Your Letters, June 26

Say It, Don’t Spray It

Bravo John Brogan’s demand to abolish graffiti. It defaces property and is disgusting to look at; its messages are indecipherable, meaningless and therefore stupid. Its presence signals that neighborhoods are in inexorable decline—not only the property, but the people suffering from its presence as well.

Worse, when we all just accept this blight it only creates more. The moment you see it in your neighborhood immediately get your spray can and paint it out. We may not “get” the graffiti message, but they’ll sure get ours.

Rex Allen

Via PacificSun.com

Spare Change

In many walks of life, abject failure brings about reassessment, recovery, revision, restructuring and renewal. We’ve seen this process take place in science, business, medicine, engineering and even religion, all throughout history.

It seems to have escaped us in politics and government, two related endeavors that may be the most change-averse of all.

In the U.S., in the coming election, we are faced with the most dreadful choice in my lifetime of 73 years: Two men completely unqualified to play the role they seek, despite the fact that both have played the role before.

The glaring weakness, this hideous scenario, must be removed and replaced if we are to remain the world’s leading democracy. It must not happen again.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Corrections Dept.

In last week’s article “Spanning Time” (June 19, 2024), author Molly Giles was erroneously said to be married. She is not. We regret the error.

Tributes, TacoFest and More

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Sonoma County

SoCo Library Teen Film Fest

Amateur filmmakers can now submit their films to the Sonoma County Library’s fourth annual Teen Film Festival through July 31. Sonoma County residents ages 12 to 19 can submit an original film up to six minutes long. Entrants will be grouped into three age categories: 12 to 13 years old, 14 to 16 years old and 17 to 19 years old. The director of the top film in each age group will receive a $100 gift card. Sonoma County Library teen services librarians will serve as film judges. Winning films will be shown at the Teen Film Festival Premiere on Aug. 28 at 6:30pm at the Rohnert Park-Cotati Regional Library and also be posted to the library’s YouTube channel in August. This event is open to all. Aspiring teen filmmakers can check out camera equipment free of charge through the library’s E Street Studios, located at the Central Santa Rosa branch. Teens seeking more information on festival submission guidelines should visit a library branch or go online to the Teenspace blog at sonomalibrary.org.

Napa

‘M is for Water’

Di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art is pleased to present “M is for Water,” a group exhibition guest-curated by artist Isabelle Sorrell. The exhibition features works by Shiva Ahmadi, Mari Andrews, Mildred Howard, Paul Kos, Hung Liu, Cheryl Meeker, Susan Middleton, Gay Outlaw, J. John Priola, Isabelle Sorrell, Theodora Varnay Jones and Wanxin Zhang. “M is for Water” will be on view from June 29 to Oct. 6 in di Rosa’s Gallery 1. An Opening Reception on Saturday, June 29, will welcome di Rosa patrons at 5:30pm, and the public from 6-7pm. Public reception is $10 general admission, free for di Rosa members. “M is for Water” is the latest in a series of exhibitions curated by Sorrell exploring the origins of language and its relation to human consciousness. Di Rosa will host an Artist Panel Discussion on Saturday, July 13, from 2-3:30pm. $25 general admission includes gallery admission; free for members. Located at 5200 Sonoma Hwy, Napa. dirosaart.org.

Windsor

TacoFest

Bring the family to the third annual Windsor Taco Fest & Lowrider Car Show from 4-8pm, Saturday, July 13, on the Windsor Town Green—no advance tickets needed this year. Tacos will be available for purchase from various local food trucks and restaurants, accepting cash or credit. See which tacos win the hearts of our panel of local celebrity chefs! Adults can enjoy beer and wine, while there will be plenty of nonalcoholic beverages for the kids. Some 100 lowrider cars from across the North Bay Area will be parked around Windsor’s Town Green and entered in a juried auto show. Come see classic cars turned into shiny works of cultural art. Bring your own low-backed beach or camp chair to set up on the Green and enjoy free music from the ranchero band Los Compas De Turicato Michoacan. There will be free children’s activities and an arts-and-crafts market featuring the work of local artisans. For more details about TacoFest, Somos Windsor or other Somos Windsor events, visit somoswindsor.org.

Nicasio

Parsons/Harris Tribute

A rare collection of Bay Area country music giants will gather to celebrate the architects of country rock and Americana music—Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris. Performers include Jill Rogers and Myles Boisen (Crying Time), Loralee Christensen and Paul Olguin (the Loralee Combo), Doug Jayne (Laughing Gravy), and Candy Girard and Kevin Russell (the Familiar Strangers). Sean Allen, Dave Zirbel and Tim Gahagan will also perform. The genre definition “country rock” was virtually unknown until Village Voice critic Richard Goldstein mentioned it in a 1968 article titled “Country Rock: Can Y’All Dig It?” Well, can you? The show commences at 7:30pm Friday, June 28, at Rancho Nicasio,1 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio. Tickets are $30.

Free Will Astrology: Week of June 26

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): This may sound weird, but I think now is a perfect time to acquire a fresh problem. Not just any old boring problem, of course. Rather, I’m hoping you will carefully ponder what kind of dilemma would be most educational for you—which riddle might challenge you to grow in ways you need to. Here’s another reason you should be proactive about hunting down a juicy challenge: Doing so will ensure that you won’t attract mediocre, meaningless problems.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Now is an excellent time to start learning a new language or to increase your proficiency in your native tongue. Or both. It’s also a favorable phase to enrich your communication skills and acquire resources that will help you do that. Would you like to enhance your ability to cultivate friendships and influence people? Are you interested in becoming more persuasive, articulate and expressive? If so, Taurus, attend to these self-improvement tasks with graceful intensity. Life will conspire benevolently on your behalf if you do. (PS: I’m not implying you’re weak in any of these departments; just that now is a favorable time to boost your capacities.)

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Barbara Sher and Barbara Smith wrote the book I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was: How to Discover What You Really Want and How to Get It. I invite you to think and feel deeply about this theme during the coming months. In my experience with Geminis, you are often so versatile and multi-faceted that it can be challenging to focus on just one or two of your various callings. And that may confuse your ability to know what you want more than anything else. But here’s the good news. You may soon enjoy a grace period when you feel really good about devoting yourself to one goal more than any other.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): You are entering a phase when you will be wise to question fixed patterns and shed age-old habits. The more excited you get about re-evaluating everything you know and believe, the more likely it is that exciting new possibilities will open up for you. If you are staunchly committed to resolving longstanding confusions and instigating fresh approaches, you will launch an epic chapter of your life story. Wow! That sounds dramatic. But it’s quite factual. Here’s the kicker: You’re now in prime position to get vivid glimpses of specific successes you can accomplish between now and your birthday in 2025.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): How many different ways can you think of to ripen your spiritual wisdom? I suggest you choose two and pursue them with gleeful vigor in the coming weeks. You are primed to come into contact with streams of divine revelations that can change your life for the better. All the conditions are favorable for you to encounter teachings that will ennoble your soul and hone your highest ideals. Don’t underestimate your power to get the precise enlightenment you need.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Border collies are dogs with a herding instinct. Their urges to usher, steer and manage are strong. They will not only round up sheep and cattle, but also pigs, chickens and ostriches—and even try to herd cats. In my estimation, Virgo, border collies are your spirit creatures these days. You have a special inclination and talent to be a good shepherd. So use your aptitude with flair. Provide extra navigational help for people and animals who would benefit from your nurturing guidance. And remember to do the same for your own wayward impulses!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): We have arrived at the midpoint of 2024. It’s check-in time. Do you recall the promises you made to yourself last January? Are you about halfway into the frontier you vowed to explore? What inspirational measures could you instigate to renew your energy and motivation for the two most important goals in your life? What would you identify as the main obstacle to your blissful success, and how could you diminish it? If you’d like to refresh your memory of the long-term predictions I made for your destiny in 2024, go here: tinyurl.com/Libra2024. For 2023’s big-picture prophecies, go here: tinyurl.com/2023Libra.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio-born Gary Hug was educated as a machinist and food scientist, but for many years he has worked primarily as an amateur astronomer. Using a seven-foot telescope he built in the backyard of his home, he has discovered a comet and 300 asteroids, including two that may come hazardously close to Earth. Extolling the joys of being an amateur, he says he enjoys “a sense of freedom that you don’t have when you’re a professional.” In the coming weeks, Scorpio, I encourage you to explore and experiment with the joys of tasks done out of joy rather than duty. Identify the work and play that feel liberating and indulge in them lavishly.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your power spots will be places that no one has visited or looked into for a while. Sexy secrets and missing information will be revealed to you as you nose around in situations where you supposedly should not investigate. The light at the end of the tunnel is likely to appear well before you imagined it would. Your lucky number is 8, your lucky color is black and your lucky emotion is the surprise of discovery. My advice: Call on your memory to serve you in amazing ways; use it as a superpower.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Happy Unbirthday, Capricorn! It’s time to celebrate the season halfway between your last birthday and your next. I hope you will give yourself a fun gift every day for at least the next seven days. Fourteen days would be even better. See if you can coax friends and allies to also shower you with amusing blessings. Tell them your astrologer said that would be a very good idea. Now here’s an unbirthday favor from me: I promise that between now and January 2025, you will create healing changes in your relationship with your job and with work in general.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): While sleeping, my Aquarian friend Janelle dreamed that she and her family lived in a cabin in the woods. When dusk was falling, a strange animal put its face against the main window. Was it a bear? A mountain lion? Her family freaked out and hid in a back bedroom. But Janelle stayed to investigate. Looking closely, she saw the creature was a deer. She opened up the window and spoke to it, saying, “What can I do for you?” The deer, who was a talking deer, said, “I want to give you and your family a gift. See this necklace I’m wearing? It has a magic ruby that will heal a health problem for everyone who touches it.” Janelle managed to remove the necklace, whereupon the deer wandered away and she woke up from the dream. During subsequent weeks, welcome changes occurred in her waking life. She and three of her family members lost physical ailments that had been bothering them. I think this dream is a true fairy tale for you in the coming weeks, Aquarius.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A psychologist friend tells me that if we have an intense craving for sugar, it may be a sign that deeper emotional needs are going unmet. I see merit in her theory. But here’s a caveat. What if we are currently not in position to get our deeper emotional needs met? What if there is at least temporarily some barrier to achieving that lovely goal? Would it be wrong to seek a partial quenching of our soul cravings by communing with fudge brownies, peach pie and crème brûlée? I don’t think it would be wrong. On the contrary. It might be an effective way to tide ourselves over until more profound gratification is available. But now here’s the good news, Pisces: I suspect more profound gratification will be available sooner than you imagine.

Homework: Take a vow that you will ethically do everything necessary to fulfill your most important goal. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

The Most Expensive Listings in Sonoma County, California

Sponsored content by TOMO Real Estate

When you think of Sonoma County, in Northern California, you think of sprawling hills, vineyards, relaxing spas and acclaimed food. Located just 30 miles north of San Francisco, there are more than 425 wineries, amazing hiking trails through the redwoods, and beautiful homes along the Pacific Coast. Unfortunately, the cost of living isn’t cheap. 

According to the Council for Community and Economic Research, the cost of living in Sonoma County is 52 percent higher than the national average. But typically it is more likely that you’re moving here from elsewhere in California and compared to the rest of California, the cost of living in Sonoma County is fractionally lower than the California average. Fractionally is the key word since things are still expensive here. Forbes magazine rates California as having the nation’s third-highest living costs behind Hawaii and Massachusetts. So it’s no wonder Sonoma Country has some of the most expensive homes in the country. 

We at Tomo, a real estate and mortgage company, wanted to know just how expensive, so we looked at the most recent homes on the market, and came up with this quick list of the 5 most expensive homes in Sonoma County. And, no, that is not a typo for the first home on our list—the sale price is $32.5 million, but what you get is beyond your wildest dreams. 

Here is Tomo’s List of the 5 most expensive listings in Sonoma County, CA:

AddressSale PriceSquare FeetAcres
7596 Sonoma Mountain Rd, Glen Ellen$32,500,00013,989156
2025 Redwood Hill Rd, Santa Rosa$10,900,0006,62257.29
20600 Broadway, Sonoma$8,850,0004,5344.0
1315 5th St E, Sonoma$7,800,0004,5972.2
97 Stone Crop Rch, The Sea Ranch$6,995,0004,650.94

Interested in other Real Estate Trends? 

Check out more real estate trend stories in Tomo’s series: 5 Places to Buy a Victorian Home, 12 Places to Buy a Beach House in Connecticut, or Best Cities for Flipping Houses. Looking for a home with more of a reasonable budget—see all our homes for sale in Sonoma County.

‘Kinky Boots’ struts at 6th Street

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April is the cruelest month is the opening line to T. S. Eliot’s 1922 poem, The Waste Land. But June has been no picnic for the North Bay theater community either. Transportation issues marred the opening of the Mountain Play while bouts of illness plagued other productions.

Napa’s Lucky Penny had to utilize an actor with script in hand for one of The Real Housewives of Napa Valley with a medical emergency. Sonoma Arts Live lost their entire opening weekend of Lend Me a Tenor after several cast members took ill, while Santa Rosa’s 6th Street Playhouse canceled the opening night performance of Kinky Boots to give their understudies a go at a run after illness took out a number of their players.

But, as either British actor Edmund Kean or circus impresario P.T. Barnum said, “The show must go on!” And so it shall for 6th Street’s production of Kinky Boots. The Cyndi Lauper/Harvey Fierstein musical runs in the GK Hardt Theater through July 7. 

The story of a struggling, English family-owned shoe manufacturer and its unique solution to avoid closure was first told in a 1999 BBC television documentary. That broadcast inspired a “mostly true” film adaptation in 2005, and that film inspired the 2013 multi-Tony-Award-winning Broadway musical.  

Charlie Price (Noah Vondralee-Sternhill) has been avoiding the family shoe business for years, but the death of his father finds him back at the factory and dealing with the possible shuttering of the company. A chance meeting with drag queen Lola (Jonathen Blue) leads to a discussion about the lack of quality women’s footwear for men.

Then Charlie returns to the factory and begins to lay off his employees. He’s challenged by employee Lauren (Grace Kent) to find an underserved niche market and save the company. Charlie soon puts two and two together and enlists Lola’s help in designing footwear for drag queens.

There are, of course, obstacles to overcome. Charlie’s fiancé, Nicola (Nicole Stanley), wants him out of the shoe biz and in London. Factory workers like uber-macho Don (Skyler King) continually harass Lola. Soon, Charlie is cracking under the pressure.  

It all works out (of course). Soon Charlie, Lola and a cadre of drag queen angels are off to Milan for a make-or-break footwear fashion show and the unveiling of Lola’s Kinky Boots.   

Director Patrick Nims and his creative team have mounted a good production that is still struggling with some cast absences. Vondralee-Sternhill is excellent in the lead and is well-matched with the multi-talented Blue (he’s also the show’s costume/makeup/wig designer).

The bulk of the show takes place in Luca Catanzaro’s nicely-detailed factory set, complete with operating conveyor belts that led to one helluva wardrobe malfunction.  The audience absolutely ate it up. And kudos to performer Maureen O’Neill for singing and dancing (and laughing) her way through it.

Lauper’s joyous and emotional songs are performed to tracks. And while well-performed by all, a live orchestra is sorely missed.

Despite the challenges 6th Street continues to face in mounting Kinky Boots, the production holds up pretty well. Only a heel without a sole would think otherwise. 

‘Kinky Boots’ runs through July 7 in the GK Hardt Theatre at 6th Street Playhouse, 52 W. 6th St., Santa Rosa. Thur.-Sat., 7:30pm; Sat & Sun, 2pm. $29–$51. 707.523.4185. 6thstreetplayhouse.com.

Multi-Media Creator Space Walker

In this season of butterflies, Space Walker has chosen “emergence” as the theme of our brief encounter. For four years—antedating the quarantine by just two weeks—Walker lived at the Isis Oasis temple of the divine fem in Geyserville.

There, she was cocooned in self-healing and creative transformation, drawing on the energy of the land and the inspiration of the temple. Space Walker emerges into the North Bay with two new albums of music, a ready show of paintings, a new oracle deck and an array of “high vibe” crafts. She’s ready to fly.

CH: Space, the art that you have created completes a high-vibe lifestyle set or, alternately, a space world. I would call that vibe joy. You are one of the most joyous people I know. Tell us about joy.

SW: Joy keeps me alive! It’s a choice. It’s our true nature. I do my best to share this gift.

CH: Tell us about your music.

SW: I’m a genre-fluid musician. The style of each song reflects the feeling it’s supposed to invite. My main influences are nature, neo soul, hip-hop, house, funk, punk and jazz. What started as a diary became an open love letter to my ideal world.

CH: What are your next gigs?

SW: June 20 at Golden Bear in Sacramento. June 22 at Elephant in the Room in Healdsburg. June 23 at Cliff’s Variety San Francisco. June 29 with Black Yacht Club at The Jacquelyn in Sacramento. Aug. 4 at Barrell Proof Lounge in Santa Rosa. I’m available for bookings too! I play a variety of styles and love to host and vend.

CH: Tell us about the oracle deck you have divined. I believe it’s called BDE?

SW: Beneficial Divine Evolution appeared to me via meditation, writing without judgment and divine bravery. The accuracy and relatability amazes me. Cosmic poetry and affirmations. Seventy-eight cards inspired by our chakras and the many paths in life. You can find BDE on Etsy (BlackStarBotanica) or find me at Strange Constellation’s Juneteenth Celebration in Santa Rosa.

CH: In addition to oracle readings and reiki healings, are you hosting a rock star charisma camp?

SW: StarPower 101 helps tap into each individual’s unique talents and presence. I also teach live looping. Private lessons and workshop bookings are welcome!

Learn more: Space Walker can be reached for bookings at cr***************@***il.com or through her Instagram, @spacewalker92, where one can reach portals to her dance and music and joyous vision.

Thanks for Your Service

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The decision made by the former president’s defense team members to relieve him of the burden of testifying in his own defense is a real surprise.

If there is one thing that has defined his life in private business and public life, it is his devotion to truth, justice and the relentless pursuit of American democratic ideals.

When he was offered the opportunity to serve his country during the Vietnam War, for example, he tearfully admitted to lifelong suffering from painful and debilitating bone spurs in his feet. He accepted an appointment to the Nixon cabinet as a bartender to serve the country on those spongy mats.

And when he was invited to take part in Desert Storm, the campaign carried out by ground forces from the U.S. and allies in Kuwait and Iraq, he begged off, but offered free golf lessons to senior officers stationed in Qsar.

In March of 2003, in the initial invasion of Iraq, his crack hospitality team took over the Baghdad Ritz Carlton. It served fresh-baked oatmeal raisin and chocolate chip cookies, as well as 2% milk to troops returning from maneuvers in the evening.

That incredible gesture by itself reduced incidents of PTSD by more than 27% due to the homey, comfort food experiences our men and women enjoyed after a hard day of brutal combat in an inhospitable foreign land.

Perhaps the former president is not widely identified as a true American hero by some. Still, given the dangers and logistical nightmares involved, he has served his country in ways none of us can even imagine.

It’s just too bad he didn’t personally and publicly add to the historical record of his achievements in court, which would bring clarity to an unfortunate entanglement with an unpatriotic and unsympathetic adult film star before the election in 2016.

Craig J. Corsini sends satirical missives from a bunker in San Rafael.

Your Letters, June 19

American Graffiti

In response to “Street Art Legend: The Velvet Bandit” glorification of graffiti (June 12 Bohemian), graffiti is vandalism when it is done without permission on public or private property. Graffiti is a form of defacement or destruction of public or someone else’s property, which shows a lack of respect for the community and the rights of property owners.

There are huge public costs associated with graffiti: An estimated $12 billion a year is spent cleaning up graffiti in the United States. Graffiti removal generates pollutants that are harmful to human health and the environment.

Please stop, for the sake of the environment and the taxpayer’s cost for removing graffiti from public property, The Velvet Bandit and all other graffiti vandals. Thank you.

John Brogan

Sonoma

Serial Box

Nikki Silververstein’s delightful cover story regarding the lasting impact of author Cyra McFadden and “The Serial” (May 22 Pacific Sun) left out one notable instance of that impact, which appeared to reach presidential levels in 2002 when ex-President George H. W. Bush described a former Mill Valley resident who joined the Taliban as a “misguided Marin County hot-tubber.” (Bush later apologized wryly after Marin residents objected.)

James Holmes

Larkspur

Block Parties and Art Galas

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Expression Ball

Join art, fashion, food and wine lovers for an evening under the stars at the Expression Ball, a fundraising gala to benefit the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art in Napa. Hosted by honorary co-chairs Christian Cowan and Jock McDonald, the event takes place on Saturday, June 22. At the fusion of imagination, art and nature amidst di Rosa’s galleries and sculpture gardens, revelers are encouraged to dress to impress, from flamboyant to funky. The evening begins at 5:30pm with a red-carpet arrival, followed by a culinary palette from top Sonoma-Napa chefs and wineries. A live auction will also feature unique works by artists like Francis Collins and Gordon Heuther, plus exclusive experiences like a VIP New York Fashion Week and a harvest dinner at Opus One Winery. Details and tickets at dirosaart.org/expression-ball.

Santa Rosa

Block Party

Santa Rosa Urban Arts Partnership is establishing a new summer tradition with the opening of its West End Block Party and Summer Market beginning Sunday, June 30, from 11am to 3pm, and running the last Sunday of each month through September. Food vendors for the inaugural occasion include the Tri Tip Trolley, Good Vibes Lemonade and the Brunch Boys. Crafters in attendance range from Kim Dow Made This to the Blackout Rage Room, Stafford Makes, Serpent & Bow, Creative Crayons and Crafts, Beachmix, Sonoma Sauces, White Warrior Studios, Studio Dejavoo and Savvycakes Studios. The Joy Riot Hoop Clowns keep the atmosphere light, and Bourbon Street Brass Band and Parson Jones share the tunes. Bikeable Santa Rosa will be on hand with great bicycle resources to get one out on two wheels in the most fun and safe way possible. West End Block Party and Summer Market, 11am to 3pm, the last Sunday of every month starting June 30, at 819 Donahue St., Santa Rosa. More information at srurbanarts.org.

Napa

Wine & Song

Summer weekdays at the Cuvaison 3rd Annual Summer Music Series feature live music every Thursday evening through Sept. 26. Music and wine fans are invited to partake in an idyllic sunset view from the Cuvaison winery patio and tasting salon, accompanied by celebrated local musicians (Nick Foxer, Chance McCauley, Courtney Kelly, Smorgy, Jason Morvich and Vincent Costanza among them) and a glass of wine handcrafted from the vineyards. Thursday evenings throughout the summer from 4 to 7pm at Cuvaison Estate Tasting Room, 1221 Duhig Rd., Napa. Tickets are $35 and include the aforementioned glass of wine. For more information, visit cuvaison.com/winery-events.

Mill Valley

Asher Belsky

Catch guitar prodigy, songwriter and vocalist Asher Belsky at Sweetwater Music Hall from 8 to 11pm, Friday, June 28. Endorsed by Gibson Guitars and an inaugural member of the Gibson Generation Group, Belsky will perform his original music, with roots in rock and R&B. The evening will kick off with singer-songwriter Rachel Barton opening the show. In addition to leading his own band, Belsky has performed alongside Michael Franti & Spearhead, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels (Run DMC), the Marcus King Band, Isaiah Sharkey, MC Hammer, ALO and Maurice “Mobetta” Brown, among other luminaries. Sweetwater Music Hall is located at 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. Tickets range from $17 to $22. Get tickets at sweetwatermusichall.com.

Chinook Salmon in Hot Water

There may not be tumbleweed blowing through the salty streets of California’s coastal marinas, but the collapse of the state’s Chinook salmon runs has reduced many ports to ghost towns. 

At Bodega Bay, Sausalito and other seaside harbors, fishing boats that once targeted the coveted fish have been idled for almost two years after officials determined there are not enough salmon off the California coast to support harvest.  

Once abundant, Chinook have been devastated by habitat loss, water diversions from the rivers where they spawn and drought. They are trending toward extinction. And while recovery is a possibility, it will be an upstream push. The salmon need improved spawning grounds and more floodplain nursery habitat. 

They also need more cold water. And in 2023 and 2024, both exceptionally wet years, they got it—until, that is, they didn’t. Water temperatures in the middle Sacramento River soared to lethal levels this spring, exceeding basic environmental objectives and threatening salmon born last summer and fall. 

With no agency taking firm ownership of the problem, the mishap raises the question of who’s at the wheel in managing the state’s reservoirs and rivers for fish and who’s to be held accountable if salmon disappear.

The temperature troubles can be traced upstream to Shasta Dam, which creates California’s largest reservoir. The lake is almost full – typically a great boon for fish downstream. However, Lake Shasta is also unusually warm this year, according to local irrigation districts, which say this has produced similar temperature profiles downstream of the dam. 

Fishery advocates frame the story differently. They say the warm water spike in May was an avoidable outcome of water management decisions, and they’re blaming officials for prioritizing human water supply over basic environmental needs.  

“It’s a violation of state law, and they know they’re doing it,” said Tom Cannon, a retired fisheries ecologist and consultant. 

He says the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, with the approval of state regulators, released so much of Lake Shasta’s water through the spring to Sacramento Valley farmers that keeping water cool enough to protect migrating salmon smolts, then ocean-bound, became impossible. 

Environmentalists also accuse the State Water Resources Control Board—the top water referee in the state—of setting weak temperature standards in the first place and failing to enforce them. If this continues, they say, the fish may never recover. 

“They are managing salmon to extinction,” said Tom Stokely, a water policy consultant for the group Save California Salmon.  

Through the spring, the Bureau of Reclamation released several heavy bursts of water from Lake Shasta to help salmon born last summer and fall migrate downstream. These so-called “pulse flows”—recommended by federal endangered species rules—first exit Shasta Dam, then run through a smaller facility called Keswick Dam, and finally course through miles of meandering river channel. 

But between pulse flows, the river has dropped dramatically. During such lulls, water temperatures predictably jump. In mid-May, a gauge at a site called Wilkins Slough registered 72 degrees Fahrenheit—surpassing a state limit of 68. Such warm water is dangerous for small salmon, making them sluggish and predator fish more active. 

Fishery advocates say the 68-degree objective, ordained by the state water board’s “Basin Plan,” could have been achieved without disruption if the Bureau of Reclamation had slightly reduced water allocations to valley farmers. 

But the Bureau of Reclamation—which operates Keswick—claims no responsibility.

“Reclamation does not manage Keswick Dam releases for water temperatures at Wilkins Slough,” a staff member explained in an email. He elaborated that water outflow from the dam is used to meet water supply demands and keep salty ocean water at bay, away from the major pumping stations in the southern Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. 

These facilities, which send water to millions of people and vast farming regions, were the site of another recent controversy when the pumps exceeded “take” limits on protected winter-run Chinook and steelhead trout. In spite of complaints that thousands had been sucked to their deaths, the Bureau of Reclamation has not entirely mitigated the entrainment. 

This month, the agency reported an “increasing” trend of steelhead found at the pumps. These fish are usually rescued alive, but their presence is an indicator of other fish that were not so lucky.

To Jon Rosenfield, science director with the group San Francisco Baykeeper, such losses in a wet year bode poorly for the species’ futures.

“If they’re making decisions that cut against the fish in 2024, when reservoirs are full and many contractors are receiving full deliveries, is there a year when they won’t harm imperiled fish species?” he said.

Shasta is one of many California dams from which water releases harm fish. Coyote Valley Dam, on the Russian River, is another. 

A court ruling in early May found that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has violated the federal Endangered Species Act for years by releasing muddy water from the bottom of Lake Mendocino, through the dam and into the Russian River. These flood control releases, according to a lawsuit filed in 2022 by private citizen Sean White, cloud the river with silt and sediment and harm the watershed’s salmon and steelhead, all nearly extinct.   

There is, however, good news emerging on the horizon for California’s troubled salmon. The water board recently approved the Bureau of Reclamation’s 2024 Sacramento River temperature management plan. This planning document, which features projections of the reservoir’s stored water and its temperature by depth, shows that water releases will remain cold through the fall, leading to minimal losses of fertilized salmon eggs. This would be a promising turnaround from recent years when most eggs of spawning salmon were killed by temperatures in the mid-to-high 50s.

State and federal water officials are tasked with a tricky balancing act of providing water to people while protecting the environment. In many cases, contractual obligations to deliver water to farmers weigh heavily on the agencies. So do rules meant to protect fish. Both sides take hits when supplies run low.

But the treatment is not always equal, and the agencies often bypass environmental regulations to better supply farms and cities. 

In the wet winter of 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an order allowing the state water board to waive basic environmental flows in the Delta so agencies could store more water in reservoirs. Many similar waivers were made in prior years—often through a regulatory tool called a temporary urgency change petition—allegedly killing millions of fertilized eggs and smolts and possibly precipitating the Chinook’s collapse. 

While 2023 and 2024 are shaping into a decent time for the Central Valley’s salmon, it could have been a great one, owing to the abundant water and snowpack it produced.  

“Mother Nature gave us two good years in a row,” Rosenfield said. “We need to rebuild the population that was decimated during the last few drought years.”

Rosenfield wants to see a systematic increase in average river flows through the Delta, all the way to the ocean. While this would likely benefit struggling species, it’s a divisive idea since it would mean reducing Delta water exports. 

“There are a few groups that always point to the farmers whenever they believe there’s a water need for the fishery,” said Lewis Bair, the general manager of Reclamation District No. 108, which provides water to Sacramento Valley farmers. 

Bair says unusually warm water in Lake Shasta has made it difficult to meet the physiological needs of Chinook salmon, even though the reservoir is nearly full. 

“It’s unheard of to have a reservoir this full and to have this temperature challenge,” he said. 

Climate change and warming trends, Bair said, existentially threaten salmon and steelhead. Saving them, he noted, will require expanding upstream spawning habitat and providing access to cold tributaries currently blocked off by dams. 

Environmentalists tend to agree. But many argue that state policies are just as dangerous as changing climate. Of particular contention is a rule known as Water Right Order 90-5, which sets a 56-degree threshold for spawning salmon in the Sacramento and also the Trinity River, a major Klamath tributary connected to the Sacramento basin by an 11-mile tunnel bored through the Coast Range mountains. 

That 56-degree limit is widely considered to be scientifically outdated and a potential death sentence for salmon eggs. In June, a group of organizations requested that the water board initiate a process of amending the rule by reducing the threshold to 53.5 degrees—what would align with federal endangered species guidelines.

Water board staff told Weeklys in an email that they plan to “assess this issue further” later in the year.  

Stokely isn’t holding his breath. He said he has been encouraging the board to amend the order for years. He and his allies in conservation want them to write in lower temperature limits for both the Sacramento and the Trinity, where coho salmon have recently suffered almost complete spawning failures.

“If they don’t change Water Right Order 90-5, we’re certainly looking at the end of salmon fishing and salmon in general,” Stokely said. “They’re on the road to extinction. They can’t go on like this.”

Your Letters, June 26

Say It, Don’t Spray It Bravo John Brogan’s demand to abolish graffiti. It defaces property and is disgusting to look at; its messages are indecipherable, meaningless and therefore stupid. Its presence signals that neighborhoods are in inexorable decline—not only the property, but the people suffering from its presence as well. Worse, when we all just accept this blight it only creates...

Tributes, TacoFest and More

Sonoma County SoCo Library Teen Film Fest Amateur filmmakers can now submit their films to the Sonoma County Library’s fourth annual Teen Film Festival through July 31. Sonoma County residents ages 12 to 19 can submit an original film up to six minutes long. Entrants will be grouped into three age categories: 12 to 13 years old, 14 to 16 years...

Free Will Astrology: Week of June 26

Free Will Astrology: Week of June 26
ARIES (March 21-April 19): This may sound weird, but I think now is a perfect time to acquire a fresh problem. Not just any old boring problem, of course. Rather, I’m hoping you will carefully ponder what kind of dilemma would be most educational for you—which riddle might challenge you to grow in ways you need to. Here’s another...

The Most Expensive Listings in Sonoma County, California

Drone aerial of California coast with houses in northern California
Sponsored content by TOMO Real Estate When you think of Sonoma County, in Northern California, you think of sprawling hills, vineyards, relaxing spas and acclaimed food. Located just 30 miles north of San Francisco, there are more than 425 wineries, amazing hiking trails through the redwoods, and beautiful homes along the Pacific Coast. Unfortunately, the cost of living isn’t cheap.  According...

‘Kinky Boots’ struts at 6th Street

April is the cruelest month is the opening line to T. S. Eliot’s 1922 poem, The Waste Land. But June has been no picnic for the North Bay theater community either. Transportation issues marred the opening of the Mountain Play while bouts of illness plagued other productions. Napa’s Lucky Penny had to utilize an actor with script in hand for...

Multi-Media Creator Space Walker

In this season of butterflies, Space Walker has chosen “emergence” as the theme of our brief encounter. For four years—antedating the quarantine by just two weeks—Walker lived at the Isis Oasis temple of the divine fem in Geyserville. There, she was cocooned in self-healing and creative transformation, drawing on the energy of the land and the inspiration of the temple....

Thanks for Your Service

The decision made by the former president’s defense team members to relieve him of the burden of testifying in his own defense is a real surprise. If there is one thing that has defined his life in private business and public life, it is his devotion to truth, justice and the relentless pursuit of American democratic ideals. When he was offered...

Your Letters, June 19

American Graffiti In response to “Street Art Legend: The Velvet Bandit” glorification of graffiti (June 12 Bohemian), graffiti is vandalism when it is done without permission on public or private property. Graffiti is a form of defacement or destruction of public or someone else’s property, which shows a lack of respect for the community and the rights of property owners. There...

Block Parties and Art Galas

Expression Ball Join art, fashion, food and wine lovers for an evening under the stars at the Expression Ball, a fundraising gala to benefit the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art in Napa. Hosted by honorary co-chairs Christian Cowan and Jock McDonald, the event takes place on Saturday, June 22. At the fusion of imagination, art and nature amidst di...

Chinook Salmon in Hot Water

There may not be tumbleweed blowing through the salty streets of California’s coastal marinas, but the collapse of the state’s Chinook salmon runs has reduced many ports to ghost towns.  At Bodega Bay, Sausalito and other seaside harbors, fishing boats that once targeted the coveted fish have been idled for almost two years after officials determined there are not enough...
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