Free Lighthouse Peddler - The Lighthouse Peddler
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Free Lighthouse Peddler - The Lighthouse Peddler
Lighthouse Peddler Free April 2014 (707) 882-3126 Issue #50! www.lighthousepeddler.net Bruce Cockburn to Play Arena Theater The Arena Theater has scored a coup and booked Canadian-born singer/songwriter/ activist Bruce Cockburn for a performance on Tuesday, April 15 at 7:00 p.m. The internationally acclaimed artist has 20 gold and platinum records to his credit as well as a lifetime of activism. Like his friends, Bono and Jackson Browne, Cockburn has used his notoriety to shine a spotlight on conditions around the world that need attention. He has worked with such groups as Oxfam, Amnesty International, Doctors Without Borders, Friends of the Earth, and USC Canada. Cockburn started out as a rocker (his band, Olivus, opened for Jimi Hendrix in 1968). He began his recording career in 1970 and his early music reflected his new-found Christian faith, but with the ascension of right-wing Christianity, he turned away and his faith led him to focus on humanitarian issues, rather 1 1 T H A N N U A L F E S T I V A L than the more mystical and spiritual themes of his early writing. His songs have been characterized as a blend of folk, blues, jazz and rock. Though he is known for his politically and socially relevant lyrics, he is less known outside his fan base as an outstanding guitar player. His 31 albums contain numerous instrumentals and some are all instrumental. His guitars are all handmade to his specifications and include a Resolectric guitar model from the National Guitar Company, and a steel-bodied Dobro resonator guitar. His playing has been compared to Bert Jansch, Pat Metheny, and Mississippi John Hurt. His songs have been covered by the a plethora of artists including Barenaked Ladies, Jimmy Buffett, Ani DiFranco, The Jerry cont on page 15 S O N O M A - M E N D O C I N O • A P R I L & M A Y C O A S T 2 0 1 4 Something for Everyone! 17 Outstanding Events along the Sonoma & Mendocino Coasts, from Timber Cove to Little River Friday, April 4 – Sunday, May 11, 2014 W H A L E A N D J A Z Z F E S T I V A L • C O M From the Editor’s Desk The sun is returning and so is the Whale and Jazz Festival. It seems like the Festival is starting to signal the beginning of “the season”; that is, when the visitors return and everyone starts scheduling their fundraisers and parties. You won’t have to wait long in April as 2 art openings will take place on April 4. The Dianne Neuman Gallery in Gualala has an opening by Portland artist, Paz. Dianne is relatively new to the Gualala arts scene and seems to be really shaking things up with all the activity at her gallery. If you are out viewing art that evening, you are in luck as Gualala Arts is hosting an opening for the Pacific Piecemakers Quilt Guild. Their long-standing Quilt Challenge produces some spectacular quilts from their members. See page 7 for details on both shows. We said things are heating up on the social calendar and we aren’t kidding. On April 5 2 more events can be added to the list. The Arena Theater’s opera series continues in the morning with Puccini La boheme. If that doesn’t float your boat you may wish to check out the 3rd Anniversary party at the Garcia River Casino that evening. Live band and cash drawings await you. See page 10 for both of these events. Of course, the Whale and Jazz Festival is all over the place and on April 7, the Arena Film club and the Whale and Jazz Festival are screening the documentary Thelonious Monk; Straight No Chaser. See page 5. Blues on the Coast is also partnering with the Festival when they present The FortyFours blues band on Saturday, April 12. This is a boogie band, so be ready to dance! See page 4. The Gualala Arts Chamber Music Series is bringing young violin talent, Emma Steele, to Coleman Auditorium on April 13 for an afternoon concert. She is just turning 24, but has an impressive resume already. See page 13. The Third Thursday poetry night at the 215 Main wine bar continues on April 17 with Jenny Lin. Poetry and Jazz is the theme of the evening as the Festival reaches another venue. See page 14. Action Network has 2 important fundraisers coming up. On April 18 they are sponsoring a picnic at Bower Park to reinforce April as Child Abuse Awareness Month and Alcohol Awareness Month. See page 18. Mar Vista Cottages is kindly hosting a gourmet dinner for Action Network to support the Music Together program that has proved so popular in past years. Music Together introduces Children to music and incorporates parents into the process. The event isn’t until May 1, but the $100 tickets are available now. See page 6. The Arena Theater Association will hold it annual membership meeting and board election on April 21 at 7:00 p.m. This is not just a boring meeting. Live music and food augment the election and report from the officers. See page 15. Opera returns to the Arena screen on April 26 with Mozart’s popular Cosi Fan Tutte. Local wildlife observer, Jeanne Jackson, has just published a fantastic book collected from her Mendonoma Sightings column over the years. It is a beautiful, informative, yet informal survey of our fauna and flora throughout the seasons. She will introduce this truly gorgeous book to the public at Gualala Arts Center on April 27. You will eventually see lots of these books around and you may wish to own one yourself. See page 11. Advertisers Index 3 Little Green Bean Mar Vista Moriah Mitchell Arena Market and Cafe 7 MTA 15 Office Source 11 Anchor Bay Store 10 Arena Frame 8 Arena Pharmacy Arena Tech Center 13 10 10 3 Arena Theater 6,13 B Bryan Preserve 10 Oz Farm 8 Banana Belt Properties 11 Pacific Chiropractic 4 Outback Garden and Feed back cover Barry Vogel attorney 4 Pacific Comm. Charter School Bed and Bone 5 Pacific Plate 5 Cottage Carpets 3 Peter McCann P.T. 8 Cove Coffee 13, 16 16 Phillips Insurance David Moulton A.I.A. 10 Pier Chowder House 8 Denise Green 11 Pirate’s Cove 11 Dianne Neuman Gallery 8 Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore 11 3 Pizzas &Cream 6 Point Arena Light Station 8 Fresh Flower Bouquets 9 Pru Parker Bookkeeping 6 Garcia River Casino 4 Red Stella 5 Gualala Arts cover, 9 Gualala Eye Care 7 Redwood Coast Chamber of Commerce 11 Redwood Coast Humane Society 6 Gualala Bldg. Supply 11 Rollerville Café 4 Gualala Supermarket 9 Roots 6 Sea Trader 4 3 HAZmobile 15 Healing Arts and Massage 8 Synergy Yoga Center/Surf Therapy Yoga Ibis 5 The Loft 9 Ignacio Health Insurance Services 4 Transformational Bodywork 5 Innovations 5 UnedaEat 15 KTDE 16 Village Bootery 10 KZYX Lane Geographics 14 10 Wellness on the Coast 10 Zen House Motorcycles 9 Read the Peddler Online- Its Free & In Full Color! Issue #150 April 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 Pg 2 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 www.lighthousepeddler.net This Year’s Whale and Jazz Festival Offers Impressive Line-up The ever-expanding Whale and Jazz Festival returns this year with a schedule that spans 3 months and includes a wide definition of jazz. Some events took place in March, but the April events begin on Friday, April 4 at St. Orr’s Restaurant when Ian Scherer & Steve Forberg perform gypsy jazz, Latin and standards. The multitalented Scherer plays guitar while accompanied by Forberg on guitar and electric bass. The duo will play for seatings at 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. In addition to the regular 3-course menu, small plates and award winning wines will be offered. On Monday, April 7 the Film Club of the Arena Theater will present the 1990 jazz film Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser. See Film Club schedule on page 5 for details. The whale theme is emphasized on Thursday April 10 with the showing of the 2009 Academy-Award winning documentary film, The Cove, in which a team of activists, filmmakers and free divers penetrate a hidden cove in Taiji, Japan to witness the slaughter of some 23,000 dolphins and porpoises that takes place annually by Japan’s whaling industry. Mark J. Palmer from Berkeley’s Earth Island Institute / The Dolphin Project will emcee the event. Light refreshments will be served. $5 donation requested. The graphic depictions may be upsetting to some. Food is definitely a part of the festival and on Saturday, April 12 beginning at 11:30 a.m. Barnebey’s Hot Four New Orleans style jazz band will play for the popular Chowder Challenge. Local chefs & cooks vie for the title of “Best Mendonoma Coast Chowder.” A panel of ‘celebrity’ judges will determine winners in the categories of Traditional (New England Style Clam Chowder) and an Open Class (for all manner of seafood and even vegetarian chowders). A “People’s Choice” vote of the Chowder & Jazz patrons decides the most popular entry and there is even a cash award for the entrant with the ‘Most Tasted’ chowder. Entry forms at Gualala Arts website. Entrance is free, but $20 purchases a COTTAGE CARPETS Moriah Mitchell Carpet Starting at 0.99 Sq. Ft Tile And Vinyl. All Window Coverings Kitchen Cabinets, Area Rugs,Wood Floors, Laminates & More. Senior Loan Officer *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 Festival Logo wine or beer glass and 15 tickets for chowder tastings, hot bread fresh out of the oven and beverages, including fine wines and microbrews as well as soft beverages. Jazz and the blues share a common cultural and geographic source and came into being during more or less the same era and thus the festival continues on the evening of April 12 when the Arena Theater’s Blues on the Coast series presents The Forty-Fours. See story on page 4. The Third Thursday Poetry night at the 215 Main wine bar is again participating in the festival with their monthly poetry and jazz evening. Details on the April 17 event on page 12. The following evening, April 18, the 215 Ian Scherer will once again host jazz when The Kaleo Larson Quintet performs at 7:00 p.m. Local favorites Harrison Goldberg (reeds), Keith Abrams (bass), Chris Doering (guitar) and Gabe Yanez (drums) join trumpeter Larson for this lively gig. $8 cover with limited seating. The Garcia River Casino remains a part of the festival as they welcome back the immensely popular Zydeco band, the Zydeco Flames on Saturday , April 19. There is no cover charge for the 8:00 p.m. show, but entrance is limited to 21 and over. On Friday, April 25, keyboardist Susan continued on pg 15 Senior Loan Officer Brett Jorski Integrity • Service • Commitment Financing Homes on the Coast for 19 years 707.884.5300 CA DRE license #01197302 NMLS #294346 mmitchell@rpm-mtg.com www.rpm-mtg.com/mmitchell P.O. Box 1006 Gualala, CA 95445 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, April 2014 DR. DANIEL BRANNIGAN, D.C. PACIFIC CHIROPRACTIC Blues on the Coast and the Whale and Jazz Festival Presents The 44s Blues Band 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 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. . . . 884-3248 Hwy. One, N. Gualala Daily 10-5, Sun. 11-5 The Blues on the Coast series at Arena Theater has partnered with the Whale and Jazz Festival and will present the LA-based group, The Forty-Fours, on April 12 at 8:30 p.m. Led by Johnny Main on guitar and vocals, the solid rhythm section consists of J.R. Lazana on drums and Mike Turturra on upright bass. The extraordinary Tex Nakamura, formerly of the band War, plays the harp. The 44's play the blues with a rocking style with few frills. They don't impress with personal style or fancy shoes, but with their solid, danceable music. Nakamura's harmonica rivals most anything you will hear out of Chicago. While this is clearly a boogie band, Johnny Main is very capable of soaring, delicate solos on his guitar. He began playing classical violin as a youth, but got in trouble with his teacher for fooling around and playing the Funkacillin “Old School Funk!” Sat, April 5th, 8.30PM The Zydeco Flames Alysia Calkins & Dorothy Barrett’s Rollerville Cafe 882-2077 Outdoor Deck Delicious Caring Homestyle Fare Breakfast & Lunch 8:00 am till 2:00 pm Dinner on Friday & Saturday 2 minutes north of Point Arena on Hwy. One at Lighthouse Road RETURN TO THE SOIL WITH A LEGAL BURIAL IN YOUR BACKYARD Barry Vogel Attorney and Counselor 280 North Oak Street Ukiah 707 462 6541 www.radiocurious.org Cooperation is the thorough conviction that nobody can get there unless everybody gets there. - Virginia Burden Tower IGNACIO HEALTH INSURANCE SERVICES VANESSA IGNACIO Agent/Broker #0H53499 Gualala 707-884-4640 707-882-2488 Point Arena Whale & Jazz Festival vanessa@ignaciohealth.com Sat, April 19th, 8.30PM Helping to find the best policy to protect you and your family is just the beginning. 22215 Windy Hollow Rd, Point Arena, CA. 707 467 5300 www.TheGarciaRiverCasino.com Pg 4 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 violin like a guitar. He was a closet guitar player until at age 15 when he showed up at a party and to everyone's surprise played Voodoo Child on guitar. The band didn't really hit the scene until 2007 when they took 4th Place in the Memphis International Blues Challenge. Producer and guitar master, Kid Ramos of the Fabulous Thunderbirds picked them up and produced their first album, Boogie Disease, which garnered Best Debut Album of 2011 from the Blues Underground Network and Best Blues Band of 2011 from American Blues News, who called the band “one of the hardest working, hardest playing blues outfits anywhere." They released a second album in 2012, Americana, to rave reviews. The band has been compared with ZZ Top and Tommy Castro and a confusing list of others, a testament to their range of styles. Band members cite as their influences Albert King, Albert Collins, and Muddy Waters (not a bad list). Tickets are $20 and can be purchased online at www.arenatheater.org and at local ticket outlets: Four-Eyed Frog Books and Sea Trader, Gualala; Arena Market and The Pier Chowder House and Tap Room, Point Arena. The Arena Theater Bar and snack stand will be open. Open E ay Evvery D Day DRAGON’S BREATH PRESENTS Healing into Freedom Three Thursday Evening Winter 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 Lodging for Paws Boarding Grooming 882-2429 PO Box 174 Point Arena 95468 www.bednbone.com ibis colon hydrotherapy Colon hydrotherapy offers an excellent opportunity to restore and maintain optimum colon health in your life. It is the first step towards total health. Raquel Mashiach raquel@mcn.org 707-882-2474 www.ibisCHT.com Film Club Schedule Includes Jazz Film red stella The Arena Film Club has a full schedule real-life brothers and child prodigy stand for April beginning with the documentary, up comic team, Koki Maeda and Oshiro Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser, Maeda, along with veteran actress Kirin which will be screened on Monday, April Kiki and actor Joe Odagiri. 7 at 7:00 p.m. as part of the Whale and Jazz The 2 boys are separated with divorced Festival celebration. The film is about the parents living in different cities, but when life of pianist one hears that a and jazz great new bullet train Thelonious connects their 2 Monk and cities they set off in features live search of a miracle performances that is alleged to by Monk and take place when Cypress Village his band, and 2 bullet trains Gualala interviews meet for the first 884-1072 with friends time. It has been and family reviewed as “a about the wonderful movie offbeat genius. with tons of heart. Thelonious Puts the human Thelonius Monk photo by Herman Leonard Sphere Monk grew up in Manhattan, in humanistic filmmaking.” 2011 running started playing piano at age 6, attended time 128 min in Japanese with subtitles. Julliard, and by his early 20’s was a regular Monday April 28 No Place on Earth at Minton’s Playhouse, a Manhattan a docudrama by Janet Tobias about the nightclub where many of bebops discovery by a 1993 spelunker of caves in innovators, including Charlie Parker, the Ukraine where in 1942, 38 Jewish men, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis, met women and children hid from the holocaust to play. His first recording was with the for 511 days in a pitch-black underground Coleman Hawkins band in 1944 and world where no human had gone before. in 1957 Monk returned the favor and The film has been well received in the festival invited Hawkins to play on a recording rounds. Its screenwriters, Janet Tobias and with John Coltrane. Paul Laikin, are nominees for the 2014 Duke Ellington, who was Monk’s Award for Documentary Screenplay. 2013 hero and inspiration, composed over in English running time 83 min. 1000 songs and is the most recorded jazz composer of all time. Monk’s popularity as a composer can be judged by the fact that he is the second most recorded jazz composer of all time despite having written only 70 songs. His compositions include “Epistrophy”, “’Round Midnight”, “Blue Monk”, “Straight, No Chaser” and “Well, You Needn’t” and other hugely popular standards. Charlotte Zwerin (Gimme Shelter) directed the film which includes much archival footage in this Clint Eastwood produced film. Admission is free to Film Club members. Guests are welcome for a $10 donation and teens are $5. Monday April 14 I Wish a 2011 Japanese film written and directed by Adorable home in the city of Point Arena with a sunny south facing Hirokazu Koreeda. This film stars the H O M E In-Home Health Care Companion orientation. The sun room entry opens up to a large living room, three bedroom's and one remodeled bathroom. Wood & tile floors throughout. Kitchen with six burner stove top and hand built cabinets. Landscaped yard in the front with grassy lawn in the back. Outbuildings, decks, fruiting apple trees and flowers in bloom. Outbuildings, decks, fruiting apple trees and flowers in bloom. $310,000 $310,000 Cassie Henderson Broker Associate CalBRE #01355194 cassie@kennedyrealestate.com Laura Leigh 882-2983 39040 S. Hwy. One Gualala, CA 707-884-9000 INNOVATIONS Pg 5 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Happy Hour Daily & POINT ARENA 4:00 - 6:00 pm Beer $3.00 Wine $3.50 Pasta Mondays $9.95 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 ROOTS Herbal Apothecary Specializing in Healthcare for the whole family Jacqueline Strock & Gillian Nye Herbalists & Co-Owners 882-2699 Mon - Sat 10:00 am to 5 pm www.rootsoriginals.com Prudence Parker Bookkeeper Payroll Services Notary Public 707- 272-7396 707- 882-3468 (F) LNP@MCN.ORG 7 1 5 8 9 2 3 4 6 8 4 9 3 5 6 1 2 7 2 6 3 4 1 7 9 5 8 3 9 2 7 4 1 6 8 5 Puzzle by websudoku.com 4 8 1 5 6 3 7 9 2 5 7 6 9 2 8 4 3 1 1 2 8 6 3 9 5 7 4 6 3 4 2 7 5 8 1 9 9 5 7 1 8 4 2 6 3 Pg 6 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Mar Vista Hosts Fundraiser Dinner for Action Network Thursday, May 1 Action Network is pre- includes 2 CD’s and a songbook. senting a fundraising dinner in the Glass It is an expensive program to offer, and House at Mar Vista Cottages in Anchor Action Network has fundraised since 2012 Bay. The event is a to be able to continue to fundraiser for our offer the program. The Music Together Fundraiser dinner will Children’s Music feature a superb menu Program offered created and prepared originally in Guaby Ross Woodward of lala, now expanding Trinks Café, with desto Point Arena. The sert by Margaret Smith Fundraiser is made of Two Fish Baking possible by the genCompany, and dinner erosity of Renata will be complimented and Tom Dorn, by wine pairings from owners of Mar Vislocal vineyards. Tickta Cottages, Event ets are available now for Director Rox$100 per person and anne Claflin, Ross space is limited. Please Woodward, Trinks call Action Network Café, and Margaret at 884-5413 for tickets Smith of Two Fish and more information Baking Company. on Music together. For Music Together more go to www.acis an internationtionnetwork.info. Mar Vista’s Glass House at Night ally recognized early childhood music program for babies, toddlers, preschoolers, kindergarteners, first and second graders, and the adults who love them. Music Together classes build on your child’s natural Appetizers: enthusiasm for music and play – encouragMarble Potatoes, Smoked ing the imagination with song and moveSalmon, Crème Fraiche, Caviar ment, incorporating drums, shakers and other instruments. The 10-class program Local Oysters with Mignonette Grilled Flatbread with Shaved Asparagus, Gruyere, April is Child Abuse Prevention Month and Alcohol Awareness Month. Action Mushrooms Network is sponsoring a Family fun day Amuse Bouche: to raise awareness of Child Abuse and NeRoasted Local Beets stuffed glect and the consequences of underage with Point Reyes Blue Cheese drinking and tobacco use. Everyone is inMousse topped with La vited to Bower Park on April 18 from 11:30 Quercia Prosciutto and Herbs a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free. Soup: They have commitments from a large Local Fennel and Green Garlic cross section of community officials, inSoup with Marin French cluding law enforcement, CHP, Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman, Fish Farmers Cheese Crostini and Wildlife wardens, and California State Main: Parks Ranger. Fire Departments from GuaGrilled Leg of Sonoma Lamb lala and Sea Ranch, Health Services, CLSD with Roasted Carrots, Spring Ambulance, RCMS, RCMS Dental, and Onion, Fiddlehead Ferns, and Americorps will also be on hand. Whipped Potatoes The Humane Society will be there with Salad: animals along with miniature ponies with a Local Mixed Greens with cart to give kids rides, Jumpy House, kids Spring Strawberries, Chevre, games, Scavenger hunt, “Hide a Gnome’ Kumquats, Almonds, and game, Pomo Dancers, Zumba Kids dance troupe, and the CALSTAR helicopter will Balsamic Reduction be landing up on the baseball field, with the crew promising to give kids a chance to Dessert: see inside. Action Network will be cooking Seasonal fresh fruit tarts hot dogs for $1 each. Families may wish to bring picnics to supplement the hot dogs. Menu Action Network Picnic arenatheater.org April 2014 Bruce Cockburn Tuesday April 15 7 PM Arena Theater Annual Membership Meeting and Board Election Monday April 21 6 PM Arena Theater LIVE Blues on the Coast The Forty Fours Saturday April 12 8:30 PM 3rd Monday Music Hosting ATA Election Night Monday April 21 6 PM ▪▪▪ Met Opera Live in HD La Boheme Saturday April 5 9:55 AM Cosi Fan Tutte Saturday April 26 9:55 AM ▪▪▪ Arena Theater Film Club Mondays 7 PM April 7 Thelonius Monk Straight No Chaser April 14 I Wish April 28 No Place on Earth 214 Main Street Point Arena No one ever said on their deathbed, ‘Gee, I wish I had spent more time alone with my computer.’ - Danielle Berry Low Cost Spay/Neuter Services for Cats & Dogs for low-income families For more information Please visit us on the web at www.redwoodcoasthumane.org or call 884-1304 New Show at Dianne Neuman Gallery Since opening last year, the Dianne Neuman Gallery has kept up a fast paced exhibition schedule and her recently released calendar for the remainder of the year proves she has no intention of slowing down. Beginning in April, a new show will present the work of Portland artist “Paz”. Paz describes herself as a “Sundancer and Pipecarrier of the Lakota lineage.” Preview pieces from the show are spell binding . Bold colors set the scene for an imaginative romp. Largely figural in subject matter these paintings are peopled with beings from the physical and spiritual worlds. The viewer gets the sense of entering another’s dreamscape. There is an intensity in the work, which reflects her method of creating. “For me, painting is an intuitive journey. I approach my work completely open to what might happen, to the process of emotion, spirit, thought and impulse interacting with the media. I am rarely attached to the outcome, mostly to the experience. The unpredictable experience allows the final piece to emerge through color, texture, light and composition, which provides the form that connects my inner world of spirit and emotion to the shared reality of the earth-world. This becomes the completed painting. The movement in the process can be great or small, bold or timid, loud or soft, just as the relationship of spirit is with the physical realm. “ This show begins on Friday April 4th and runs through the month. There wil be an opening reception on April 5th from 4 to 9 pm. The gallery’s schedule seems to rotate between local, juried shows and shows such as Paz’s, which are selected by Dianne from her personal network of artists. Following this show, will be a juried show entitled, “Imagine- Figuratively Speaking”. Artists are encouraged to submit works that consider the human figure in some way. Juror Teresse Radenbaugh is a painter, designer and currently teaches figure drawing at Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in L.A. Entry fee is $15 per entry up to three. Cash prize offered for Best in Show. Deadline for entries is April 14. See the website for prospectus- www.dngallery.com Annual Quilt Challenge Graces Gualala Arts One of the more poplar annual shows at name just a few. It is always impressive to Gualala Arts Center is the Quilt Challenge. see the range of individual interpretation The Pacific Piecethis yearly show presmakers Quilt Guild ents. Using color, pathas been holding the tern and linear elements, Challenge in Gualala contemporary quilts are since before the Arts a bold, graphic- yet tacCenter opened in tile art form 1998 and it is now in The Opening Recepits 16th year there. It tion is Friday, April 4 continues to be a viat 5:00 p.m. when the sual treat as well as a Jacob Foyer and the display of fine craftsBurnett Gallery will manship. burst with color and deEach year memsign. Refreshments will bers of the Guild be provided by Guild choose a theme to members. This popular inspire their quilts. event celebrates both This year the Chalthe quilters and the lenge is “Quilt the sources of their inspiraMusic” enticing tion. quilters to choose The show will hang una favorite piece of til April 27. music and give it Vintage Wagon Wheels by C Smith a physical form. Challenge chairperson Iris Lorenz-Fife has added to the Challenge: to visually interpret the elements of light, water, or wind in a quilt- as if translating music into fabric isn't challenging enough. Not that the quilters haven't taken on big challenges in the past. Previous years' themes have been art, nature, books, the sea, exotic cultures, self41601 Mountain Retreats View Road expression, mathematics and chocolate, to Weddings Retreats CSA Produce 882-3046 www.oz-farm.com 882-3046 Have you been diagnosed with an eye disease or disorder? Gualala EyeCare does more than prescribe eyewear and contact lenses. We have over 20 years of experience in diagnosing, monitoring and treating eye disorders and disease. Our state-of-the-art equipment and specially trained staff allow us to treat a wide variety of eye problems. We will also monitor your eye health if you have a medical or family history of diseases that cause eye problems. We will put preventive screening measure in place to detect problems early before damaging results occur. Signs indicating that you may have an eye disorder include: Blind spots • Blurred or cloudy vision • Chronic Tearing • Floaters Headaches • Increased sensitivity to light • Red watery eyes • Scratchy eyes These symptoms, if unchecked, can cause serious damage to your eyes. If you are currently suffering a vision disorder, or problematic symptoms, call us today at 884-3937 to schedule an eye examination. At Gualala Eyecare, our focus is on the health of your eyes! Gualala Eyecare Optometry By Dr. Gena L. Davis, O.D. 39150 Ocean Drive Suite 3 (downstairs in the SeaWatch Building) Gualala, CA 95445 707-884-3937 www.gualalaeyecare.com Pg 7 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Point Arena Lighthouse ❖Tower Tours ❖Museum ❖Gift Store ❖Lodging Scuttlebutt “Climb to the Top!” Open Daily 10:00am-3:30pm 45500 Lighthouse Rd. Point Arena (707) 882-2809 pointarenalighthouse.com TEACHING POSITION AVAILABLE Pacific Community Charter School is looking to hire a Full Time Multiple Subject Credentialed Teacher For Grades 4-8. Spanish an asset; Send resume & 3 references by April 4 to: PCCS Attention: Sigrid P.O. Box 984 Point Arena, CA 95468 pacificharterschool.org pccs@mcn.org 882-4131 * 882-4132(fax) PCCS is a fair employment/EOE Position open until filled by Mitch McFarland Healing Arts Healing & Arts Massage Healing Arts &Center Massage & Center 884-4800 Massage Judith884-4800 Fisher Center Judith Fisher Massage & CranioSacral Therapy 884-4800 Massage & CranioSacral Therapy I didn’t want to have to think about Crimea. Did you? All of a sudden we are all being asked to have an opinion about what should happen in Crimea. It is unlikely that one in ten thousand Americans could have found Crimea on a map 2 months ago and yet the talking heads want us all to freak out because Russia has “taken” it from the Ukraine. Maybe this is a ploy the news media like: drum up an issue that no one knows anything about because that will require lots of experts to come out of the woodwork and explain the “significance” of what is going on. I dove into the woodwork myself a bit to learn more. My interest was slightly piqued from having studied Russian in school under a Ukrainian teacher. The history of Crimea is incredibly complex. It lays at the virtual crossroads of human history. Crimea has been conquered by just about every ethnic group you could name from that region (and several others you can’t name). For several hundred years after the 1400’s it was ruled by Crimean Khans. These turkic people, so-called Tartars, have extended at times as far as Siberia and the Baltic. The Crimean Khans were part of the Ot- toman Empire for several hundred years, though with a good deal of autonomy, until the late 18th century. They had a massive slave trade with the Ottomans and others. About 2 million slaves from Russia and Ukraine were sold over the period 1500– 1700. Eventually the Russians gained influence over the khans and, in 1783, the entire Crimea was annexed by the Russian Empire (Crimea was larger than just the penisula then). Russia and the Ottoman Empire went to war in October 1853 over Russia’s rights to protect Orthodox Christians. Sound familiar? Despite being a stronghold of the antiBolshevik White Army (so-called White Russians), in 1921 Crimea became part of the Soviet Union. In 1944, the entire population of the Crimean Tatars, who are Muslim, was forcibly deported to Central Asia by Joseph Stalin’s Soviet government as a form of collective punishment, on the grounds that they had collaborated with the Nazi occupation forces. An estimated 46% of the deportees died from hunger and disease. We have all heard that in 1954 Nikita Khrushchev, a Ukrainian and General Secretary of the Communist Party in Soviet Union, arranged for Ukrainian independence while remaining part of the Soviet Union. It was timed to celebrate the 300th anniversary of Ukraine becoming a part of the Russian Empire. Hmmmm. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 Crimean Tartars began a movement to return exiled Tartars to Crimea. With Russia severely weakened by the collapse 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 Alisa EdwardsTissue 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 ARENA FRAME Custom Mats & Frames Anna Dobbins, APFA 882-2159 cont’d on page 12 Don’t Miss Paul McCandless & Will Siegel May 4 6:00 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. seatings A Whale and Jazz Festival Event HAPPY HOUR 4-6 EVERY DAY 11 A.M. - 8 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK like us on Facebook 882-3400 Pg 8 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 The Adventurous Gardener Tropical Paradise www.lighthousepeddler.net by Lori Hubbart The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. - George Bernard Shaw Bananas, of course, though edible fruit As an antidote to a long, dry summer, consider a lush retreat with the flavor of the requires a heated greenhouse. Abysinnian tropics. If you are in love with the tropical banana (Ensete ventricosum) and hardy look, why not create a tropical garden ha- Japanese banana (Musa basjoo) have big, ven? After our blessed bit of rain, it’s time elongated leaves and grow 6’ to 20’, making them prime into get plants in gredients for the the ground and tropical look. established beRice paper fore things dry up plant (Tetrapagain. anax papyrifOn the north erus) is in the coast we can use aralia family, plants that conjure along with ginup the look of the seng and ivy. It tropics, though of is multi-trunked a hardier persuawith suitably sion. We’re talking large, deeply approx imat ion, lobed leaves, rather than actual which are great replication. for textural conFirst, you need trast. plants with great The smaller big leaves, like elpalms are anephant ears (Coother important locasia esculenta. element, and It has large, heartfor outdoors, shaped leaves the Mediterrathat grow from nean fan palm in-ground tubers, (C h a m a e ro p s which provide the Red Ginger with Canna humils) is argutaro root that has sustained Polynesians for untold centuries. ably the best choice. It is very hardy and This plant is an aroid, related to calla “lilies” tough, and doesn’t need copious watering. but is unlikely to flower in our climate, and Slow growing, it can eventually reach 20’ tall. Dwarf forms like ‘Vulcano’ will grow may die back in the winter Another aroid genus, Philodendron, in- more slowly and remain compact. Dwarf cludes some hardy, arborescent (upright) windmill palms (Trachycarpus species) are species. P. selloum is the hardiest of the lot, another good choice, with T. wagnerianus with deeply cut, heart-shaped leaves up to and T. nanus among the best. 3’ long. continued on pg 14 SENIOR DISCOUNT EVERY MONDAY WE ACCEPT EBT CARDS Fresh Flower Bouquets Patty (415) 342-4647 I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night. - Galileo Galilei 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 Your FULL SERVICE Grocery Thank Thank You You for for Allowing Allowing Us Us toto Serve Serve You You Happy Holidays SUNDSTROM MALL, GUALALA 884-1205 . . .with High Quality Fresh Meats Closed ClosedChristmas ChristmasDay Day Come Comeby bytotoview viewthe theHoliday HolidayTrain Train SENIOR SENIORDISCOUNT DISCOUNT & Vegetables EVERY EVERYMONDAY MONDAY WE WEACCEPT ACCEPTEBT EBTCARDS CARDS 7AM UNTIL 8PM PgDAILY 9 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Waterproof Boots & Shoes ges WWork ork & Dress All AAges Western Chief Village Bootery Open Daily 11:30 - 6:00 Across from Seacliff GUALALA 884-4451 Anchor Bay Store featuring a full line of Organic & Conventional Foods Beer & Wine Camp Supplies 884-4245 Architecture & Interior Design Bringing forty-plus years of architecture, design, experience and professionalism to your project DAVID MOULTON AIA Hwy. One - Anchor Bay 884-3522 www.MarVistaMendocino.com ENHANCE YOUR HEALTH & VITALITY www.Wellness On The Coast. com 20+ Local Bodywork Practioners & teachers provide exceptional resources & services Pg 10 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 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 The Met: Live in HD Presents La boheme and Cosi Fan Tutte Mon- Sat 8-7 Sunday 8-6 T: (707) 884-9695 C: (415) 298-2778 E: david@dmoultonaia.com W: www.dmoultonaia.com O: 39150 Ocean Dr. Suite 1, Gualala, CA Garcia River Casinos Celebrates 3rd Anniversary The Garcia River Casino will be celebratStan Spencer, General Manager of the caing their 3rd anniversary on April 5. They sino, states that he is pleased with the casiare already passing out pull tabs on the ca- no’s progress as they continue to see growth. sino floor with They have develthe chance to oped a solid enwin instant tertainment proprizes, plus gram that serves a gamers can variety of musical write their tastes. name on the Efforts by the back of the kitchen crew has tabs and enter put the casino on it into a drawthe map of places ing which will to go to eat. take place Gamers who beginning at missed playing Funkacillin 8:00 p.m. the blackjack when night of the party with up to $2000 in cash the casino opened now have a blacjack maprizes. Funkacillin will provide live music chine to play. with no cover charge. On Saturday April 5, the Arena Theater opera series, The Met: Live in HD, continues with Giancomo Puccini’s La boheme, a 4-act opera based on the Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa. The story began as a series of stories published by Henry Murger beginning in 1846 titled Scenes of the Bohemia. In 1849 he and Theodore Barriere wrote a play based on the stories that was very popular. This inspired Murger to collect the stories into a book, Scenes of the Bohemian Life, which was published in 1851. While Puccini was working on the opera the composer Leoncavallo offered him a completed libretto, which Puccini declined in favor of finishing his own work. Puccini’s opera premiered in 1896 with Arturo Toscanini conducting. Leoncavallo put his opera up in 1897 and little has been heard of it since. Puccini’s La boheme is the most performed opera in Met history and Operabase lists it as one of the top 5 of all time with over a hundred different productions having been staged. Romanian Anita Hartig sings the lead role of Mimi after having already sung the part this season with the Paris Opera, the Bavarian State Opera, and the Deutsche Oper Berlin. Vittorio Grigolo sings the part of her lover Rodolfo. Running time 3:25 with a 9:55 a.m. start. 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. Lane GeoGraphics, LLC On April 26 Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte will be screened. It is the 14th most performed opera of all time. It is the 20th of his 23 operas and was first performed one year before his death in 1791. The Italian-language opera buffa (“comic opera”) is in 2 acts with a libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte, who, after losing his patron with the death of Austrian Emperor Joseph II and falling out of favor with the court, eventually moved to New York and in 1833 founded the first opera house in the United States, the New York Opera Company. It was the predecessor of the New York Metropolitan Opera. The plot is reminiscent of Shakespeare‘s Taming of the Shrew and Cymbeline with characters swithcing roles and tricking their betrothed into infidelity. Youthful Met stars Susanna Phillips and Isabel Leonard are the sisters Fiordiligi and Dorabella and Matthew Polenzani and Rodion Pogossov are their lovers, with Danielle de Niese as the scheming Despina. Running time 4:05 start time 9:55 a.m. Property Ownership Maps lanegeo@mcn.org 707 785-9714 Data Source: Mendocino County Mendonoma Sightings Throughout The Year by Jeanne Jackson Lease This Thriving Business ! Contact Jorge for more info on this great opportunity Book review by LHP We now rent tools for lawn and garden, concrete work, floors, pumps, much more 38501 South Hwy 1 Gualala 884-3518 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 Several fine books profiling aspects of life In addition to the stunning photograph on the coast have been published by local there are over 80 brief stories that accomauthors and each has its own distinct style pany some of the photos of the sightings reand content. Most recently we have seen ported to her by her readers. Further, there Merita Whatley’s are many short book about the Point bits of informaArena Lighthouse tion about the and Donlyn Lyndon subjects that she and Jim Alinder’s calls “Fun Facts”. book featuring the arCraig Tooley chitecture of The Sea contributed over Ranch. 200 images from Now coast resident his collection of Jeanne Jackson has nature photogput together a book raphy and some that celebrates our shots were taken local fauna and flora. specifically to Mendonoma Sightings illustrate this Throughout the Year book. Twentyfeatures more than seven other pho250 spectacular photographers, many tographs primarily by of them local, local photographer contributed phoCraig Tooley. It is a tos as well. beautiful display of The front and the outdoor life of our back covers both area. fold out to proThe book was 2 vide nicely scaled Northern Flicker by C. Tooley years in the writing, maps of the coast but is a result of Jeanne’s 8 years as colum- to guide those unfamiliar with the coastal nist for the Independent Coast Observer. Her area. popular column “Mendonoma Sightings”, There is also pointers to local trails and features submissions by the paper’s readers hidden view spots and links to specialized of photos and other observances of our bio- nature websites. logically diverse area. On Sunday, April 27 at 3:00 p.m. Jeanne The book is organized by months and and Craig will be at Gualala Arts Center to presents plants and wildlife that are typi- launch the self-published volume as part of cally seen during those months. It is inter- the Local Eyes series. They will discuss the esting to note that she begins the year in book, answer questions and do book signMarch which is the first sign of the Zodiac ings. The book is currently available at the and beginning of the astrological year. Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore and the Point Arena Lighthouse gift shop. Mexican & American Cuisine Mon-Friday 10:30 am - 7:30 pm Saturday10:30 am - 3pm Closed Sunday Hwy 1 Just North Of Point Arena 882-4105 5% Senior Discount Backhoe Work Tree Removal Landscaping Milling Jasper Brady 882-1822 Jin Shin Jyutsu Gentle and Powerful Relief for: Pain Stress Allergies Since 1981 Denise Green, CMT 882-2437 If Columbus had an advisory committee he would probably still be at the dock. - Arthur Goldberg BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW LOT READY TO BUILD! This is a complete package with permits, plans, water, sewer, PG&E & phone. It offers an excellent bluewater ocean view, deeded access to Anchor Bay Cove, a tiny gurgling creek & an easy stroll to the beach + all the amenities of Anchor Bay village. The delightful home plan features a 3BR/2BA design on two levels offering perfect privacy for full-time living with children or vacationing with guests. Banana Belt Properties www.bananabelt.org Serving the Mendocino Coast Since 1986 $99,500 J.Moloney Scott, Broker #00795487 884-1109 FAX 884-1343 35505 SO. HWY 1 ANCHOR BAY E-MAIL: BANANA1@MCN.ORG Full Service Print & Copy Tech Accessories & Office Supplies Sea Watch Bldg 39150 Ocean Drive, Suite 2, Gualala 707-884-9640 officesourcegualala@gmail.com Pg 11 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 SCUTTLEBUTT cont’d on page 14 and Stalin’s treachery still stinging, Crimea declared itself a part of the Ukraine in 1994, but Crimean Communists forced the Ukrainian government to expand on the already extensive autonomous status of Crimea. Nevertheless, Russia was given a treaty that extends Russia’s lease on naval moorings and shore installations in port of Sevastopol and other locations in Crimea until 2042 with optional five-year renewals (can you say “Guantanamo”?). Also, Russian troops have been stationed in Crimea for over a decade under an agreement with Ukraine, though lately they have exceeded the allowable number of troops. During the 2004 presidential elections, Crimea largely voted for the presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych. In both the 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary elections and the 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary elections, the Yanukovych-led Party of Regions also won most of the votes from the region, as they did in the 2010 Crimean parliamentary election. Are you still panicked that Russia has “invaded” Crimea? The imperialist war mongers like John Bolton and Dick Cheney are ready for us to launch the missiles to stem Russian hegemony. More American blood and treasure to feed the military industrial complex. America is tired of foreign adventures. We have plenty of war damaged veterans to take care of already and we are just crawling out of a deep recession. Sure, Putin probably fantasizes a return of the USSR, but that is a pipe dream. What I see is a severely weakened leader confronting massive protests and discontent at home resorting to the same tactic that has been used by leaders for centuries: if you have trouble at home, start a war and drum up nationalism to divert the public’s attention from the real problems. The U.S. militarists would call people like me an isolationist, yet others would call it “minding your own business”. Isolationism has a long history in the U.S. Early colonialist came here precisely to get away from European politics. Until the machine age we had 2 big oceans that acted as a effective buffer between us and most of the rest of the world. Even the Monroe doctrine, which we all learned was suppose to be our justification for colonizing Latin America, was really a statement of non-inference from European politics. These are Monroe’s words, “In the wars of the European powers, in matters relating to themselves, we have never taken part, nor does it comport with our policy, so to do.” The introduction to the Monroe Document states, “American continents, by the free and independent condition which they have assumed and maintain, are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any European powers.” The idea was to avoid entanglements with Europe, although it was later interpreted to mean WE could colonize Latin America. World War II pretty much ended isolationism in America as we emerged as the world’s policeman and fear of Soviet communism led to the cold war struggle “fought” all over the planet. Ronald Reagan put the final nail in the coffin when he declared in 1982 “it is time that we committed ourselves as a nation -- in both the public and private sectors -- to assisting democratic development”, which in retrospect appears to have meant, “let’s go for it boys!”. While the idea of our becoming a peace loving nation terrifies the military industrial complex there is another group that fears isolationism and that is the Tri-Lateral globalists . Tariffs and other protectionist trade policies are considered another aspect of isolationism. Such things bother these folks very much and any talk of the U.S. turning inward to focus on our own economic development is counter to their vision of a global economy dominated by multi-national corporations. In times of change, learners inherit the earth; while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists. - Eric Hoffer Third Thursday Poetry Hosts Jazz Poet JennybyLin Blake More On Thursday, April 17 at 7 p.m. The Third Thursday Poetry & Jazz Reading Series, in conjunction with the Whale & Jazz Festival, at 215 Main in Point Arena will feature SF Jazz Poet Genny Lim. The reading will begin with live improv jazz and an open mic with jazz improv; the reading will conclude with more live jazz. Genny Lim is a poet, playwright and performer. A noted jazz poet, she has collaborated with such jazz legends as Max Roach, Billy Higgins, Eddie Marshall, and longtime friend& bassist Herbie Lewis. She has performed at numerous national jazz festivals and venues from San Jose, San Diego, Kansas, Houston, Chicago and Honolulu to Davies Symphony Hall and SF Jazz Center, and has been featured at World Poetry Festivals in Caracas, Venezuela, Sarajevo, Bosnia-Hercegovina, and Italy. Her poetry and jazz collaborations have been recorded in several CDs with her long time collaborators, Jon Jang, Immigrant Suite and Francis Wong, Devotee and Child of Peace. Genny Lim’s award-winning play Paper Angels, about Chinese immigrants detained on Angel Island under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, was the first Asian American play featured on PBS’s American 7 2 3 5 2 7 1 6 1 9 8 Pg 12 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Playhouse in 1985. The play was reprised in the San Francisco Fringe Festival in 2010, where it received the Best Site Specific Award. Her performance piece, Where is Tibet? premiered at CounterPULSE and at Afro Solo Arts Festival in San Francisco. She is the author of two poetry collections, Child of War and Winter Place and the co-author of the American Book Award winning, Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island. Her work has been widely anthologized in publications, such as This Bridge Called My Back, Unbroken Thread, Cheers to Muses, Huizache, Asian American Literary Review and Pacific Northwest Review. Her newest poetry collection, Paper Gods and Rebels, was released in November 2013. Genny served as a San Francisco Art Commissioner from 19911995 and helped to establish the Cultural Equity Arts grants program and Writers Corps under the Commission’s aegis. She is currently an adjunct at Notre Dame De Namur University in Belmont, California and teaches the Senior Women's Asian American Writing Class at the Japanese Community and Culture Center of Northern California in San Francisco's Japan Town. 1 8 9 8 4 8 4 2 3 1 4 2 3 Puzzle by websudoku.com Chamber Music Series Presents Violinist Steele On Sunday April13 at 4:00 p.m. Concert violinist, Emma Steele, will perform. As a 20-year-old she was a finalist in the highly regarded Sibelius Violin Competition in Finland where she received the Young Talent Prize and one reviewer claimed she “stole the show at Sibelius”. She has also received the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts Silver Award, WAMSO Elaine Louise Lagerstrom Memorial Violin Award and a study grant from the International Pablo de Sarasate Violin Competition 2009. She is featured in the PBS documentary, Circling Around: The Violin Virtuosi. A native of Chicago, she currently resides in Copenhagen, Denmark where she’s a concertmaster of the Royal Danish Opera. Steele has an impressive list of awards and competition achievements for a young woman who will turn 24 2 days before her Gualala Arts appearance. Her violin was made by Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume (1798–1875), a French luthier, widely regarded as the pre-eminent luthier of his day. Tickets are $25 advance; $5 more day of concert. Children and young people ages 7 through 17 are admitted free with adult. Full Moon New Moon April 16 April 30 Surf Therapy at 25 Charles DeFay is celebrating 25 year since opening his business, Surf Therapy. When he opened his shop, first at 170 Main St in Point Arena, it was a combination surf shop and massage studio. He was experiencing some health issues and was doing yoga to help alleviate the problem. Through his bodywork, he was able to help single individuals, but the benefit he was receiving from doing yoga made him want to give classes in yoga to be able to help groups of people. He took a class in teacher training from yoga instructor Peri Ness in Encinitas, California and quickly fell in love with both her yoga style and herself. She eventually became Peri DeFay, his wife. Charles moved his business to the top of the hill while renting the Point Arena Dance Studio and in 2005 purchased the building that is now Surf Therapy Yoga, the surf shop being long gone. DeFay estimates that some 2000 people have attended at least one class and some come nearly every day. Charles plans to continue to provide a place to do yoga into the indefinite future so that locals can receive the documented physical, mental, and spiritual benefits of yoga. A study by Dr.F J Schell of the Dept. of Internal Medicine in Germany concluded that comparing two groups, one that was asked to begin practicing yoga and one that does not, “Significant differences between both groups were found in psychological parameters. In the personality inventory of the yoga group showed markedly higher scores in life satisfaction and lower scores in excitability, aggressiveness, openess, emotionality, and somatic complaints. Significant differences could also be observed concerning coping with stress and the mood at the end of the experiment. The yoga group had significantly higher scores in high spirits and extravertedness.” Pacific Community Charter School Enrollment is Open K - 12th Grade Award-winning Canadian singer-songwriter & world renowned guitarist BLUES ON THE COAST Presents Contemporary & Traditional blues and R&B TUESDAY, APRIL 15 SATURDAY, APRIL 12 doors 6pm / Show 7pm 8 PM D OORS /8:30 PM S HOW Tickets $30 G ENERAL $20 Our vision is to provide a challenging curriculum that integrates core academic skills with art and real-world experiences. We value lifelong learning, compassion and the involvement of families and the community. Our K-12 Programs Offer • • • • • Small class sizes Community environment Alternative curriculum Family participation Real world experiences Call 882-3141 or visit www.PacificCharterSchool.org Pg 13 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 Arena Theater’s Membership Meeting and Board Election Is April 21 On Monday, April 21 The Arena Theater Association will hold its annual general membership meeting and Board of Directors Election. The meeting is open to any member of the public, but voting rights are reserved for theater members. The evening is hosted by the Third Monday Music series so members will be entertained by James Hayes, a key member of he Monday musicians group, and his friends. Delicious snacks will be offered and members are invited to bring a pot luck dish if they wish. Candidates for the Board of Directors are Thom Matson, incumbent; Barbara Pratt, member, volunteer; Rufus SavageFriedman, member, volunteer; Nathan Ramser, member; Mitch McFarland, appointed incumbent. Candidates may make a brief statement to the membership prior to the voting. Voting will take place with secret ballots during the meeting and results will be announced before adjournment. Members will also be given a brief, but inclusive summary of the financial matters of the Association and members may have their questions answered. At the last general meeting, Board member, Hugh Brady, gave his first show ing of a slide show of old photographs that revive memories of past events. He has been working on it and now has added music and some brief interviews. The n e w version of the show will be put up on the big screen and CD’s of the show will soon be on sale, perhaps at the meeting. For those who can’t be at the meeting, absentee ballots with candidate statements and voting instructions are available at the theater office at 882-3272. Pirates Cove Restaurant Available for Lease Jorge Carbahal, owner of the popular Mexican/American restaurant in Point Arena, Pirates Cove, is calling it quits to make room for the next entrepreneur. Jorge has been working in the restaurant business on the coast for 20 years. He started out as a dishwasher at the original Pangaea Restaurant under Shannon Hughes and with the help of his grandmother’s secret recipes, rose to own his own restaurant. He has been 8 years at the current location. His intention is not to sell the business, but to lease it, thus not requiring the large capital expense of a purchase for a new owner. Jorge points out that the business is doing well, but the intensity of restaurant work has worn him down after two decades. He especially emphasizes his location as a positive asset right on Hwy 1 with easy in and out for RV’s and other large vehicles. He also welcomes high school customers from the school which is just a short walk away. To inquire about obtaining a lease call 882-4105. ADVENTUROUS GARDENER Embrace KZYX. FM: 90.7•91.5•88.1 Listener Supported Community Radio www.kzyx.org (707) 895-2324 NPR • Pacifica R adio Public R adio International Pg 14 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 For more delicately textured foliage plants, go for the clumping bamboos. There are various types, but do your research and buy from a reputable source. Running bamboos can ruin your whole garden plan and infuriate your neighbors, too. Tree ferns, in all their prehistoric glory, will create a canopy for your tropical retreat. Australian tree fern (Cyathea cooperi) grows fairly rapidly to as much as 20’. Old fronds are shed cleanly, leaving a smooth trunk behind. Tasmanian tree ferns (Dicksonia antarctica and D. squarrosa) have fuzzy trunks and grow more slowly to 15’. Smaller plants with showy leaves include Caladium bicolor, another aroid. The many cultivars have leaves blotched with color – white, red, pink, and more. A festive plant, for sure. These can be grown in colorful pots and brought in out of the harsh weather during the winter. Cannas, old garden standbys, can also contribute to the tropical look. These tallish perennials usually have orange, red or yellow flowers, and long, lush leaves. The varieties with boldly striped leaves are especially choice. If your garden has a wet spot, you could try skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus). Not a cabbage, its flower heads reveal its kinship with the common garden calla. The colorful part is a bright yellow spathe, from page 9 a modified leaf, surrounding a narrow stalk containing the tiny, true flowers. In sheltered, part shade, its narrow leaves can grow amazingly large. A northwest native, you can find it in streams on the Stornetta Public Lands. Next, it’s time to add more flowers, which, in the tropics, may be pale and fragrant, or shades of red for attracting hummingbirds. Foremost among the delicate pastels is angel’s trumpet (Brugmansia species and hybrids), with big bold leaves and huge, hanging trumpet flowers in luscious sherbet shades. The flowers are wildly fragrant, blooming summer through fall. B. sanguinea is hardier than the B. candida hybrids, with smaller trumpets of orange-red with yellow highlights. None of the angels’ trumpet plants look their best in winter, and all are toxic if ingested. For red flowers, it’s easy to grow flashy, red annual morning glory vines like ‘Crimson rambler’ or ‘Scarlet O'Hara’. Redstar morning glory (Ipomoea coccinea) is an annual species with flowers of orangey red, smaller and long tubed. Mexican scarlet sage (Salvia gesneriflora) is shrubby and covered with tubular flowers of fire engine red. Needless to say, it’s a magnet for hummingbirds. It reaches an untidy 6’, so keep it in the background and prune as needed. Casting Call for Gualala Art Center Theater’s production of Jekyll & Hyde AUDITIONS Sun May 11, 1 pm & Mon May 12, 5:30 pm Callbacks : Wed. May 14, 5:30 p.m. Performances Nov. 14-16, and 20-22 Regular rehearsals begin in October 2014 Coleman Auditorium, Gualala Arts Center ALL ROLES TO BE OPEN CAST Principal roles: 1 male & 2 female Supporting cast: 9-12 male & female Large Chorus (AKA People of London) This show’s powerful musical score will require many versatile singers & highlights not only the main characters but the entire ensemble cast. If your musical education is limited to singing in the shower & stage experience is minor… please still consider auditioning! New talent is always emerging! Interested actors are strongly encouraged to request an audition package that includes a script & sheet music to review prior to auditions. Coaching for auditions are available to all. For more information and/ or audition packet, contact Director Teo Ariola (707) 884-3090 or email Teo.ACT@msn.com A number of “flowering gingers” will grow here, but scarlet ginger (Hedychium coccineum) has dozens of small, stamen-studded, orange-red flowers on big spikes. The plants reach over 6’ tall, with big, elongated leaves. Those who like softer reds can also choose the incomparable Chilean bellflower (Lapageria rosea), in the lily family. This evergreen vine, the national flower of Chile, bears waxy, bell-shaped, rosy-red flowers. It needs regular water, but is well worth it. Sacred flower of the Incas (Cantua buxifolia) is a loose shrub growing to 6’ or more, with small leaves and clusters of long, hotmagenta tubular flowers. A fine hummer plant, it does quite well in our area. So many tropical-looking flowers, and so little space to describe them! Look for red flowered Iochroma species, pineapple lily (Eucomis species). Bolivean begonia (Begonia boliviensis), long-tubed fuchsias, calla (Zantedeschia) ‘Edge of Night’ and more. Add some coleus (alas, now called Solenostemon scutellarioides) with warm toned leaves, some outdoor wicker seating, piña coladas, and relax in your own tropical paradise. WHALE AND JAZZ from page 3 Sutton will perform at the Black Point Grill in The Sea Ranch Lodge. She will be joined by vibist / bassist Piro Patton of Bolinas for a set of tender standards. Early arrivals for the 8:00 p.m. show can witness the sunset over the Pacific. Special menu with à la carte selections will be offered. Mads Tolling’s Jazz Europa group is the main event of the Whale and Jazz Festival and takes place on Saturday, April 26, at 7:30 p.m. Tolling was raised in Denmark, but moved to the U.S. to study at the Berklee College of Music. The rest of his organization will include Tommy Kesecker, vibraharp ; Rob Reich, accordion; Dave Mac Nab, guitar; Sam Bevan, bass and Eric Garland, drums. Tolling toured worldwide with the Mads Tolling Stanley Clarke band after being recommended by his idol, French jazz violinist Jean-Luc Ponty. He received a Grammy for his work on the Turtle Island Quartet’s 2006 recording 4+Four. He received his second Grammy with Turtle Island in 2008 with the recording A Love Supreme – The Legacy of John Coltrane. He has also performed with Chick Corea, Ramsey Lewis, Kenny Barron & Paquito D’Rivera. The concert will also introduce this year’s festival youth discovery, the phenonmenal 14year old Santa Cruz pianist, Lucas Hahn. Lucas Hahn Ticket price, $28 advance, $5 more day of the performance. No host bar. Brown Paper Tickets: (800) 8383006, Gualala Arts Center (707) 8841138. That’s it for the April line-up, but the Festival continues in May beginning on May 2 when Wendy DeWitt & Kirk Harwood visit the Timber Cove Inn. The Matt Silva Trio plays the Annapolis Winery on May 3 see next column Ukiah Hazmat Facility Extends Open Days Anyone traveling to Ukiah should know that if they have hazardous waste to be disposed they need not wait until the Hazmobile visits our area. The Hazmobile household hazardous waste collection facility in Ukiah is now open an additional day every week, Tuesday and Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 3200 Taylor Drive, Ukiah. In additional to the TuesdayWednesday drop-off, the Ukiah facility is open on the 2nd Saturday of each month. Toxic waste can’t go in the trash, but is accepted at the HazMobile including motor oil, paint, solvents, fuels, poisons, batteries and fluorescent light tubes (including compact fluorescents). There is no charge for households for up to 15 gallons per day, and business waste is accepted for a fee. The HazMobile schedule is posted at www. MendoRecycle.org/haz_schedule.html and on the Recycling Hotline at 468-9704. WHALE AND JAZZ and Paul McCandless & Will Siegel play the Arena Cove Bar and Grill on May 4. McCandless founded the 70’s fusion group Oregon. More details in the May Peddler or visit the www.gualalaarts.org. If you have to ask what jazz is, you’ll never know. -Louis Armstong COCKBURN cont’d from cover Garcia Band, Judy Collins, K D Lang, and Holly Near. Cockburn's list of awards and honors is too long for this article, but beyond his numerous music industry awards he has received 6 honorary doctorates, induction in the Canadian Broadcast Hall of Fame, and Queen Elizabeth's Golden Jubilee Medal. He is perhaps best known in the U.S. for his 1979 hit single “Wondering Where the Lions Are” or his 1996 hit, “Pacing the Cage”. A documentary film, Bruce Cockburn Pacing the Cage, was released in 2013 on television and a brief theatrical showing. Directed by Joel Goldberg, the film gave a rare look into Cockburn's music, life and politics. A limited number of tickets for the show are available online to ensure local audiences can purchase them locally. Tickets are available at The Four-Eyed Frog Bookstore and the Sea Trader in Gualala, plus the Arena Market (co-op) and the Pier Chowder House in Point Arena. Go to www.arenatheater.org for online tickets. HazMobile Toxic Waste Drop-Off April 25-26 Friday &Saturday 9 am - 1 pm Sea Ranch North Fire Station Highway One, The Sea Ranch Open to both Mendocino & Sonoma Residents Limit: 15 gallons/vehicle per day Charge for any excess. Businesses by appointment. Items Accepted: Motor oil, Medi- cations, oil filters, paint, solvents, gasoline, pesticides, antifreeze, fluorescent lights, auto & household batteries & other toxic items. Motor oil, auto and household batteries, electronics (i.e. t.v.’s, monitors electronics) may be recycled at South Coast Transfer Station, Fish Rock Road, Gualala Open Wed. 12 -4, Sat- Sun 9-4 For More information, call the Recycling Hotline at 468-9704 or visit the website at mendoRecycle.org The Next Hazmat Collection For The South Coast Will Be June 27 &28 Mendocino Solid Waste Management Authority Funded by a grant from Cal Recycle 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 A diplomatist is a man who always remembers a woman’s birthday, but never remembers her age. - Robert Frost Pg 15 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 24 26 27 28 30 33 40 45 53 54 58 65 68 69 38 39 66 72 51 60 61 62 63 67 70 73 1- Fundamental 40- Mobster 6- Tent stick 42- Bring up 10- Hill dwellers 44- Modify 14- Stadium used for sports or musical events 45- Scrutinize 17- Render weaponless 18- Upon us 19- Demeanor 20- Lifeless 22- Musical dramas 24- Charles Lamb’s pen name 25- Treat salt 26- Contemporary 30- Small notch 32- Impersonator 33- Choir member Pg 16 Lighthouse Peddler, April 2014 38598 Cypress Way, Gualala www.ktde.com 35- Convocation of witches 16- Steak order KTDE -The Tide Tune in to Local Radio Office 884-1000 Studio 884-3000 <ACROSS> 15- Corp. VIP, briefly 100.5 FM 57 59 64 37 47 50 56 36 43 46 49 55 71 23 35 42 44 52 13 31 34 41 48 12 25 29 32 11 best crosswords 1 47- “So be it” 48- Money 50- Panel of special keys 52- Disheveled 56- Theater award 58- Strong forward rush 59- Capable of being won 64- Employs, consumes 65- Assisted 67- Londoner, e.g. 68- Search 69- Sniff 70- Verdi opera 71- Lodge members 72- Behind time 73- Implement <DOWN> 1- Oz creator 2- Tuscan river 3- Scorch 4- Cross inscription 5- Curve upward in the middle 6- Old finnish money 7- Chemical agent that oxidizes 8- Human limb, section of a journey 9- Resembling a reverberation 10- Packing heat 11- Monetary unit of Nigeria 12- Pay for 13- Psychics claim to have a sixth one 21- Arm bones 23- Popular card game 26- Baby’s cry 27- Opaque gemstone 28- Facile Sandwiches - Cold Drinks -SmoothiesOrganic Fair Trade Coffee & Espresso Bait & Tackle - Surf Gear - Gifts 882-2665 7 am till 3 pm Daily at Arena Cove, 790 Port Rd Point Arena Now Serving Locally Made Unedabagels 29- Buffalo’s county 31- New Rochelle college 34- A pitcher may take one 36- Remain 37- Collide with 38- Neighborhood 39- Look after 41- Killer whales 43- Mean 46- Thick fish soup 49- Struck by overwhelming shock 51- Plural of eye, to Spenser 52- Wake 53- First name in photography 54- Ancient tongue 55- Elephant parts 57- Shelter 60- Blind as ___ 61- Vigor 62- Italian resort 63- Catchall abbr. 66- ___ little teapot... April Specials 10% off Everything in the Garden Store Bare Root Locally Raised Fruit Trees $20* Vegetable Starts *While supplies last Open Tuesday - Saturday 10 am- 5 pm Outback stocks several kinds of small and large animal foods and treats, as well as conventional and alternative health remedies. We have very competitive pricing & tons of unique items. 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