zollman from the Sebastopol city council was willing to comment.
But, according to news reports, cities rejecting ceasefire resolutions have said they were divisive or not the business of local governments. Still, dozens of cities and municipalities nationwide have approved these measures, including Oakland, San Francisco, Fort Bragg, Albany, Richmond, Sacramento, and Davis in northern California. Locally, the Sonoma County Commission on Human Rights approved a ceasefire resolution.
Many people go to the theater, read articles like this and listen to musical soundtracks not just because they love the art form but because, at some level, we all want the release and community that the performing arts provide.
However, due to many factors, most of us limit our silliest (and most fun) dances to our bathroom mirrors (and the occasional sock-friendly hallway). That is where Rachel Wynne comes in, with Danceypants.
Theater-goers will know Wynne’s work even if they don’t know them. Wynne choreographed Hair and Elf the Musical at 6th Street Playhouse and Shakespeare in the Cannery’s final show, Shakespeare in Love. She also advised on Cinnabar’s well-received Dancing Lessons. On top of this impressive list, Wynne is also the founder of expandance, a somatic movement practice she currently offers free to cancer patients and survivors through St. Joseph Providence. If one is looking for pure joy, Danceypants is the place to be.
A multi-generational, multi-level group known for being welcoming to all (18+) newcomers, Danceypants brings together people of all body types, genders, sexualities, races, abilities, etc., to learn choreography set to familiar pop songs of the ’80s, ’90s and ’00s.
Starting in 2018, Danceypants was originally supposed to be a once-off class for some friends. It proved so popular that it became a monthly event. And then, after a long hiatus during the pandemic, it came back as a weekly (and now twice weekly) offering. This week, it celebrates its 100th class! However, that legacy may be in jeopardy.
Danceypants relies on the Sebastopol Community Cultural Center. Founded in 1982, the center is one of the organizations partially funded by the City of Sebastopol in lieu of a dedicated parks and recreation department. Committed to “quality education and enrichment,” the center provides programs that help build community.
Due to financial shortfalls, Sebastopol City Council is considering cutting the funding it supplies to the center by half. Where this cut leaves the communities that have formed around the center is currently up in the air. But thankfully, there’s still the opportunity to let one’s inner child come out to play, for now.
Danceypants is all about the joy of community and movement, two things we can all always use. And while you’re at it, you might even learn something about dance and performance (with or without hallway socks).
Danceypants classes commence at 7:15pm on Mondays and 9am on Wednesdays at the Sebastopol Community Cultural Center in the Youth Annex, 425 Morris St. Info and tickets at expandance.com/danceypants.
On a sunny afternoon just north of Bodega Bay, two large troughs of water bubbled in the sunlight, toward the ocean. Swirling in the eddy of bubbles were slimy forest green blades of kelp. Julieta Gomez, the Greater Farallones Association (GFA) kelp restoration specialist, explained that these were blades of lab-grown bull kelp, a tall brown algae that towers dozens of feet over rocky coastlines like a tree.
Bull kelp forests were once a common sight along beaches all across Marin and Sonoma counties. But over the last decade, they have been almost entirely wiped out from the West Coast, only surviving in small pockets between Santa Barbara and Alaska. In Marin and Sonoma, their numbers have been wiped out by nearly 90%, replaced by vast areas of urchins, called urchin barrens. One such barren reaches hundreds of miles from Marin County, all the way to the Oregon border, according to work conducted by UC Davis researchers.
Since this loss was first noticed in 2014 by local urchin divers who have spent their lives and made their livelihoods in these underwater forests, a confluence of groups have attempted to bring back the kelp forests. From divers in Monterey attempting to kill the urchins, to a San Quentin prisoner-founded ocean stewardship nonprofit, SeaForester, many are attempting to help the kelp forests in any way they can.
And this summer sparks some serious hope for the future of kelp forests.
This July marks the first summer planting of lab-grown bull kelp along specific sites on the Sonoma coast by the Greater Farallones Association and NOAA. Starting in 2023, this project began to bring much needed action on returning a lost and biodiverse ecosystem back to our shores. The outplanting of kelp is occuring in Fort Ross Cove, Timber Cove, Ocean Cove and Stillwater Cove, with most of this year’s focus being in Fort Ross.
“I feel hopeful that we can get the forest to a point where it can become self-sustaining,” said Gomez. “It will probably take years, and it will take a lot of effort.”
The task for Gomez and the varying partners in this restoration project begins in the ocean.
In order to give the kelp a fighting chance at reestablishing itself in these forests, the sites that have been chosen must be cleared of urchins, specifically purple urchins.
Purple urchins, sometimes derogatorily called zombie urchins, can survive up to nearly a year without eating anything at all. This ability to fast for such a long time, along with their voracious appetite for kelp itself, has made the purple urchin the main reason for the decline of the kelp forests.
While people do eat urchins, the market is only for red urchins, a slower and less voracious eater of kelp than the purple urchins whose numbers have struggled to rebound with the loss of their kelp forest homes.
In place of swathes of swaying kelp blades with otters, seals, sunstars, red urchins and abalone, there are now vast rock beds covered almost exclusively in purple urchins, called urchin barrens. If a kelp starts to grow in these areas, one can be sure that it will be eaten before it has a proper chance to grow.
So, local urchin divers working with NOAA and GFA have been going out to specific sites, such as Fort Ross Cove, and picking out the purple urchins. They do this until a site is entirely cleared of the ravenous grazers. At this point, Gomez, with the help of other divers, heads into these areas and begins to plant the lab-grown kelp.
This bull kelp, originally brought over from Moss Landing Marine Lab, begins its life in outdoor tanks of circulating water, providing fresh oxygenated water to it. As the kelp matures, it will then begin to create small pockets of spores on its blades, called sporangia.
Gomez at the Bodega Marine Lab finds these floating lighter colored flecks and collects them, bringing them inside the lab to another smaller tank. These smaller tanks, equipped with bits of PVC pipe wrapped in twine, become the first home of the microscopic kelp, with many attaching to the small grooves of the twine until it is completely covered.
LENDING A HAND Bull kelp, once common in Sonoma and Marin, is a tall brown algae that towers dozens of feet over rocky coastlines like a tree.
Once the miniscule kelp is firmly planted on the twine, around three or so months since the seedlings began to grow, this string is now ready to be taken out to the ocean to be outplanted. Gomez and a team of divers boat out to the coves, placing the PVC and twine onto a lead line which then slowly unspools. This releases the baby kelp, who will attach themselves onto the rocks and then grow out to the water’s surface. Thus begins their first moments in the ocean, and hopefully the return of kelp forests to Sonoma.
But how did we get to this point where kelp forests were nearly lost?
The first block in the chain to fall was the sea star, commonly known as the starfish. Many sea stars are vital predators to the rocky understories of kelp forests, eating mussels, snails and, most importantly, purple urchins, keeping at bay many of these kelp eating critters. However, in 2013, a large (and still mysterious to science) sea star wasting syndrome killed millions of sea stars along the West Coast, completely altering the ecological checks and balances of the kelp forests.
One such sea star that died quickly was the sunflower sea star. These animals, with two dozen legs and a growth as wide as three feet, were one of the main predators of purple urchins, along with sea otters. Once they died off, the purple urchins came in quickly, grazing down large stretches of kelp forests until there was little left for them to eat.
For the past decade, this has remained mostly unchanged, which is highly unusual.
Kelp forests, like many ecosystems, go through cycles of dying off and then returning, but usually only for a couple of years. With no sea otters living on the Sonoma and Marin coast and the sunflower sea stars still having yet to return to the coast in any significant numbers, the swathes of urchin barrens remain, with kelp forests now a memory. Those who remember their plenitude along the coast, mostly coastal residents and urchin divers who made their livelihood selling uni, have mourned the loss of these vast ecosystems.
“It was dramatic,” recounted Erik Owen, a long-time red urchin diver.
“I always figured the kelp would come and go in cycles,” Owen said. “I never in my wildest imagination would dream that we would have a purple urchin explosion that would take all the kelp away.”
Owen has been diving in the Sonoma waters since the ’70s, when his family moved to the area. In 1986, already working on salmon and crabbing boats as a deckhand and curious about urchin diving, he received a permit from the state and began to collect red urchins and sell them.
Since then, he has watched as places like Timber Cove have ebbed and flowed with kelp. Some years there were more kelp than others, more red and purple urchins than other seasons, but everything would always return in numbers. However, in 2014, after the purple urchins decimated the kelp forests, he returned to crabbing for his main source of income.
“I’ve watched the dynamic changes that the kelp forests have made from the red sea urchin fishery to the thriving recreational abalone fishery that was created after we pulled these red urchins out,” Owen said. “And then I watched it get dominated by purple urchins.”
Throughout the decades, he has seen the red urchins decrease in numbers, only to watch red abalone rebound in their absence. His deep and direct knowledge of these waters is vital to scientists and conservationists alike. As someone who has made his living in these forests, he does not want to see them disappear as they have.
However, noticing that kelp was faring better in Timber Cove, he thought he could maybe help the kelp along with its return.
“I just saw that there was an ability there to take these purple urchins out and to try to bring them back a little bit,” he explained.
So now Owen dedicates much of his work to removing purple urchins for GFA and NOAA sites. He and divers like him are taking to the ocean not to harvest uni, but to remove purple urchins, providing them with an opportunity to help return kelp forests back to the coast. This provides income for their labor in the process, as they can sell the purple urchins to NOAA.
While this project is only in its second year, the outlook for Owen is optimistic.
“I just think that it’s got hope,” Owen said. “And I hope that we can continue the project through the coming years and get it to the point where, in the long term, we can really sit down and look at what we’ve done and go, ‘Look at that. We made a difference.’”
I have profiled Willow Fish Peterson before for my Sonoma County: A Community Portrait podcast. But I would do anything within my small power to help her, for her mission is the same as my own—to showcase the best of the North Bay, and make makers some money.
Her exemplary store, Made Local Marketplace, currently shows the products of over 150 local makers, artists and brands drawn from a list of over 1,000. Simply put, hers is our made in North Bay store. She also owns the production imprint, “Made in The North Bay.”
CH: Describe your Montgomery Village store.
WFP: A crafts fair inside a store! We have goods grouped by maker—like at a crafts fair, but also displays where we bring goods together from different makers into sets, like a dinner table set, in the manner of a traditional retailer.
CH: I love your display cases—lots of Victorian cabinets, lightly refurbished work tables, apple crates, farm baskets. It’s all very funky, rustic and eclectic in our own local style. Could you pick out a few products?
WFP: Yes! But it’s so hard to choose! Well, in our home goods department, we have wonderful hand-turned redwood platters, vases and bowls by Sam Lefkowitz. He doesn’t have a website or email; he just turns up here twice a year in his old truck.
In our bath and body section, we have My Apothakeri, which are products by Kary Knecht. She loved and was inspired by those fancy perfumes, but her body had a reaction to them, so she has researched ways of creating alluring scents with all-natural ingredients.
CH: It’s super homey that with any product we pick up you can tell a fond story about a local producer. That’s the opposite of the Amazon experience.
WFP: I’ve a great way to meet and support our neighbors.
CH: It’s a great place to shop for a gift or to inquire what we make and who we are. I would recommend it to the local and the tourist alike. You told me that you were willing to consult with local entrepreneurs in the creation of parallel stores in any of our five North Bay counties.
WFP: If you’re out there, give me a call!
Visit the store. Also, click here to purchase Fish Peterson’s local good gift baskets or listen to her describe her business model in her own voice!
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