Friday, 27 August 2010

Friendships, we enjoy those friendships

The absolute best part of traveling the country in our motor home are the friendships we have formed. We had a chance to visit with two of these friends when they were traveling through Northern California. We first met Joe and Bonnie on our Maritime trip and have enjoyed visiting them in Tucson. This time, after much negotiation, we got together for lunch in Truckee. After five hours of non-stop talking, we started planning where next to continue the conversation.


When we met Trudy and Marvin in Michigan last May, it seemed more like seeing old friends rather than finding new ones. We just fit in so well together. Via the internet they also met our friends and neighbors Mark and Ellen and were together at the International FMCA Convention in Bend, Oregon. Since they were driving through Sacramento, all six of us got together. With chefs Ellen and Jerry catering, we enjoyed brunching and conversing in Ellen’s Park (aka her garden). Again we discussed where to meet again.


We welcome emails and calls from more friends when they are in our area.

Saturday, 21 August 2010

Many Happy Birthdays

Candles have been ablazing all week in celebration of the birthdays of six august people, Jerry and five women friends. Revelries began in The City (no offense to our East Coast friends, but SF is our The City), with lunch in the Haight. The streets are little changed from the ‘60 and the denizens are clones of their grandparents who first brought the long hair, colorful attire, and aroma of marijuana to the area.


These legs were across the street from our lunch stop.

















Our purpose for the day was to enjoy the Impressionist Collection from Musee D’Orsey in Paris. The de Young Museum is the only place in the country to house this collection during the renovation of the musee. On a personal note, Jerry has yet to accept the remodeled de Young. It was such as institution during his childhood that he is pained to see the changes but he has to admit, that nostalgia aside, the new building is a wonderful showcase for exhibits. The small sculpture garden is worth a visit.



The first of the two exhibits is of early Impressionists including Renoir, Monet, Manet, and Caillebotte. It is an understatement to say seeing these was wonderful. The groups of visitors were small enough that we could study the paintings at leisure. We will be back later in the year to enjoy Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Cézanne.

Friend Rita’s birthday dinner was at The Grand Cafe where we enjoyed a grand, and rare, experience, a very reasonably priced fine dinner in SF. Our three-course prix fixe dinner of onion soup, salad or escargot, followed by steak or salmon, and ending with profiterols was outstanding.

On Saturday we returned to Alexander’s Horseshoe Bar up the road in Loomis to celebrate Coral’s day. Dinner was good but the service was way below par. Fortunately, we four have decades of experience entertaining ourselves no matter what.


Sunday brunch was in honor of Jerry’s birthday and Steve and Rita’s anniversary. Sienna, up the road in El Dorado Hills, puts on a wonderful brunch at a fabulous price. We toasted all the celebrants with bottomless mimosa’s.


Then Anna Lee attended three birthday lunches for friends. Karen was feted at On the Border. After margaritas and lunch, the writer group Karen leads settled down to work, analyzing each others writing under her critical eye.


The week’s festivities ended with a joint Pat and Pat party. It was also a mini reunion for educators from San Juan USD. Over delicious salad and cake, the conversation ranged from years of memories in the district to politics and travel. Hostess Nancy did a great job of providing a celebration for the Pats.


You notice no ages were revealed, suffice it to say, temperatures were warm in the area

Sunday, 25 July 2010

Life at Home

Life at home (for those of you who wonder about what we have been up to)

While life on the road is exciting and exotic, home offers its own adventures. We are enjoying a return to “normal” including book clubs, Shabbat dinners, Mexican Train, rubber stamping and bridge. Each of us has our own group and we also play as a couple (sometimes as “agreeable” partners). Jerry is back in his wood shop in the garage creating furniture and sawdust while Anna Lee stays in the house reading, knitting and writing (and too often doing nothing of import). We continue our great gig ushering at B Street Theater, a local company started by brothers Tim (Field of Dreams and West Wing) and Buck Busfield.

Being with at-home friends is the best part though. We visited a Buddhist exhibit of ancient relics that was both interesting and appropriately peaceful with longtime friends Steve and Rita.


They, Eddi and Dorit, and Saul and Donna and yours truly all laughed at Spamalot the Musical.

We volunteered at the Placer County State Fair exhibit annoying parents by giving out train whistles to their children (with the caution to put them away when asked to by mommy or daddy).

Our favorite part of the fair is the art and craft exhibit. Jerry, of course, likes to examine the industrial arts made by young students. We were amazed by this chair made by a thirteen-year-old girl who can’t have been in this country more than a few years. Jerry tried to recruit her for the school up in Fort Bragg.


Just as we do when traveling, dining is a major part of our lives. For those of you here and those of you whom we hope will visit us, Alexander’s Horseshoe Bar Restaurant in Loomis (a small rural town up Interstate 80) is our new favorite. If Anna Lee had had the camera, you would drool at the beautiful presentation of Boneless Chicken Breast wrapped in shoe string potatoes stuffed with goat cheese, spinach and served on a bed of ratatouille with tapanade and a basil sauce or the scallops on risotto. Let us know when you want to go and we’ll make the reservations.

Sometimes duty calls. Anna Lee was compelled to wake up before six for a two-hour plus drive to Napa. There, along with five other women from her book club, they worked their way through four wineries. Back in the early 90s, teaching at the same high school, Gaye, Pat, Polly and Susan formed a book club; Joann joined a bit later. While books are the main purpose, eating out and occasional field trips are wonderful complements to the meetings. In addition to brilliant literary critiques, these women really know how to create a picnic. It was a long, tough sixteen-hour day but we survived and can’t wait to do it again.




Jealous of Anna Lee’s wine tasting, Jerry (and Anna Lee) went to our community’s wine club. Fun time but not so great wine.

Monday, 5 July 2010

Home for now

Wearing layers of clothing and wrapped in a blanket, we shivered through the Fort Bragg Fireworks Display. This has to be one of the only places where the 4th (actually the 3rd here) of July is cold. Fort Bragg is a small town but they put on a nice display for Independence Day.

Prior to the fireworks we stuffed ourselves at the World’s Largest Salmon BBQ on Noyo Harbor between Fort Bragg and Mendocino. The salmon, corn, salad, and bread were delicious.


In the midst of this throng of people, we sat next to someone from Sacramento. No surprise, as this area is a great escape from the valley heat. The surprise was that the guy recognized Jerry, not by his face, but by his voice. The guy had worked for a former client and had been to court with Jerry many times.

The 4th was surprisingly warm. This part of the California coast is always cool and mostly foggy but everyone pulled shorts and tank tops out of the closet to bask in the almost hot day. That meant the Sacramento Valley where we live and are returning to was blazing (90s and 100s).

We enjoyed a left-leaning small town parade with bands, old cars, politicos, dogs, and off-key singers.



This car has been running around Mendocino for years and we keep wondering how it can move with all the decorations but are always fascinated by it.

Jerry reminds me there were scantily clad women dancing also.

Jerry’s class has ended and he has an interesting stool to show for it. I did finish my knitting and rewarded myself with more yarn.


Jerry writes:
Two weeks of intense woodworking instruction is over. Again, many would say that making a stool is not much. The school has as its title “Fine Woodworking”. This means that your joints have to go together so there is no gap, dovetails have to be hand cut and clean and parts have to fit together exactly. You learn that you just can’t cut it on a table saw and expect that it will satisfy the instructors. One of the exercises in making the stool was taking a square piece of stock and, with a hand plane, make it perfectly round. If any of you would like to try this some time, come on by and I will loan you a plane to work with. The best lesson of all was that it is not just the stool that you learn to make but the process is what is important. While it took Yeung 15 minutes to make his, mine may require 15 days but my skills did improve.
In case you were wondering, a lawyer was not the only professional in the class. We had three computer guys, two doctors including a surgeon, and a couple of teachers. I think I was the oldest but whose counting. Anna Lee adds: and not all the students were male, two ladies who held their own with all the testosterone in the shop.
That said, I did finish the stool.

I brought it home in pieces and have a bit of fitting work to do and then glue it up. Don’t know what we will do with it but I am sure it will find a home.
This closes another chapter of the blog. Stay tuned. We will add anything momentous that occurs here at home and will be back on the road the end of August with Cheryl and Dave.

Monday, 28 June 2010

Schools Out

The sun came out, the fog left and the chill lessened. We enjoyed playing tourists over the weekend, starting with an excellent history tour of Mendocino. In the forty plus years we have come up here, we were too busy having a good time to learn about the town.

Jeff, our guide, made learning about the town a good time. From its early days as a lumbering town to its virtual abandonment during the depression to its revival as an art community by SF beatniks to its tourist and art status today, the buildings have remained. They bear the names of those early lumber families such as Kelley, Ford and Mac Callum and those who supported them, such as Doctor Whitegate.
Our visit to the Dao temple was most interesting. Over the years we had gone by the small colorful building but ignored it. Inside, the temple is filled with the small statues, incense, and tributes, in paper and produce, that are part of the Dao ritual. The docent and her sister are the sole remaining descendants of the early Chinese community that lived on the outskirts of town.











Jeff led us quietly into the Presbyterian Church, where choral rehearsal for the Mendocino Music Festival was in session, to see the bell pull. No ordinary pull this one. Instead it is a one-of-a-kind history of the USA in macrame, including muted colors for the Great Depression, the glaring brightness of the Age of Aquarius and culminating with a piece of tile from the space shuttle.











After lunch at the Mendo Deli, we wandered the shops of town. There used to be three excellent galleries that included wood furniture in the exhibits. That number is down to one but what beautiful pieces they have. We were also attracted to the word “sale” in a clothing shop (souvenirs). After all that walking, we just had to have a bit of ice cream to rejuvenate.
As with the history tour, we made a discovery of an Italian seafood restaurant that had only been in Noyo Harbor for sixty years. Family run, the atmosphere was as good as the food. The proprietor, a third-generation matron, expects us back again this week.


The Noyo River flows between Mendocino and Fort Bragg. The tiny fishing village suffers from the ban on salmon fishing. Crab boats and tourism keep it going. Jerry recalled fishing trips with Saul and whaling viewing with Anna Lee (both trips included unhappy tummies, though not for Jerry.)
On Sunday, we drove the spectacular Highway 1 down the coast. Then we turned inland along the windy, tree lined road to Hendy Woods State Park and walked trails through towering old growth redwoods. In case you were wondering, Anna Lee still likes to hug the trees.

These, and others in state and national parks, are but a small remnant of the giants that once filled the west coast from California to Washington.

Thursday, 24 June 2010

Mendocino through the years

Anna Lee writes nostalgia:
We started coming up here in the 60s. One of the family attractions has been the Skunk Train, an old steam train. Jeff was barely walking when we took him on his first train ride. Later, when we traveled in a tent trailer, nearby Van Damme State Park was a long-weekend favorite destination. We’d walk the fern lined trail and wander the galleries of town.
Lumber was the main industry in nearby Fort Bragg and we enjoyed, yes, enjoyed, touring the mill and seeing all the big, loud equipment sawing trees into wood planks for plywood. The mill is gone and in three days I have counted three trucks with lumber. They are still cutting but the industry is not so obvious and tourism has taken its place.
Mendocino, always caught up in bohemia, is still funky. Those of you who have never visited may know it as Hollywood’s idea of a New England village in the opening of the show Murder She Wrote.

Back then the Art Center showed movies. Jeff and Cheryl enjoyed The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm from the comfort of bean bag chairs. Now the bean bags have been updated to semi-comfortable theater seats for plays. Mr. Marmalade, the play we saw, was also a bit odd though well performed: the story of a four-year-old and her imaginary friends who speak and live very adult lives.
When our children grew up, went to camp or became old enough to leave at home, we came up alone and with friends. We enjoyed staying at Hill House with Saul and Donna. There was a great ice cream shop that we always patronized.
Local restaurants continue to be excellent. We celebrated Father’s Day, sans children, at Café Beaujolais where the salmon and sturgeon were wonderful. Margaret Fox, a disciple of Alice Waters of Chez Panisse, emphasized fresh local produce as well as local seafood. She no longer owns the restaurant but works at the Harvest Market, an excellent grocery store, where I always purchase edible souvenirs of our visit.
Jerry made reservations at the Albion River Inn for our anniversary. We have fond memories of dining there with many friends. Even with the fog grey skies the gardens put on a colorful display. Dinner was excellent, mushroom and fennel soup, steak for him and ling cod for me. Then we were compelled to share a chocolate mousse.

Sad to say, Heritage House, an old inn featured in Same Time Next Year and a popular wedding and celebration spot for about fifty years, has closed.
This morning the fog lifted for a while and I returned to Pomo Beach where the bird calls out rang the buoy bells and boats with tourists or seeking fish and crab had returned to the water. When the skies got grey again, I went to fulfill a personal commitment.
One of my favorite places to visit is the Mendocino Yarn Shop. Annelle is a delight and has some fabulous yarns. I was not there to shop but to finish one of three dangling projects. This one was with yarn bought here four years ago. It will be done by the time I return which means I may have bought yarn for another project as a reward.
Jerry writes:
Class is still great. The small table we are going to start on tomorrow is far more complex than it looks. It is based on a 15th century Ming design that Yeung has updated. It is the jointery (how it is put together) that is the important lesson. The idea is that the legs are angled out 1.5 degrees off center so, in order to get everything to fit right, everything has to be cut at a 1.5 degree angle.

That small offset doesn’t seem like much but to get all the parts to fit to fit together is a challenge. By the way, if you look at the photo of the table, it does not look like it is made up of 33 separate parts all dovetailed into each other at that small 1.5 degree angle. To take it apart, you have to do it in the right order, much like a Chinese puzzle.

In class today we were lusting over new equipment. I was looking at a Felder saw that they have here in the shop and thinking about trading my Delta in on one. Unfortunately, when I mentioned the idea to Anna Lee she took a dim view of my spending $14,000.00 on a new saw. Oh well, I guess I will have to live with what I have.
I did finish my chisel and knife.

I have a couple more chisels that I am working on and hopefully will finish them tomorrow so I will have a complete set.
Anna Lee wrote about coming to Mendocino over the years and we all really enjoyed the area. This is the most beautiful coastline I have seen and, in the right light, you can get great photos.
Anna Lee continued:
Jerry invited me to the class lecture and demonstration on the breaking down of the table. No longer can I scoff about it being a little project. The pieces he mentioned are intricately connected and required precise positioning and angles. I will be impressed if anyone in the class can master even a part of this project in the short time they have. This is a lesson in process not project. By the way, Jerry and I traded cameras and I am finding a whole different view out there.

Tuesday, 22 June 2010

A foggy day

Anna Lee writes:
A typical day on the north coast: The drone of the fog horn. The clang of the buoy bell. A squadron of pelicans. The pose of a seagull. The splay of yellow, white and purple flowers. The gentle nip of cool air. All these blended together to make the fog shrouded coast gorgeous.



Jerry writes
Today was the second day of class where we continued to work on our knives and chisels. We learned how to mount the knife in a wooden handle and then shape the handle to individual hands. Sounds kind of nominal but there is a lot to doing the shaping for individual hand sizes and the session was very interesting.

We had a special guest today. Mrs. Krenov came by to see what was going on. She is the widow of James Krenov who started the school. He was one of the giants of furniture making who used to come in every class and meet the students. His work now sells for six figures in New York. Anyway, his wife is a very pleasant lady and here is a picture of her with Yeung Chan, the teacher in this class.

My knife is coming along and tomorrow I hope there will be a finished photo of it. Here it is at the moment with the knife installed. It has come a long way from the bare piece of steel we got yesterday morning.

The chisel will take a bit longer because, here, rather than use machines, you have to sharpen it with water stones and that is a very time consuming procedure. The steel I got had some deep groves in it and it is taking some time to lap them out.