High Time for Pride

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Santa Rosa

SoCo Pride

It’s almost Sonoma County Pride time again! This year’s theme is “Heroes, Sheroes and Queeroes.” The 39th annual parade kicks off at 11am on Saturday, June 1, in downtown Santa Rosa. Over 50 festive floats will roll through city streets, followed by a giant Pride festival at Courthouse Square until 5pm. Festival headliners include Kiesza (of “Hideaway” fame), Rêve and Grant Knoche. The dance party will continue into the wee hours at the Flamingo Resort. For details, visit sonomacountypride.org.

San Rafael

LGBTQ+ on Screen

CAFILM announces the launch of Pride Month in the Bay Area with a weekend series at the Smith Rafael Film Center showcasing LGBTQ+ films. The weekend, from June 7 to 9, is curated by MVFF world cinema programmer João Federici. Program highlights include Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, the story behind the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt; Pride, the true story of LGBTQ+ activists supporting striking miners in 1984 Wales; Toll, a tale of a mother entangled in a criminal gang while trying to send her son to a gay conversion therapy program; Tomboy, an exploration of gender identity; and Queer Women’s Stories, a selection of short films celebrating the voices and experiences of queer women, in partnership with Frameline. In partnership with the National AIDS Memorial Grove, a 12×12 foot section of the iconic AIDS Memorial Quilt will be displayed in the Rafael lobby throughout the weekend. For dates, times, tickets and location, visit rafaelfilm.cafilm.org.

Sonoma County

Library Love

The Sonoma County Library celebrates Pride Month with queer book lists, LGBTQIA+ events at various branches and parade participation. The library will participate in the Sonoma County Pride Parade on Saturday, June 1, in downtown Santa Rosa, with librarians marching, an information booth and the BiblioBus stocked with LGBTQIA+-focused materials. Members of the Here + Queer project will also be available to chat with parade watchers. For more information and inspiration, visit sonomalibrary.org/pride.

Marin County

Call for Artists

Marin County artists are invited to submit their work to the exhibition, Are We There Yet?, a collaboration between Cedars and the San Anselmo Arts Commission. The exhibition is inspired by the notion of journeying and arriving at a destination. Think cars, trains, staycations, postcards, gas stations, monuments and landmarks. The art submission deadline

is June 7—sculpture, painting, drawing, photography, collage, mixed media and fiber art are accepted. The exhibition runs from July 12–Aug. 22. All submissions will be subject to selection by a jury of Cedars and San Anselmo Arts Commission staff, artists and curators. Art sales will share a 50% commission with Artist Within: A Cedars Gallery. For more information and an entry form, visit cedarslife.org/artsubmission2024.

Left Edge stages ‘Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons’

In a London in the not-too-distant future, the British government has imposed a strict limitation on the number of words any individual can speak in a 24-hour time period. That’s the basic premise of Sam Steiner’s Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons.

The “whys?” for the limitations are barely addressed (and the “hows?” never are) in what is basically a love story. Jenny Hollingworth directs the Left Edge Theatre production currently running through June 8 at The California Theatre in Santa Rosa.

The 90-minute show consists of a series of short scenes beginning with Oliver (Argo Thompson) and Bernadette (Rosie Frater) “meeting cute” at a pet cemetery and then traipses non-chronologically through their life together. Bernadette is a lawyer, while Oliver is a musician who eeks out a living writing commercial jingles. The relationship has its ups and downs, with Bernadette concerned about one of Oliver’s previous lovers while Oliver has issues with Bernadette pulling in more money than him.

Their relationship is further complicated by the passing of the Quietude Bill, or Hush Law, as it’s commonly known. How can any relationship survive when limiting verbal communication to 140 words a day?

While issues of privilege, free speech, oppression and authoritarianism lurk in the background, the importance of open communication to the success of any relationship is front and center. What we say and how we say it counts more than how much we say.

The California’s floor has been transformed into a small black box theater, with the audience at one end in “stadium” seating. And the set is sparse, consisting of one bench that also operates as a bed and a dinner table. The back wall is a series of shelves that subtly contain items representing forms of communication (a telephone, a radio, a typewriter, musical instruments, etc.).

Thompson and Frater are very strong in their roles, literally having to turn on a bell from one point in the relationship to another. (Each scene change is noted by the ringing of a bell, which too often gives the show a sense of being an improv exercise.) They both give very physical performances. The accents they use are generally solid and non-distracting, though Thompson’s seemed to wander on occasion.

Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons was a big hit at the 2015 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. It certainly maintains the feeling of a “fringe” show, which is a nice change of pace from our area’s usual theatrical fare.

Left Edge Theatre’s ‘Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons, Lemons’ runs through June 8 at The California Theatre, 528 7th St., Santa Rosa. Thu.–Fri., 7:30pm; Sat., 1pm. $20–$29. 707.664.7529. leftedgetheatre.com.

No Plans to Divest

CSU’s ‘indirect’ money in Israel less than 1% of holdings

The California State University system disclosed last week that it does not have direct investments in any companies that might profit from Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories and the war in Gaza but has a small amount of indirect holdings through mutual funds.

This disclosure was made in response to demands by pro-Palestinian student and faculty protests on campuses for CSU to divest from any such companies.

However, CSU officials again said they will not sell off any of that indirect investment, echoing the position of the University of California. “The CSU does not intend to alter existing investment policies related to Israel,” according to a statement on the CSU website.

The 23-campus university system had disclosed in April it does not invest in “direct stocks or equities in any companies,” regardless of location.

Officials last week offered additional details about indirect investments in Israel-based firms via holdings in mutual funds that include equities and corporate bonds. Those total $3.2 million, or 0.04%, of all CSU investments, according to a report discussed during last week’s systemwide board of trustees meeting.

The list of funds CSU invests in was included in a report to the trustees. However, that did not include holdings that individual campuses and related foundations might own separately from the central system. A portal on the university system’s website details revenue and other financial details on each campus.

A newly published page on CSU’s website says: “Consistent with their legal structures, CSU investments and auxiliary investments are distinct from one another.”

But given a recent controversy at Sonoma State and the retirement of its president over his promise to discuss possible divestment from firms with ties to Israel, it seems unlikely that any campus would take such an action now.

Students have also called on the university to divest from all defense and aerospace investments, but officials have refused to do so. CSU has direct ownership of $20.8 million in such bonds and some exposure via mutual funds, totaling $30.6 million of the system’s investments. In total, defense and aerospace investments make up 0.62% of the CSU system’s central investment portfolio.

CSU chancellor Mildred Garcia, during her address to the board, made no direct mention of the calls for divestment. But she did urge any protests to be peaceful and to not harm other members of the CSU communities. “The CSU stands unequivocally against acts of hatred, violence, injustice, discrimination, and more specifically antisemitism and Islamophobia,” Garcia said.

University campuses nationwide have struggled with how to handle protests in recent weeks, actions mainly against Israel’s invasion of Gaza. Israel’s bombardment of the Hamas-controlled Gaza followed the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, which killed about 1,200 people and resulted in hundreds of hostages being taken. Since then, more than 35,000 people in Gaza have been killed, mostly civilians, and thousands more have been injured, according to Palestinian health authorities.

The new CSU webpage also details the university’s response to common questions regarding investments in both Israel and the defense and aerospace industries. But one trustee questioned the focus on Israel.

“I’m not comfortable singling out Israel on a website without singling out Sudan and Russia,” said trustee Leslie Gilbert-Lurie, regarding the information on the webpage. “I’m on the side of human rights and following countries that follow international human rights law.”

Among the individual CSU campuses, Sacramento State has disclosed that it has no direct investments in assets that might violate its policies forbidding “direct investments in corporations and funds that profit from genocide, ethnic cleansing and activities that violate fundamental human rights,” according to a statement on the university’s website. Reporting by The Sacramento Bee found that Sacramento State “has more $150 million in indirect investments that would be subject for review” under its policy.

Most recently, Sonoma State University president Mike Lee was disciplined for agreeing to some terms proposed by student protesters on his campus. One such term was “to determine a course of action leading to divestment strategies that include seeking ethical alternatives” to companies with ties to Israel.

The system’s chancellor, Garcia, then said Lee would be placed on administrative leave for “insubordination and the consequences it has brought upon the system” and acting “without the appropriate approvals.”

Lee has since apologized and announced his retirement. “In my attempt to find agreement with one group of students, I marginalized other members of our student population and community,” he wrote in a recent memo. “I realize the harm that this has caused, and I take full ownership of it. I deeply regret the unintended consequences of my actions.”

Amor Para Todos Founder Renee Ho

Amor Para Todos was founded to save the lives of our LGBTQIA+ youth. But what is now a 501 (c)(3) non-profit with 100 local volunteers began as a family effort to save just one young life.

Founder and executive director Renee Ho is part of a “ very big and very loving Mexican-American family, with lots of kids, and everyone helping to raise each other’s children.”

When one of this family’s young children came out as transgender, there was a family effort to get educated. What they discovered was a shocking statistic: 41% of LGBTQIA+ youth and 50% of transgender and nonbinary youth have seriously considered killing themselves.

A former schoolteacher, Ho’s mission is to make local schools safe for these children.

CH: Renee, can you list a few of Amor Para Todos’ inclusion offerings for the school and the classroom and how they can be made safe spaces?

RH: Starting Amor Para Todos’ student clubs on campuses and the purchase of Pride flags for schools creates inclusive, safe spaces and visual representational support.

CH: Two points that jumped out at me from your mission statement were “increase gender/LGBTQIA+ inclusive/anti-bias knowledge and skills among school staff, community leaders and parents/caregivers through workshops,” and to “facilitate district adoption of a general TK-6th grade gender/LGBTQIA+ inclusive curriculum to meet California Education Code and Fair Act standards.”

I understand that most of your programming is backed by California State Law and Educational Code, that what you are really helping out with is compliance. Can you explain?

RH : For years, we have been educating school folks about laws born in the mid 2010s that support our programming. We support schools to be in compliance with laws, such as the FAIR act, the California Healthy Youth Act and the All-Gender Restroom Signage Law.

CH: “Amor Para Todos,” literally, “Love For All,” is heart-centered. Can you bring a love-based approach to administrators or teachers that are prejudicial?

RH:  I meet them where they are at, with amor. I believe all folks are where they are at due to their past and present experiences and do not judge them for that. I listen with an open heart, and that makes progress.

CH: Tell me about your upcoming fundraiser, Thursday, May 30 at The Block Petaluma.

RH: Amor-filled event for all, with music, food and more! Donate at least $10 to giveoutday.org/organization/Amor-Para-Todos to help us win a virtual fundraiser.

Learn more. If you need support or want to help, email am**************@***il.com.

Community Art Day in Angwin

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What is a community but a mosaic of people? In an effort that literalizes and brings the metaphor to life, Nimbus Arts, a community-owned 501(c)(3) non-profit organization with the mission of giving the Napa Valley community access to art, invites the community at large to contribute to a mosaic project.

Nimbus’ mosaic is one of the many activities comprising the organization’s free Community Art Day and Pop-Up Market in the Napa County town of Angwin, located in the northern part of the county about 10 miles northeast of St. Helena. Helping bring the event to life are Angwin’s resident artist couple, Nikki Ballere Callnan and Will Callnan, whose full-time ceramics business, NBC Pottery, boasts a client roster that reads like the who’s who in Napa fine dining. They are also instructors at Nimbus Arts.

The couple’s studio is now located in what used to be Angwin’s old town center, an apt location for two people committed to bringing the arts to the surrounding community. Sharing their creative energy, artistry and know-how is, in many ways, part of a community-focused therapeutic endeavor following the various wildfires, the pandemic and other hardships that have left many locals reeling.

Art Heals

“I think even more than ever, after the fires and power outages, we’ve kind of been conditioned to live in this kind of weird mindset of evacuations and whatnot. Everybody in Angwin kind of felt that crunch,” observes Ballere Callnan. “I think with the space that we have, it’s an opportunity to bring in art and artists from all over the board—from art therapy to makers—to do demonstrations and be a conduit for that.”

Her husband, Callnan, concurs. “We need to encourage people to step out of their box and realize that art is accessible to everyone,” he says. To that end, the event’s price point—free—will hopefully allay any apprehensions about checking it out. The event is part of the art organization’s Hundreds of Hands community art programs, designed to engage community members and highlight the health and wellness benefits of art-making.

Nimbus Arts’ mobile art-making unit, the whimsically titled “Nim+BUS,” delivers art programs to public schools, parks and community events.

“It’s like this portable studio, so it’s got everything they need and allows for anybody, of any age, to do a project,” says Callnan, who recommends taking a hike up in Angwin. And then, “You can come up here and make a mosaic piece that will be permanently installed down in Napa. And when you come back, you’ll be able to see it.”

Also on hand will be working artists of every stripe, as well as a variety of food vendors.

“We’ve often heard people say, ‘It’s so great to be able to walk here and have stuff to do here in Angwin.’ The events are super well-attended, and people are like, ‘Wow, I wish this happened more often.’ And so we’re really trying to make that happen,” says Callnan.

Nimbus Arts’ free Community Art Day and Pop-Up Market featuring the Nim+BUS Mosaic Workshop at NBC Pottery’s gallery and studio, 410 Circle Dr., Angwin, goes from 10am to 2pm, Sunday, June 9. For more information, visit nimbusarts.org or nbcpottery.com, or call 707.965.4NBC.

Cleve Jones: An Activist for All Seasons

Cleve Jones came striding across the lawn toward the outdoor patio behind the Russian River Senior Center. The legendary gay activist had included our interview in a daily constitutional around his Guerneville neighborhood.

“Right on time,” I said. “I knew you would be.”

“That’s how I keep it together,” he replied.

And keep it together he does. Miraculously pushing 70, having nearly died with AIDS more than 30 years ago, he says he is semi-retired, but is involved in enough projects to make a 30-something’s head swirl.

Jones began his lifelong career as an activist in high school, where he joined an anti-Vietnam War organization and organized a student walkout. But he hadn’t yet come out as gay.

“It was a different time entirely,” he said. “When I was 12 or 13, the kids used to bully me, call me a faggot, even before I knew what that word meant. I didn’t have feelings for girls, and I did have feelings for other guys, but I had to go to the library to find out what I was.”

During Jones’ early years, his mother took him to Quaker meetings, “probably preparing me to avoid the draft,” he recalled. And it was at a Quaker conference in Moraga where he met lesbian icons Phyllis Lyons and Del Martin, and came out of the closet.

Back home in Arizona, Jones told his parents that he was gay, and they were “horrified.” So he quickly made plans to leave for San Francisco.

He hitchhiked across the country, with $20 or $30 in his pocket and all his belongings in a knapsack on his back. When he arrived, he was just another homeless gay youngster living on the streets in the Tenderloin, with no education and no job skills.

“I nearly starved,” he said.

But he had Lyons’ and Martin’s phone number, and they connected him with some of the “real pioneers at that time,” like Jim Foster, who had founded the Alice B. Toklas Gay Democratic Club. He took odd jobs, found a place to live with some other young men and eventually secured a lucrative position selling Time Life books over the phone.

It was the early 1970s, a blissful time for a “happy gay hippie boy,” as Jones described himself. He showed up for marches and protests, but was mainly having a good time dancing in the clubs and hanging out in the park.

Jones met Harvey Milk, who owned a camera store in the Castro, thought he was “a nice guy,” but didn’t take Milk seriously because he wasn’t leftist enough for him. He also connected with Howard Wallace, a union organizer and gay man.

April Fools’ Day, 1975, Jones decided it was time to see the world. A roommate drove him to the Golden Gate Bridge, and Jones stuck out his thumb. Through a series of happy circumstances, Jones ended up in Europe, where he came upon Barcelona’s first gay liberation march. The letter he sent to Howard Wallace and Milk describing the march was published in the Sentinel, the San Francisco gay and lesbian newspaper at the time, and Jones returned to San Francisco as a celebrity.

When the city elected Milk as its first openly gay supervisor in 1977, he brought Jones with him as a student intern.

And it was in Jones’ capacity as Milk’s aide that he was one of the people who discovered Milk’s body after disgruntled former San Francisco supervisor Dan White killed Milk and Mayor George Moscone on Nov. 27, 1978.

“Harvey was my mentor, my father figure. I was traumatized and had nightmares for months and months,” said Jones.

The following May, an all-white, all-heterosexual jury found White guilty of manslaughter instead of murder, and Jones recalled, “The city exploded.”

Shocked by the verdict, people began marching toward city hall, where Jones quickly jumped onstage and addressed the crowd that rapidly grew from 500 to 5,000. This was the infamous “White Night Riot” which left behind it smashed windows, burned police cars and dozens of rioters and police in the hospital.

Although the riot was a spontaneous happening, the newspapers labeled Jones the instigator, both a problem and an opportunity, as it turned out.

That year, Jones was part of a country wide organizing committee that planned the First National March on Washington for Gay and Lesbian Rights. It was held on the last day of a three-day conference that began Oct. 11.

Not a coincidence, said Jones, who was born on Oct. 11.

“I pushed for Oct. 11 because I had a crush on a cute bartender in D.C., and I wanted to be there on my birthday,” he remembered.

In commemoration of this march and a second march in 1987, Oct. 11 is annually celebrated as National Coming Out Day.

Back then was a heady time for LGBTQ folks, who had spent so much of their lives in fear and disgrace. But the bubble was about to burst.

A year later, as state Assemblymember Art Agnos’ legislative consultant for health issues, Jones began reading disturbing magazine articles about a mysterious disease syndrome that seemed to be affecting gay men. It was the beginning of the AIDS epidemic. Jones teamed with Dr. Marcus Conant to found the Kaposi’s Sarcoma Research and Education Foundation, which later became the San Francisco AIDS Foundation.

“By the fall of 1985, everyone I knew was dead, dying or caring for someone with HIV/AIDS,” said Jones.

That year, Jones announced his own AIDS diagnosis on televisions’ 60 Minutes. By 1992, he was close to death and decided to move to Villa Grande on the lower Russian River.

“I didn’t want people to see me sick,” he said.

But through his connections as an AIDS activist, he was able to sign up for the early trials of the miracle drug combinations that became known as the “AIDS Cocktail.”

“We were counting our lives in six-month increments, looking for the next medication because they only lasted for a few months. I put chunks of butcher paper on the wall for tracking each new treatment,” he recalled.

Over the years, Jones has moved back and forth between San Francisco and the River. He has finally come to call Guerneville his home, although he still spends time in San Francisco, where his partner lives.

“Being in ‘Cleve in the Castro’ is freaking cool. But when I reach the middle of Golden Gate Bridge on my way back to Guerneville, I feel my shoulders relaxing. This place is good for my soul,” said Jones.

And he has been working for the past 18 years with Unite Here, an umbrella organization for several unions, primarily composed of service workers.

“We work together,” he explained. “Right now, we are mapping out a strategy to save democracy in the next election, because someone has to do it.”

Summing up a life in activism that is far from over, Jones said, “The most meaningful important thing that I have learned is that ordinary people really can change the world. There is no limit to what we can do if we work to cross the boundaries that divide us.”

Free Will Astrology: Week of May 29

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Welcome to the future of your education, Aries! Here are actions you can take to ensure you are exposed to all the lush lessons you need and deserve in the coming months. 1. Identify three subjects you would be excited to learn more about. 2. Shed dogmas and fixed theories that interfere with your receptivity to new information. 3. Vow to be alert for new guides or mentors. 4. Formulate a three-year plan to get the training and teachings you need most. 5. Be avidly curious.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Poet Emily Dickinson was skillful at invoking and managing deep feelings. One scholar described her emotions as being profoundly erotic, outlandish, sensuous, flagrant and nuanced. Another scholar said she needed and sought regular doses of ecstasy. Yet even she, maestro of passions, got overwhelmed. In one poem she wondered, “Why Floods be served to us in Bowls?” I suspect you may be having a similar experience, Taurus. It’s fun, though sometimes a bit too much. The good news is that metaphorically speaking, you will soon be in possession of a voluminous new bowl that can accommodate the floods.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): All of us periodically enjoy phases I call “Freedom from Cosmic Compulsion.” During these times, the Fates have a reduced power to shape our destinies. Our willpower has more spaciousness to work with. Our intentions get less resistance from karmic pressures that at other times might narrow our options. As I meditated on you, dear Gemini, I realized you are now in a phase of Freedom from Cosmic Compulsion. I also saw that you will have more of these phases than anyone else during the next 11 months. It might be time for you to get a “LIBERATION” tattoo or an equivalent new accessory.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Bold predictions: 1. Whatever treasure you have lost or are losing will ultimately be reborn in a beautiful form. 2. Any purposeful surrender you make will hone your understanding of exactly what your soul needs next to thrive. 3. A helpful influence may fade away, but its disappearance will clear the path for new helpful influences that serve your future in ways you can’t imagine yet. 4. Wandering around without a precise sense of where you’re going will arouse a robust new understanding of what home means to you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Denmark’s King Canute IV (1042–1086) wasn’t bashful about asserting his power. He claimed ownership of all the land. He insisted on the right to inherit the possessions of all foreigners and people without families. Goods from shipwrecks were automatically his property. But once, his efforts to extend his authority failed. He had his servants move his throne to a beach as the tide came in. Seated and facing the North Sea, he commanded, “Halt your advance!” The surf did not obey. “You must surrender to my superior will!” he exclaimed, but the waters did not recede. Soon, his throne was engulfed by water. Humbled, Canute departed. I bring this up not to discourage you, Leo. I believe you can and should expand your influence and clout in the coming weeks. Just be sure you know when to stop.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo-born Irène Joliot-Curie craved more attention than she got from her mother, Marie Curie. Mom was zealously devoted to her career as a chemist and physicist, which is one reason why she won Nobel Prizes in both fields. But she didn’t spend sufficient time with her daughter. Fortunately, Irène’s grandfather Eugène became his granddaughter’s best friend and teacher. With his encouragement, she grew into a formidable scientist and eventually won a Nobel Prize in chemistry herself. Even if you’re not a kid, Virgo, I suspect there may be a mentor and guide akin to Eugène in your future. Go looking! To expedite the process, define what activity or skill you want help in developing.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I have a fantasy that sometime in the coming months, you will slip away to a sanctuary in a pastoral paradise. There you will enjoy long hikes and immerse yourself in healing music and savor books you’ve been wanting to read. Maybe you will write your memoirs or compose deep messages to dear old friends. Here’s the title of what I hope will be a future chapter of your life story: “A Thrillingly Relaxing Getaway.” Have you been envisioning an adventure like this, Libra? Or is your imagination more inclined to yearn for a trip to an exciting city where you will exult in high culture? I like that alternative, too. Maybe you will consider doing both.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): An Instagrammer named sketchesbyboze advises us, “Re-enchant your life by making the mundane exciting. You are not ‘going to the drugstore.’ You are visiting the apothecary to buy potions. You are not ‘running an errand.’ You are undertaking an unpredictable adventure. You are not ‘feeding the birds.’ You are making an alliance with the crow queen.” I endorse this counsel for your use, Scorpio. You now have the right and duty to infuse your daily rhythm with magic and fantasy. To attract life’s best blessings, you should be epic and majestic. Treat your life as a mythic quest. 

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): I invite you to invite new muses into your life in the coming months. Give them auditions. Interview them. Figure out which are most likely to boost your creativity, stimulate your imagination and rouse your inspiration in every area of your life, not just your art form. Tell them you’re ready to deal with unpredictable departures from the routine as long as these alternate paths lead to rich teachings. And what form might these muses take? Could be actual humans. Could be animals or spirits. Might be ancestral voices, exciting teachings or pilgrimages to sacred sanctuaries. Expand your concept of what a muse might be so you can get as much muse-like input as possible.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The Japanese have a word for a problem that plagues other countries as well as theirs: karoshi, or death from working too hard and too much. No matter how high-minded our motivations might be, no matter how interesting our jobs are, most of us cannot safely devote long hours to intense labor week after week, month after month. It’s too stressful on the mind and body. I will ask you to monitor yourself for such proclivities in the coming months. You can accomplish wonders as long as you work diligently but don’t overwork. (PS: You won’t literally expire if you relentlessly push yourself with nonstop hard exertion, but you will risk compromising your mental health. So don’t do it!)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Typically, human fertility is strongest when the temperature is 64 degrees Fahrenheit. But I suspect you will be an exception to the rule in the coming months. Whether it’s 10 below or 90 in the shade, your fertility will be extra robust—literally as well as psychologically and spiritually. If you are a heterosexual who would rather make great art or business than new babies, be very attentive to your birth control measures. No matter what your gender or sexual preference is, I advise you to formulate very clear intentions about how you want to direct all that lush fecundity. Identify which creative outlets are most likely to serve your long-term health and happiness.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Here’s a key assignment in the coming months: Enjoy fantasizing about your dream home. Imagine the comfortable sanctuary that would inspire you to feel utterly at home in your body, your life and the world. Even if you can’t afford to buy this ultimate haven, you will benefit from visualizing it. As you do, your subconscious mind will suggest ways you can enhance your security and stability. You may also attract influences and resources that will eventually help you live in your dream home.

Homework: What would you most like help with? Ask for it very directly. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Big Petaluma Homecoming for Lagunitas

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Petaluma’s most iconic local beer brand, Lagunitas, is coming home! Not that it ever left. It’s just that now it will be exclusively based in Petaluma, where the whole movement started. The brewing company’s original location on McDowell Boulevard, which opened in the early ’90s, has continued to serve as its main taphouse and HQ, even as Lagunitas has tried branching out and opening other taprooms in Seattle and Chicago over the past decade. But they reportedly shut down the Seattle outpost last year — and now, come August, they’re shutting down the one in Chicago, too. From the Press Democrat: “The closing of Lagunitas’ Chicago location was fueled by a need to ‘future proof the organization’ as changing tides continue to impact the craft beverage industry. The company said the transition will ‘allow for a more efficient and flexible supply chain, with a greater focus on innovation and the acceleration of more sustainable brewing practices.'” There’s a downsizing aspect at play, it seems — but on the upside, maybe more growth at the local level. Lagunitas reps also tell reporters that “some of the 86 employees to be laid off will transfer to Petaluma or take on remote roles,” so we could start seeing some new Chicago beer heads wandering around town this summer. And that reminds me: Lagunitas’ popular summer music series is right around the corner. It kicks off on June 17 with a show by an L.A. rock band called the Allah-Lahs, in what the brewery affectionately calls its “mini amphitheaterette.” Other names on this year’s lineup include the Robert Randolph Band, the Mexican Institute of Sound, the Ibibio Sound Machine, Sir Woman and Dengue Fever. Which sound eerily like IPA names, now that I’m writing them out… (Source: Press Democrat & Eater Chicago & Lagunitas)

Futuristic ‘Popup Village’ Calls Healdsburg Home for June

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Another group I’ve heard throwing around the word “solarpunk” in recent months: the organizers of a monthlong “popup village” planning to take up residency in Healdsburg next weekend and stay for the entire month of June. The event is called Edge Esmeralda — a mashup of the names of the two out-of-town orgs behind the vision, Edge City and the Esmeralda Land Company. If you have a Sonoma County address, you can get a discounted ticket here for around $200. Locals in Healdsburg have had trouble making sense of the whole thing, thrown off by what some of them are calling the “word salad” of new-age lingo on the Edge Esmeralda website — but after speaking to organizers a few times, I think I’ve more or less wrapped my head around it, so I’ll do my best to explain. Basically, a group of 150-plus people will pay around $2,000 each (plus lodging costs) to attend daily talks, salons, workshops and “unconferences” at Healdsburg venues — like the Raven Theater, the CraftWork co-working space and the Community Center — led by experts on topics like AI, crypto, biohacking, space exploration, renewable energy, geopolitics and all sorts of other trippy stuff. This core group of village “residents” will stay in existing Healdsburg hotels like Hotel Trio, the Dry Creek Inn and H2Hotel (so no new infrastructure) and will be joined by hundreds more visitors and speakers who pop in for a day or two at a time, according to organizers. The ultimate goal being to re-envision the way society and community can work, no less. You can check out the full programming calendar here. To me, this whole concept also seems like an attempt by the global internet tribes invested in these particular futuristic topics to hang out face-to-face for a sustained period. The ticket price includes nightly dinners where everybody comes together to eat local farm-to-table type fare; daily morning runs; camps and classes for kids, as well as a “babysitting club” to make childcare easy; a series of hackathons for coders; a central spot for “sauna, cold plunge and daily workouts” at Hotel Trio; and “adventure days on weekends.” (Therapy sessions and blood tests/consults to “improve your biomarkers for longevity” are on the menu as well!) So that everyone can get to these events from their hotels without cars, organizers say they’ll be putting shuttles into rotation and renting out “used beach cruisers” to attendees. They’re hoping most people will walk and bike along the Foss Creek Pathway, a nature trail that runs the entire length of Healdsburg. “We planned all of our venues around a 7-minute bike path,” they said in a recent newsletter. “We’re calling it Serendipity Lane, because it’s where you’ll bump into fellow attendees between sessions and go for walks with new friends!” (This same pathway has also been the site of multiple violent crimes in recent months, a trend often pointed out by local critics of the Edge Esmeralda event when making the case that organizers are out of touch.) Another intriguing aspect of the Edge Esmeralda experiment: It’s being modeled off the “Chautauqua” gathering in upstate New York, which Esmeralda Land Company founder Devon Zuegel used to attend as a girl with her grandma. That, too, was a summertime popup village of sorts — famous for democratizing education, science and culture outside of a costly/elite university setting. Back in the day, there were also “traveling Chautauquas” that would set up shop in rural U.S. communities. “Our hope is that Edge Esmeralda is a place that supports and nurtures the next generation of people who can make such a positive impact on the world,” Zuegel told me over email — “whether it’s through physical technology (medicine, materials science) or through social technology (urban planning, childhood education, etc).” Down the road, once the Healdsburg popup experiment plays out, Zuegel is even hoping to find a site to build a permanent Chautauqua-esque community in California, perhaps just north of us in Mendocino County. Might not be a bad place to land for the climate apocalypse. (Source: Healdsburg Tribune & Edge Esmeralda)

Guerneville Natural Wine Festival Doubles in Size for 2nd Year

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An interesting festival is coming up next weekend in Guerneville: the Big West Wine Fest, a two-day natural wine tasting back for its second year at twice the size. “About 100 winemakers will be pouring throughout the weekend, alongside cider producers, food vendors and plenty of live music,” the Press Democrat reports. A grand tasting for the natty set! The whole thing goes down in a magical redwood grove at Solar Punk Farms on Armstrong Woods Road just outside town, which describes itself as a “queer-run regenerative hub in Guerneville” and a “climate hub focused on bioregional regeneration.” Most of the wineries showing up are local — Idlewild, Ruth Lewandowski, Horse & Plow, Hobo Wine Company, Monte Rio Cellars, Goat Rock Cider and Two Shepherds are some of the names I recognize — but the PD notes that there will also be some Bay brands in the house, like Laughing Gems from Richmond and Virgo Magic Wines in Berkeley. Here’s more info from the event invite: “Join us for year two of Sonoma County’s Favorite Natural Wine Festival: two days of revelry under the redwoods, a pageant of poppies, a vinous carnival for the ages. Big West celebrates the mainstay makers and the fresh faces, the big and the small, the farmers and the land, the people and wines that make up Sonoma County’s vibrant world of natural wine. And it’s TWO DAYS! This year features an all-star lineup of local producers pouring their vin du pays, local talent to serenade you as you sip, plus a stellar roster of vendors: offering everything from pierogies to plant-dyed painter pants. Check the roster for the lineups by day!” Also on tap: free ice cream from Alec’s in Petaluma; a “barn-raising, soul-nourishing” food hall; an interactive merch station where you can screen-print your own stuff; and a supervised camp for kids, so you can get tipsy without losing your children or overexposing them to the throes of natty-wine revelry. Tickets are $80 per day or $140 for the full weekend. “Bring your own water bottle & spit cup and consider packing a sun hat, sunscreen and a picnic blanket,” say the wild West County peeps organizing this thing. And one of them tells the PD that noobs are more than welcome: “Even if someone doesn’t know anything about wine, we hold a space for them here.” Another adds: “Wine can be very divisive by class and education, and we’ve taken a lot of care to create an event that feels welcoming. We want this event to challenge what people think about when they think of wine culture.” (Source: Eventbrite & Big West Wine Fest & Big West Wine Fest via Instagram & Press Democrat & Solar Punk Farms)

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Futuristic ‘Popup Village’ Calls Healdsburg Home for June

Another group I've heard throwing around the word "solarpunk" in recent months: the organizers of a monthlong "popup village" planning to take up residency in Healdsburg next weekend and stay for the entire month of June. The event is called Edge Esmeralda — a mashup of the names of the two out-of-town orgs behind the vision, Edge City and...

Guerneville Natural Wine Festival Doubles in Size for 2nd Year

An interesting festival is coming up next weekend in Guerneville: the Big West Wine Fest, a two-day natural wine tasting back for its second year at twice the size. "About 100 winemakers will be pouring throughout the weekend, alongside cider producers, food vendors and plenty of live music," the Press Democrat reports. A grand tasting for the natty set!...
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