The Lighthouse Peddler
Transcription
The Lighthouse Peddler
ALWAYS FREE Lighthouse Peddler December 2014 (707) 882-3126 Issue #158 www.lighthousepeddler.net Shameless Art at Gualala Arts All Month Long Gualala Art Center is not afraid to put Ball. Artists are encouraged to set aside their tongue in cheek while still presenting artistic “purity” and go for the sale. Most artists quality workmanship. find the most difficult part Beginning on December of their occupation is the 5 and running through selling of their art. How December 28 in the many artists have been to Burnett Gallery and shows or fairs and seen Jacob Foyer they will other artists doing a good present “Shameless!”, an business selling items exhibit of innovative new produced solely for their work that is designed ability to sell? Here is the with marketability as a chance for artists to go primary element. This for it. Norman Rockwell is the annual show of style paintings, black the North Coast Artists’ velvet canvasses, animal Guild. Artists from portraits, and plaster cast the Artist Collective of wall decorations are not Elk, the Coast Highway out of bounds. The public Artists Collective in Point is invited to see what local Arena, and the Upstairs artists believe can sell Gallery Collective in well, but often refuse to “Elvis” by Edgar Leeteg, father of black velvet painting Gualala have also been make. invited to participate. Over 80 pieces will be on The highly knowledgeable, yet often display whimsical owner of the Stewart-Kummer The exhibit is curated by Ling Yen Jones with Gallery in Gualala, Don Endemann, will judge the able assistance of NCAG’s Doric Jamison- the exhibit. Indeed, Don’s artist wife, Heidi, continued on page 15 12th Annual Visit from Mr. & Mrs. Claus Saturday, Dec.13 1pm - 3pm Bring your kids, your friends, your pets, your parents & get your picture taken with the famous husband & wife team from the North Pole!! Cypress Village www.foureyedfrog.com 707-884-1333 From the Editor’s Desk Shopping, cooking, decorating, hosting guests (or traveling), and, yes, cleaning is keeping us all quite busy this holiday season. Local venues have toned down their schedules for this busy month, but there are still plenty of holiday events to help celebrate the season. RCMS and Shamli Hospice is once again placing their Memorial Tree at Sundstom Mall on December 17. See page 3. Santa and Mrs. Claus will be at the Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore on Saturday the 13th for photo opportunities. Also page 3. Brandybuck Ranch on the Point Arena ridge is again having their Bizarre Bazaar with plenty of locally made items, see page 7. Point Arena merchants are holding their Hometown Holiday shopping event on Thursday, December 18. See page 11 for details. Christmas Eve there will an inter-denominational service at Gualala Arts that will feature the Nine Lessons and Carols. See page 4. Another holiday favorite is the Ernest Bloch Bell Ringers performance. This includes plenty of audience sing-a-longs of traditional Christmas carols. See page 8 What would Christmas be without a performance of The Nutcracker? The Arena Theater fills that need with a spectacular telecast from the famous Bolshoi on December 21. See page 5 How about an opera whose storyline is about singing? That is what you will see if you attend the opera series at Arena Theater on December 13 when they present Richard Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (“The Master-Singers of Nuremberg”). See page 6. Gualala Arts’ Reader’s Theater goes with the Christmas theme on December 19 when they present Miracle on 34th Street at Gualala Arts Center. This production is based on an adaptation by local writer David Skibbins (who also directs). See page 7. The Arena Film Club is only showing 2 films this month, but they are both outstanding. On December 1 They will show one of our favorite Bogey films, To Have or Have Not. Thought of as something of a remake of Casablanca, neither film gains its strength from the storylines and each features outstanding performances and tight editing. On December 8 They are showing Starman, a Jeff Bridges vehicle with Karen Allen. It wasn’t a blockbuster when released, but has come to be highly regarded as a sci-fi flick with serious intentions. See page 13. We aren’t ones to champion wanton consumerism, but we also know that many of us will be buying gifts and other items during the holiday season. We strongly encourage you to BUY LOCAL and circulate your money with your friends and neighbors. Gift certificates and donations to local non-profits are always a good idea if for some reason you can’t find an appropriate gift. Best wishes to all of you from the staff at the Peddler. Try to enjoy that part of the season that appeals to you and consider a little exercise after you partake of all those holiday goodies. Series to Highlight Successful Former Students We here at the Peddler have come up with an idea for a new series that will highlight the accomplishments of people who attended local schools and have since made a significant contribution to society or have otherwise attained particularly impressive achievements. From artists to athletes, musicians to scientists to entrepreneurs, despite our small population, there are many who we think would qualify. The purpose of this is two-fold. First to honor the individual for their hard work and determination, but also to serve as models for those who are still students and may be looking with trepidation at a daunting future that holds many challenges, but also hopes and dreams that for the determined, Pg 2 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 can come true. We will also be illustrating to one and all that graduates of local schools can, with hard work, be prepared for any of life’s challenges. Therefore, we are asking the public to assist us by nominating people who you feel deserve this recognition. We will follow up by learning more about these successful individuals and doing a column about them. Please send the names and contact information for anyone that you feel deserves this recognition along with a brief explanation as to why you think they qualify. Our contact information is listed on the masthead to the right. Advertisers Index 11 KZYX 7 Little Green Bean 4 Mar Vista 4 3 MTA 14 Arena Market and Cafe 5 Office Source Action Network Anchor Bay Store Arena Frame Arena Pharmacy Arena Tech Center 13 Outback Garden and Feed 12 10 6 back cover Arena Theater 5, 10 Oz Farm 7 B Bryan Preserve 9 Pacific Chiropractic 13 Banana Belt Properties 9 Pacific Plate 3 Barry Vogel attorney 12 Peter McCann P.T. 6 Phillips Insurance 3 Pier Chowder House 9 Pizzas &Cream 5 Point Arena Light Station 8 Red Stella 4 Redwood Coast Chamber of Commerce 12 8 Rollerville Café 13 cover Roots 3 Bed and Bone 5 Copies & More 13 Cottage Carpets 7 Cove Coffee 15 David Moulton A.I.A. Denise Green 6 10 Dianne Neuman Gallery Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore Garcia River Casino 4 Sea Trader Gualala Arts 3 Skinluv 5 Gualala Bldg. Supply 4 Synergy Yoga Center/Surf Therapy Yoga 4 Gualala Supermarket 11 The Loft 4 11 Healing Arts and Massage 6 Transformational Bodywork 6 Ibis 6 UnedaEat 8 Ignacio Health Insurance Services 7 Village Bootery 8 Jasper Brady Kelly Kieve 10 9 KTDE Wellness on the Coast Zen House Motorcycles 12 6 10 Read the Peddler OnlineIts Free & In Full Color! Issue #158 December 2014 Lighthouse Peddler Mitch McFarland: Editor, Publisher, Madeline Kibbe : Production Manager lighthousepeddler@mcn.org (707) 882-3126 P.O. Box 1001, Point Arena, CA 95468 www.lighthousepeddler.net Shamli MemorialTree Honors the Departed On Wednesday, December 17 from 4 to 6:00 p.m. at the Sundstrom Mall RCMS and Shamli Hospice will host an event to decorate the Shamli Memorial Tree. The public is invited to place a personalized heart on the tree in memory of a family member or friend who has departed this world. Diane Agee, CEO of RCMS stated, “Our Shamli Memorial Tree is all about love and remembrance, and helping decorate it is a beautiful way to celebrate the lives of friends and family who have passed away. We thank the Sundstrom family for helping us host this event, year after year.” The tradition goes back more than 20 years. Each year the tree is decorated by community members with over 500 handmade hearts personalized in memory of family members and friends. Refreshments will be served, and everyone is welcome. There is no charge to attend the Shamli Memorial Tree event, or to hang a heart on the tree. However, donations to RCMS’s Shamli Hospice program are welcome and help toward the cost of providing Hospice services in this community. The Shamli Memorial Tree will remain up in the Sundstrom Mall through New Year. The RCMS/Shamli Hospice Team, made up of medical providers, nurses and specially trained volunteers, focuses on providing comfort care to those who are terminally ill and helping provide support to their caregivers. To learn more about Shamli Hospice or to volunteer, please call Pat OwPhoto by R Kuehn ings at 884-4853. Open Christmas Eve & Christmas Day On New Years Eve Join Us For A Special Multi-Course Dinner Paired With Cocktails Please Call For Reservations 882-1619 Winter hours: Thursday - Sat 5:30 - 9 pm ROOTS Herbal Apothecary Specializing in Healthcare for the whole family HOLIDAY SALE Dec.15-24Th. 15 % off practically everything! Shop Local! HRS: Mon. - Sat. 10:00am to 5:00 pm 250 Main Street, Point Arena 882-2699 Students’ Creative Efforts Presented to Public with Two Events Point Arena High School Drama Department and Computer Classes along with Adobe Youth Voices will be presenting Cause and Effect: A Student Film Festival. The public is invited to join them Friday December 5 and Saturday December 6 at 7:00 p.m. at the PAHS auditorium. The formats for the short films are based around Adobe Youth Voice’s “creation with a cause.” Students have created movies around a cause or a purpose that feel passionate about and wish to bring awareness. Topics include: anti-bullying, suicide and depression awareness, get up and get active, rape culture in social media, keeping art in schools, the lost art of chivalry, animal abuse awareness, and more. Students have created their films with different media from stop and go animation, to documentaries, to music videos. This format gives creative youth a way to express themselves in digital media. $5 general admission, $3 students and seniors. The Point Arena Schools Music Department presents The Winter Concert and Clam Chowder Dinner featuring The Pier Chowder House and Tap Room clam chowder. Join them Wednesday, December 10 for dinner at 5:00 p.m. in the high school cafeteria then walk over to the auditorium for the Winter Concert at 7:00. Cost for dinner is $15 for Adults and $10 Children (under 12). Price includes bowl of chowder, salad, bread, drink, and admission to the Winter Concert. Those not wanting clam chowder, can attend the concert for $5 Adults and $3 students and seniors. There will be performances by the Arena Middle School Band, PAHS Jazz Band, High School Guitar Class, a special appearance by the Coastal Singers, and more. Concert doors open at 6:30 and refreshments will be sold at intermission. For more information on either event contact Music Director Jaime Erwin at 882-2134 ext.348. Natural Natural Cosmetics Cosmetics Homeopathic & Natural Homeopathic Remedies & Natural Available Remedies Available MediCal MediCal & Insurance & Insurance Cheerfully Cheerfully Accepted Accepted. Arena Pharmacy Pharmacy Arena 882-3025 882-3025 - 5:30p.m. p.m. Mon - Fri 9 -95:30 Mon - Fri Delivery Available Delivery Available 235 Main Street, Point Arena 235 Main Street, Point Arena Pg 3 Lighthouse Peddler, December 2014 Public Invited to Join Nine Carols and Lessons ARENA FRAME Custom Mats & Frames Anna Dobbins, APFA 882-2159 Surf Therapy Yoga Synergy Yoga DAILY CLASSES OFFERED 340 Main Point Arena (707) 350-0394 The hard and stiff will be broken, the soft and supple will prevail. - Tao te Ching On Christmas Eve at 5:00 p.m. the Nine Lessons and Carols will again be presented at the Gualala Arts Center auditorium. This service has been performed at King’s College in Cambridge England since 1918 when thennew dean of King’s Chapel, 34-year-old Eric Milner-White, wanted to try something innovative and beyond the standard liturgy of the Church of England. He had recently been an army chaplain, which had convinced him that the Church of England needed more imaginative worship, so he wove together scripture and song, called on readers of various ages from school and town. The original service was adapted from an Order drawn up by E.W. Benson, later Archbishop of Canterbury, for use in the wooden shed, which then served as his cathedral in Truro, at 10 pm on Christmas Eve 1880. AC Benson recalled: “My father arranged from ancient sources a little service for Christmas Eve – nine carols and nine tiny lessons, which were read by various officers of the Church”. In the King’s College event, almost every year some carols have been changed and a new, specially commissioned one is introduced, but the backbone of the service, the lessons and the prayers, has remained virtually unchanged. The Kings College service is broadcast over the Internet and numerous radio stations, including some 300 stations in the U.S. alone, to millions of listeners around the world each year. Our local event has been represented by red stella FOR THE HOLIDAYS! dress shoe gift home Cypress Village Gualala 884-1072 several of the coast faith communities: Mary, Star of the Sea and St. Aloysius Catholic Churches of Gualala and Point Arena; Light of the Coast - Science of Mind Center, Gualala; St. Paul’s Community United Methodist Church, Point Arena; Starcross Community, Annapolis; Shepherd of the Sea Episcopal - Lutheran Mission, Gualala. In addition several of our coast’s children and youth will lend their gifts of leadership to this well-loved tradition and celebration. There is no admission charge and seating at the Gualala Arts Center is limited and traditionally fills up to standing room only. Folks are encouraged to plan ahead, arrive early and bring a flashlight for safe walking to and from parking areas around the Arts Center. Donations received at the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols go to support South Coast Crisis Aid (also known as South Coast Crisis Line). These donations are the primary source of funding for SCCA. Your generosity supports emergency food, fuel, bus transportation and lodging assistance throughout the year via vouchers distributed by local clergy in Gualala and Point Arena. Please make your checks out to Shepherd by the Sea, with “South Coast Crisis Aid” in the memo line. Thunder is good, thunder is impressive; but it is the lightening that does the work. - Mark Twain All Your Quilting, Fine Yarns, Arts & Crafts Craft Supplies 884-4424 Quilting, Fine Yarns, 884-4424 10-5 Mon.-Sat. / 11-3 Sun. Arts & Crafts and 10-5 Mon. - Sat./ 11-3 Sun. Sundstrom Mall, Gualala Handmade Gifts Sundstrom Mall, Gualala Hwy. One - Anchor Bay 884-3522 www.MarVistaMendocino.com Garcia River Casino Presents BRAD WILSON THE HIGHWAY POETS & The Blues Drivers New Years Eve! Fri Dec 12th, 8.30PM Weds Dec 31st, 9.00PM 22215 Windy Hollow Rd, Point Arena, CA. 707 467 5300 www.TheGarciaRiverCasino.com Pg 4 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 We now rent tools for lawn and garden, concrete work, floors, pumps, much more 38501 South Hwy 1 Gualala 884-3518 & POINT ARENA Happy Hour Daily Bolshoi’s Nutcracker to Screen at Arena Theater The series is presented in North America in association with the Metropolitan Opera. The Nutcracker will be followed by Swan Lake and Romeo and Juliet. Each production will feature behind-the-scenes programming, including interviews with the cast and creative teams, either prior to the start of the production, or during intermission. Tickets for the performances are $18 general, $5 youth. Online tickets can be purchased from the Theater website, www. arenatheater.org. 4:00 - 6:00 pm Beer $3.00 Wine $3.50 CLOSED ON CHRISTMAS Pasta Mondays $10.95 Pizza Pasta Sandwiches Gluten Free Crust By Request OPEN EVERY DAY Fri Sat Sun 11:30-9 pm Mon-Fri 4:00-9 pm 882-1900 195 Main Street, Point Arena facials • waxing • nails makeup • massage Open Mon- Fri by appointment only 882-3588 It is hard to imagine a Christmas season passing without a performance of The Nutcracker. The Arena Theater will telecast the Bolshoi version of this classic ballet on December 21 at 2:00 p.m. The music, of course, is by Tchaikovsky and the choreography and libretto is by Yuri Grigorovich, who was the Artist Director of the Bolshoi for over 30 years. The Nutcracker, which he first put up in 1966, is one of his most famous productions. He currently serves as ballet master and choreographer at the Bolshoi. Even those not inclined toward ballet are familiar with the story of the Nutcracker in which a young girl’s Christmas toy comes to life and overcomes the threat of the Mouse King and his army. The tale explores the universal themes of love, power and evil and is renowned for the costumes and sets that accompany Tchaikovsky’s highly recognizable music. This is a new program for the Arena Theater that is being offered as a result of requests from patrons. The same company from which the Theater contracts for the opera series is now offering for the 20142015 season 3 ballets from the Bolshoi. Each event will be screened as a Sunday matinee. Lodging for Paws Boarding Grooming 882-2429 PO Box 174 Point Arena 95468 www.bednbone.com One kind word can warm three winter months. - Japanese proverb cont. next column Arena Theater Live 3rd Monday Music Ballet in Cinema Bolshoi Ballet—Live from Moscow The Nutcracker November 17, 8pm Monday, November 17 Doors: 7:30pm Show: 8pm Tickets: $5 For Open Mic inquiries and sign ups, call Rufus at 882-1906 One of the greatest classics in the world with iconic music by Tchaikovsky Sun, December 21 doors 1:30 / show 2pm $18 General Admission $5 Youth Admission Pg 5 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 66 A DRAGON’S BREATH PRESENTS Healing into Freedom Three Thursday Evening Salons each season with Fred Mitouer, Ph.D. Somatic Awakenings Private Sessions and classes in Meditation, Pilates & Bodywork with Cheryl Mitouer Transformational Bodywork Private Sessions with Fred Mitouer, Ph.D. Classes with Fred & Cheryl in Couple’s Massage, Transformational Journeys and Continuing Education for Therapists To order Fred’s book: Wounds into Blessings Click Here or go to Transformationalbodywork.org 707.884.3138 Email mitouer@mcn.org for more info Healing Arts Healing & Arts Massage Healing Arts &Center Massage & Center 884-4800 Massage Center Judith Fisher 884-4800 Judith Fisher Massage & CranioSacral Therapy 884-4800 Massage & CranioSacral Therapy Judith Fisher Nita Green Nita Green Massage & CranioSacral Therapy Judith Fisher Massage & Tissue Deep Tissue Massage & Deep Nita Green Massage & CranioSacral Therapy JoAnn Dixon Massage & Deep Tissue Nita Green JoAnn Dixon Jin Shin Jyutsu & Massage JoAnn Dixon Massage Deep Tissue Jin Shin&Jyutsu & Massage Laurie Bowman Jin Shin Jyutsu & Massage Spa JoAnn Treatments & Massage Dixon Laurie Bowman Jin Shin Jyutsu & Massage Alisa Edwards Alisa Edwards Spa Treatments & Massage Hot Stone & Deep Tissue Laurie Bowman Hot Stone & Deep Tissue Alisa Edwards Spa Treatments & Massage Bill L Tissue Ac., D.C. HotSchieve, Stone & Deep Alisa Edwards Acupuncture & Chiropractic BillSchieve, Schieve, Ac.,D.C. D.C. Bill LLAc., Hot Stone & Deep Tissue Acupuncture & Chiropractic Acupuncture & Chiropractic Bill Schieve, L Ac., D.C. Cypress Village Acupuncture & Chiropractic Gualala Village Cypress Gualala Cypress Village Osteopathic Gualala Physical Therapy Osteopathic & Manual Medicine Physical Therapy Osteopathic &Physical ManualTherapy Medicine PETER& McCANN, P.T. Manual Medicine 884-4800 PETER McCANN, P.T. McCANN, 884-4800 Blue Shield - PETER Medicare-Workmen’s Comp P.T. OtherInsurance - Private Pay 884-4800 Comp Blue Shield - Medicare-Workmen’s OtherInsurance - Private Pay Healing Arts & Massage Center Blue Shield - Medicare-Workmen’s Comp Cypress Village, Gualala OtherInsurance Private Pay Healing Arts & Massage Center Cypress Gualala Healing ArtsVillage, & Massage Center Cypress Village, Gualala 62 T B A S E M E N 54 55 Bringing forty-plus years of architecture, design, experience and professionalism to your project A N A S T R E O 51 S A K Architecture & Interior Design 38 I 56 48 43 67 L O E S B C E 44 45 H A N G T U N 28 I 29 24 B O D T R 17 I M E 21 53 T 31 25 D 22 O N E R N B O S S R A N D 2 3 4 E 15 5 6 N 46 T A T A S 7 L V E N 50 R A C K 30 65 R E A D T I 18 E D O L D O G E E 14 1 52 36 C O L O M 20 D S E A 68 58 E A N O U N S O P S 71 T O 64 T 40 T 27 E 57 B A E R E C 35 63 B L 49 39 R E R O C 8 41 I 59 26 E C 23 I 19 47 E T 42 E E L A M E 32 L A L P O 16 9 E 61 E R Y L G A N A N 60 E V E R 37 I T E N A C 10 T 33 I E N I N T A 11 12 E 34 M E T S 13 Pg 6 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 www.ibisCHT.com E T December 22 Raquel Mashiach raquel@mcn.org 707-882-2474 C Colon hydrotherapy offers an excellent opportunity to restore and maintain optimum colon health in your life. It is the first step towards total health. 70 ibis colon hydrotherapy S New Moon S E December 6 T Full Moon I 39150 Ocean Drive, Suite 2, Gualala p 707.884.9640 • f 707.885.0191 officesourcegualala@gmail.com Open M-F 10am-5pm, Sat 10am-3pm E L Here to assist you R A ✔ Tech Assistance ✔ Photo Books ✔ Calendars ✔ Stamps ✔ Labels ✔ Office Supplies ✔ School Supplies ✔ Tech Accessories On Saturday, December 13 The Met: Der Ring des Nibelungen, and in 1866 his first Live in HD series continues at the Arena wife died. Theater with Richard Wagner’s only mature The July 1868 premier was held in Munich opera, Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (“The and sponsored by Ludwig II of Bavaria who Master-Singers of Nuremberg”). James had Wagner with him in the Royal box. At Levine reprises the opera along with Johan the end of the successful performance the Botha as Walther and Annette Dasch as audience called for Wagner who broke court Eva. James Morris and Michael Volle share protocol by addressing the crowd from the the central role of Royal box. Hans Sachs. The The opera is opera features often cited as stunning sets an example of and costumes Wagner’s antias they recreate Semitism. It 16th century was also used by Nuremberg. various German At the time, administrations Nuremberg was in the early a free imperial 20th century to city, and one of promote German the centers of nationalism. the Renaissance In fact at the in Northern reopening of the Europe. The story Bayreuth Festival revolves around in 1924 Die the real-life guild Meistersinger was of Meistersinger performed. The (Master Singers), audience rose to an association of its feet during amateur poets Hans Sachs’ final and musicians. oration, and sang “Deutschland One of the main über Alles” after characters, the the opera had cobbler-poet photo Met Opera Hans Sachs, is based on an actual historical finished. On 21 March 1933, the founding figure: Hans Sachs (1494–1576), the most of the Third Reich was celebrated with a performance of the opera in the presence famous of the historical mastersingers. The opera is Wagner’s only opera centered of Hitler. Subsequently Wagner’s grandson on a historically well-defined time and and later his great-granddaughter produced place rather than a mythical or legendary revisions which significantly changed the setting. It is the only mature Wagner opera storyline to exclude any anti-Semitism or to be based on an entirely original story, German nationalism. While it is hardly one of Wagner’s more devised by Wagner himself, who wrote the libretto himself. He began writing the popularly performed operas, it is noted story in 1845, but didn’t begin writing the for the music as the opera itself centers on libretto until 1862 with the premier not musical performance. Start time 9:00 a.m. held until 1868, as the 1860’s were not Running time 5 hr. 50 min. 2 intermissions. a good time for Wagner. The 1861 Paris Tickets $24, Seniors $22, youth $18. production of Tannhauer was a fiasco, the 1864 production of Tristan und Isolde was abandoned, Wagner gave up hope of writing D ✔ Notary Public ✔ Building Plans ✔ Business Cards ✔ Postcards ✔ Flyers ✔ Posters ✔ Signage ✔ Brochures Wagner Opera at Arena Theater December 13 69 PRINT • COPY • SCAN • FAX • EMAIL & MORE... T: (707) 884-9695 C: (415) 298-2778 E: david@dmoultonaia.com W: www.dmoultonaia.com O: 39150 Ocean Dr. Suite 1, Gualala, CA DAVID MOULTON AIA Anchor Bay Store featuring a full line of Organic & Conventional Foods Beer & Wine Camp Supplies Mon- Sat 8-7 Sunday 8-6 884-4245 Weddings Retreats CSA Produce 882-3046 Reward Offered to Help Stop Poaching A group of local concerned citizens have offered a $1500 reward for information leading to the conviction of anyone who is guilty of illegal fishing in the Garcia River or any of its tr ibutar ies. This would include netting, gigging, spearing, shooting, keeping caught fish, fishing with lights, fish in home freezers, transporting fish or fishing without a license. If you have knowledge of such activity please call CALTIP anonymous 24- hour hotline at 888-334-2258. The Garcia River fishery is in the early stages of making a comeback and it is essential that fish stocks be left alone until they reach a sustainable number for fishing. It has been a long and difficult struggle by many persons working to restore this once fabulous fish run. Everyone should be encouraged to promote this important effort. Readers Theater Presents Holiday Classic Live with Subsequent Radio Broadcast 41601 Mountain Retreats View Road www.oz-farm.com 882-3046 *NOT JUST CARPETS* Monday To Friday 10 AM - 5 PM Saturday 10 AM - 3 PM 39200 S. HWY 1 GUALALA CA WWW.COTTAGECARPETS.COM cottagecarpets@hotmail.com 707-884-9655 from the original film, “Miracle on 34th Street” Nearly everyone is familiar with the 1947 film Miracle on 34th Street about the Macy’s Santa Claus who believes he is the real Santa and goes about turning skeptical New Yorkers into believers. In the course of their transformation they come to discover the true, generous meaning of this holiday. Local author and stage director, David Skibbins, has adapted for Gualala Arts Readers’ Theater a play version of the story The Lighthouse Peddler Is For Sale! * sale to include historic string ball The 13th Annual Brandybuck Bizarre Bazaar to be held the weekend of Dec. 6 and 7, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Brandybuck Ranch located on the Point Arena ridge near Schooner Gulch Road. Unique, funny, thoughtful, practical and affordable items will be available to satisfy holiday shoppers desire to shop local and support local artists. The bazaar includes a Grand Raffle of a basket of donated artisan goodies. Sweet and savory hors d’oeuvres, hot apple cider, and music are provided. Participating this year are Potters Brenda Phillips, Gretchen Barton, Cindy McPeak, Beatrice Acosta, and Cate Carre; Jewelers Jennifer Washick, Mike Sorbelli, Kirby Leary, Carol Segelstom and Linda Dawson; Woodworkers Bill Ranseen and Steve Main. Other local vendors include ; Joel Kies, Joanne Leary, Astrid R-Hogle, and Jan Edwards. Watch for the signs and festive decorations. More information at 882-2269. READERS THEATER COTTAGE CARPETS Carpet Starting at 0.99 Sq. Ft Tile And Vinyl. All Window Coverings Kitchen Cabinets, Area Rugs,Wood Floors, Laminates & More. Bizarre Bazaar at Brandybuck Ranch For over 13 years the focus of this monthly has been the arts, events, sustainability & opinions. The Lighthouse Peddler is a turn-key business that doesn’t require any publishing experience. We will work with you to develop The Lighthouse Peddler in your way. Available in over 55 locations and in an online format, the paper is thriving. For more information contact lighthousepeddler@mcn.org written by the Mountain Community Theater and presented with the permission of Dramatic Publishing. The reading will be accompanied by music from Don Kreiger (who else?) with sound effects by Sabina Walla. Though the Readers’ Theater has been in existence for several years, this is the third year that they have given public continued next column cont. performances. They rotate directors each year and this is the first public performance directed by Skibbins. The performance will be recorded for broadcast on KTDE 3 times during the holiday season. See KTDE website for times. The cast this year includes Karen Sarratoni, Joel Crockett, Annan Paterson, Rick Hansen, Saundra Brewer, Bob Welsh, Lynn Atkins, Jane Simmonds, and Jan Carter. Evening performances will be on Friday, December 19 and Saturday December 20 at 7:0 p.m. There will be a matinee performance on Sunday at 2:00 p.m. General admission tickets are $10 with youth tickets at $5. Tickets may be purchased at the Gualala Arts website (www.gualalaarts.org) or at the Dolphin Gallery, the Art Center, or Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore in Gualala. Open Enrollment for Individuals & Families Ends February 15th! VANESSA IGNACIO Agent/Broker #0H53499 Gualala 707-884-4640 Point Arena 707-882-2488 vanessa@ignaciohealth.com Pg 7 Lighthouse Peddler, December 2014 Bell Ringers Concert Set for December 13 UGGS BOGS Belts Slippers Socks The holidays on the coast just wouldn’t seem right without a concert by the Ernest Bloch Bell Ringers, so on Saturday, December 13 at 3:00 p.m. the Gualala Arts Center will host the bell ringers along with some of their friends under the direction of Jeanne Jackson. In addition to songs from their f o u r- a n d - a - h a l f octave hand bells and chimes, they will be joined by local singers. Remi Alexander joined by Karl Young on Shakuhachi flute will help the audience sing “Have Yourself a Merry Little C h r i s t m a s ,” always a lot of fun. Catherine Miller will lead an all sing on “Santa Claus is Coming to Town.” Rachel Kritz and Linda Bostwick will perform a duet on “Angels We Have Heard on High” and Sita Milchev and Cassy Grossman will join the bells on “Mary, Did you Know?”A highlight of the concert is sure to be “Pata-Pan” with Cyndy Solomon joining the bell ringers on alto recorder and Eric Kritz on clarinet playing “Just a Closer Walk with Thee”. The Coastal Singers will add their beautiful voices and 4-part harmonies to this concert, performing 3 pieces and joining the bells on “Winter Wonderland.” Santa Claus will also be at the concert and will be handing out candy canes to kids of all ages. R e f res h m ent s will be served. Tickets are $10 in advance and $5 more day of performance. Children and young people 17 & under can attend for free as long as they are accompanied photo by B. Pratt by an adult. For advance purchase, visit Brown Paper Tickets or call them at 800-838-3006. To purchase in person, visit the Gualala Arts Center or Dolphin Gallery in Gualala. For further information, contact Bell Director Jeanne Jackson at 884-1761. wednesday -saturday 5ish-8ish food to take out or eat in Dinner menu changes weekly 206 Main St. Pt. Arena 707-882-3800 also home of Pangaea Catering www.unedaeat.com check out our encased meats Point Arena Lighthouse ❖Tower Tours ❖Museum ❖Gift Store ❖Lodging “Climb to the Top!” Open Daily 10:00am-3:30pm 45500 Lighthouse Rd. Point Arena (707) 882-2809 pointarenalighthouse.com 5th Annual Create a new family holiday tradition at Festival of Lights! Thousands of lights transform Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens with brilliant displays of whimsy and wonder! Enjoy light refreshments, beer, wine, hot cocoa, light supper available by David’s Deli, holiday shopping at The Garden Store, Holiday Sweets Café, and live music. Thursday through Sunday, December 4–7 Thursday through Sunday, December 11–14 5:00 to 7:30 pm Adults $10; Children age 16 and under FREE Children must be accompanied by an adult. No pets. No electric carts available after 5:30 pm. Tickets at Harvest Market and The Garden Store at MCBG in Fort Bragg, Out of This World in Mendocino, or at the door. 18220 North Highway 1, Fort Bragg, California 707 964-4352 ext. 16 u www.gardenbythesea.org Pg 8 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 Doug Pollard photo. Friday through Sunday, November 28–30 www.lighthousepeddler.net/currentissue always free & in color The Adventurous Gardener Eating Really Local – A Wild Holiday Feast By Lori Hubbart Could you put on a holiday dinner using only foods native to Mendocino and Sonoma Counties? The traditional holiday meal was based on foods like corn and turkey, native to other parts of the Americas. A feast consisting only of locally indigenous foods would be a fun challenge. Local appetizers might feature crunchy, richly flavored seaweeds – gathered, since we can’t grow them. For meat eaters, low tide foraging would also yield shellfish. For a main dish, carnivores would have to forgo the non-native turkey, but duck or Canada goose could certainly be served, accompanied by a sauce of wild huckleberries (related to cranberries). A tasty stuffing could be made with native grains and nuts. Blue wild rye (Leymus glaucus) was used as a grain by native peoples, and like most native grasses is a peren- berries of the hairy manzanita nial bunchgrass, growing in a clump, rather than a spreading mat. This tall, handsome grass is commercially available, and quite growable. Wild hazelnuts (Corylus cornuta var. californica), are abundant here, and in a good year, will produce a plentitude of nuts. The roasted nuts would make a delicious ad- ISLAND COVE ESTATES: Two fantastic parcels totaling 5.3 acres reach from Hwy 1 to Iversen Drive. Adjacent lots, bordered by a lush creek canyon on north & seasonal creek on south provide incredible privacy for your dream home(s) plus deeded beach access to exclusive Island Cove. Potential for family compound! dition to the stuffing. Hazelnut is a large, sculptured shrub for sun or light shade, and its leaves can turn a glorious gold in the fall. For seasoning, try Sonoma sage (Salvia sonomensis), which, like California’s other shrubby sages, is closely related to the culinary sage of Europe. Sonoma sage stays low, creeping along slopes under pines and oaks, and can make a lovely groundcover. It needs good drainage, high shade and minimal summer water. Gardeners who can meet these needs will be rewarded with a profusion of whorled, lavender-blue flowers, and visiting hummingbirds. We have two tasty local onions: The tall pink onion (Allium unifolium), and the magenta-flowered coast onion (Allium dichlamydeum). These beauties are easily grown, though the tall pink one multiplies much faster. For vegetarians, a pilaf of wild grains and nuts, seasoned with local plants would make a lovely main dish. Carnivores could add venison served with a reduction sauce and wild mushrooms. Another veggie entrée would be roasted bulbs, ranging from the large, multi-purpose soaproot plant (Chloragalum pomeridianum), to the smaller, delectable broadiaeas (Brodiaea, Dichelostemma and Triteleia species) and blue camas lily (Camassia quamash). All these showy bulbs can be had from specialist sources, and planted out in the fall. Raised beds lined with wire might be the best way to grow them for eating. Perhaps there were fewer pocket gophers in the old days, though some disturbance helps the bulbs multiply. The bulbs could be roasted with the leaves of California bay (Umbellularia californica). On the coast, this aromatic tree grows in damp draws where the extra water compensates for moisture lost to powerful coastal winds. It should be planted with the greatest caution these days, as it is a vector for Sudden Oak Death (SOD). 110 acre conservation center dedicated to the breeding and preservation of endangered African hoof stock. Visits available at 9:30 am and 4:00 pm by reservation only. Stay with us in the comfort and style of one of our eco-friendly cottages. 707-882-2297 www.bbryanpreserve.com continued on pg 13 2.6 park-like acres manicured to perfection. Bluewater ocean view, 2 GPM well, perc tested for 3 bedroom standard hi-line system, level building site surrounded by beautiful pines with cypress hedge row along Iversen Drive for additional privacy. Mushroom hunters take note: King Boletes abound! $295,000 2.7 acres, knolltop building site overlooking meadow. Level terrain, bluewater views, 3 GPM well, approved plans for a 2 bedroom standard hi-line septic system, paved frontage on Hwy 1 with CalTrans approved site for encroachment easement. $224,500 Banana Belt Properties J.Moloney Scott, Broker #00795487 www.bananabelt.org 884-1109 FAX 884-1343 35505 SO. HWY 1 ANCHOR BAY E-MAIL: BANANA1@MCN.ORG Serving the Mendocino Coast Since 1986 Available For Your Holiday Parties Both Large And Small! Closed 12/24 &12/25 Call for reservations HAPPY HOUR 4-6 EVERY DAY 11 A.M. - 8 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK 790 PORT ROAD (THE COVE) IN POINT ARENA 882-3400 Pg 9 Lighthouse Peddler, December 2014 RCU TOY DRIVE Redwood Credit Union (RCU) is holding its annual holiday food and toy donation programs in all of its North Bay and San Francisco locations. All branches, as well as the RCU Auto Center, will be collecting toys and non-perishable food items Nov. 28 through Dec. 13. Partnerships with nonprofit agencies throughout the North Bay ensure that donations will remain in the local community, benefitting children and families in need during the holiday season. The Point Arena branch donations will be shared with Project Santa and Project Sanctuary. Brett Martinez, President and CEO of RCU, stated, “What makes RCU’s toy and food drives unique is the way our communities rise to the occasion to help those less fortunate during the holiday season. This program has been an RCU tradition for more than 20 years, and I am always overwhelmed by the generosity of our Members and staff.” Jin Shin Jyutsu Uplift and Harmonize Your Healing Since 1981 Denise Green, CMT 882-2437 Backhoe Work Tree Removal Landscaping Milling Jasper Brady 882-1822 Locally Roasting Specialty Coffee In Small Batches & Delivering Often For Freshness & Flavor. Available at Anchor Bay Market, Arena Market, Blue Canoe, Cove Coffee, Franny's Cup & Saucer, Lisa's Luscious & Surf Super. Pg 10 Lighthouse Peddler, December 2014 Scuttlebutt by Mitch McFarland The Keystone Pipeline debate is getting lots the headlines these days as President Obama is about to make perhaps one of the biggest decisions of his presidency. This dirtiest of oil will be piped down to Texas to be refined and exported. How that is suppose to be of any great advantage to us is beyond me. Proponents are claiming that it is a jobs program, but if that is the best they an do, they don’t have much of an argument. Between 1000 – 2000 (depending on who you believe) workers will be needed for 2 years to build it and the CEO of the pipeline company building the pipeline says 35 people will be employed after that. Is that reason enough to accept the inevitable spills, air pollution, and dislocation (plus massive deforestation of boreal forests in Canada) that even proponents admit will occur? There is a huge environmental argument against not just the pipeline, but the whole tar sands extraction of oil. No one who seriously looked at all the issues could say this is something humanity should be doing. Too bad that doesn’t matter. Most people don’t give a crap about that as long as they can afford their energy costs like home heating, air conditioning, and transportation and we have been continuously told that we cannot live without fossil fuels for the foreseeable future. We have no choice many will claim. Oil is our lifeblood and our economy will crash without cheap oil. The problem is that tar sands oil will not be cheap. The website Oilprice.com informs us that while existing production will remain profitable for some time, new production has costs that make it a very marginally profitable investment. Bitumen is expensive to extract, upgrade and refine and cannot compete with the many new shale oil projects in the U.S. with production at its highest level in a decade. Total SA, Europe’s third-biggest oil company, will book a $1.65 billion loss in the first quarter on the canceled Voyageur Upgrader project in Canada’s oil sands after selling its stake to Suncor Energy Inc. More than $5 billion of investment in Voyageur over the next five years is “no longer justified from a strategic and economic point of view,” the Paris-based company said in a statement. Economist Jeff Rubin has written, “when you’re schlepping oil from sand, you are probably at the bottom of the ninth inning in the hydrocarbon economy.” Yet it doesn’t appear that we are in the waning days of oil burning despite the fact that more and more difficult efforts are employed to extract oil worldwide. This trend along with the vast increase in U. S. production including cleaner natural gas leads me to think that there is a reason why many believe that the Keystone oil is headed to China. We will simply be part of China’s delivery system. Funny too, how some here cry that we shouldn’t be doing anything about climate change because China will still keep burning dirty fuel, yet here we are striving to help them do just that. Closer to my heart is how our tax dollars are being invested in energy. We know that huge sums of potential tax dollars are not collected from oil companies because of numerous subsidies of which they may legally take advantage (let’s ignore the huge chunk of Pentagon budget that goes to “secure” our access to oil in the Mid-East.) Not collecting taxes for something is the same as spending money on that thing, so I figure we taxpayers are investing quite a bit of money annually in the fossil fuel business and I don’t like the long-term prospects of that investment. But how else to invest in energy infrastructure? I think we all agree that we as a government should be keeping an eye on the future to plan how we can continue to develop as a nation and people. That would surely include our energy future. Most people understand that our energy future is with renewables. The argument revolves around when that future will arrive. I would like to posit that it is already here and the only thing keeping it from accelerating is our lack of understanding (thank you mainstream media). Let’s look at the federal government’s investments in alternative energy. In 2009 The Obama administration charged the DOE’s Loan Programs Office with jumpstarting cutting edge green technology ventures deemed too risky and expensive to attract cash from private investors. One such loan guarantee was the Solyndra factory. When they went down you would have thought the Russians had landed on the East Coast and the Chinese army landed in California the same day. The media went nuts and the climate deniers and fossil fuel cont’d on page 14 arenatheater.org December 2014 Merry Christmas and Thank You for your support and patronage! Arena Theater Live 3rd Monday Music Open Mic 8-9 PM Featured Band 9-10 PM Jam Session 10 PM Monday Dec. 15 8 PM ▪▪▪ Met Opera Live in HD Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg Saturday Dec. 13 9 AM ▪▪▪ Bolshoi Ballet in Cinema Live from Moscow The Nutcracker Sunday Dec. 21 2 PM ▪▪▪ Arena Theater Film Club Mondays 7 PM Dec. 1 To Have and Have Not Dec. 8 Starman 214 Main Street Point Arena 100.5 FM KTDE -The Tide Tune in to Local Radio 38598 Cypress Way, Gualala Office 884-1000 Studio 884-3000 www.ktde.com Grief can take care of itself, but to get the full value of a joy you must have somebody to divide it with. - Mark Twain Point Arena Shops Open Late for Hometown Holiday On Thursday, December 18 Point Arena merchants will once again be staying open late to celebrate the season and accommodate holiday shoppers. Main street merchants will be open until 7:00 p.m. with many offering refreshments, special sales, gift-wrapping, and gift certificates. Action Network’s facility in Point Arena will be open to give children a place to be while parents are shopping. When stores close at 7:00 p.m. The Arena Theater will be showing The Hunger Games” Mockingjay Part 1 and the Third Thursday Poets will be holding their annual solstice party at the 215 Main wine bar. Family Resource Centers ...building a thriving, healthy, drugfree commUNITY for all. We offer: Teen Activities (ages 13-18) Mentoring & Tutoring (5-18) Learning Through Play (18 mos-5, drop off) Playgroups (0-5), Computer Lab, Parenting Classes, Counseling & much more..... You can: Volunteer or Donate—Today In Gualala: Cypress Village, above Gym. In Point Arena: 200 Main St (Blue Awning) 884-5413 884-5414 en espanol www.ActionNetwork.info PO Box 1163, Gualala, CA 95445 Ad For Peddler Mistletoe By Gail Thompson Do you remember your first romantic kiss? Perhaps it was a magic moment under the mistletoe. You are young and nervous, hoping that a certain someone will be brave enough to join you under the mistletoe and give you a special kiss. Not so long ago, this meant a marriage pledge! What a strange choice for a romantic moment. Mistletoe is a parasitic plant. It has a modified root (called a haustorium) that penetrates the host plant, usually a tree. This spreading root system connects to the conductive system where it extracts water and nutrient needs, which eventually can kill the host plant. Mistletoe has a good side. It has been found to have a positive effect on biodiversity by providing high quality food and habitat for a wide range of animals and birds. In ancient Celt, Norse, Greek and early European periods, mistletoe was revered as a mystical plant with special powers. It was often used in certain pagan ceremonies. Depending on the culture, it was used to bestow life and fertility, as an aphrodisiac and 884-3248 used in primitive marriage rites. It was hung to ward off evil spirits and to prevent witches from entering and as a protection against poison (which is strange since their berries can be poisonous). In Scandinavia, it was considered a plant of peace under which enemies could declare a truce or where fighting spouses could kiss and make-up. Wow, all this attributed to that piece of green hung up for a hopeful kiss during the holidays! Even if all the pagan aspects of mistletoe are mostly forgotten, its evolution into romantic kissing under the mistletoe makes for a lot of fun, teasing and repartee. Two eighteenth-century events popularized our modern tradition. The Eng- Thank You for Allowing Us to Serve You I column width (2 1/2) x 3 inches Rate: $44 per month The Sea Trader is a fine emporium of delightful and heart-felt gifts including beautiful handcarved sculptures from Thailand , spiritual books, greeting cards, CD’s and much much more. . . . Happy Holidays Hwy. One, N. Gualala Daily 10-5, Sun. 11-5 lish had a decorated mistletoe kissing ball at Christmas. If a girl stood under it, she could not refuse a kiss. If the girl was not kissed, she could not expect to be married the following year. On the twelfth night, the Christmas mistletoe was burned to ensure that the boys and girls that kissed do eventually marry. It was also popular to pluck a mistletoe berry after a kiss. Once all the berries were gone, it was considered bad luck to kiss under the mistletoe. In the U.S., the tradition was popularized by the American author, Washington Irving (1783-1859), famous for The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. He describes the tradition in his book The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. Kissing is yummy, sweeter than candy. I plan to promote this tradition by giving each family some mistletoe for their holiday decorations, including one for our house. With this article visible in a prominent spot, I have high hopes that my lifetime sweetheart will bestow a lingering kiss at a special moment. What a fun tradition! continued next column Closed Christmas Day Come by to view the Holiday Train SENIOR DISCOUNT EVERY MONDAY WE ACCEPT EBT CARDS 4 Inch is $59 per month SUNDSTROM MALL, GUALALA 884-1205 HRS: 7:00 A.M. TILL 8:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, 7:30 TILL 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY SUNDSTROM MALL, GUALALA 884-1205 7AM UNTIL &8PM SUNDSTROM MALL, GUALALA 884-1205 HRS; 7:00 A .M. TILL 8;00 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, 7:30 DAILY till 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY Pg 11 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 Redwood Coast Chamber of Commerce and Visitor’s Center The Sonoma- Mendocino Coastal Connection Thursday, Friday, Saturday 11 - 5pm Sunday 11-2 39150 S. Hwy 1 in the Forte Gualala Bldg. tel: (800)778-5252 or 884-1080 www.redwoodcoastchamber.com ENHANCE YOUR HEALTH & VITALITY www.Wellness On The Coast. com 20+ Local Bodywork Practioners & teachers provide exceptional resources & services Give A Gift That Keeps On Giving: Give a Gift Membership to KZYX. It Encourages a Friend or Family Member to get into the Public Radio Habit. It's Easy. Go to our Home Page, www.kzyx.org or call KZYX at (707) 895-2324* * ( D u r i n g B u s iness Hours) Listener Supported KZYX 90.7 • 91.5 • 88.1 RETURN TO THE SOIL WITH A LEGAL BURIAL IN YOUR BACKYARD Book Review: Being Mortal by Atul Gawande Review by Joel Crockett, Four Eyed Frog Books “I’m old!” That’s the opening to a song my brother wrote. It’s a humorous song and touches, gently, on some of the issues and infirmities we associate with old age: “...I’m the same punk kid in used-up skin; I wish that young was now and old was then.” But Being Mortal tells it as it really is. Old age, or any age as we approach our final days, is rarely humorous. It’s serious. It can be scary. And doctors tend to try, in every way they can, to extend our lives as long as possible. That’s their job. Often, though, unwittingly in most cases, they do just the opposite. The results can be painful, expensive, and just, plain sad. Who talks honestly and helpfully to a person who is clearly dying? What is the value of a risky operation to prolong a life that is clearly and irreversibly in decline? What are the risks? Why are bad decisions made? What matters most to a person, to a human being, who is nearing the end of her life? These are questions that Atul Gawande addresses in his sobering and thoughtful, yet hopeful new book, Being Mortal. In his interviews of the very old, Dr. Gawande confirms it isn’t death itself that we fear. It’s the journey. It’s what happens along the way. Losing faculties such as hearing and memory, losing best friends and, perhaps most importantly, our way of life. When we can no longer take care of ourselves, when we are debilitated, we risk losing our independence. He quotes Philip Roth from his novel, Everyman: “Old age is not a battle. Old age is a massacre.” But until it happens we don’t really think much about it. We are unprepared. As I read the book, as I write this review, I can’t help but think of my mother-inlaw, Anny. Anny has lived by herself in a small Winnipeg apartment since she was widowed, 32 years ago. She’s been fiercely independent; driving to the store, doing her own cooking, living life on her own terms. Early in November, though, Anny (who, by the way, is 97 years old) ended up in the hospital for the first time in her life. While her mind is sharp and intact, her body is letting her down. Now what? Barry Vogel Attorney and Counselor 280 North Oak Street Ukiah 707 462 6541 www.radiocurious.org Options are being considered for Anny, who desperately and vociferously wants to go home. What medication will be most effective? Should she be given a pacemaker? What kind of in-home help will she require? Maybe we should consider a nursing home, or an “assisted-living” facility. Doctors are making recommendations. We are struggling with the choices and the potential consequences. We knew this day would come, but we really didn’t talk much about it. In many ways we simply weren’t prepared. Neither, of course, was Anny. How do we make her life worth living when she is weak and frail, when she can no longer fend for herself? And the more insidious question, how soon will this be us? Doctors aren’t always right. Surgery, medications or the latest technology aren’t always the answer. Nursing homes aren’t either. To a person wishing to live life on his own terms, even if on a limited level, these options can feel like a prison. And all assisted living facilities are not created equal. But there is a movement toward understanding. There are assisted living facilities that live up to their names, that offer what’s important to those in the final chapter of their lives. There is hope. “We’re all gonna die!” It sounds like a line from a bad Airplane movie. But the fact is, it’s true. We are all going to die. “Death,” cont. next column Pg 12 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 Dr. Gawande reminds us, “is not a failure. Death is normal.” How, he asks, can we avoid losing what’s really most important to us as our bodies let us down? How can we live successfully all the way to the very end? Is being safe and living longer the answer? Or is it more important to have meaning? Through powerful, personal and often moving stories, the author shares insights on what has worked and what hasn’t. There’s magic in tough conversations. There’s value in asking questions like, “What matters most? Your hopes? Or your fears?” Being Mortal offers paths to explore what really matters and suggests options to bring meaning and worth to the last days of your aging parents, to your terminally ill best friend, and ultimately to you. No matter how old you are, no matter your circumstance, this is a book that belongs at the very top of your reading list. Sooner or later it will matter to you. When death comes for us, may our lives be already safely stored away in the minds and hearts and memories of those we have loved, and in the happiness and well’being of all we have helped, and may death find no life to take from us but shuffle off defeated, having relieved us only of our dying -Robert Brault Open Every Day Alysia Calkins & Dorothy Barrett’s Rollerville Cafe 882-2077 Outdoor Deck Delicious Caring Homestyle Fare Monday - Thursday 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Friday - Sunday 8 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. 2 minutes north of Point Arena on Hwy. One at Lighthouse Road Arena Film Club Schedule for December Monday December 1 To Have or Have Not The movie that introduced the world and Humphrey Bogart to 19-year-old Lauren Bacall. Director Howard Hawk’s film shadowed Bogart’s earlier film, Casablanca, but is no less entertaining even if less well known. If you don’t know how to whistle, see this film for instructions. 1944 100 min. Monday December 8 Starman Not one of Jeff Bridges’ best known of his 71 films, yet he received a nomination for Best Actor for his portrayal of a stranded alien trying to get back home. Director John Carpenter and co-star Karen Allen were both commended for their work on this film. The story goes DR. DANIEL BRANNIGAN, D.C. PACIFIC CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH CENTER Offering Class IV Laser • • • • • • • Improves vascular activity Increases metabolic activity Improved nerve function Accelerates tissue repair Faster wound healing Anti inflammation Decreases pain Monday 2-6 pm Tuesday 9-6pm Wednesday 9-6pm Thursday 9-12 38460 So. Hwy One Gualala, CA 884-1714 ADORABLE BLUEEYED PUREBRED KITTENS FREE TO GOOD HOMES. One tortie seal point manx, cameo effect, loving and bright, female. One lynx point, blue point Siamese, sweet and gentle, female. 707-353-0999. Bridges and Allen in Starman 3rd Thursday Poets Host Solstice Party from Blake More On Thursday, December 18 at 7:30pm, The Third Thursday Poetry Reading Series at 215 Main in Point Arena will feature the group’s annual “Open Mic Solstice Reading & Party”. The reading will begin with live improv jazz followed by an open mic with jazz improv; the reading will conclude with more live jazz. Following tradition, there will be no featured poet this month, but instead all members of the community are encouraged to bring in extra poems & potluck food to share if they are inspired to do so. Third Thursday Poetry is supported by The Third Thursday Poetry Group, many anonymous donors, and Poets & Writers, Inc. through a Bogart and Bacall in To Have or Have Not deeper than the typical sci-fi flick. Bridge’s grant it has received from The James Irvine stone-faced alien is a long way from the laid Foundation. back stoner, Lebowski 1984 115 min PG Arena Theater requests your participation in our Film Club survey so they can better understand your preferences for future films to screen at the Monday night Film Club. Guests are welcome to attend Film Club movies for an $10 (adult), $5 (teen) Western Union/Orlandi Valutasend/receive money, admission. convenience bill pay, money orders The Cineaste membership level of the Arena Theater ($85 per year) includes free Full color/B&W/wide format scanning, copying, printing, faxing admission to Monday evening Film Club and file management events as well as discounts to regular movies for business, art and architecture/design. We and many live events. feature the latest in Canon digital equipment ADVENTUROUS GARDENER from pg 8 Yes, SOD is a danger to many plants other than oaks. Another at-risk tree is the tanbark (Lithocarpus densiflorus), an oak relative. Some years it sets a good crop of plump acorns, said to be delicious. Learning to pound, leach and cook acorns takes some practice. The tanbark trees in northern Sonoma County were devastated by SOD, much to the sorrow of the resident native people. This tree is sacred to local native people, much used by wildlife, yet a trash tree to the timber industry. Salad greens would include miner’s (or Indian) lettuce (Claytonia perfoliata). This tangy annual is easily grown in a sheltered garden, where it can be encouraged to become large and lush. For beverages, berries of manzanitas (Arctostaphylos species) were traditionally made into cider. These shrubs are quite at home in our acidic coast soils. If your landscape is bereft of manzanitas, large types are stunning as single specimens, or planted in rows for an allée effect. Their flowers impart a honey-like scent to the air on warm, late winter days. California’s wild grape (Vitis californica) is native a bit further inland, and its leaves turn either golden or red with cool fall temperatures. We can grow it here, and with enough grapes for experimentation, it might yet be possible to make a passable native wine. On to dessert! No pumpkin pie for us, since edible squashes occur further east, but not in California. A sort of pudding of the aforementioned grains, maybe? What about sweeteners? Neither sugar cane nor sugar beets are native here, and honeybees are from the Old World. Luckily, the big leaf maple (Acer macrophyllum), a few miles inland, is actually a type of sugar maple, so you could make a rich, sweet syrup from the sap. For table decorations from the wild, try lichens blown down in a storm (the ecosystemfriendly way to collect lichens). For decorative berries, toyon or hollyberry (Heteromeles arbutifolia) can be grown in sunny, sheltered spots on the coast. Its red berries are stunning when combined with the white fruits of snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus), which thrives in light shade. Weaving more natives into our home landscapes and gently tending our wild food sources can benefit us now and in the future. Even this brief overview shows that we could feast pretty well in a state that has been called a land of nuts and berries for best reproductive results. Public Computer Access plus FREE WIFI for Sundstrom Mall customers Wide array of print services, including bindery, batch folding, carbonless forms and lamination. + Gifts Sundstrom Mall- Downstairs Gualala, CA Monday - Friday 9:30am - 5:30pm Saturday 10am- 2pm local phone (707) 412-8101 fax (707) 884-9657 www.copiesandmoregualala.com FOR SALE: California King bed frame & box springs. Craftsman style. Solid oak. Good condition. No mattress. $20. 882-1726 Pg 13 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 Official Gear for the Lighthouse Peddler lover in your life! www.cafepress.com/+lighthouse-peddler+gifts SCUTTLEBUTT cont. from pg 10 groupies claimed proof that solar energy was a bust. Some media outlets later brought out that Solyndra’s failure was one of several solar companies worldwide that also went bankrupt as the result of illegal dumping by China. But leave the explanation aside (voters don’t like explanations anyway-- too complicated). For the sake of argument let’s agree that Solyndra was a bad investment in a company with a bad business model. Some $500 million tax dollars were lost. Of the many billions of dollars that DOE risked in alternative energy they have lost some $800 million and most of it through the Solyndra failure. But wait. As of September, that portfolio had a loss rate of 2.28 % and has made a profit of $30 million. Compare that to the typical loss rate for a venture capital firm’s portfolio. As many as 40 % of those companies fail, according to a 2012 Harvard Business School study. Oh, and the program has created or saved 55,000 jobs and avoided carbon pollution equivalent to taking more than 3 million cars off the road. That is a good outcome whether or not you believe in man-made climate change. One group that always looks to the future is billionaire investors. What kind of things are some of them doing in energy? We have all heard about Texan T Bone Pickens and his big investments in wind energy (making Texas America’s leader in wind generation). Warren Buffet has put $15 billion into solar power and plans to invest another $15 billion. Elon Musk, of course, started the electric car company Tesla, but is also chairman of SolarCity, the nation’s biggest solar installer, which announced it is acquiring a Silicon Valley photovoltaic panel manufacturer called Silevo in a deal worth as much as $350 million. The startup claims to have developed technology to make solar panels that produce more electricity at lower cost than those currently on the market. At a targeted capacity greater than 1 gigawatt within the next 2 years, it will be one of the single largest solar-panel production plants in the world. Musk recently wrote about the Silevo factory, “This will be followed in subsequent years by one or more significantly larger plants at an order of magnitude greater annual production capacity.” SolarCity expects to install 1 gigawatt of solar panels in 2015—double this year’s installations, and as much as some manufacturers’ total capacity. The move comes 4 months after Musk announced plans to build the world’s biggest lithium-ion battery factory. The big idea: The $5 billion “gigafactory” would allow Tesla to manufacture as many as half a million electric cars a year by 2020, driving down costs to make battery-powered vehicles a mass-market phenomenon. I have heard that the owners of Walmart are not West Coast liberals, yet Walmart plans to switch to 100% renewable power by 2020 from approximately 20% currently. Cumulative solar installations in the U.S. rose 547% in the last 4 years. During those 4 years, the world has deployed more photovoltaic systems than over the past 4 decades. Even Saudi Arabia, for crying out loud, is aggressively expanding their solar capacity. We need to move away from the fossil fuel economy as quickly as is possible and since the environmental argument has limited appeal, shouldn’t economics be convincing? Pg 14 Lighthouse Peddler, 2014 Photography Exhibit at 215 Main An exhibit of black and white photographs of Yosemite in winter by Bob Schwein will be on display at 215 Main wine bar in Point Arena beginning December 1 with an opening reception on December 5 from 3 – 5:00 p.m. The photos will be displayed until the end of the month. In his statement for the show, Schwein explains how as an eight year old his next door neighbor took him under his wing in his hobby darkroom and taught him the basics of mixing chemicals, processing negatives and making prints. The magic of watching a print gradually appearing in the developer is a wonder he still savors. He began his professional career as a metallographer in a materials testing laboratory where a major portion of his work involved technical photography. Schwein cites Sebastiao Salgado, Walker Evans, Dorthea Lange, Ruth Bernard, Margaret Bourke-White and Ansel Adamsas as influences which untimately led to his work in black and white, medium and large format photography. He has studied under Frank Espada, Mark Citret, Marcia Liebermann, John Below and Michelle Vignes in the U.C. Berkeley San Francisco Extension Program and has exhibited in many group and oneperson venues in California. Eschewing the digital age of his medium, his favorite pieces of equipment are a 4”x5” Arca-Swiss view camera and a 2.25” square format Hassleblad. His standard film is Kodak T-Max 100,printing on Ilford Gallery, fiberbased paper with selenium archival toning. Schwein is a member of the Bay Area group, i-contact and a past member of the Bay Area Photographers’ Collective. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 24 27 28 25 29 30 35 39 43 44 48 12- Years in old Rome 21- One-twelfth of a year 23- Early computer 32 33 25- Began 34 27- Fluff, as bangs 37 41 45 46 56 13 13- Stalk 31 49 55 12 26 40 52 57 Sandwiches - Cold Drinks -SmoothiesOrganic Fair Trade Coffee & Espresso 28- Living in a city 42 Bait & Tackle - Surf Gear - Gifts 29- Head supporters 47 882-2665 31- Rat-___ 50 51 54 11 23 36 38 10 1/2 DAY DEC 24 & CLOSED Thru JAN 2 32- Advil rival 53 58 59 62 63 64 66 67 68 69 70 71 60 65 now serving locally made UnedaBagels 33- Spud 61 bestcrosswords 1 34- Abrasive mineral SHAMELESS 36- Bibliography abbr. suspects the show’s name is inspired by a part of Don’s personality. For himself, Don believes that there is no shame in producing commercial work if the artist enjoys their work and strives to perfect it. Is it not preferable to the artist who is employed at other work they don’t enjoy in order to support their “art”? First, second, and third place prizes are $100, $75, and $50 respectively with a $50 prize for best work for an artist under 18 years old. Judge Endemann will award 4 Judge’s Prizes according to his mood. There will be an opening reception on December 5 at 5:00 p.m. 40- Superior of a monastery 41- Mix dough <ACROSS> 50- Sport of hunting 44- Most strange 1- McNally’s partner 51- Stutz contemporary 47- Incessant 5- Big cheese 52- Fear greatly 49- Untidy states 9- Take the role of 54- Fine sheer fabric 50- Played at a fast tempo 14- Arch type 58- Established 53- Helicopter part 15- Fish-eating eagle 62- Healing plants 54- Poet 16- Sharp end 63- Defense grp. since 1949 55- Winglike parts 17- Barbershop request 65- Steinbeck: East of _____ 56- Hard work 18- “My Heart Will Go On” singer 66- Elevate 57- Suffix with exist 19- Actress Graff 67- Gator’s kin 59- Prefix with logical 20- Commercial capital of Sri Lanka 68- Show to a table 60- Type of tide 22- Make a formal speech 69- Shoulder muscles, briefly 61- Tolkien tree creatures 24- People and places, e.g. 70- French 101 verb 64- Illustrative craft 26- Scot’s refusal 71- Soaks (up) 27- Adjusting a musical instrument <DOWN> 30- Follow very closely 1- Campus mil. group 35- Set up 2- Farming prefix 36- I could ___ horse! 3- Singer Sedaka 37- Jack of “Rio Lobo” 4- Satanic 38- 1970 Jackson 5 hit 5- It bites you in your sleep 39- Frame for hanging hats 6- Rigel’s constellation 42- Hot time in Paris 7- ___-Cat 43- Japanese rice wine 8- Transport, mail 45- Inner layer of a quilt 9- Of the top 46- Not once 10- School 48- Costume 11- ___ yellow ribbon... Time is the coin of your life. It is the only coin you have, and only you can determine how it will be spent. Be careful lest you let other people spend it for you. - Carl Sandburg december beach walk tangles of kelp remaining from last nights storm -madhaiku Pg 15 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 LET THERE BE PEACE ON EARTH Pg 16 Lighthouse Peddler, December, 2014 Winter Hours Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday 10 am - 5 pm Outback stocks several kinds of small & large animal foods & treats, as well as conventional & alternative health remedies. We have very competitive pricing & tons of unique items and gifts. If you don’t find what you’re looking for, we can probably special order it for you, so don’t hesitate to ask. Feed, Bedding & Health Remedies For Your DOG CAT CHICKEN HORSE GOAT PIG COW FISH RABBIT & MORE Feed Store 882-3335 Garden Shop 882-3333 Main Street, Point Arena