Readers Picks: Culture

Best Art Gallery

Marin

Gallery Route One

11101 Hwy. 1, Ste. 101, Pt. Reyes Station.
415.663.1347.

Napa

Slack Art Collective

964 Pearl St., Ste. B., Napa. 707.344.7133

Sonoma

Sebastopol Gallery

150 N. Main St., Sebastopol.
707.829.7200.

Honorable Mention

Sebastopol Center
for the Arts

282 S. High St., Sebastopol.
707.829.4797.

Best Museum

Marin

Bolinas Museum

48 Wharf Road, Bolinas.
415.868.0330.

Napa

Napa Valley Museum

55 President’s Circle, Yountville.
707.944.0500.

Sonoma

Charles M. Schulz Museum

2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa.
707.579.4452.

Honorable Mention

Sonoma County Museum

425 Seventh St., Santa Rosa.
707.579.1500.

Best Outdoor Art Event

Marin

Sausalito Art Festival

www.sausalitoartfestival.org

Napa

Riverfront
Chalk Festival

588 Main St., Napa.

Sonoma

ARTRAILS Open Studios

www.artrails.org

Honorable Mention

Bodega Seafood Art
& Wine Festival

www.winecountryfestivals.com

Best Movie Theater

Marin

Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center

1118 Fourth St., San Rafael.
415.454.1222.

Napa

Cameo Cinema

1340 Main St., St. Helena.
707.963.9779.

Sonoma

Rialto Cinemas

6868 McKinley St., Sebastopol.
707.525.4840.

Honorable Mention

Summerfield Cinemas

551 Summerfield Road, Santa Rosa.
707.522.0719.

Best Film Festival

Marin

Mill Valley
Film Festival

www.mvff.com

Napa

Napa Valley
Film Festival

www.napavalleyfilmfest.org

Sonoma

Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival

www.sebastopolfilmfestival.org

Honorable Mention

Sonoma International Film Festival

www.sonomafilmfest.org

Best Ballet Company

Marin

Marin Ballet Co.

100 Elm St., San Rafael.
415.453.6705.

Napa

Napa Valley
Dance Center

950 Pearl St., Napa.
707.255.2701.

Sonoma

Sebastopol Ballet

390 Morris St., Sebastopol.
707.824.8006.

Honorable Mention

Petaluma City Ballet

110 Howard St., Petaluma.
707.765.2660.

Best Performing Dance Company

Marin

Stapleton School
of the Performing Arts

118 Greenfield Ave., San Anselmo.
415.454.5759.

Napa

Napa Valley
Dance Center

950 Pearl St., Napa.
707.255.2701.

Sonoma

Sebastopol
Ballet School

390 Morris St., Sebastopol.
707.824.8006.

Honorable Mention

Risk Dance Company

riskdance.wix.com/risk-dance-company

Best Dance Studio

Marin

Roco Dance
& Fitness

237 Shoreline Hwy., Mill Valley.
415.388.6786.

Napa

Napa Valley
Dance Center

950 Pearl St., Napa.
707.255.2701.

Sonoma

Move2Change

6780 Depot St., Sebastopol.
707.823.1074.

Honorable Mention

The Dance Center

56 W. Sixth St., Santa Rosa.
707.575.8277.

Best Place
to Dance

Marin

George’s Nightclub

842 Fourth St., San Rafael.
415.226.0262.

Napa

Empire Napa

1400 First St., Napa.
707.254.8888.

Sonoma

Hopmonk Tavern

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol.
707.829.7300.

691 Broadway Ave., Sonoma.
707.935.9100.

Honorable Mention

Ellington Hall

3535 Industrial Drive, Santa Rosa.
707.545.6150.

Best Media Personality

Marin

Lyons Filmer,
KWMR 90.5-FM & 89.9-FM

State Route 1, Ste. 1, Pt. Reyes Station.
415.663.8068.

Napa

Bob St. Laurent,
KVYN 99.3-FM

1124 Foster Road, Napa.
707.257.8463.

Sonoma

Brent Farris,
KZST 100.1-FM

3392 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.528.4434.

Honorable Mention

Bill Bowker,
KRSH 95.9-FM

3565 Standish Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.588.0707.

Best Festival

Marin

Fairfax Festival

www.fairfaxfestival.com

Napa

Napa Valley
Film Festival

www.napavalleyfilmfest.org

Sonoma

Sebastopol Apple Blossom Festival

www.sebastopol.org

Honorable Mention

Rivertown Revival

www.rivertownrevival.com

Best Music Festival

Marin

KWMR Far West Fest

State Route 1, Ste. 1, Pt. Reyes Station.
415.663.8068.

Napa

BottleRock

www.bottlerocknapavalley.com

Sonoma

Russian River Jazz
& Blues Festival

www.omegaevents.com

Honorable Mention

Petaluma Music Festival

www.petalumamusicfestival.org

Best Charity Event

Marin

Gallery Route One’s Latino Photography Project

11101 Hwy. 1, Ste. 101, Pt. Reyes Station.
415.663.1347.

Napa

Auction Napa Valley

www.auctionnapavalley.org

Sonoma

Calabash! (Food
for Thought)

PO Box 1608, Forestville.
707.887.1647.

Honorable Mention

Human Race

www.volunteernow.org

Best Performing Arts Center

Marin

Marin Center

10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael.
415.473.6800.

Napa

Napa Valley
Opera House

1030 Main St., Napa.
707.226.7372.

Sonoma

Wells Fargo Center
for the Arts

50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa.
707.546.3600.

Honorable Mention

Green Music Center

1801 E. Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park.
866.955.6040.

Best Theater Troupe

Marin

Marin Shakespeare Co.

890 Belle Ave., San Rafael. 415.499.4488.

Napa

Lucky Penny Productions

www.luckypennynapa.com

Sonoma

6th Street Playhouse

52 W. Sixth St., Santa Rosa.
707.523.4185.

Honorable Mention

The Imaginists

461 Sebastopol Ave., Santa Rosa.
707.528.7554.

Best Band

Marin

Soul Pie Band

www.soulpie.com

Napa

Voltones

www.voltones.com

Sonoma

Wonderbread 5

www.wonderbread5.com

Honorable Mention

Pat Jordan Band

www.patjordanband.com

Best Music Venue

Marin

Sweetwater Music Hall

19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley.
415.388.1100.

Napa

Uptown Theatre

1350 Third St., Napa. 707.259.0123.

Sonoma

Hopmonk Tavern

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol.
707.829.7300.

691 Broadway Ave., Sonoma.
707.935.9100.

Honorable Mention

Mystic Theatre

23 N. Petaluma Blvd., Petaluma.
707.765.9211.

Writers Picks: Culture
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Bottlerock It, Man

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Bodacious Bottlerock

Welcome to Bottlerock, 1999! On Friday, the Napa music festival announced the lineup for its second annual concert, and it’s full of ’90s and ’00s nostalgia acts.

Weezer, LL Cool J, Outkast, Third Eye Blind, Barenaked Ladies, Smash Mouth. Although Smash Mouth played at the Sonoma-Marin Fair three times in the past eight years, big-time headliners like the Cure and Eric Church didn’t, and probably won’t any time in the near future.

Want more ’90s? Blues Traveler. De La Soul. Spin Doctors. Gin Blossoms. Camper Van Beethoven. Rumored, but not confirmed, are the Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers (featuring Zordon), the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and a special 45-minute hologram set by that dancing baby from Ally McBeal.

All in all, it’s an exciting lineup, if for no other reason than to see what all these bands look and sound like today, 15 years after their prime. And local groups will be performing as well: Trebuchet, Moonalice, the Incubators, the Graveyard Boots, Cosmos Percussion Orchestra, Grass Child, the Bell Boys, the Sorry Lot, the Deadlies, Irontom, Breakaway Patriot, Major Power & the Lo-fi Symphony and Kingsborough. Also included are hip indie acts like Robert Delong, Empires and Deerhunter. Spread out over three days, this will make for an interesting concert.

Bottlerock takes place May 30–
June 1 at the Napa Valley Expo Center.
575 Third St., Napa. $129–$3,000. www.bottlerocknapavalley.com.—Nicolas Grizzle

Best of 2014: Back to the Future

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We’ve always been fascinated with the future. From the smartphone of tomorrow to the sci-fi world of intergalactic space travel, we are drawn to speculation about what could be. In this year’s Best Of issue, we celebrate forward thinking with our theme of Back to the Future—we’re getting back to looking ahead.

Unlike the movie of the same name, we don’t get to see what’s next, but we do analyze the past to shape the future. Not coincidentally, 2015 is the year the young Marty McFly travels to in the sequel to his history-altering hijinks—watch it again and compare reality today with what it was envisioned to be just 30 years ago. As you’ll see, it’s pretty much spot-on, right down to the power laces. (But not that part about the Cubs. Don’t ever put money on the Cubbies.)

The future is also about accepting people’s differences, conserving energy and making sure the energy we do use comes from sustainable sources. The world wouldn’t be the same without innovators in the arts, technology, media, industry, food, transportation and even romance. For that reason, we celebrate pioneers—futurist thinkers of their time—and draw inspiration from their radical ideas.

Leilani Clark, Tom Gogola, Nicolas Grizzle, Stett Holbrook, Brooke Jackson, James Knight, Jacquelynne Ocaña, Jonah Raskin, Charlie Swanson and David Templeton contributed to the writers’ picks in this issue, and their initials are inscribed at the end of their pieces like carvings in a park bench. But their contributions will exist digitally beyond the lifespan of a slab of treated wood (unless, of course, that slab is picked up at a reclaimed salvage yard and made into something new and beautiful). —Nicolas Grizzle

Readers Picks

Culture | Everyday | Family | Food & Drink | Recreation | Romance

Writers Picks

Culture | Everyday | Family | Food & Drink | Recreation | Romance

Bohemian “Best Of Winners 2014” from jon lohne on Vimeo.

Writers Picks: Romance

Best Wedding Everyone Can Attend in Their Underwear

Imagine an online world (turn away now if you’re already lost) that’s part Sims, part Minecraft
and part real, human existence. Founded and headquartered in San Francisco, Second Life is a global online game that allows users to create avatars and live in a user-created digital world. Now in its 10th year, Second Life gets an average of 400,000 new registrations each month, according to the game’s website, with 36 million accounts created in its history (though some estimates put the actual number of users at about 1 million). In this fantasy world, users can exist without society’s slings and arrows (or gravity, for that matter, since Second Life avatars have the ability to fly). Currency exists as Linden dollars, which have a current exchange rate with real dollars at about 250 to 1. They can also be earned in the game just like they would in life: by working, selling goods or paying for a premium account that refreshes your Linden dollar stash each week.

Why would one desire an alternate life? Well, companionship, for one. It’s easier to meet people online these days, and over 41 million have tried online dating. But even then, there’s the awkward real-life meeting, and maybe it turns out he hasn’t been 28 years old for a while or maybe her laugh makes Fran Drescher sound angelic. In SL, avatars are user-generated idyllic versions of their creators; everyone is beautiful, so personality becomes the only compatibility test. For $L10, users can officially “partner” with another user—though, as in real life, separation costs more ($L25).

But there are some twists, as one might imagine, to this alternate universe.

For starters, SL relationships sometimes exist simultaneously with RL (real-life) relationships. This can cause problems with RL couples, though sometimes one type of relationship can lead to the other. And forget seeing your sweetheart during a power or internet outage. There have been reports, as well, of NSA agents creating online personae in games like Second Life to infiltrate potential terrorist organizations. Without a face-to-face meeting, who’s to say if
the blushing bride isn’t really Agent Smith from The Matrix?

But the positives are wonderful. Four hours of SL time equates to one hour of RL time, so relationships tend to bloom faster on the screen than in person. And when the wedding takes place, everyone looks fantastic, the weather is impossibly gorgeous and floating hearts emanate from a grand piano played by the bride and groom on a tropical beach. People do spend money on this, and there are a handful of wedding services available in the SL marketplace. But the cost is nowhere near the $28,000 average for an American wedding. After marriage comes babies (seriously, there are videos of SL births), and after that, who knows. Here’s to love, both in the physical and digital realms.—N.G.

Best Place to Spot Celebs in Love

For the record, the best celebrity to have walked the sidewalks of Railroad Square in Santa Rosa is, and will always be, Steve Martin. But this year, the cozy, downtown shopping district seemed to have transformed into a haven for celebrity couples out for sweet afternoon dates. In late November, Renee Zellweger shopped for trinkets with her boyfriend, musician Doyle Bramhall, at Whistlestop Antiques after attending a KRSH radio station party the day before (Bramhall performed live). But in even more exciting news for rabid Parks and Recreation fans out there, Nick Offerman (better known as Ron Swanson, the meat-loving, woodworking, Libertarian county employee on the Amy Poehler–helmed show) and his wife, the equally talented and hilarious Megan Mullally (Will and Grace, Party Down), were spotted shopping at Skirt Chaser vintage. They graciously agreed to a photo with a friend of mine, who happened to stop by the store at the same time, and her Instagram feed blew up with comments like “Oh my god. Ron Swanson!” If this trend continues, I may need to start running a romantic celebrity date star map tour that starts and ends on Fourth Street.—L.C.

Best Place to Talk Dirty

There is a place in Petaluma where a group of adults gather once a week to talk dirty. They do it in a well-lit room, they do it fully clothed, and they do it in front of each other. This isn’t 900- number material; it’s intimacy therapy. The group goes by “O,” and is part attitude adjustment, part playful distraction. Professional life coach Elizabeth Wolfe facilitates the sex-positive conversations in a safe environment. Sessions consist of three games, played each week, to the tune of participants’ prowess. The games are a psychological framework for breaking down taboos about sex while practicing vulnerability. Risqué questions and words of desire fly about even as people blush and squirm. “I encourage people to play hard, to speak the first answer that comes to mind and not to filter,” says Wolf. “You never know, if you say something kind of edgy, it may free your neighbor to do the same!” Check it out. You may come out feeling a little more kinky than usual. eSensum.com.—J.O.

Best Rooftop Graffiti (From the Future?)

I should have done it a long time ago, when you first walked away. All you wanted was to know that I loved you. And of course I did. I still do. And I never forgot you. I never stopped regretting my silence. And I never forgot the metal roof glimmering in the sunshine across the parking lot in downtown Santa Rosa where we stood when you said goodbye. When I first discovered the time vortex last year, and realized I could only use it once, I knew I had to go back to that day, that moment, and tell you how I felt. It took me till now to figure out how. I haven’t tagged a building in decades. We don’t do it like that in 2067. But I knew I couldn’t walk up to you, the young us and say, “Hey, I’m you from the future! Tell her how you feel! Tell her you love her, and will never stop loving her!” We’d both be terrified. So instead, I wrote it down for you. There on the roof of that abandoned building. In great big letters. “I STILL LOVE YOU.” It may be too late to matter, too late to change the future. But maybe it’s not. Maybe you’ll walk by that lot, see those words, and somehow know they’re not just the random ravings of a daredevil artist. They’re from the future. They’re from me. I still love you. If you still feel the same way, leave me a message. I’ll find a way back. I’ll find the message. Then I’ll find you. And I’ll never stop telling you. I love you. I love you. I love you.—D.T.

Readers Picks: Romance
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Writers Picks: Food & Drink

Best Plan to End World Hunger

Excess is so 1980s. Today, the most forward-thinking folks are all about eliminating excess and cutting down on the waste stream, in turn strengthening community, bolstering local food systems, building social safety nets and making some friends along the way. That’s why CropMobster, the community food exchange dreamed up by Nick Papadopoulos, the general manager of Bloomfield Farms in Petaluma, has leapt to the head of the pack.

The story began with Papadopoulos searching for a way to distribute surplus produce left over after a farmers market. He posted a message on the Bloomfield Farms Facebook page offering the leftovers at a reduced price, but he didn’t stop there. With help from his wife, event planner Jess Flood, along with Joanna and Gary Cedar of Press Tree, he established CropMobster, a hub where producers, farmers and regular folks can advertise their surplus in a way that’s easy, manageable and gets the food to someone who will use it.

As Papadopoulos told the Bohemian last October, “We wanted to address food waste and loss, and help people who are hungry or just priced out of the good stuff. But we also wanted to help people in the cottage food industry and the gleaning industry, and build trading relationships.”

Once a producer—farm, ranch, grocer or grower—posts an alert regarding surplus goods, it’s automatically spread to all members of the CropMobster community. What’s truly innovative about the project is the way the founders use social media like Twitter, Facebook, email and website alerts, plus a thriving online community, to get the word out, utilizing the idea of “going viral” for the good of the community and not just to spread the word about the latest crazy cat playing piano upside down.

With coverage on the Huffington Post, Fast Company, PBS and in Time magazine, CropMobster has gone national, which is a good thing, since the model they’ve created is something that should be realized on a global level. In January, they were added to Food Tank’s “Organizations to Watch” list, and the next step has become helping other communities develop their own versions of CropMobster. As the website states, “What started on one farm just a few months back is turning into a movement to transform food waste and surplus into value and community.” How’s that for one to grow on? cropmobster.com.—L.C.

Best Celery Root Schnitzel

Imagine a TV show devoted to farming. Hell, imagine a whole network devoted to how food actually gets to the kitchen in the first place. In a world in which chefs are hailed as cultural icons, John McReynolds insists that farmers ought to be applauded as the real all-stars. As culinary director at Stone Edge Farm in Sonoma, he has authored a new innovative cookbook that offers stunning recipes for mouth-watering dishes like celery root schnitzel, orange and beet salad with black olives, and feta and cabernet-braised beef short ribs with green onion mashed potatoes. His dishes look gorgeous and taste scrumptious, and long before it was cool to shop at farmers markets and roadside stands, McReynolds beat a path to organic produce and foraged for herbs, flowers, nuts and leaves in meadows and vineyards. Like the great jazz musicians, McReynolds riffs on the familiar. Not a slave to menus or a prisoner of classic recipes, he shares kitchen secrets and demystifies the art of gastronomy. In The Stone Edge Farm Cookbook, McReynolds shows foodies that he’s still on the cutting edge of contemporary culinary art.—J.R.

Best Green Grapes

Just when you’ve figured out that organically made wine is not the same as wine made with organically grown grapes, along comes certified biodynamic, certified fish-friendly and sustainably certified by this, that or the other. Many of these designations are backed up by organizations that employ independent verification; others, not so much. And the dregs of the barrel simply claim they’re “sustainable because we said so.” Recognizing that a future crowded with different standards and claims can only confuse conscientious wine shoppers, the Sonoma County Winegrape Commission announced in January a plan to require all Sonoma County growers to conform to a single sustainable standard by 2019. Instigated by a board member and pursued by SCW president Karissa Kruse, the five-year plan would make Sonoma County the first 100 percent sustainable county in the nation. “Greenwashing” is not part of the plan; independent verification will be implemented on a multi-point list of environmental, energy and social and economic targets. Unlike in organic and biodynamic farming programs, some chemicals would likely be allowed. However, sustainable standards also address erosion issues, energy conservation and the welfare of farmworkers. But for some, it just might make Sonoma County wines shine a little bit brighter on the shelf.—J.K.

Best Otherworldly Sandwich Combinations

When the hankering strikes for a two-fisted meal, head down to Davey Jones Deli in Sausalito. Inside a bait shop just off the 101, this eatery has all kinds of futuristic combinations cloaked in spinach tortillas or on a choice of breads and rolls. The bestselling vegan wrap contains hummus, raw almonds, avocado, quinoa tabouleh, gomazio and a garden patch of fresh herbs, veggies and sprouts. Punjabi pulled pork adds gravitational heft on the porkslaw, a curried mouthful-of-Iowa-meets-New-Delhi. The house-made sauces, sprinkles and spreads are what make Davey Jones Deli ahead of its time. The likes of almond pesto, sesame salt, pumpkin butter, maple chipotle butternut spread, roast garlic with red pepper and cranberry Dijon are just a sampling of the trippy flavors that complement the meat and veggie fillings. Garlic sesame kale, roasted beets, radishes, fresh pineapple and other crazy additions take the term “deli” to new heights. The waterfront is in back of the shop, making for a great picnic spot to wolf down one of these massive meals in a sandwich. 1 Gate 6 Road, Sausalito. 415.331.2282.—B.J.

Best Use of Biogas —for Beer!

Bear Republic Brewing Company is a business on the forefront of sustainability. The family-owned company has held environmental stewardship as a cornerstone of their business, and earlier this year became the first brewery in California to install the EcoVolt wastewater system. In a state with drought woes, beer makers feel the pinch all the more—it takes between three and 10 units of water to make one unit of beer—so Bear Republic stepped up its game with the installation of the EcoVolt system in its Cloverdale brewery. It’s a unique take on a biogas system—the process uses bioelectrical microbe organisms to convert the carbon elements in wastewater into electricity, simultaneously cleaning water for reuse and creating energy to offset production costs. Water
is treated and reused on-site, easing the impact on sewage and utilities for the city while cutting electricity and water costs for the brewery.
—C.S.

Best Food Alchemist

Tom Boyd and his wife, Deanna Dennard, together with longtime research and development associate Jeffrey Edelheit, have become modern-day food alchemists. Specializing in eccentric organic elixirs inspired by nature’s own engineering, their biomimetics laboratory, of sorts, the Kefiry, sits in a cozy shopping plaza just south of downtown Sebastopol. It is part testing room and part tasting room, featuring 12 elaborately infused kefir flavors.

“We are able to pull the most subtle aromatics out of the herbs without destroying them with heat,” explains Boyd. The result is a bubbly, soda-like drink—minus the unpronounceable preservatives and gobs of sugar.

“These are the most important herbal formulas from the past,” he says, pulling out a long glass flute filled with ruby red liquid and white sediment. By angling it against the light, the tiny crystalline structures become visible. “We are producing this for people to increase their wellness and happiness.” The crystals are probiotic kefir “grains,” which are actually strains of bacteria and yeast, and have been used to ferment fruits and herbs for centuries. This drink is Flower Power, a hibiscus and cinnamon blend that smells like sweet summer tea.

And because they’re made with water kefir instead of milk kefir, as found in yogurts, the beverages are lactose-free. The result is a nonalcoholic, probiotic and lacto-fermented drink that fills the belly with all the good bacteria needed for healthy digestion. 972 Gravenstein Hwy. S. #120, Sebastopol. thekefiry.com.—J.O.

Best Carbon Message in a Paper Bottle

If you want to make the attendant at a recycling center cross with you, bring in your empty wine bottles. It’s not that in the year 2014 we don’t possess the technology the recycle them, and it’s not that recycling an ex-vessel of Pinot Gris saves any fewer resources than an empty IPA bomber. It’s just that people don’t get money for turning in empty bottles of Pinot Gris like they do from beer and soda bottles—gotta keep ’em separated! Better yet, skip the heavy glass. Sure, we’ve been hearing about the future of alternative wine packaging for years now, but consumers haven’t taken to bag-in-a-box wine with gusto. So one winery had a lightbulb moment—an energy-saving, LED lightbulb, of course—and put the bag in a bottle. Truett-Hurst’s 2012 Mendocino Chardonnay ($13.99) and 2012 Paso Robles Red Blend ($14.99) were released last November in lightweight, plastic-lined cardboard “bottles.” Truett-Hurst shipped 250,000 bottles in the first 60 days of sales, representing a saved weight of 280,000 pounds over the equivalent in glass bottles. By mid-December, they’d loaded up 20 trucks at seven tons per truck, and estimate they saved 20,000 pounds of carbon emissions. Designer Kevin Shaw, who created sister winery VML’s witchy-cool biodynamic-inspired labels, worked with the U.K.’s Green Bottle to create the package. After the wine is drunk, “PaperBoy,” as it’s known, can be disassembled into recyclable components. Sadly, it cannot be reused as a shabby-chic wine bottle candle holder.—J.K.

Best Sausage Made from Life’s Lemons

Yanni’s Sausage Grill is exactly what you want it to be: a small, mom-and-pop shop in an out-of-the-way location that does one thing really well—sausage. John Vrattos and his wife, Francesca, run the shop on Penngrove’s main drag from a 270-square-foot storefront. It’s hard not to be charmed by the couple. After he lost his job a few years ago, John decided to turn a sausage-making hobby into a business. When Francesca lost her job, too, she joined her husband. Life gave them lemons, but instead of lemonade, they made sausage.

John, who is proud of his Greek heritage, works flavors from the old country into his links—try the orange-and-anise-flavored loukaniko, if it’s available—but he also tries newfangled creations like the Aloha (teriyaki pork sausage with grilled onions, jack cheese and grilled pineapple) and the popular “jalapeño popper” (pork sausage seasoned with pickled jalapeños). Grab a seat in the cozy dining room or head next door to the Penngrove Pub for the ultimate combination—beer and sausage. 10007 Main St., Penngrove. 707.795.7088.—S.H.

Readers Picks: Food & Drink
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Writers Picks: Family


Best Hint That the Future Might Be Better Than the Past for Our LGBT Elders

When plans were first announced years ago to establish an upscale LGBT retirement community in Sonoma County, the idea was nothing short of revolutionary. The first of its kind in the nation, Fountaingrove Lodge was dreamed up as a place where lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender seniors and their allies could spend the post-work years of their lives in a beautiful location, with luxury apartments that offered an option for continuing care services. With a golf course, a gourmet restaurant, unbeatable views and 10 acres on which to roam in safety, security, comfort and beauty, the project was immediately controversial—not due to the idea of same-sex couples retiring in peace, but because the size of the facility caused concerns to locals eager to protect the environment.

Any way you look at it, that’s social progress. After addressing the environmental concerns, developers Bill and Cindy Gallaher, who’ve created a significant senior-citizen empire through building state-of-the-art housing complexes all over the country, forged ahead and brought the long-overdue dream to life. In November, the first residents moved into Santa Rosa’s Fountaingrove Lodge, and the only shockwaves caused were from the realization that, until now, no facility of its kind had existed anywhere in the country.

As the first generation of LGBT Americans to have lived the majority of their lives out-of-the-closet, Fountaingrove’s inaugural group of residents know the truth: while things may be about to get better, the present is often not so great for gay and lesbian seniors, who experience far higher incidents of abuse and neglect than straight seniors. Reports show that many LGBT seniors are at increased risk of depression and suicide. There are also numerous reports that many gay and lesbian seniors, fearing discrimination, go back into the closet for the first time in decades when leaving private homes to take residency in group-care facilities.

While Fountaingrove is certainly a pricey option, it offers hope that the tide has turned. In the future, as indicated by reports of several similar facilities now in planning or construction phases around the country, old age might become something to look forward to for LGBT seniors, who previously had no practical models of safe, inviting housing.

And who knows, maybe it won’t be that far in the future before a senior’s sexual orientation and gender identity are no big deal. fountaingrovelodge.com.—D.T.

Best Nonhallucinated Wonderland

The long-planned, years-in-the-making Children’s Museum of Sonoma County has been adding a few finishing touches, and it’s almost ready to open to the public. A few lucky early visitors got to test out the place in anticipation of its official grand opening on March 29 (additional parts open at the end of 2014). With an emphasis on science and exploration, the brand-new facility—located in a former church next to the Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa—is a bit like Alice’s Wonderland, if Alice were a bit of a nerd. In other words, it’s perfect for kids, who are naturally curious and always seeking entertainment. The museum has indoor and outdoor areas, including a mesmerizing hydroelectric exhibit that shows how water can be turned into energy by pumping and releasing a water-spinning turbine. There’s a nature education garden, with butterfly-themed playground tractor rides, buried treasure excavations, an art studio and a miniature replica of the Russian River. 1835 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa. 707.546.4069.—D.T.

Best Mobile Communication Device

Struggling with your Spanish conjugations? Need help navigating those Facebook pictures? How about some collaboration on that calculus homework? All of these languages are part of Sonoma County’s Language Truck, an innovative cross between a bookmobile and a food truck. Teacher and Language Truck founder Bridget Hayes needed a way to reach students after recession-era budget cuts closed many of Sonoma County’s adult schools. So two years ago, the Santa Rosa resident outfitted a mini-school bus and created a mobile tutoring service. The result is the coolest, most accessible classroom around. Inside, work stations have computers and the walls double as instructional white boards. Outside, the bus is a center for workshops and neighborhood events. At wineries, CEOs are learning Spanish while their employees study English. Senior citizens are gathering for morning coffee and email tutorials. Mothers study for citizenship exams with toddlers on their knees. While the main focus is learning, community building is an inevitable positive side effect.
www.languagetruck.com.—J.O.

Best Hope for Recycling’s Future

Anyone who’s been to an elementary school at lunchtime understands the atrocious amount of waste generated in just one cafeteria session. The next day,
it happens all over again. Multiply that waste by thousands of schools across
the country, and you get a pretty unsustainable picture. That’s why the efforts to establish a “green culture” at the Santa Rosa French-American Charter School are so innovative and heartening. Working in partnership with the Ratto Group, the company behind Santa Rosa Recycling and Collection, the school’s Green Committee has set up a complex, all-encompassing recycling program. Recyclables are sorted out each day, and commercial compost bins accept all food waste and soiled paper products. Plus, kids at the school are learning what it really means to send things into the waste stream, and how there is another way to do it, a way that thinks outside of the (trash) box and beyond, into the future. unicycler.com.—L.C.

Readers Picks: Family
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Bottlerock Lineup Announced—Welcome Back to the ’90s!

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Welcome to Bottlerock, 1999! The Napa music festival announced the lineup for its second annual concert, and it’s full of ‘90s nostalgia. Weezer? LL Cool J? Outkast? Ok, I get those, but Third Eye Blind? Barenaked Ladies? Smash Mouth? That’s where I’m lost. I mean, Smash Mouth actually played at the Sonoma-Marin Fair three times in the past eight years. At least Bottlerock didn’t book Tower of Power and Elvin Bishop (nothing against those excellent groups but they play the fair every year, too). Want more ‘90s? Blues Travelor. De La Soul. Spin Doctors. Gin Blossoms. Camper Van Beethoven. Oh, how I wish I were making this up.
The Cure is also headlining, as is Heart. So there’s some ‘80s love being spread around, too. But these old-school bands are being placed alongside hip, young acts like Robert Delong, Empires and Deerhunter. Shoutout to Moonalice for representing the North Bay, maybe they’ll challenge Matisyahu, Sublime with Rome and Tea Leaf Green for the most smoke-filled stage. Oh, and country star Eric Church is the other big name, here. Robert Earl Keen is also playing. Diverse, indeed.
There’s still “more to come,” but I can’t imagine any huge names being announced. Spread out over three days, this will make for an interesting concert. Three-day passes are $249, and will rise to $279 soon. Single-day tickets are not yet on sale, but when they were available last week (at a discounted Napa residents price), they were $129.
As for this little gem, you’re welcome.

The full lineup, mostly for SEO purposes:
The Cure
Outkast
Eric Church
Barenaked Ladies
Ben Sollee
Blues Traveler
Camper Van Beethoven
Cracker
De La Soul
Deerhunter
Delta Rae
Ed Kowalczyk
Empires
Gin Blossoms
Heart
Howie Day
Hurray For The Riff Raff
James Otto
Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe
Keep Shelly In Athens
LL Cool J
Matisyahu
Matt and Kim
Miner
Moon Taxi
Moonalice
Robert DeLong
Robert Earl Keen
Smash Mouth
Spin Doctors
Sublime with Rome
Tea Leaf Green
The Black Angels
The Fray
The Stone Foxes
Thee Oh Sees
Third Eye Blind
Victory
Weezer

Letters to the Editor: March 12, 2014

Where Do
They Go?

What I find difficult to understand is, if there are no prisons (“Imagine No Prisons,” March 5), then what do we do with all of the thousands of people who commit serious, violent crimes each year? Are they just scolded and set free to go back out on the streets and repeat their crimes? Just let them be and go back out and continue to kill, rape, pillage and steal? I am confused about Steve Martinot’s position on this.

Novato

Bee Correct

Thank you for giving the honeybees some attention (“Bees Here Now,”
Feb. 26). The article, on the whole, was very good. There were some errors I would like to see corrected.

It is not true that “without the honeybee, we’d be eating a diet, basically, of oat gruel.” Many things are pollinated by wind and other insects. We would see a limited amount of some of our favorite fruits and vegetables, that is true. For example, walnuts and grapes are wind-pollinated. Bumblebees are the insects that pollinate tomatoes.

If a mouse should enter a beehive and die in it, the bees would encase the dead mouse in propolis, not wax. Propolis is a wonderful substance the bees gather from the sap of trees on their back legs. It is a great sanitizer, and also works as weather stripping for the hive.

The queen is surrounded by the females who feed her and groom her all day and night. The males are not part of the queen’s helpers. They are called drones and do nothing but mate with her, as the author correctly states later.

The Sonoma County Beekeepers’ Association meets monthly, not bimonthly. I was sorry you did not include the association’s web site in the article, as it has a lot of good information about bees and even has an extensive list of plants that are beneficial to their survival. The website is www.sonomabees.org.

Petaluma

Waiting for
the Worms

Appreciated your article on bees (“Bees Here Now,” Feb. 26), with some hopeful signs. However, I’ve been wondering about a possible decline in earthworms. Years ago I remember seeing hundreds of them all over this area after a good rain, not so much in the past few years. I’ve not found anything on the internet on the subject.

Santa Rosa

Participatory Democracy

I appreciate a fellow Democrat’s point (Open Mic, March 5), but nothing changes the fact that in this case a vote for the Farm Bill was in fact a vote to cut SNAP. Yes, “balance and tough decisions need to be made,” and sure, you can dismiss criticism of the yes vote as arm-chair quarterbacking if you like. I would call it participatory democracy: holding our representatives accountable for their votes (or lack thereof). Everyone in the House voting on this bill had to make those tough decisions referred to. Yet George Miller, Henry Waxman, Barbara Lee, Anna Eschoo, Maxine Waters and a host of other Democrats voted against the bill, with many of them having gone on record about the SNAP cuts being a primary factor for the direction of their vote.

Standing against SNAP cuts was always a principled stand to vote against budget cuts made on the backs of the poorest one quarter of us who need that extra $90 a month in benefits.

Like Alice Chan, I would have preferred Huffman’s vote go in the other direction. We’re accustomed to principled leadership in this district from Woolsey and Boxer; it remains to be seen if we’re getting comparable representation these days. Being somewhat familiar with Alice Chan, I have no doubt that she did make her feelings known to Rep. Huffman prior to arm-chair quarterbacking.

Via online

Dept. of Corrections

In our recent “Hive Minders” cover story (Feb. 26), the name of Katia Vincent, co-owner of Beekind in Sebastopol, was misspelled. We regret the error.

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

The Repurposed-Driven Life

0

The Japanese have a tradition of repairing broken pots with a lacquer resin laced with gold, a process called kintsugi. Repairing the pot this way emphasizes the flaw and is considered to enhance its beauty and value. Indeed, sometimes the old, weathered and seasoned can be more beautiful than the new.

According to the state’s official website, Californians generate over 50 million tons of waste each year. Much of that “waste” is made up of wood, metal, glass and other materials that could, like a cracked Japanese pot, be repaired, reused and repurposed. Living as we are in a “use it and throw it away” society, it’s easy to grow complacent about what we toss in the trash. But some in Sonoma County are working to reverse this trend.

Sonoma County artist and designer Seth Richardson is part of a vanguard of creative thinkers who are re-envisioning notions of disposability. After years in the construction industry, he now creates furniture and home accents from reclaimed items.

“I don’t like seeing good material go into landfills,” says Richardson, who frequently scours junkyards and landfills to find material for his creations. “I like to find things that have a story, then help those things retell their story, but with a happy ending.”

In 2011 Richardson started Functional Art, Incorporated, and began putting his vision into practice. His work can be seen mostly in homes, offices, restaurants and tasting rooms. Located on Industrial Drive in Santa Rosa, Functional Art is the only business in the district creating original pieces.

Every turn in his studio reveals another surprise. Recently, Richardson built a set of picnic tables using wood rescued from a set of bleachers at a Kansas City high school. Other pieces include lighted wall sconces fashioned from recycled oak barrel staves and a stunning three-dimensional wall sculpture made up of beach rocks and reclaimed seasoned wood.

“I don’t always plan before beginning a project,” says Richardson. “I take existing items and ask myself, what could I do with this—what could this become?”

Sebastopol artist and craftsman Chris Lely and his partner Nick Howard recently started a company, Lely-Howard, creating unique furniture from castoffs, including one-of-a-kind custom tables using old-growth Douglas fir from a recently demolished building in downtown Petaluma. “We love the idea of repurposing,” says Lely. “The old lumber has great character and beauty.”

Lely began crafting furniture when work in the construction business fell off due to the lagging economy. “Suddenly, no one was hiring,” he says. “I began finding things that were lying around and turning them into something else. There’s a real market for this. Lots of people are looking for the industrial, reclaimed look. We use lumber, old carts or metal wheels and make something new and unique. It’s not just something to look at; it’s something you can use.”

This trend toward making and buying items made from repurposed materials has also spurred some businesses to warehouse and supply these materials to craftsmen and DIY-ers. Joel Fox owns and operates one of these businesses, Beyond Waste, in Cotati.

“We take reclaimed Douglas fir and redwood and turn it into flooring and wainscoting,” says Fox. “We were doing salvage work and deconstruction. At the time, there weren’t many people repairing or reclaiming materials. But when we began custom-milling beautiful flooring from salvaged wood, we couldn’t make it fast enough. Our customers love the character and the flaws in the wood.”

Even the Sonoma County Probation Camp, which runs a 24-bed facility for young men ages 16 to 18, has gotten onboard the recycling train. There, the crews learn carpentry and welding by creating benches, picnic tables and fire rings from reclaimed wood and metal, which is then offered for sale to the public and California’s state parks.

“Sometimes,” says Richardson. “I think of that old wedding rhyme—something old, something new, something borrowed . . .” He laughs, adding, “I guess the ‘something blue’ part is how I feel when I let a piece go to its new home.”

Local activist Lauren Shalaby is making plans with Richardson to create a nonprofit in alignment with Functional Art, which will teach at-risk youth how to work with repurposed materials.

“We throw so much away,” says Shalaby, “and much of it goes into landfills or to foreign countries, where they recycle it and sell it back to us. Our plan is to come up with ways to keep those resources here while teaching a new generation about conservation and recycling. Children will have the opportunity to learn craft skills, art, welding, design and carpentry, and see their efforts actually being used in their community. We want to teach kids that they can impart new life to old things.

“We want to build a bridge between the way things are and the way they can be.”

Wines of March

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The ides of March may be upon us, but they aren’t going anywhere until you head to a couple of area culinary events this week, in Napa and Sonoma counties.

The 2014 Savor Sonoma Valley, held over the weekend of March 15–16, will feature the wares of 26 wineries from the region, all of whom offer 2013 vintages straight from the barrel.

The event, sponsored by Heart of Sonoma Valley Winery Association, promises a Sauvignon-to-nuts experience. You can meet winemakers, drink their wine, check out local art and local music, and enjoy dishes from local restaurants paired with an appropriate wine.

A few of the vineyards that’ll be representin’: Arrowood, Benziger, Pangloss Cellars, Talisman Wines and others. Savor Sonoma Valley is also offering a bunch of cool promotions and deals for the event—go to WineCountry.com

A weekend pass to Savor Sonoma will run you $65. Designated drivers can roll for $20. A Sunday-only deal will set you back $50 (the designated driver pays $10 for a Sunday-only pass).

Meanwhile, over in Yountville, there’s another great drinks-‘n’-food-focused weekend event. The Taste of Yountville takes place March 14–16, and is essentially a three-day street fair with tasting menus and microbrews on offer, not to mention wines from dozens of Napa Valley vineyards. Tasting tickets cost $1 each and, at past events, have been redeemable for food at such places as Bouchon Bakery, Bottega, Hurley’s Restaurant and wine at Cliff Lede, Domaine Chandon and others.

The event schedule includes a “Taste of Yountville” passport program—get your passport stamped five times, and you’ll be in the running to win some top-notch swag from participating Yountville businesses.

On Friday, 5–7pm, the Yountville Community Center will host an artist reception featuring wine and small bites, and art. That’s a $10 ticket. The rolling Saturday street party is free to attend, with $1 tasting tickets and the aforementioned “passport.” There’s art for sale all day Saturday and Sunday at the Community Center, and a bunch of chef demonstrations and garden tours, too.

Readers Picks: Culture

Best Art Gallery Marin Gallery Route One 11101 Hwy. 1, Ste. 101, Pt. Reyes Station. 415.663.1347. Napa Slack Art Collective 964 Pearl St., Ste. B., Napa. 707.344.7133 Sonoma Sebastopol Gallery 150 N. Main St., Sebastopol. 707.829.7200. Honorable Mention Sebastopol Center for the Arts 282 S. High St., Sebastopol. 707.829.4797. Best Museum Marin Bolinas Museum 48 Wharf Road, Bolinas. 415.868.0330. Napa Napa Valley Museum 55 President's Circle, Yountville. 707.944.0500. Sonoma Charles M. Schulz Museum 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa. 707.579.4452. Honorable Mention Sonoma County Museum 425 Seventh St., Santa Rosa. 707.579.1500. Best Outdoor...

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Bottlerock Lineup Announced—Welcome Back to the ’90s!

Welcome to Bottlerock, 1999! The Napa music festival announced the lineup for its second annual concert, and it’s full of ‘90s nostalgia. Weezer? LL Cool J? Outkast? Ok, I get those, but Third Eye Blind? Barenaked Ladies? Smash Mouth? That’s where I’m lost. I mean, Smash Mouth actually played at the Sonoma-Marin Fair three times in the past eight...

Letters to the Editor: March 12, 2014

Where Do They Go? What I find difficult to understand is, if there are no prisons ("Imagine No Prisons," March 5), then what do we do with all of the thousands of people who commit serious, violent crimes each year? Are they just scolded and set free to go back out on the streets and repeat their crimes? Just let...

The Repurposed-Driven Life

The Japanese have a tradition of repairing broken pots with a lacquer resin laced with gold, a process called kintsugi. Repairing the pot this way emphasizes the flaw and is considered to enhance its beauty and value. Indeed, sometimes the old, weathered and seasoned can be more beautiful than the new. According to the state's official website, Californians generate over...

Wines of March

The ides of March may be upon us, but they aren't going anywhere until you head to a couple of area culinary events this week, in Napa and Sonoma counties. The 2014 Savor Sonoma Valley, held over the weekend of March 15–16, will feature the wares of 26 wineries from the region, all of whom offer 2013 vintages straight from...
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