North Coast Journal 06-12-14 Edition

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thursday june 12, 2014 vol XXV issue 24 • humboldt county, calif. FREE

north coast

northcoastjournal.com

‘BAIT AND SWITCH’ Did Anthem Blue Cross use Obamacare to swindle Humboldt customers?

By Thadeus Greenson

6 Hive got you, babe 9 The bougiest trim scene in Humboldt 33 Beer + meat = happy dad 38 Weren’t you in the Cutters? 42 Bi-valve curious


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table of 4 Mailbox 5 Poem

GOD GETTING OLD

6 News

NO MORE HORNET GUYS

8 9

Blog Jammin’ Week in Weed EAT YOUR WEEDIES

12 On The Cover BAIT AND SWITCH

18 Go Local

SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

21 Bobarazzi

AROUND HUMBOLDT COUNTY

21 Home & Garden SERVICE DIRECTORY

22 Art Beat

THE BIG CHEESE

24 Arts! Arcata

FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 6-9 P.M.

25 Best of Humboldt 2014 Ballot

28 Stage Matters THE BIG MAD

Dell’Arte’s 2014 Mad River Festival SPECIAL INSERT

33 Table Talk POP ROAST

34 Music & More!

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

38 The Setlist

ENCHANTMENT

41 Calendar 45 Filmland TOP CHEF

46 Workshops 54 Sudoku & Crossword 54 Marketplace 58 Body, Mind & Spirit 59 Real Estate This Week

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

3


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June 12, 2014 Volume XXV No. 24

Comment of the Week

North Coast Journal Inc. www.northcoastjournal.com ISSN 1099-7571 © Copyright 2014 CIRCULATION VERIFICATION C O U N C I L

The North Coast Journal is a weekly newspaper serving Humboldt County. Circulation: 21,000 copies distributed FREE at more than 350 locations. Mail subscriptions: $39 / 52 issues. Single back issues mailed / $2.50. Entire contents of the North Coast Journal are copyrighted. No article may be reprinted without publisher’s written permission. Printed on recycled paper with soy-based ink.

publisher Judy Hodgson judy@northcoastjournal.com news editor Thadeus Greenson thad@northcoastjournal.com arts & features editor Jennifer Fumiko Cahill jennifer@northcoastjournal.com staff writer/assistant editor Grant Scott-Goforth grant@northcoastjournal.com staff writer Heidi Walters heidi@northcoastjournal.com calendar editor Dev Richards calendar@northcoastjournal.com contributing writers John J. Bennett, Simona Carini, Barry Evans, William S. Kowinski, Jennifer Savage, Ken Weiderman, Jessica McGuinty, Genevieve Schmidt contributing photographer Bob Doran bob@northcoastjournal.com art director/production manager Holly Harvey holly@northcoastjournal.com graphic design/production Amy Barnes, Miles Eggleston, Carolyn Fernandez, Christian Pennington general manager Chuck Leishman chuck@northcoastjournal.com advertising manager Melissa Sanderson melissa@northcoastjournal.com advertising Mike Herring mike@northcoastjournal.com Shane Mizer shane@northcoastjournal.com Terrence McNally terrence@northcoastjournal.com Tad Sarvinski tad@northcoastjournal.com marketing & promotions manager Drew Hyland office manager/bookkeeper Carmen England receptionist/classified assistant Michelle Wolff

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• 4 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Canvassing

“Lupisphobia is the irrational fear of wolves and is similar to xenophobia. The decision was a major advance in overcoming the phobic barrier.”

Editor: I enjoyed Ken Weiderman’s article about, and especially his in— Gary Graham Hughes, terview with artist Sheldon Skillie (“Breakdancing with the Spirits,” commenting on California’s Fish and Wildlife Commission June 5). While I live too far away approving endangered listing of the gray wolf. to attend the gallery showing, I’ve followed and appreciate his works. He seems to be able to shift media with fine attention to the details needed to successfully capture each individual theme. I wish him success with his showing and hope you can follow up with more information about his previous their rears and go to the polling place. gallery displays in the Pacific Northwest. I I think many citizens here feel that we find his work very impressive. need a change on the board of supes but Alicia White, Cottage Grove, Ore. many of those same people didn’t vote. Conservatives tend to be more reliable Editor: voters. What message does that send to Marcy Burstiner’s fine article in The those who want to see some progressive Journal (“Art Attack,” May 29) prompted thinking in our government? It should me to write a letter, for once not excoritell them to walk the walk, to take some ating some foible, but in appreciation of responsibility. sentiments so finely crafted. In a time of I tried registering voters at the Co-op acute polarization, one or another view is and targeted younger people. I was told expressed so strongly, opposing views are over and over that they weren’t interestbelittled by implication, if not outright ed. They can’t then complain if they get dismissal. Burstiner’s exposition scaled the world their inaction gives them. Well, impossible heights by her balanced examithe Gang of Four got the message, they nation of an issue we should all consider: can safely shred the environment and Select any option, but be aware of the more to fatten their supporters pockets. real and diverse consequences. The non-voters have told them so. But The process of confirmation bias styvoting doesn’t matter, does it? mies objectivity in such a way as to mock Sylvia De Rooy, Eureka thoughtfulness by allowing our prejudices to shape, not just what we think, but what Editor: we allow others to think. A comment on the Journal’s otherwise Larry Hourany, McKinleyville excellent election coverage: In your coverage of Ballot Measures, Measure N, the bond proposal for the Southern Humboldt Unified School District, was indeed “to renovate and repair” facilities, but Editor: there’s more to the story than that. Voters While I appreciated your article, “Your in Southern Humboldt approved a bond Doorstep... Where Elections Are Won” issue several years ago, but the district (June 5), after this election I’m not sure sold the maximum number of permissible that’s where elections are won. The turnbonds before the renovations and repairs out for this election was pitiful and a large were completed and had to return to part of the MIAs were younger people the voters for more money to issue new who, it seems, don’t vote. bonds. Southern Humboldt voters said I phone banked for Kerrigan and soon “no” to more bonds and higher property realized that the registered voters I was taxes to cover for the district’s ineptitude calling were almost all senior citizens and in selling the original bonds. almost none were in their 20s and 30s. I Richard Finch, Garberville understand why so many younger people are disenfranchised, feel that voting doesn’t matter, but they cost this election dearly. Kerrigan, among others, didn’t get Please try to make your letter no more elected because the more progressive than 300 words and include your full potential voters didn’t vote and many of name, place of residence and phone numhis espoused supporters didn’t get off

After the Poll

Write a letter!


ber (we won’t print your number). Send it to letters@northcoastjournal.com

Correction An elections results box on Page 20 of the June 5, 2014 edition of the North Coast Journal inaccurately listed State Senate candidate Mike McGuire’s party affiliation. McGuire is a Democrat. The Journal regrets the error. l

God Getting Old Just for practice, I created another planet. Took me a week, and it was still unmanned! And now I’m stiff and sore all over. Went to cancel it, but couldn’t remember where I put it. Now it’ll probably run into one of the others! So I went to check out Earth. It had been a while. My god, it was overgrown! And all the Non-Believers! More sodomy than at Sodom! I went to wash it clean, but they said I promised not to do that again! Now, when did I do that? Told the Pope, never mind the “Be fruitful and multiply”— he said it would never fly at the Synod, but to check back with him next visit. Smote him down — an eyeblink later there was white smoke, and another in his place. Took a chariot out of there — halfway to Heaven I realized the turn signal was still on! Hard to relax — maybe a little nap — but here are all the original Hell’s Angels running across the lawn! Now, where did I put that brimstone? — Rick Park northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

5


No More Hornet Guys

But you still have options for dealing with your scary new neighbors By Heidi Walters

heidiwalters@northcoastjournal.com A bald-faced hornet nest. Photo by Thadeus Greenson

A

t Coast Central Credit Union in Arcata, the newcomers had set up camp outside and were menacing customers. A similar group had taken up inside a shed in Kneeland where a man keeps his lawnmower. Yet another hung around,

prickly-humored and uninvited, too close to a home’s window and garden hose. These were the new neighbors, and they were not welcome. “Is there something we can do that’s constructive instead of just killing them?” asked Ken Collins, a lawyer and musician

6 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

whose tenant in Kneeland was afraid to enter a shed now because of the hornets. What Collins and others are really wondering is, whatever happened to the hornet-getters? You know, the Weiderts, whom the Journal featured in July 2010. The Grass Valley family used to come here

regularly to collect our unwanted hornets — for free — because they could sell them to a company that makes anti-venom. They would set up a contact number with a local answering service, and when they got enough calls they’d drive up. But the Weiderts haven’t come here lately,


and their phone number is out of service. We finally tracked down Ryan Weidert via Facebook and he says he’s moved on to other things. His parents live in Washington now and collect north of Seattle. His brothers still live in central California and still collect hornets, but they weren’t getting enough calls in Humboldt to warrant the trip up here. So what’s a pestered Humboldtian with a fat, papery hornet’s nest to do? You have options. There are local exterminators who are skilled in hornet and wasp removal. And a few of our many local beekeepers do hornet and wasp removal, generally for a fee. For instance, Dick LaForge, of Freshwater, charges $35 an hour, including driving time, with an hour minimum charge. LaForge, who used to refer people to the Weiderts, says he doesn’t do hornet removal for the money. In fact, he tries to talk people out of it. “I’m hoping I don’t get too much business out of this, because I have other things to do,” says the beekeeper, gardener and player of low brass instruments

who is “retired, supposedly.” More important, he says, hornets are beneficial. They eat caterpillars and other insects that chew up gardens. They’re pollinators. Some might bother you at picnics and try to eat your hotdog. Some won’t. “We should try to live with them,” LaForge says. “If a nest is high on a house — for example, under second story eaves — or high in a tree, [they] will go about their business and not bother anyone. They are dangerous if the nest is within 10 feet of the ground in an area where people frequently pass by, especially if the nest could be accidentally hit with something. Nests in shrubbery are dangerous as any shaking makes them defensive. Nests in the ground are not dangerous if you can avoid disturbing that area, but quite dangerous if anyone could step on it or walk very near it.” If they are not in a dangerous place, leave them alone, he advises. They are part of nature’s balance. And, anyway, they’ll be gone by winter. We have three species here: Black and yellow Dolichovespula arenaria builds

grey paper balls under the eaves of roofs and in shrubs and trees. Vespula alascensis, also black and yellow, builds similar nests underground and in cavities (these are called yellow jackets). And Dolichovespula maculata is black and white and makes gray paper ball nests under eaves and in shrubs and trees; it’s called the bald-faced hornet. All three have the same kind of life cycle, says LaForge. “A single queen starts a nest in spring, raises a few female workers, who then help raise more,” he says. “The colony gradually grows in size and number until, in mid to late summer, it can have thousands. In fall, queens and drones are produced. These mate, and the queens hide and hibernate individually. The nest is abandoned and is not re-used the next year. In spring the queens each try to start a new nest.” That said, our hornets are not endangered, so LaForge says it’s OK to remove some. “I probably did 25 to 30 nest removals last year,” he says. That’s out of the 50 to 60 calls he received; he talked about half

of his callers out of removing nests. People have been calling him since April, this year, and he expects more as high summer progresses. When he’s hired, he drives over, dons his beesuit, flips a plastic bag over the nest and removes it, then swats stragglers dead. The removal typically takes 15 to 20 minutes. The hornets who aren’t caught might survive nestless three days, and might try to rebuild. Others remove nests, too, including Drew Barrett of McKinleyville who says he does it all over Humboldt County. The Humboldt County Beekeepers Association can direct you to these hornet-getters: humboldtbeekeepers.org. Or you can call your pest guys. That’s what Aileen Arrieta did to get rid of her bald-faced hornets (famous all over Trinidad). She didn’t want to pay LaForge’s travel time and rent a ladder, and she’d chucked the self-help option after scaring herself silly watching “a few really terrifying YouTube videos about hornet removal.” In the end, she says, “it was uneventful.” l

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7


Blog Jammin’ COURTS / CRIME

Eccentric Powerhouse Tapped for Murder Defense

After months of telling a federal court he intended to plead guilty to charges that he murdered one of the workers tending his marijuana farm, a Kneeland man has reconsidered and appears ready to take his case to trial. Mikal Xylon Wilde, 32, was indicted federally March 1, 2012 on six counts, including murder in the commission of a narcotics offense, for the Aug. 25, 2010 fatal shooting of Mario Roberto JuarezMadrid, of Santa Rosa, Guatemala, on a large-scale marijuana growing operation near Kneeland. Wilde — the first Humboldt County resident to be federally prosecuted for murder in decades — began working toward a plea agreement with the feds in December, after they decided not to seek the death penalty in the case. In March, Wilde told the court he had entered into “an agreement in principal” that just needed a bit more time for review. Then, in May, Wilde asked for a final continuance in the case to allow a private defense attorney — J. Tony Serra — to offer him a second opinion on the agreement. Apparently, Serra didn’t like the deal, as Wilde appeared in court earlier this month and informed the judge he was leaving the offer on the table, ditching his public defender (Daniel Blank), hiring Serra and prepared to proceed to trial on July 22. The interesting about face is made all the more so by Wilde’s choice of attorney. The long-haired Serra is a bit of a cult figure in the legal profession. He famously won the acquittal of Black Panther founder Huey Newton in a high-profile murder case but North Coasters will likely remember him most for his successful representation of a host of Redwood Summer protesters and his involvement in the lawsuit against Humboldt County and Eureka law enforcement officers for swabbing pepper spray into the eyes of nine protesters in the lobby of Pacific Lumber Co. offices in Scotia and then-Congressman Frank Riggs’ Eureka office. Known for having taken a vow of poverty, wearing hand-me-down suits — sometimes tailored with staples and duct tape — Serra made national headlines in 2005 when he was imprisoned for tax evasion after refusing to pay income taxes in protest of the Iraq War. (Serra was similarly imprisoned in the 1970s for failing to pay taxes in protest of the Vietnam War). According to an article in the L.A. Times, Serra took his 2005 prison sen-

MCKINLEYVILLE’S PONY EXPRESS DAYS PARADE WAS SURPRISINGLY LACKING IN PONIES. PHOTO BY THADEUS GREENSON.

tence in stride. “I would rather get down with inmates,” Serra told the paper. “They’re interesting, they’re dramatic, they’ve overstepped the bounds of society. Some of it is high principle; some of it is low principle. But these people are extraordinary. They’re not ordinary. These are my people.” Unusual antics and prison stints aside, Serra is also a damn good lawyer, boasting what colleagues call a “remarkable acquittal rate.” Wilde faces life in federal prison and a fine of up to $10 million if convicted on murder, conspiracy and marijuana charges. He was arrested Aug. 26, 2010 after officers responded to the CAL FIRE airbase in Kneeland to find a man suffering from a gunshot wound to the face, and another dead at a nearby property. During a hearing to determine if there was enough evidence to hold Wilde to stand trial in Humboldt County before the feds took on the case, testimony indicated the shooting came after a dispute broke out between Wilde and his employees. Just a year after emerging from Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, Wilde was apparently again in financial trouble, according to court records, with a bank moving to foreclose on his home on Greenwood Heights Road near Kneeland after Wilde fell behind some $33,000 in mortgage payments. Wilde had allegedly invested heavily in a marijuana growing operation near Kneeland on a property he’d purchased under the name Ashland Ranch LLC. Wilde allegedly hired three men from the Sacramento area — Juarez-Madrid, Fernando Lopez and Christopher Bigelow — to work the sprawling hillside property, which contained more than 1,500 marijuana plants.

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8 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

The dispute allegedly broke out after Wilde informed the men, who’d been living on the property for a couple months, that he was running out of money and couldn’t afford fuel for a watering truck the men were using to irrigate the property. Instead, Wilde allegedly told the men, they’d have to water the plants by hand. According to preliminary hearing testimony, the men balked, asking to be paid for their work and taken home. Wilde allegedly told the men he’d come back later in the day to pay them and take them home. But when he returned to the property the next day, he allegedly opened fire, killing Juarez-Madrid and seriously wounding Lopez. Serra was not immediately available for comment. — Thadeus Greenson l ENVIRONMENT / NATURAL RESOURCES

Gray Wolf Listed as Endangered

Following a crowded meeting, California Fish and Wildlife commissioners approved the listing of the gray wolf as an endangered species in the state. Close to 200 people filled the conference room of Fortuna’s Riverlodge conference room June 4 to attend a California Fish and Wildlife Commission public hearing on the topic of large predators. Included in the itinerary was public comment on whether or not to list the gray wolf under the California Endangered Species Act. The crowd, which quickly spilled out of the conference room, sported a proportionate mix of furry “wolf-ear” beanies and cowboy hats, illustrating the wide schism between local ranchers and

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environmentalists on this issue. “It’s hard to find a species in the West that provokes more passionate opinion from such a diverse range of people for more different reasons,” said Chuck Bonham, Director of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, “Before we open for public comment I ask that everyone keep it civil. At the end of the day we’re all Californians.” His call for civility was pertinent as public understanding and opinion of the gray wolf’s role in California’s future is an area with limited common ground. Some see the gray wolf’s listing as a non-issue as the species does not have a presence in the state, but the recent migration of a gray male wolf dubbed OR-7 across the Oregon border into Northern California has raised concerns that the wolves may be expanding their territory. That morning a Portland-based news affiliate reported that OR-7’s mate had a litter of pups in the Siskiyous. The effect of wolves on livestock is a hot-button issue in many other states in which wolf packs are active, including Montana and Wyoming. Bonham says that the department anticipates there will be an active wolf population in California within the next decade. To this end, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife prepared a wolf management plan. The management plan would include reparations for lost livestock and opportunities to manage the species through hunting. Many in favor of listing the wolf as an endangered species expressed the opinion that this is an inadequate response to the wolf’s re-emergence in California, and they fear that, unprotected, wolves will be poisoned, shot or otherwise killed. Many livestock owners fear that if the wolf is listed as endangered they will have no way to defend their livestock against predation. Public comment on the issue topped three hours and was punctuated by bursts of applause and the occasional exasperated sigh from either side. It included statements from local ranchers, activists, scientists, 1st District Supervisor Rex Bohn (against the listing), 3rd District Supervisor Mark Lovelace (for the listing), small children in furry hats, two speakers who burst into tears and at least one song. “The wolf is a killing machine,” said Bohn. “The wolf is a mother of us all,” sang a pro-wolf supporter. Following the commission’s decision, Natalynne DeLapp of the Environmental Protection Information Center said, “It’s a good day for wolves in California and beyond.” — Linda Stansberry


the week in WEed

Eat Your Weedies By Grant Scott-Goforth

W

ill this be the most potfriendly World Cup ever? In host nation Brazil, marijuana possession is tolerated, if illegal — an arrest leads to a warning and community service, according to the “legality of cannabis by country” entry on Wikipedia (yeah, yeah, don’t use it as a resource, kids). Of course, the U.S. men’s team will be there, amid much being made in the international media of our country’s burgeoning legalization. Also in attendance will be a number of nations with relaxed or nonexistent possession laws: Uruguay, Colombia, Netherlands, Iran. Of course, there are hardline nations too: Algeria, Japan, South Korea (where citizens can be charged for smoking outside of the country — take note, national team). Puff your stuff at home, Humboldt, and check out the games starting Thursday at Big Pete’s or your favorite sports bar. • Speaking of national marijuana policies, Mexico, which in recent years decriminalized personal possession (and made this year’s World Cup cut), appears to be mulling further decriminalization of pot. President Enrique Pena Nieto said the U.S. trend toward legalization means Mexico needs to examine its own laws. Pena Nieto told the Spanish newspaper El Pais (which has Central and South American editions) that Mexico’s was a “failed policy.” “We can’t continue on this road of inconsistency between the legalization we’ve had in some places, particularly in the most important consumer market, the United States, and in Mexico where we continue to criminalize production of marijuana,” he told the paper (via the Toronto Sun). • Another neighbor to our south is considering marijuana legalization: Jamaica, the Caribbean island most famous for pot (and whose national team did not qualify for the World Cup). Some Jamaican policy makers, marijuana farmers and businessmen are eager to capitalize on the marijuana tourism that they think legalization would provide, according to USA Today. It’s not unlikely that many Jamaicans, who’ve seen their culture co-opted and semi-understood abroad as one big ganja celebration,

could benefit from the dollars of America’s spring-breakin’ greeks or Australia’s hard-partying holidayers. The article says that the island, only about 400 square miles bigger than Humboldt County, is home to 37,000 acres of marijuana farms. • Humboldt’s stories are everywhere. It seems more and more often a national or international news outlet runs a large story covering some aspect of the marijuana subculture. The coverage is often good, sometimes great and only occasionally completely misses the mark. The latest in the great column comes from literary magazine The Believer, whose Lee Ellis spent some time at “The Bougiest Trim Scene in Humboldt.” It’s a fascinating read, following closely a large grow op’s cook as he deals with the complicated interpersonal, workplace, environmental, intellectual and emotional strife that comes with being on “the mountain.” An excerpt (find a link to the full story at northcoastjournal.com): — Those growers who want to keep their shipments of marijuana off public roads as much as possible pay fellow growers, like Ethan, the owner and chief executive of the farm where Dan cooked, for the right to use his farm’s roads to bypass county, state, and federal throughways. The customary toll, according to Dan, is two hundred to four hundred dollars per trip. He’d collected a few of these tolls himself. — On the farm, Ethan’s rule was omnipotent. He was supervisor when Dan cooked, lender when he needed a loan to start his own patch, and sole distributor when Dan sold. “It’s a little fiefdom,” Dan said. As salt in the wound, the boss’s crop was coming in strong, again. “Guy’s never had a bad year. His neighbors quietly hate him.” — Later, Dario and Brianna squabbled in the parking lot, surrounded by majestic Toyotas, their door handles gummed with resin. The moon turned some distant ridge elegant. There was a forest that backed up to the bar, the gnarled dark of it, an untrodden path in there, one sensed, that led to another bar, like this one but mountains away, with some other trim team there doing the same shit. l

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Did Anthem Blue Cross use Obamacare to swindle Humboldt customers? By Thadeus Greenson

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t’s early March, and a group of local insurance agents are at wit’s end. The enrollment period for health insurance plans offered under Obamacare is in its final throes, and the headaches began just as soon as Covered California got off the ground. There’s the typical stuff one might expect from a massive overhaul of the nation’s health care system that’s bringing insurance to millions of people for the first time: widespread confusion, poor communication, huge backlogs and entire days wasted on the phone, sitting on hold. But it is a deeper problem that’s bringing these seven agents together to pen a letter to North Coast Congressman Jared Huffman on this day. Though none will out and out say it, they’ve all realized that Anthem Blue Cross’ published provider network — its list of doctors with whom the insurance company has contracted to provide services to its policy holders — is a sham. “We are sitting on a powder keg waiting for the fuse to reach its destination

and it is getting closer by the day,” reads the March 4 letter to Huffman, written by Steven Justus, vice president at Anderson Robinson Starkey Insurance, and co-signed by six others. “Hospitalizations, surgeries and a myriad of other expensive medical procedures will reveal themselves as ‘out of network’ and insureds will be left with extremely large bills, perhaps to the extent of threatening their homes and savings through no fault of their own.” As the agents note in the letter, “it’s a little complicated,” but the short of it is that Anthem Blue Cross — which insures about 90 percent of Humboldt County’s 5,600 Covered California patients — claimed it was under contract with hundreds of local doctors to provide “in-network” care to its patients when, in reality, few local physicians outside of the Open Door Community Health system had agreed to take the company’s new plans. That left Anthem’s Humboldt customers to either seek out one of the few in-network providers under the policies or risk hefty bills for out-of-network care.

12 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

“It’s a bait and switch problem,” says Huffman flatly, dismissing the notion that Anthem’s flawed network provider lists could have simply been the result of pervasive confusion with the massive rollout of the Affordable Care Act. “Frankly, when you initially post online for the people who are shopping for policies a list that includes just about every provider in Humboldt County and represent they’re part of your network and you don’t actually have contracts with any of them, that’s a problem and that’s outrageous, really. We need to see some accountability for this.”

Widely considered

the most significant overhaul of the nation’s health care system since the passage of Medicaid in 1965, the Affordable Care Act leaves virtually no aspect of health care delivery in the United States untouched. (See the Journal’s March 6 cover story, “The Faces of Obamacare.”) It mandates that just about everyone in the country secure health insurance or pay a fine. It

prohibits insurers from denying policies to people with pre-existing conditions or from dropping folks because they get sick. The act also greatly expands subsidized policies for the poor, and mandates that plans cover preventative care and provide coverage for mental health and addiction services on par with coverage of physical ailments. But the single biggest change under Obamacare is the creation of health insurance marketplaces, known as exchanges, that offer standard, government regulated plans online in a format that allows customers to compare plans side by side. The Golden State’s exchange, dubbed Covered California, enrolled more than 1.2 million people, including 5,679 in Humboldt County, for its first year. Statewide, a total of 11 insurers put plans on the exchange, including smalltimers such as Stern Health Advantage and Contra Costa Health Plan, mid-sized groups such as Health Net and Kaiser Permanente, and the two giants, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield. Anthem

Photo by Thadeus Greenson

‘Bait and Switch’


their life savings in such a scenario. quickly cornered the market in Humboldt, Justus and the other agents at lunch offering three tiers of Covered California that day — Jeff Pauli and Jeff Miller — plans beginning in October. The plans, one made clear they weren’t pointing a finger local insurance agent says, “looked good at anyone, neither the insurance compaon paper.” nies nor local doctors. “It’s a confluence Sitting around a private table at the of events and unfortunate circumstances,” Ingomar Club one afternoon in March, a Justus says. couple weeks after sending the letter to But, while local doctors were left with Huffman, several local insurance agents the frustration of telling longstanding talked Obamacare while picking at their patients they could no longer see them Cajun chicken salads. They vented about under their new insurance policies and “the botched rollout” and a host of adagents were left ministrative failworrying they’d ures. There was sold clients the website crash health care’s verthat necessitated sion of the bridge their spendto nowhere, ing days on end Anthem seemed faxing forms to to be doing just Sacramento, the fine. After all, inability to find the insurance anyone to answer giant was pulling simple questions in premiums — and the horrible averaging some lag-time in pro$300 a month — cessing applicafrom thousands tions. of Humboldt There was the County residents story about a while dolling out guy with a heart physician reimcondition who bursement rates submitted his lower than Mediapplication in Cal and Medicare, November and the government supplied his credsubsidized insurit card number to Penny Figas, executive director of the ance programs pay his premium. Humboldt-Del Norte Medical Society, for the poor and The state finally estimates that she has spent about 100 hours elderly. One can processed the pa- combing through Anthem Blue Cross’ imagine it being a perwork in Janupublished Covered California network provider list, culling it down to an pretty profitable ary and tried to accurate list that spans just three pages. business model. run his card, but Photo by Thadeus Greenson Huffman says it had expired. By he’s been keeping the time the guy close tabs on the situation since receivfound out his card was denied, he’d been ing the agents’ letter and sitting down living without health insurance for more with them a few weeks later. Covered than two months. But the big concern, California has been hitting rough patches the one that had brought them to the throughout his district, but nothing quite club that day and spurred the letter to like what he’s seen in Humboldt. For his Huffman, was the powder keg. part, the congressman said he’s simply not Anthem’s network did not include St. buying the notion that Anthem’s provider Joseph Hospital or Humboldt Medical list somehow got jumbled in the push Specialists — the North Coast’s largest to launch Covered California, or that the group of specialized physicians — but company didn’t realize that most local few seemed to know that, including the physicians had turned down its low-ball two organization’s billing staffs, according reimbursement offers. “I think these are to the agents. Someone, they warned, very sophisticated actors, and I think they was going to go to the hospital for a know exactly what they’re doing,” he says. specialty procedure only to find out, after the fact, that the care was out-of-net, executive director work and face tens of thousands of dolof the Humboldt-Del Norte County Medilars in bills. “They cure ’em of one thing cal Society, spends huge swaths of her but they’re going to get the bill and have days seated at her desk staring at heaps of a heart attack,” Justus says, adding soberly that someone could lose their house or continued on next page

Penny Figas

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014

13


continued from previous page paper. It’s Anthem’s “in-network” provider list which was initially put up online, or what’s left of it. Figas keeps the original list in a three-ring binder and it sits a few inches thick. From that, Figas has whittled it down to a list that, at just three pages long, is as accurate as she can make it before turning it over to the California Medical Society for a sit-down meeting the group has scheduled with Anthem in the near future. The original list was a mess, Figas says. There were doctors listed under the wrong specialties and docs who had long since picked up their practices and moved out

of the county. Some doctors — like the physicians in the Open Door system, including Chief Medical Officer Bill Hunter — were listed multiple times, sometimes at each of Open Door’s eight locations. St. Joseph Hospital President David O’Brien made the list, even though he’s worked as an administrator for the last 14 years and doesn’t see patients. Figas said emergency room doctors also made the list and, perhaps the most shameful of all, so did locum docs, or doctors who happened to fill in locally on a temporary basis at some point in the past.

Having trouble with Obamacare?

“How does Joe Public know a new doctor, look these aren’t doctors here for a new insurance that you can go see?” Figas plan or pay often If so, the California Departasks. “It’s nuts.” exorbitant out-ofment of Managed Health Care More troubling than that, network fees to wants to hear from you. “If she says, are the doctors who keep seeing their people are struggling, we want made the list despite having doctor of choice. to hear about their problems, turned down Anthem’s conThe situation left loboth because we want to help tract offer. According to mulcal docs in difficult them solve them and because tiple sources, when Anthem spots as well, somewe want to know what’s going was preparing to roll out its times forcing them on in the marketplace,” says deCovered California plans it to say goodbye to partment spokeswoman Marta took a hard line patients they’d been Green. The Department of Mannegotiating with seeing for years. aged Health Care’s website at local doctors, Since Januwww.dmhc.ca.gov or call its help offering reimary, the state has center at (888) 466-2219. bursement levreceived some 1,800 els 65 percent complaints about lower than for Covered California, its traditional according to Marta plans. That left most local Green, a spokeswoman for the Departdoctors looking at takment of Managed Health Care, which ing a substantial loss for oversees the new program. While the vast every Covered California majority of those complaints were about patient they treated, and the enrollment process — exactly the most walked away. But kinds of things the Humboldt insurance Anthem left many on its agents were griping about over lunch — in-network provider lists Green said 211 have been about issues with anyway, leading some accessing providers, whether it be difficulof their patients to ties finding a primary care physician or the purchase Anthem plans, accuracy of plans’ physician networks. thinking their doctor Green’s department was also copied on was in-network and the a letter sent earlier this month from Hufftransition would be man and six other Democratic members seamless. of Congress to Covered California DirecInstead, those pator Peter Lee. While the letter is full of tients were faced with flowery language congratulating Lee on a a difficult choice: find “successful first open enrollment period,”

CONGRESSMAN JARED HUFFMAN, PICTURED SPEAKING AT THE OPENING OF THE HUMBOLDT OPEN DOOR CLINIC IN EUREKA LAST YEAR, SAYS THE NATION NEEDS A PUBLIC HEALTH CARE OPTION TO “KEEP INSURANCE COMPANIES HONEST.” PHOTO COURTESY OF CONGRESSMAN JARED HUFFMAN’S OFFICE.

14 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com


it also sends the firm message that more needs to be done to ensure adequate access to health care services; that more oversight is needed. “We are hearing all too often about consumers who are finding themselves surprised, confused and unacceptably burdened by the lack of local providers covered by their plans,” the lawmakers write. “Clearly, there is still work to be done on improving network adequacy, especially in rural communities.”

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System’s vice president for contracting. Igram says efforts are ongoing to get the specialty group included under Anthem’s People who purchased plans, but it hasn’t hapinsurance plans on the pened just yet. exchange with government Surveying the local subsidies landscape of Anthem’s in-network providers, it’s clear things are improvPeople who purchased ing, says Martin Love, unsubsidized plans on the chief executive officer of exchange the Humboldt-Del Norte Independent Practice Association. The network, he Total Humboldt County says, has picked up a host residents insured under of providers over the last Covered California plans month. “I’m certainly very happy things seems to be Source: Covered California going better,” Love says. months after it began “I think we just all wish enrolling patients, Anthem they’d gone this way from is beginning to expand its the start.” network on the North Coast, although — Was it the Congressional attention? as the company did not respond to inquiDid the state’s oversight groups — the ries for this story — it’s not exactly clear Department of Managed Health Care why. But, over the last month, Anthem and the Department of Insurance — has returned to the bargaining table with prod Anthem behind the scenes, making a number of local doctors and brought clear they were out of compliance with more providers into the fold. Perhaps Affordable Care Act provider-to-patient most importantly, St. Joseph Hospital is ratios? It’s unclear. But what is clear is now in the company’s Covered Califorthat even Anthem’s newfound push to nia network, joining Mad River Hospital, expand its network has created some which has participated from the outset. problems locally. Humboldt Medical Specialists, howWhen the company initially came to ever, remains an out of network provider, continued on next page according to Rick Igram, St. Joseph Health

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continued from previous page Humboldt with it’s take-it-or-leave-it approach to negotiations, some took it. Open Door, for example, decided it was treating many of the Covered California patients before they had insurance, so any level of compensation — not matter how meager — would be an improvement. A few other providers opted to take the contract and provide the care at a loss because they felt it was the right thing to do and their practices could sustain the hit. Now, six months or so later, these providers, locked into three-year contracts, are watching as Anthem comes back to the table offering higher rates. “These physicians who did sign up at the beginning and accepted that miserably low reimbursement rate are kind of being punished,” explains Huffman. The congressman points out that this situation is exacerbated by a provision of Obamacare that makes it illegal for physicians to discuss contract information among each other, leaving insurance companies with much of the bargaining power against a fractured community of doctors. Huffman said he and other lawmakers are working to change that provision of the law to level the playing field a bit. Catherine Markle, the billing manager at Eureka Family Practice, says her physicians’ group simply couldn’t accept Anthem’s contract offer the first time around, saying it would have put them out of business. But the practice’s out-ofnetwork designation was devastating to some patients, who assumed one Anthem Blue Cross plan was the same as the next, and couldn’t understand why their physicians wouldn’t accept the Covered California plans. Markle says frustrated and distraught patients became the norm for a few months in the practice’s billing department. But Anthem recently came calling again and, on May 1, entered into a contract with Eureka Family Practice. Markle says she can’t discuss the terms of the threeyear contract, but says: “We were able to come to a place where both parties were happy.” Markle’s voice lights up as she describes calling some of the practice’s long-standing patients who had switched to Covered California policies and consequently been forced to look elsewhere for their medical care to inform them they and their policies would be welcomed back with open arms. “I was able to make those calls and it was a wonderful thing,” she says. “We were never happy not taking it. That was never a good place for us.” With some practices, such as Open Door, getting terribly low reimbursement rates while others have negotiated more reasonable ones, Huffman says the situation is untenable. “It’s not a model


Breakdown of plans in Northern California

in the North Eastern for sustainable health areas of the country,” care moving forward, he says. “It’s a balance, so we’ve got to get this we need to meet adfixed,” he says. equacy requirements, There are plenty of but we also are very other issues to fix as attentive to what the well, especially in rural premium is going to be areas like Humboldt. (for customers). That’s While Figas agrees Total people insured under a balance that we’ve getting the in-network Covered California in Northern been looking at and provider lists straight California will continue to look at and getting more local in the coming years.” doctors under contract It seems that’s with Anthem Blue Of Northern California enrollees the challenge for all Cross is a priority, she who purchased plans from involved in healthcare says changes under the Anthem Blue Cross of California on the North Coast: Affordable Care Act are According to Covered California, finding balance. Curputting an increased Northern California includes rently, Huffman says he strain on an already Alpine, Amador, Butte, sees too much power frayed system in HumCalaveras, Colusa, Del Norte, in the hands of insurboldt County. “Being Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, ance companies, and in a rural area, we don’t Mendocino, Modoc, Nevada, particularly Anthem have the provider base,” Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Blue Cross, which holds she says. Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Toulumne a near monopoly on Even before Obamand Yuba counties. Together, they the Covered California acare, there was a account for 4 percent of the 1.2 market locally. But the shortage of physicians million people enrolled in Covered congressman seems locally, she says, noting California plans statewide. quick to take on anythat more and more Source: Covered California one who would point local docs are nearto what’s happening ing, or have passed, in Humboldt as a sign retirement age. “Every that Obamacare is fatally flawed. time we lose a physician, their patients “I’m a fan of the Affordable Care Act,” have to be absorbed into someone else’s Huffman says. “It’s an important reform practice,” she says. The system was already and moves us in the right direction, but stretched, Figas says, and now there are we’ve got some work to do to make sure some 9,000 additional MediCal and Covthe implementation is successful, and ered California patients, many of whom that’s what this is all about.” If anything, didn’t have insurance before. “If you Huffman says, Obamacare didn’t go quite already have shortages and (doctors) are far enough. “I continue to believe we booked solid, giving people insurance and need a public option in the mix to keep access doesn’t help the problem on the insurance companies honest, but if we can other side,” she says. just hold them accountable, there’s every reason to believe the system should work company’s perspective, Humboldt County better now that we’ve managed to get poses some unique challenges. Sean Barry, most people covered.” a spokesman for Blue Shield of California, And Huffman pledges that he will says it comes down to a supply and decontinue to pressure Covered California, mand issue. Because doctors in Humboldt and the state’s departments of managed are in high demand, he says their practices health care and insurance to continue to are already bulging at the seams and they hold Anthem’s feet to the fire. But, he don’t feel the need to make concessions says, at least under Obamacare, there’s a to take on new patients. fire burning. “It’s mostly a supply issue,” Barry ex“I think anyone who thought this was plains. “Generally, we’ve seen when there going to be smooth and seamless and are fewer providers over a larger region, without challenges was naive,” he says. we see higher costs. Also in lower popu“Remember that the context before lation densities, there’s not the econothe Affordable Care Act was insurance mies of scale you’d find in an urban area.” companies overreaching and gouging From Blue Shield’s perspective, Barry and dropping patients for technicalities says it’s a constant balancing act: The and preexisting conditions. So, I never company wants to contract with enough thought that, with the passage of this doctors to treat policy holders but also law, insurance companies would stop needs to be careful not to overextend. engaging in questionable practices. This “It’s a challenge in the North Coast and is what they do.” l

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11th Street, the nearly 600-square-foot painting fills the front of a newly renovated 100-year-old barn. The scene is idyllic, reflecting the pastures of the Arcata Bottoms. Rolling hills are dwarfed by huge curling clouds, a country road meanders past a canary yellow house and, of course, goats bask in a sunny field, munching on grass and gazing at passers-by. In 1988, a store filled the barn and the married owners commissioned Ken Jarvela to paint a pastoral scene that included cows and such personal touches as the couple’s favorite horse and a portrait of the husband. Created with conventional house paint in just six days, time had reduced Jarvela’s painting to flecks of color and bare redwood planks. Cypress Grove put out a call to artists to restore the faded image, selecting Thornton’s proposal over 10 other competitors. It’s no small feat to design, plan and complete a mural of this size, but Thornton is no stranger to the process. At 15, he began painting murals with Duane Flatmo’s Rural Burl Mural Bureau and was immediately hooked by the sheer scale of the images they created. While other

L SA

want people to think of Lucas Thornton when they think of murals in 20 years,” says Lucas Thornton. Confident and proud after completing his latest largescale achievements both at home and internationally, the local artist and up-ancoming muralist spares no syllables when discussing his long-range plans. “If I could have a mural lined up every three months I would,” Thornton says with a grin. “It’s just what I want to do. I want to paint murals for people.” At his home studio in Eureka, Thornton is taking a break from shaping a new surfboard dedicated to his dear, departed cat. Leaning into an old, squeaky, wooden chair, his eyes flicker above high cheekbones and a dimpled chin. An easel to his right holds an in-progress oil painting, and sketches, frames, rulers and clippings are hung from every available surface. Thornton pulls a triangular contour line drawing off the wall and uses it as a reference to talk about the mural he’s recently completed at the Cypress Grove creamery in the Arcata Bottoms. Located at 1330 Q St. a few blocks off

S

A new muralist climbs the scaffolds

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The Big Cheese

than drawing the initial image with graphite or charcoal, painting it in with a neutral color allows him to establish the values and evaluate the overall composition more accurately. It also “keeps people guessing” as they watch the image unfold monochromatically before he fills it in with vibrant color. As Thornton talks about the mural painting process, it’s clear that he’s in love with the entire aesthetic experience. Unlike the solitary painter toiling away in a lonely studio, a muralist is “surrounded by the birds chirping and the sun beating down and the wind blowing and people coming by and talking.” There’s also an historical connection, walking in the footsteps of eons of painters who’ve decorated walls before him. Thornton describes the “nostalgic feeling” of climbing up the scaffolding, hoisting up his bucket of paint hand over hand with a pulley and rope, and moving methodically over the surface again and again. “Not that I’m comparing myself to Michelangelo, but he had to do the same thing!” he says. Immediately after finishing the Cypress Grove mural, Thornton hightailed it to Costa Rica to complete another mural commissioned by a surf photographer who saw him working on the Bucksport wall. Now, he’s in between, waiting for that next opportunity to scale a wall and fill it with color. He sees all of his murals as his “little babies.” He says, “You kind of fall in love with that little place that you were at for a month. It’s great to experience that place you would have otherwise never gone to.” With the light and warmth lasting well into the Arts Arcata evenings now, Ken Weiderman encourages everyone to walk or drive over to Q Street to see this marvel. A link to the time-lapse video of the in-progress mural can also be found at northcoastjournal.com l

PA

THORNTON ON THE SCAFFOLD, WORKING THE FINAL COLORS OVER THE UNDERPAINTING.

young students came and went, Thornton stuck to it, eventually apprenticing under Flatmo and assisting in the repainting of numerous murals throughout the county (including the newly-finished Bucksport mural in Eureka). However, the time comes when fledglings need to spread their wings and Thornton jumped at the chance to begin building his own mural reputation with the Cypress Grove barn. Besides, he says, “I personally love goats.” He frequents the Sequoia Park petting zoo, where he’s got a hairychinned buddy “with a harelip and half an ear missing … we’re like this (putting his fist to his chest), butting our heads together.” After some research at Cypress Grove’s dairy in Dow’s Prairie, Thornton got to work drawing out the image, loosely basing it on Jarvela’s original. It wasn’t until he had the 30-foot scaffolding up and started prepping the surface that he realized exactly what he’d gotten himself into. Wood fibers sloughed off at the slightest touch. The entire thing had to be scraped and coated with a flexible sealant to fend off the sun, rain, bird poop and acidic redwood tannins. Eventually, Thornton was staring at massive blank canvas. He gridded it out to match his 1-inch to 1-foot scale drawing, then stunned everyone by painting the entire first layer in strictly sienna and magenta tones. This style of underpainting comes from Thornton’s studio experience. Rather

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VOTE 4 US

Second Friday Arts! Arcata June 13, 6-9 p.m.

Peter Lisle’s ink and watercolor works were mostly created at restaurant tables. Check them out in their natural environment at Crush.

Arts! Arcata is Arcata Main Street’s monthly celebration of visual and performing arts, held at more than 30 participating locations in Arcata. Visit www.artsarcata.com for even more information about the event or call 822-4500.

Express

2014

Auto Body HUMBOLDT You nominated, now the best remain.

VOTE!

BEST Outlined Text

PET GROOMER

2014

BEST SPA

www.northcoastjournal.com

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Thank you for your vote.

Voting closes Monday, June 30 at 5 p.m.

Please Vote!

BEST

Furniture & Mattress Store Jeff Stanley’s paintings of Trinidad are at Folie Douce, and you can see his new mural at La Chiquita Taqueria (1021 I St.).

ARCATA ARTISANS 883 H St. Betsy Roberts, metal work; Michael Edwards, jewelry; Jeff Langdon, art and photography. ARCATA EXCHANGE 813 H St. “A Rainbow of Stories,” Raw Elizabeth City, mixed media and paintings. Saxophone and drums by Russ Thalheimer and Shane Fox. BUBBLES 1031 H St. Bluegrass by Clean Livin’. CAFE BRIO 791 G St. Music by Chris Parreira. CRUSH 11th and H streets. Peter Lisle, watercolor, pen and ink. FOLIE DOUCE 1551 G St. Jeff Stanley, paintings. GARDEN GATE 905 H St. Anna Amezcua, artwork. Music by The Lindsay Battle Trio. HUMBOLDT CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS 637 F St. Ben Aubert, acrylic paintings.

LIBATION 761 Eighth St. “Lupines and Lavender,” Doc Ray, paintings. Music by Duncan Burgess, guitar. NORTH SOLES FOOTWEAR 853 H St. Martha Jane Johnson, watercolors. PLAZA 808 G St. Stilson Snow, photography. REDWOOD CURTAIN BREWING CO. 550 South G St. Vico, multi-media. ROBERT GOODMAN WINES/HUMBOLDT MACHINE WORKS 937 I St. Laurel Sky, mosaics. Jazz improv by USGGO. SCRAP HUMBOLDT 101 H St. Participate in “The (Re)Workshop,” with fabric, wood, metal and yarn at 6 p.m.. UPSTAIRS GALLERY 1063 G St. “Still:Life,” Libby Yee, Chinese brush painting. l

24 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Hum Plate Blog Devouring Humboldt’s best kept food secrets. www.northcoastjournal.com/HumPlate Have a tip? Email jennifer@northcoastjournal.com


NOMINATE

JUNE 2 - JUNE 30

VOTE

PARTY: AUGUST 6

AWARD

HUMBOLDT

2014

MAY 1 - MAY 22

www.northcoastjournal.com/BOH2014 Voting closes Monday, June 30 at 5 p.m.

FOOD & DRINK 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.

12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28.

Bar to Take a Date: The Speakeasy, The Pearl, Siren Song Tavern Dive Bar: The Shanty, The Alibi, Everett’s Sports Bar: Sidelines, Steve and Dave’s, The Logger Bar, Bar Fly Bartender: Jayme Cohn at Oberon Grill, Kelsie Derusha at The Palm Lounge, Steve at Steve and Dave’s Happy Hour: Rita’s, Applebee’s, Plaza Grill Bloody Mary: The Alibi, The Shanty, AA Bar and Grill Martini: The Pearl, The Speakeasy, Oberon Grill Brewery: Mad River Brewing, Redwood Curtain Brewing Company, Lost Coast Brewery Beer: Great White, Lost Coast Brewery, Tangerine Wheat, Lost Coast Brewery, Steelhead, Mad River Brewing IPA: Eel River Brewery IPA, Mad River Brewing Double IPA, Redwood Curtain Brewing Company Space Oddity Specialty/Seasonal Beer: Raspberry Lambic at Six Rivers Brewery, Tangerine Wheat at Lost Coast Brewery, Bourbon Barrel Vanilla Porter at Mad River Brewing Company Winery: Moonstone Crossing, Fieldbrook Winery, Briceland Vineyards Wine: Riverbend Cellars Firehouse Red, Fieldbrook Winery Babera, Moonstone Crossing Dark as Night Coffee House: Old Town Coffee and Chocolates, Ramone’s , Cafe Brio Coffee Roasters: Humboldt Bay Coffee Company, Old Town Coffee and Chocolates, Muddy Waters Steak: AA Bar and Grill, Oberon Grill, Folie Douce French Fries: The Trailer, Lost Coast Brewery, Arcata Pizza and Deli Hot Dog: Humboldt Hot Dogs, Wolf Dawg, Costco Sugar Fix: Arcata Scoop, Living The Dream, Ramone’s Milkshake: Fresh Freeze, Star’s, Toni’s Donut: Don’s Donuts, Donut Mill, Happy Donuts Sandwich: Hole in The Wall, Central Sandwich, North Coast Co-op Food Truck: Naan of the Above, The Trailer, Speedy Taco Sushi: Tomo, Sushi Spot, Kyoto Asian: Pho Thien Long, Gonsea, Bencharong Thai Mexican: Carmela’s, Rita’s, Chapala’s, Luzmila’s Italian: Abruzzi’s, Mazzotti’s, La Trattoria Vegetarian: Golden Harvest, Wildflower Cafe, Japhy’s

29. Vegan: Wildflower Cafe, Humboldt Healthy Foods, Lost Coast Cafe, Golden Harvest 30. Pizza: Paul’s Live From New York, Babe’s Pizza, Smug’s Pizza 31. Burger: Star’s, Surfside Burger Shack, The Trailer 32. Bakery: Cafe Brio, Ramone’s, Vellutini Baking Company 33. Breakfast: Golden Harvest, Big Blue Cafe, Renata’s Creperie 34. Late Night Food: Toni’s, Arcata Pizza And Deli, Don’s Donuts 35. Hangover Breakfast: The Alibi, Golden Harvest, Toni’s 36. Eatery on a Budget: Japhy’s, Los Bagels, Smug’s Pizza, The Trailer, Taco Faktory 37. Restaurant when money is no object: Larrupin Cafe, Folie Douce, Brick and Fire 38. Eats in SoHum: Cecil’s, The Woodrose, Flavors, Benbow Inn 39. Grocery Store: North Coast Co-op, Eureka Natural Foods, Wildberries

ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT, RECREATION 40. Artist: Duane Flatmo, Sonny Wong, Blake Reagan 41. Tattoo Artist: Henry Kruger, Mike Arneson, Brian Kaneko 42. Festival: Oyster Fest, North County Fair, Kinetic Sculpture Race 43. Karaoke: Blue Lake Casino, Bar Fly, Central Station 44. Band: Dr. Squid, The Hill, Gun Safe, Huckleberry Flint, Naive Melodies 45. Musician: Buddy Reed, Burly Dent, Eric Mueller 46. Club DJ: Pressure Anya, DJ Red, DJ Razor Burns, Stir Fry Willie, DJ Rude Lion 47. Live Music Venue: Arcata Theater Lounge, HumBrews, The Palm Lounge 48. Place to Shoot Pool: Roses’ Billiards, Bar Fly, E&O Bowl, Sal’s Off Broadway 49. Farmer’s Market Vendor: Neukom Family Farm, Shakefork Farms, Flying Blue Dog 50. Golf Course: Beau-Pre, Redwood Curtain Disc, Baywood, Eureka Muni 51. Weekend Getaway: San Francisco, Shelter Cove, Trinity River 52. Swimming Hole: Devil’s Elbow, Kimtu, Swimmers Delight 53. Day Hike: Trinidad Head, Headwaters Forest, Strawberry Rock

SERVICES & STUFF 54. Antiques: Heritage Antiques, Antiques and Goodies, Daisy’s Drygoods 55. Secondhand Store: Hospice Shop Arcata, Angels of Hope , Shipwreck 56. Pawn Shop: Humboldt Bay Trade & Pawn, Eureka Pawn Shop, Bob’s Pawndemonium 57. Head Shop: The Sthil, Pacific Paradise, Humboldt Glassblowers

58. Liquor Store: Myrtlewood Liquors and John’s Fine Cigars, Arcata Liquors, BevMo! 59. Vintage/Used Clothing Store: Little Shop of Hers, Shipwreck, Vintage Avenger 60. Clothing Store, men or women: Hot Knots, Willow and Rags, Shipwreck, Vintage Avenger 61. Children Clothing Store: Recycled Youth, Sassafras, Lots for Tots 62. Shoe Store: Plaza Shoe, Annie’s Shoes, North Soles 63. Jewelry Store: Plaza, Silva’s Fine Jewelry, Ten Window Williams, Holly Yashi 64. Musical Instrument Store: Mantova’s Two Street Music, Wildwood Music, Ferndale Music Company 65. Salon: Bloom, Forever Young, The Trim Scene, Kalos 66. Spa: The Spa at Personal Choice, Essential Elements , Soul to Soul Spa 67. Dentist: Tucker and Tucker, Dr. Benoit, Sr. Angeloff 68. Orthodontist: Dr. Hunt, Dr. Winzler, Dr. Enriquez 69. Optometrist: Vision Center, A to Z Eye Care, McKinleyville Optometric Center 70. Pharmacy: Barnes, Lima’s , Cloney’s 71. Bookstore: Booklegger, Northtown Books, Tin Can Books 72. Mattress Store: Furniture Design Center, Delta Discount Furniture, Arcata Exchange 73. Furniture Store: Living Styles, Arcata Exchange, Furniture Design Center 74. Bicycle Shop: Henderson Center Bicycle, Revolution Bicycles, Adventure’s Edge 75. Sporting Goods Store: Pacific Outfitters, Adventure’s Edge, Sport and Cycle 76. Computer Repair: Cornerstone Computers, Renaissance Computing, Cadny 77. Auto Body: Auto Body Express, Fred’s Auto Body, Quality Body Works, Rainbow Body Shop 78. Auto Repair: Antich Auto, Franklin Service, First Aid for Ailing Autos 79. Tire Shop: Les Schwab, Gosselin Tire, TP Tires 80. Place to Buy a New Car: Mid-City Motor World, Northwood Auto Plaza, Harper Motors 81. Place to Buy a Used Car: Craigslist, Mickey’s , Bob’s Fine Cars, Roy’s Auto Center, Harper Motors, Mid-City Motor World 82. Bank/Credit Union: Coast Central Credit Union, Redwood Capital Bank, Umpqua Bank 83. Plumber: Maple Service, Mad River Plumbing, Cruz Plumbing 84. Construction Company: Alchemy Construction, Barry Smith Construction, Pacific Builders

85. Real Estate Agent: Clyde Akamine, Mikki Cardoza, Sally Conley, Ken Murrell, Michelle Rowland, Stephanie Joy, Sylvia Garlick 86. Hardware/Lumber Store: Pierson’s Building Center, Almquist Lumber, Shafer’s Ace Hardware 87. Nursery/Garden Center: Pierson’s Building Center, Miller Farms Nursery, Mad River Gardens 88. Horticulture Supply Shop: Northcoast Horticulture, Bayside Garden Center, Humboldt Depot 89. Veterinarian: McKinleyville Animal, Sunny Brae Animal Clinic, Healing Spirit Animal Wellness Center 90. Pet Groomer: Doggie Do Pet Salon, Deb’s Bark Avenue, NorCal Pet, Muddy Paws, Myrtle Avenue Pet Center 91. Storage: Humsheds, Rainbow Self Storage, Arcata Bay Self Storage

BONUS ROUND 92. Place to People Watch: Arcata Plaza, Old Town Eureka, Arts Alive Eureka 93. Place to Take a First Date: Moonstone Beach, Palm Lounge, Siren Song Tavern 94. Locally Made Product: Larrupin Sauce, Cypress Grove Chevre, Fire and Light 95. Place to Blow Some Money: Plaza, Blue Lake Casino, Bear River Casino 96. Vista That Never Gets Old: Clam Beach, Strawberry Rock, Trinidad 97. Things to Bitch About in Humboldt: Homeless, Tweakers, Weather 98. HSU Professor: Melinda Myers, Mary Cruz, Christina Accomando 99. CR Professor: Cindy Hopper, Ryan Emanaker, Shannon Sullivan 100. Place to Take Your Dog: Hiller Dog Park, Moonstone Beach, Samoa Beach 101. Medical Marijuana Dispensary: Humboldt Patient Resource Center, The Humboldt Collective, My Closet 102. Marijuana Strain: OG Kush, Girl Scout Cookie, Trainwreck 103. Skateboarding Spot: Ramp Art, Arcata Skate Park, Eureka Skate Park 104. Humboldt Myth/Conspiracy/Urban Legend: Bigfoot, The Booms, Everyone Smokes Weed 105. Public Garden: Humboldt Botanical Gardens, Bayside, Arcata Marsh 106. Villian: Jason Singleton, The Arkley’s 107. Place to Play Hooky: Moonstone Beach, Luffenholtz Beach, The River 108. Place to Let The Kids Run Wild: Bounce-A-Palooza, Sequoia Park, Moonstone Beach 109. Worst Eyesore: The Downtowner, The Jail, Broadway Motels

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MICHAEL FIELDS AS TOMMY DUGAN AND ANTHONY ARNISTA AS LOWELL IN KORBEL V: THE SECRET.

The Big Mad

Dell’Arte leads a summer-long festival By William S. Kowinski stagematters@northcoastjournal.com

F

or more than a generation, it’s been mad in Blue Lake in June, ever since Dell’Arte created the Mad River Festival of stage performances. The festival got pretty hefty for a while in the ‘90s, and in more recent years it’s been smaller. But this year it’s bigger than ever, absorbing seven weeks of the summer with much more than the usual number and variety of events starting June 19 and ending August 3. There’s more music: in addition to the traditional Folk Life Festival from July 14 to July 19, there’s also a Blue Lake Blues Festival on August 2 and the Eureka Symphony performing Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf on July 26. (Last summer’s Dell’Arte Life Achievement Award winner and Dell’Arte founder Jane Hill was recently named

Eureka Symphony’s first-ever executive director.) A major catalyst for the festival’s expansion is a big ArtPlace America grant, which accounts for several Blue Lake-centered events, many of them free, including Blue Lake: The Center of the Universe Party on June 29 and the Trash Mash-Up community workshops from July 10 through 13. There are additional Blue Lake venues, such as Perigot Park and the banks of the Mad River, where Laura Munoz will lead One Multitude, a “movement choir” of 50 participants of all ages performing at sunset on June 25. There’s a new performance venue, as well. In addition to the Rooney Amphitheatre and Carlo Theatre, several shows appear in the new Pierson Building Center

28 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Big Hammer Tent, adding a circus big-top topography to the summer madness. That’s particularly apt since this summer’s Prize of Hope (given by Dell’Arte in conjunction with the Danish Institute of Popular Theatre) goes to Clowns Without Borders International. The award dinner is on June 28. The following day, Mooky Cornish, former lead clown for Cirque de Soleil, leads a benefit performance for Clowns Without Borders before entertaining at the Center of the Universe party in the big tent. Cornish also performs a comic solo show, The Glories of Gloria Revue, July 10 through July 13 at the Carlo. In addition to the annual Red Light in Blue Lake adult cabaret (July 5) and the acrobatic performance (this year called Taken Away, performed five times between June 21 and June 27), there are several other stage events. Mad Lab (July 2) is an evening of works-in-progress by Dell’Arte School grads Meghan Frank, Janessa Johnrude, Emily Newton and Darci Fulcher. July 23 is the official world premiere of Elisabeth’s Book, created by performers Joan Schirle, Laura Munoz and Ruxandra Cantir and director Alain Schons, with original music by Schirle, Gina Leishman and Tim Gray. Drawn from a Holocaust survivor’s memoir, the music and movement-based play runs through July 27. On July 31, Jeff DeMark brings his band The Gila Monsters (Rick Levin, Ron Sharp, Jean Browning and Paul DeMark) for an evening of music and stories about summer called Acting On A Dream (and of course, there’s a story about the title). Besides Jeff, storytellers include Marvin Samuels, Lizzy Moonbeam and Charlie Gilbert. But it all starts with the big show in the amphitheatre beginning June 19 and continuing for three weekends. Korbel V: The Secret is the latest in Dell’Arte’s outrageously epic working class soap opera that has seen death, a wedding, a birth and a fateful accident amidst much local color and family angst.

This summer’s story finds the surly and unemployed Tommy Dugan living in a ramshackle trailer, eventually confronting the Korbel Timber Company as it evicts workers’ families from company housing. It’s written and directed by Lauren Wilson, who wrote the memorable 2010 summer show, Blue Lake: The Opera. Returning are Michael Fields as Tommy and Joan Schirle as his mother Dorothy, who, despite having died in the first play, has appeared in all the sequels. Music is provided by Marla Joy, Tim Randles and Mike LaBolle. In a TV commercial for the festival, Fields as Tommy Dugan describes the show: “They say it’s a comedy but my life ain’t so funny to me.” That nails the mood of this series. It’s been satirical, melodramatic and over the top, but with heart and eyes open to the Humboldt of the moment. Off-camera, Fields said, “It is pure ‘theatre of place,’ Dell’Arte style ... I don’t know of another theatre that follows characters over decades with keen attention to the times, looking at it all through the lens of place.” Dell’Arte offers a festival pass to any four shows plus some extra benefits. 6685663. www.dellarte.com.

Coming Up:

Thursday, June 12 at Ferndale Repertory Theatre is an actors benefit performance of the ongoing production, The Dixie Swim Club by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope and Mamie Wooten. All proceeds on this night go to cast and crew. Otherwise the production continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. through June 22. This comedy portrays four North Carolina reunions of five women, college swimming teammates, who get together one weekend a year for 33 years. Directed by Leira V. Satlof, it features Marilyn McCormick, Marilyn Foote, Rae Robison, Dana Zurasky and Natasha White. Scenic design is by Ray Gutierrez, with costumes by Lynnie Horrigan. 786-5483. www.ferndalerep.org. l

Don’t miss Dell’Arte’s 2014 Mad River Festival program guide special section insert in this edition. spec ial

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Pop Roast

Beer and beef. Happy Father’s Day. By Jennifer Fumiko Cahill tabletalk@northcoastjournal.com

E

ven amid sea changes in family and gender roles, with parents sharing more equally in childrearing and wage-earning duties, Father’s Day continues to kind of suck rocks. More and more dads are changing diapers and making dinner, so where are the brunches and spa days? Where is the birthstone-encrusted man jewelry? One mother I know, who shall remain nameless, even forgot Father’s Day all together a few years ago. OK, I did that. And the “Surprise Father’s Day” I tried to pull off a few weeks later did nothing to assuage my rightful mortification. I offer this recipe — something fathers will love cooking and eating —by way of universal apology. It’s from my husband’s paternal grandmother from Oklahoma, where beer was cheap and soy sauce was an exotic ingredient. The sliced beef falls apart and the gravy is gravy — a rich, dark and roasty sauce you will want to mop up with bread (and later, alone in the kitchen, with fingers). It’s also shockingly easy. Just dump beer, soy sauce and meat in a Dutch oven, then a little thickening for the gravy. No browning, no turning, nothing. Put it in the oven and walk away. But shouldn’t you at least … No. Walk away. Watch the game, read a book — whatever it is you usually dream of doing when you’re trapped at the stove. If you need carrots and potatoes with your pot

roast, you can toss small potatoes and chunks of carrot in the pot for the last 20 to 30 minutes. Otherwise, relax. Maybe call your dad.

Beer Pot Roast

Cooking this a day ahead just makes it better. The traditional beer is cheap and canned, yielding a mild gravy with some depth, but a stout will give it a heavier Guinness stew flavor. Ingredients and method: 1 chuck roast (3 to 4 pounds) 1 can of beer 1/3 cup soy sauce 1/4 cup flour or cornstarch mixed with water until runny Preheat the oven to 325 F. Rinse the roast and pat it dry. Trim the excess fat on the outside and place the roast in a heavy, oven-proof pot with a lid. Pour in the soy sauce and the beer. Cover it and place it in the oven for 3 hours, until tender. A 4-pound roast may need 31/2 hours. Remove the meat and let it rest for 15 minutes before slicing. Meanwhile, skim some of the fat from the juice in the pot and whisk in the flour or cornstarch until it’s as thick as you like. Slice the meat and return it to the gravy. Serve with egg noodles, rice or a pile of mashed potatoes. l

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Karaoke w/KJ Leonard 8pm Free

Brad Wilson Band (rock) 9pm Free

BLONDIES 822-3453 420 E. California Ave., Arcata BLUE LAKE CASINO WAVE LOUNGE 777 Casino Way, 668-9770 CAFE MOKKA 495 J St., Arcata 822-2228 CENTRAL STATION 839-2013 1631 Central Ave., McKinleyville CHER-AE HEIGHTS CASINO FIREWATER LOUNGE 27 Scenic Drive, Trinidad 677-3611 CLAM BEACH INN 839-0545 4611 Central Ave., McKinleyville CRUSH 1101 H St. #3, Arcata 825-0390 THE FORKS (530) 629-2679 38998 Hwy 299, Willow Creek HUMBOLDT BREWS 856 10th St., Arcata 826-2739 JAMBALAYA 915 H St., Arcata 822-4766 LARRUPIN 822-4766 1658 Patricks Point Dr., Trinidad

sat 5/14

Zordon (future thizz) 11pm Free

sun 5/15

m-t-w 5/16-18

[W] OU Italian Sextet (jazz) 8pm $18, $15 [T] NBA Finals 5:45pm Free w/$5 NBA Finals 4:45pm Free w/$5 food/bev, All Ages [W] Sci-Fi Night food/bev, All Ages w/The Giants of Thessaly 6pm Free w/$5 food/bev, All Ages Jazz Night [M] Quiz Night 7pm Free 7pm Free [T] BeTh isBell Band 7pm Free Dr. Squid (rock/dance) 9pm Free

Karaoke w/KJ Leonard 8pm Free

The Ethniks (international) 8pm Free Karaoke w/Rock Star 9pm Free Vintage Rock N’ Soul (rock) 9pm Free

[W] Open Mic w/Jimi Jeff 8pm Free 707 (funk/rock) 9pm Free

Karaoke w/Chris Clay 8pm Free

Kindred Spirits (bluegrass) 10pm Free

[T] Karaoke w/Chris Clay 8pm Free [W] Blues Explosion (open jam) 8:30pm Free [T] Game Night 5pm Free

Jimi Jeff’s Open Jam 8:30pm Steel Toed Slippers (rock) 9pm Price TBA

Moonalice (roots rock) 9:30pm $10 Dirty Thirtee-nth/Peace Out Party (bands) 10pm $10 Blue Lotus Jazz 6pm Free

A Twisted Fairy Tale (drag show) 9pm $5 Lagos Roots (Afrobeat) 9pm $10

DGS Sundaze (EDM DJs) 9pm $5

[M] The Getdown (local funk) 9pm [W] The Whomp (DJs) 9pm $5 [W] Aber Miller (jazz) 6pm Free

®

Sat., June 14th 9am to 3pm

HBRA Crew Dock in Eureka, under Samoa Bridge.

demo day HAPPY HOURS Rita’s on Harris

$2 Well Drinks Extremo Happy Hour 4-5pm

& Regular Happy Hour

TEST:

Rita’s on 5th Street $4 Jumbo Margaritas $2 Pints & Full Size Drinks Regular Happy Hour M-Sa 3-5pm Rita’s in Arcata $2 Pints • $3 Margarita M-F 3-5pm

Q

A

&

Hey, McGuinty!

Ask: heymcguinty@ northcoastjournal.com

34 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Eureka 1111 5th St • 443-5458 427 W. Harris St • 476-8565 Arcata 855 8th St. Suite 3 • 822-1010

RitasCafe.com


arcata • blue lake •mckinleyville trinidad • willow creek venue

LIBATION 761 Eighth St., Arcata 825-7596

thur 5/12

Claire Bent (jazz) 7pm Free

clubs, concerts and cafés fri 5/13

Duncan Burgess (guitar) 6pm Free

sat 5/14

Submit your events online! Deadline noon Friday

sun 5/15

m-t-w 5/16-18 [T] Buddy Reed (blues) 7pm Free

Joe Garceau (folk) 5pm Free

LIGHTHOUSE GRILL 677-0077 355 Main St., Trinidad LOGGER BAR 668-5000 510 Railroad Ave., Blue Lake

Trivia Night w/Jerry Lee Wallace 8pm Free

MAD RIVER BREWERY 668-5680 101 Taylor Way, Blue Lake

Delta Nationals (rock) 6pm Free

MOSGO’S 826-1195 2461 Alliance Road, Arcata OCEAN GROVE 677-3543 480 Patrick’s Pt. Dr., Trinidad Electric Gravy (improv synth) REDWOOD CURTAIN BREW 8pm Free 550 South G St. #6, Arcata 826-7222 ROBERT GOODMAN WINES Roots & Culture Reggae 9pm Free 937 10th St., Arcata 826-WINE Rude Lion Sound (DJ) SIDELINES 10pm $2 732 Ninth St., Arcata 822-0919 SILVER LINING 839-0304 3561 Boeing Ave., McKinleyville

Sierra Rose Band (rock/folk) You Light Up My Life (benefit) 9pm Free 8pm Free LaPatina (rock) 6pm Free

The HiLL (honky punk) 8pm Free USGGO (synthwave) 10pm Free DJ Music 10pm $2

Potluck (food) 6pm Free

Jenni & David and the Sweet Soul Band (funk) 6pm Free Bradley Dean (rock/country) 4pm Free

[M] Itchie Fingaz (DJ) 6pm Free [T] Spin Drifters (acoustic) 6pm Free [W] Pints for Non-Profits 11am Free [M] Dancehall Mondayz w/Rude Lion 9pm $5 [M] Tyler Gregory (folk) 8pm Free [W] Pints for Non-Profits 11am Free

USGGO (synthwave) 8pm Free DJ Rotten (DJ) 10pm Free Sidelines Saturdays w/Rude Lion 10pm $2 Good & Evil Twins Karaoke 8pm Free

SIX RIVERS BREWERY Central Ave., McK 839-7580

Jenni and David and the Sweet Soul Band (funk) 9pm Free

Savage Henry Comedy 9pm $5

SUSHI SPOT 839-1222 1552 City Center Road, McK. TOBY & JACKS 764 Ninth St., Arcata 822-4198

DJ Itchie Fingaz (glitch/hip-hop) 9pm Free

DJ Music 10pm Free

The Only Alibi You’ll Ever Need!

[T] Cribbage Tournament 8pm $5 [W] Open Mic 8pm Free

Open Daily 8am - 2am

[W] Salsa! (lessons + dance) 9pm $5

Trivia Night 8pm Free

[T] Good & Evil Twins Karaoke 8pm Free [M] Karaoke w/DJ Marv 8pm Free [T] Sunny Brae Jazz 8pm Free [W] Matt Vrba (country) 8pm Free [M] Anemones of the State (jazz) 5pm Free [W] Reggae Wednesdayz w/Rude Lion 10pm Free

744 9th St. on the Arcata Plaza 822-3731 www.thealibi.com

SAVE WATER & TIME

UP TO 25% off

3 foods cafe

ALL IRRIGATION SUPPLIES

835 J Street Arcata (707) 822-9474 3foodscafe.com open at 5:30 tues-sun

thru JUNE

NEW! Join us for patio hours Tues-Sun 2-6pm

Check out our facebook page for news and specials!

Food that one would find in an Italian home... simple, handmade and honest. A seasonal Italian menu with an extensive use of the local and organic. Also featuring regional Italian wines.

latrattoriaarcata.com • 822-6101

Dinners Thursday-Sunday, 5:30-9:00 p.m. • 30 Sunny Brae Center • Arcata

Hwy 101 in the Safety Corridor 707.826.7435 8-6 p.m. M-F 9-6 p.m. Sat. 9-5 p.m. Sun. northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

35


EUREKA + SOUTH

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT GRID venue

Father’s Day

thur 5/12

BAR-FLY PUB 91 Commercial St., Eureka 443-3770 BEAR RIVER CASINO 733-9644 11 Bear Paws Way, Loleta CECIL’S BISTRO 923-7007 773 Redwood Drive, Garberville CHAPALA CAFÉ 201 Second St., Eureka 443-9514 CUTTEN INN 445-9217 3980 Walnut Drive, Eureka

breakfast served exclusively ‘till 2pm lunch to follow

OLD TOWN EUREKA 516 2nd St. 443-3663 www.oberongrill.com

Karaoke w/Chris Clay 8pm Free

fri 5/13

Bar-Fly Karaoke 9pm Free Nighthawk (rock) 9pm Free Joani Rose (blues) 7:30pm Free The Tumbleweeds (cowboy) 6-8pm Free

EUREKA INN PALM LOUNGE 518 Seventh St. 497-6093

Throwback Thursday (DJs) 8pm Free

GALLAGHER’S IRISH PUB 139 Second St., Eureka 442-1177

Seabury Gould and Evan Morden (Irish) 7pm Free

PEARL LOUNGE 507 Second St., Eureka 444-2017 THE PLAYROOM 11109 Main St, Fortuna 725-5438 PERSIMMONS GALLERY Poeina Suddarth (bluegrass) 1055 Redway Drive, Redway 7pm Free 923-2748

P.S. Email jennifer@northcoastjournal.com

sun 5/15

All Fired Up (covers) 9pm Free

Accurate Productions (DJs) 8pm Free

m-t-w 5/16-8 [W] Bar-Fly Karaoke 9pm Free

The Tumbleweeds (cowboy) 6-8pm Free

The Lost Luvs & Scary Photographs 8pm Price TBA Papa Paul (folk) 7pm Free

[W] Comedy Open Mikey 9pm Free Dale Winget (acoustic) 7pm Free

Irish Sessions w/Seabury Gould (jam) 3pm Free [T] Ghost Foot, Companion Animal and more (post-punk) 7pm $6 Miss Massive Snowflake (alt) Time TBA Price TBA

Will Durst (comedy) 8pm $10

OLD TOWN COFFEE & CHOC. 211 F St., Eureka 445-8600

Yours always, NCJ

sat 5/14

[T] Dale Winget (acoustic) 6pm Free

INK ANNEX 442-8413 47B w. Third St., Eureka LIL’ RED LION 1506 Fifth St., Eureka 444-1344 MATEEL COMMUNITY CTR. 59 Rusk Lane, Redway 923-3368

Dear HumCo, Tell us your food crush!

ARCATA + NORTH ON PREVIOUS PAGE

The M Notes (acoustic) 7pm Free Masta Shredda (DJ) 10pm Free

[W] Open Mic w/Mike Anderson 7pm Free

Itchie Fingaz (DJ) 10pm Free [T] Karaoke w/DJ Marv 9pm Free

Planet Four (jazz/folk) 7pm Free

Blow’em out fan sale! Sc ha efe r fan

ve rs a- ko ol ha f 20 ”

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s o p t io n s t o m o v e a m m u c h a s 12 ,0 0 0 c f OPEN EVERY DAY

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76 South G. St., Arcata (Across from the Marsh)

HUMBOLDT GROWN SINCE 1987

36

NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

your

Calendar events

Fresh, farm to table products made same day in house.

online

For Reservations call 268-3852

e-mail

Open at 5pm Tues.-Sat. 511 2nd Street • Old Town Eureka

northcoastjournal.com or by calendar@northcoastjournal.com Print DeaDline: Noon Thursday, the week before publication


eureka • fernbridge •ferndale • fortuna garberville • loleta • redway venue

thur 5/12

clubs, concerts and cafés

fri 5/13

sat 5/14

Find live music and more! sun 5/15

RED LION HOTEL Karaoke w/Chris Clay R.J. GRIN’S LOUNGE 9pm Free, 21+ 1929 Fourth St., Eureka 445-0844 Soulful Sidekicks (rock/folk) Cory Goldman, Raising Grain SCOTIA INN PUB 764-5338 6pm Free (buegrass) 6pm Free 100 Main St., Scotia The Compost Mountain Boys SHAMUS T BONES 407-3550 (bluegrass) 7:30pm Free 191 Truesdale St., Eureka Swan Sunday (eclectic and THE SHANTY 444-2053 request) 8:30pm Free 213 Third St., Eureka THE SIREN’S SONG TAVERN 325 Second St., Eureka 442-8778 THE SPEAKEASY 411 Opera Alley, Eureka 444-2244

Isotope and Zanapod (DJs) 9pm Free

The 10 Man Brass Band, Sambamore 9pm Free

Sherlock Holmes and the Steampunk Murder Mystery 7pm $5 Buddy Reed and the Rip It Ups (booty shakin’ blues) 10pm Free

Times and Energy, Evan Geesman (psych/folk) 9pm Free

m-t-w 5/16-8

Restaurant 301 & Carter House Inns 301 L St, Eureka (707) 444-8062

Happy Hour 4-6pm

[M] Andrew Endres Collective (rock) 9pm Free [T] The Thoughts, Summer Nites, Marina V (folk) 8pm Free [T] The Opera Alley Cats (jazz) 7:30pm Free [W] No Covers, USGGO (jazz) 7:30pm Free

*LIMIT TWO PER CUSTOMER

WHO: 10 Man Brass Band WHEN: Friday, June 13 at 9 p.m. WHERE: Siren’s Song Tavern TICKETS: Free

FROM OUR BAR MENU:

TRUFFLE FRIES • PHILLY CHEESE STEAK • VEGGIE QUESADILLA CARTER DOG • FRESH FISH TACOS ARTISAN CHEESE PLATE www.carterhouse.com

NCJ

COCKTAILCOMPASS

HOLD ON TO YOUR DRINK. IT’S HERE. BROWSE OVER 90 BARS AND RESTAURANTS • HAPPY HOUR COUNTDOWN TIMER FIND THE CURRENT HAPPY HOURS CLOSEST TO YOU • ROUTING DIRECTIONS ONE-TOUCH LOCATION CALLING

The Cocktail Compass is a FREE app, available for iPhone & Android.

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

37


WHO: OU WHEN: Wednesday, June 18 at 8 p.m. WHERE: Arcata Playhouse TICKETS: $18, $15 students and members

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

THe seTlIst

Enchantment

Breaking Away From the Expected By Jennifer Savage thesetlist@northcoastjournal.com

H

ello! I’m here to tell you about some live music performances that will enhance your life, make you more attractive to others and ensure that you don’t become the kind of person binge-watching reality TV.

Don’t say I didn’t tell you

Here are some reasons you want to go to the Palm Lounge on Friday night: You love objectively fun music. You’re a rocker. You remember Automatic Pink. You know, from back in the 20th century. You belong to that Humboldt County Punk Scene 1970s to Current Facebook group. You like your power pop crunchy, your punk rock anthemic, your indie pop effervescent and your new wave spunky. You enjoy being in a room full of people similarly inclined. You dig DJs Red and Zephyr. You’re curious about Eureka’s newest all-star lineup, Scary Photographs. The Palm Lounge is a cool space. The bartenders made up drinks named after local artists. Please take yourself there at 8 p.m. You can expect music to start at 9 p.m. sharp, says Courtney Luv — oh, that reminds me, The Lost Luvs are going to pave the way for a trip down Nostalgia Lane with

38 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Automatic Pink songs. Go to this show. You’re welcome. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Kyoto Sushi.)

Goin’ South

Another Friday night option is The 10 Man Brass Band and Sambamore turning Siren’s Song Tavern into a night of New Orleans with drums, brass, jazz, pop, funk, Latin, Balkan and electronica. Show starts at 9 p.m., is free and all ages. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Bless My Soul!)

That’s a lot of pieces!

Relatively new 17-piece Nigerian Afrobeat group Lagos Roots plays at The Jambalaya on Saturday. I predict much amazement as the band takes the crowd straight to 1970s West Africa. This show starts at 9 p.m., has a $10 cover and is 21-and-over. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: 3 Foods.)

Sunday! Sunday! Sunday!

Perhaps your father would like to celebrate his day with a jazz jam. La Musique Diabolique will oblige at the Morris Graves Museum of Art from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Cover is $5 adults, $2 seniors and students with ID, and free to children under 17 — the whole family can enjoy the gypsy jazz style pioneered by Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli in the 1930s. La Music Diabolique boasts a repertoire that includes jazz standards,


as well as originals and creative arrangements. (Pre-gig lunch suggestion: Black Lightning Motorcycle Café!) Once again the Siren’s Song hosts a night of interesting, this time in the form of bluegrass and grooving bass lines with psych-folk duo Times and Energy, Evan Geesman (whose thoughtful acoustic songwriting is filtered through trippy SoCal electronic beats) and Cyclops and the Owl. The Sunday night show starts at 9 p.m., is free and all ages. Sunday also brings up the return of Portland’s playful and charismatic Miss Massive Snowflake, playing at the Little Red Lion. The band’s songs are a little bit dreamy, a lot bit catchy and fully charming. Show starts at 9 p.m., is 21-and-over and may or may not have a cover. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Mekong Café.)

Skipping ahead

So here we are at Tuesday. Why not support a hardworking group dedicated to bringing live music to the differently aged? In fact, Placebo just posted the following on Facebook: “Want to book shows? Interested in working with a nonprofit? Want to enrich Humboldt County with a safe all ages atmosphere? Get in contact with us. We need more help with the load of work that is needed for a successful collective.” Aw, give the kids a hand! Or at least show up (or send your children) to a Placebo show. Maybe this one! Ghostfoot (Louisiana garage rock), Andrew Endres Collective (PDX jazz fusion), This Weeks Leader and Companion Animal will entertain in The Ink Annex on Tuesday night. All ages, obv, with a $4 cover for members and a $6 cover for non. No drugs or booze, please. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: North Coast Co-op deli.)

More Tuesday

Seattle’s The Thoughts bring their brand of orchestral folk to Eureka at the Siren’s Song (they’re on a roll!) Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. along with Marina V, and Summer Nites. They will fill your heart with sweeping sound, then break it with savage sweetness. Five bucks gets you in. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Five Eleven.)

And yet more Tuesday!

The wonderful singer-songwriter John Craigie returns to Humboldt for a show in the Humboldt Machine Works side of Robert Goodman Wines. Very cool. Doors at 7:30 p.m., music at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 night of the show or $12 in advance through Wildberries, Robert Goodman Wines and BrownPaperTickets.com. Leigh Jones opens. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Robert Goodman Wines.)

You won’t be staying home

OU and Amy Denio bring a Mediterranean joyride comprised of folk jazz with funky rhythms and lush vocals in Sardinian, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and English at the Arcata Playhouse on Wednesday, June 18. Show starts at 8 p.m., doors open at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 students, Playhouse and RJA members, $18 general and available at Wildberries, Wildwood Music or 822-1575. (Pre-gig dinner suggestion: Crush.)

Etc.

Full show listings in the Journal’s Music and More grid, the Eight Days a Week calendar and online. Bands and promoters, send your gig info, preferably with a highres photo or two, to music@northcoastjournal.com. l

PERFORMANCES: BEST KEPT SECRET WITH THE ALL-STAR ROCKOYSTRA • BAYOU SWAMIS JIM LAHMAN BAND • MOTHERLODE • SAMBA QUENTE • STRIPED PIG STRINGBAND EVENTS: NOON WHISTLE OYSTER CALLING CONTEST • KWPT THE POINT SHUCK N’ SWALLOW CONTEST ATTRACTIONS: AQUACULTURE ALLEY • ARCATA PLAYHOUSE/PLAYHOUSE ARTS • BREAKFAST AT 8AM CHILDREN’S ACTIVITIES • FARMERS’ MARKET • HUMBOLDT MADE BLOCK • HUMBOLDT WINE ASSOCIATION • KINETIC KAR SHOW • LOCAL ARTISANS • LOCAL CRAFT BEERS • SCRAP HUMBOLDT/CITY ARTS ALLEY • 30+ FOOD VENDORS FREE SHUTTLE EVERY 15 MINUTES 9:30AM–6:00PM: ARCATA HIGH SCHOOL @ M & 16TH ST. HSU @ 14TH & UNION ST. • SAMOA BLVD./HWY 255 BETWEEN V & K ST INFO AT OYSTERFESTIVAL.NET AND IN THE MAD RIVER UNION OFFICIAL OYSTER FESTIVAL GUIDE AVAILABLE IN JUNE

HEY, YOU.

WHO: The Thoughts WHEN: Tuesday, June 17 at 8 p.m. WHERE: Siren’s Song Tavern TICKETS: $5

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

Submit your art, dance, movie, lecture, meeting, community event, performance, karaoke, open mic, gig and/or comedy show online: www.northcoastjournal.com The world wants to know. northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

39


40 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com


The dancers from The Upper Studio present Carnival of the Animals (feathers, fur and tutus!) and excerpts from Paquita (Gypsies, Spaniards and tutus!) on Friday, June 13 at 8 p.m. and Saturday, June 14 at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. ($10) at the Redwood Raks dance studio. Both ballets are geared toward children, with vibrant costumes and playful music.

12 thursday Art

Art for Teens. 4:30-6 p.m. Fortuna United Methodist Church, 922 N St. Drawing, painting, mixed-media, sculpting and more. Free.

Music

Beginning Ukulele Play and Sing. 6-7 p.m. The MultiGenerational Center, 2280 Newburg Road, Fortuna. The ukulele is easy to play and a great way to learn music. This session is for chidren ages seven and older and an accompanying adult. Free. 616-5791.

Theater

Les Misérables. 8 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. The iconic musical about Jean Valjean’s quest for redemption. $18-$20. 442-6278.

Events

Police Academy Graduation. 1 p.m. College of the Redwoods, 7351 Tompkins Hill Road, Eureka. Is there a party here, officer? Cadets graduate from the 113th class. Free. 476-4334.

Food

Henderson Center Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Henderson near F Street, Eureka. Fresh local produce, straight from the farmer. Rick Park plays this week. www.humfarm.org. 441-9999. McKinleyville Farmers Market. 3:30-6:30 p.m. McKinleyville Safeway Shopping Plaza, Central Avenue. Fresh local vegetables, fruit and flowers straight from the farmer. Also fresh barbecued meats and live music.

Meetings

Humboldt Grange 501 Potluck. Second Thursday of every month, 6:30 p.m. Humboldt Grange Hall, 5845 Humboldt Hill Road, Eureka. Grange Women’s Auxiliary meets at 6 p.m., potluck at 6:30 p.m., Grange meeting 7:30 p.m. nanettespearschade@gmail.com. www.facebook.com/humboldt.grange. 443-0045.

Supposedly, there’s no room for politics in polite conversation. That’s just fine for longtime comedian Will Durst — he’s not trying to be polite. The comedian performs his one-man show BoomeRaging: From LSD to OMG at the Arcata Theatre Lounge on Friday, June 13 at 8 p.m. ($15 at the door, $10 in advance) and at the Mateel Community Center on Saturday, June 14 at 8 p.m. ($10).

Outdoors

Cocktail Cruise. 5:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. Have a drink and enjoy a slow ride around the bay on the Madaket. $10. 445-1910. Narrated Bay Cruise. 1, 2:30 & 4 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. Tour the bay with the Captain of the Madaket as your guide. Learn about the history and wildlife of Humboldt Bay. $18, $16 seniors and kids under 17, $10 kids under 12, free to kids under 4. 445-1910. Sunset Paddle. Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Drive, Eureka. The guided tours focus on the natural and cultural history of the Humboldt Bay. Tours meet two hours before sunset. Please register in advance by the Monday before your paddle date of choice. $40. hbac@humboldt.edu. humboldt.edu/ hbac. 443-4222.

Etc

Cribbage Group. Every other Thursday, 6-8 p.m. New Wine Church, 1180 Evergreen Road, Redway. Please bring a board, if possible; refreshments will be served. Free. lizcarey333@icloud.com. 497-8281. Sip and Knit. 6 p.m. NorthCoast Knittery, 320 Second St., Eureka. Join fellow knitters, crocheters, weavers, spinners and other fiber artists as they socialize and work on their current projects. 442-9276.

Steampunks and BBC fans unite! Grab your pipe and deerstalker hat for Sherlock Holmes and the Steampunk Murder Mystery at the Siren’s Song Tavern on Saturday, June 14 at 7 p.m. ($5). The game is afoot!

Arts! Arcata. Second Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Art, music and more art. Downtown Arcata and surrounding area. Free. info@arcatamainstreet.com. www.arcatamainstreet. com. 822-4500. Fire Arts and Photography. 5:45-10 p.m. Mischief Lab, 1041 F St., Arcata. Photography by John Mahoney, fire art sculptures made by the Mischief Lab and local fire dancer Gypsy Bella. Free. bellavitafiretribe@gmail. com. 298-7195.

Dance

Carnival of The Animals and Paquita. 8 p.m. Redwood Raks World Dance Studio, 824 L St., Arcata. Children’s ballet from The Upper Studio. $10. www.redwoodraks. com. 360-791-4817. World Dance. 8 p.m. St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, 1675 Chester Ave., Arcata. Teaching and request dancing. $3. g-b-deja@sbcglobal.net. www.stalbansarcata.org. 839-3665.

Lecture

Redwood Region Audubon Society Presentation. 7:30-9 p.m. Humboldt Area Foundation, 363 Indianola Road, Bayside. Betsy Elkinton, recent Humboldt State University Wildlife Master’s Program graduate, presents “Foraging Strategies of Black Brant During Spring Staging on South Humboldt Bay.” Free. rras.org/calendar.html.

Theater

13 friday Art

(Re)Workshop Grand Opening. 6-9 p.m. SCRAP Humboldt, 101 H St. Suite D, Arcata. Celebrate the opening of SCRAP Humboldt’s expanded creative reuse center and the new education and creative space. Free. tibora@ scraphumboldt.org. scraphumboldt.org. 822-1452.

The Dixie Swim Club. 8 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theater, 447 Main St. Meet five women, all friends and former teammates on their college swim team. They come together once a year for memories and hijinks. $18, $16 students and seniors. ferndalerep.org. 786-5483. Les Misérables. 8 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Events

Guided Tour. 11 a.m. Clarke Historical Museum, Third and E streets, Eureka. Take a tour with a museum employee and learn about local history. $3. www. clarkemuseum.org.

Rodeo in the Redwoods. 9 a.m. Greycliff Rodeo Grounds, Greycliff, Benbow. The 57th annual bucking and barbecuing event featuring bull riding, rodeo queens, junior rodeo and more. 223-1046.

Food

Southern Humboldt Farmers Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Garberville Town Square, Church Street. Fresh produce, meats, baked goods and more, plus live music and family activities. Free. www.facebook.com/Southernhumboldtfarmersmarket. Thrill of the Grill. 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. North Coast Co-op, Eureka, 25 Fourth St. A barbecue lunch to benefit Food for People’s child nutrition programs. Munch beef or tofu burgers, salad, chips and drink while Dogbone plays. $5. harriet@foodforpeople.org. foodforpeople. org. 445-3166.

Meetings

Grief Support Group. 1-2:30 p.m. Hospice of Humboldt, 2010 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. Meet others to exchange emotional support and ideas on coping with the death of a loved one. Free. 445-8443.

Outdoors

Cocktail Cruise. 5:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Narrated Bay Cruise. 1, 2:30 & 4 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Sports

Eight Ball Tournament Night. 7 p.m. Rose’s Billiards, 535 Fifth St., Eureka. Come and compete for prizes in a BCA rules double elimination tournament on 7-foot Diamond tables. $1 off of beers for tournament players. $5 plus $3 green fee. guy@rosesbilliards.com. rosesbilliards.com. 497-6295. Fast Break Fridays. 7-9 p.m. McKinleyville Recreation Department, 1656 Sutter Road. Open access to the basketball courts for teens 13-17. $1. mckinleyvillecsd.

continued on next page

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014

41


continued from previous page com/parks-recreation. Friday Fun Skating. 6-8:30 p.m. Eureka Muni, 1120 F Street. Skate with your friends and family. $4 youth, $4.75 adults. 441-9181. Humboldt Crabs Baseball. 7 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. The Humboldt Crabs versus the Seattle Studs. $8, $6 students and seniors, $4 kids under 12. Public Skating. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Fortuna Firemen’s Pavilion, 9 Park St. Have a blast and get some exercise at the same time. $5.

Comedy

Will Durst. 8-10:30 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. The comedy legend brings his one-man show, “BoomeRaging: From LSD to OMG,” to Humboldt! $15, $10 advance. av.persico@gmail.com. 822-1220

14 saturday Art

Arts on the Avenue. Second Saturday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Eagle Prairie Arts District, 406 Wildwood Ave., Rio Dell. Local artists, artisans and music all along the avenue. Free. www.facebook.com/info.epad/info. Opening Reception. 5-8 p.m. Studio 299, 75 The Terrace, Willow Creek. The featured artwork includes bonsai artistry by Kerry Winegarden of Little Trees Bonsai Studio and the inspired artistry of the late Will Stephen. Free. studio299.tripod.com.

Dance

Carnival of The Animals and Paquita. 1 & 7 p.m. Redwood Raks World Dance Studio, 824 L St., Arcata. See June 13 listing. Hula with Tatiana. 2-4:30 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. Bring the whole family for a performance and lesson in Hula dance with instructor and performer Tatiana Robinson. $5, $2 seniors and students with ID, free for children 17 and under. janine@ humboldtarts.org. humboldtarts.org. 442-0278.

Lecture

Know Your Rights. 1:30-5:30 p.m. Peoples’ Action for Rights and Community, Q St. Alley between Second and Third streets, Eureka. A discussion about your rights and practical ways to assert them with law enforcement. Lunch provided. Free. copwatchrwc@riseup.net. redwoodcurtaincopwatch.net/node/18767. 633-4493.

Theater

The Dixie Swim Club. 8 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theater, 447 Main St. See June 13 listing. Les Misérables. 8 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See June 12 listing. Sherlock Holmes and the Steampunk Murder Mystery. 7-10 p.m. The Siren’s Song Tavern, 325 Second St., Eureka. This live, interactive evening features the greatest science fiction authors of the late 1800s attempting to solve the murder of one of their own. $5. murderbydessert.com. 672-5651.

Events

Oyster Festival. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Live music all day, shucking contests, kids activities and a bevy of local chefs selling their oyster creations and vying for the coveted Best Oyster title. Free. arcatamainstreet@gmail.com. 822-4500. Rodeo in the Redwoods. Greycliff Rodeo Grounds, Greycliff, Benbow. See June 13 listing. A Twisted Fairy Tale. 9-11:45 p.m. Humboldt Brews, 856 10th St., Arcata. The Red Carpet Girls and Where’s Queer

Bill present a drag show and dance party to benefit Humboldt Pride and PFLAG. Dress as your favorite fairy tale character to win prizes. $5. wheresqueerbill@gmail. com. www.wheresqueerbill.com. 832-4785.

For Kids

Babies at the Library. Second Saturday of every month, 11 a.m.-noon. Trinidad Library, 380 Janis Court. Songs, rhymes and playtime for children aged 3 months to 2 years. Free. trihuml@co.humboldt.ca.us. 677-0227. McKinleyville Summer Reading Kickoff. 11 a.m.-noon. Azalea Hall, 1620 Pickett Road, McKinleyville. “Paws to Read” presents a celebration of books, featuring a performance from juggling storyteller Ross Mackinney, snacks and craft activities. Free. facebook.com/ McKinleyvilleLibrary. 839-4459. Silly Snakes and Salamanders. 9 a.m.-noon. Sequoia Park Zoo, 3414 W St., Eureka. A day of Cub Club activities, theater, stories, games and arts. Meet sneaky, slimy, slithery critters. $25. www.sequoiaparkzoo.net. Story Time. Every other Saturday, 11 a.m. Rio Dell Library, 715 Wildwood Ave. Join us for stories, songs, and games for early readers and parents. Free. riohumml@ co.humboldt.ca.us. 764-3333.

Humboldt B-52s Baseball. Noon. McKinleyville High School, 1300 Murray Road. Playing the Bay Area Tides. $5. www.facebook.com/pages/Humboldt-B-52s-Baseball. Humboldt Crabs Baseball. 7 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. See June 13 listing. Public Skating. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Fortuna Firemen’s Pavilion, 9 Park St. See June 13 listing.

Comedy

Will Durst. 8-11 p.m. Mateel Community Center, 59 Rusk Lane, Redway. $10. The comedy legend brings his one-man show, “BoomeRaging: From LSD to OMG,” to Humboldt. av.persico@gmail.com. 923-3368 Savage Henry Stand Up. 9 p.m. Six Rivers Brewery, 1300 Central Ave., McKinleyville. $5. Johan Miranda, Andrew Holmgren, Scott Simpson, Christopher John and William Toblerone take the stage. Kim Hodges hosts. 6rbmusicbooking@gmail.com. 839-7580

Etc

Women’s Peace Vigil. Second Saturday of every month, 12-1 p.m. County Courthouse, 825 Fifth St., Eureka. Dress

in warm clothing and bring your own chair. No perfume, please. Free. 269-7044.

15 sunday Music

Bayside Grange Music Project. 5-9 p.m. Bayside Grange Hall, 2297 Jacoby Creek Road. From 5-7 p.m. anyone playing any instrument with any ability is invited; 7-9 p.m. people with wind instruments for Bandemonium. Donations. gregg@relevantmusic.org. www.relevantmusic.org/Bayside. 442-0156. Jazz Jams. 2-4:30 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. Performance by La Musique Diabolique, featuring gypsy jazz. Open session follows. Museum

Food

Arcata Farmers Market. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Locavores’ delight: fresh vegetables and fruit from local producers, food vendors, plant starts and flowers every week. Free. humfarm. org. 441-9999.

Aw, Shucks

Meetings

Grief Support Group. 9-10:30 a.m. Hospice of Humboldt, 2010 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. See June 13 listing. Parent Voices Humboldt. 10-11:30 a.m. Jefferson Community Center, 1000 B St., Eureka. All parents and guardians are welcome to join. Current topics include how the 2014-2015 state budget will impact subsidies for child care and early childhood education. Free. parentvoiceshumboldt@changingtidesfs.org. changingtidesfs. org. 444-8293.

Outdoors

Arcata Marsh Tour. 2 p.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 600 S. G St. Meet a trained guide for a 90-minute walk focusing on the ecology of the marsh. Led by Katy Allen. Free. 826-2359. Audubon Society Arcata Marsh Tour. 8:30-11 a.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary, South I St. Bring your binoculars and have a great morning birding. Meet the trip leader in the parking lot at the end of South I Street (Klopp Lake) in Arcata, rain or shine. The tour guide this week is Carol Wilson. Free. rras.org/calendar. Cocktail Cruise. 5:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Hikshari’ Volunteer Trail Stewards. 9-11 a.m. Elk River Sanctuary Parking Lot, Eureka. Gloves and tools are available but bring water if you wish. New volunteers are always welcome. susanpenn60@gmail.com. 444-2357. Horse Mountain Birding Trip. 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Espresso 101, 4950 Valley West Blvd., Arcata. Join Redwood Region Audubon Society and Rob Fowler to search for birds in high-elevation Humboldt County. Bring a lunch; the trip will end in early afternoon. Free. migratoriusfwlr@ gmail.com. rras.org/calendar.html. 616-9841. Narrated Bay Cruise. 1, 2:30 & 4 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Sports

Hayfork Century Bicycle Ride. 6:45 a.m. Trinity County Fairgrounds, 6000 State Highway 3, Hayfork. A 115-mile “Century Ride” and 126-mile “Double Metric Century Ride” with views of the Trinity Alps and Mt. Shasta. There are three other rides for varying abilities. chicksr374@aol.com. hayforkcentury.com. 530-739-5718.

42 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Humboldt County welcomes the summer with a traditional bivalve brouhaha and beer to boot. Every June, the Arcata Plaza is overtaken by keg-tappers, shell-shuckers and hullabaloohavers for the Arcata Bay Oysterfest. This year, the melee of mollusks and merriment takes place on Saturday, June 14 from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (free). That’s right — it’s free this year, but the fence is around to stay. Local eateries and chefs take to their booths to serve a slew of locally produced shellfish, each recipe as mouthwatering as the next. Most of the oysters come straight from Humboldt Bay, so partaking is pretty much a civic duty. Wash down the slippery sustenance with a cold beer

from any one of the local brewery booths, then peruse the vendor tables, games and children’s activities. If oysters aren’t your slimy cup of tea, that’s okay; you’ll have plenty of other delicacies to choose from. The Striped Pig Band, DJ Stir Fry Willie, Motherlode and more local bands take the stage throughout the day, so there’s never a dull moment. The festival wouldn’t be complete without the ridiculous spectacle of the Oyster Calling and Shuck and Swallow contests. It’s a hyper-local extravaganza of gluttony and excess, so show up with an empty stomach and an inclination for shellfish shenanigans. — Dev Richards


The No Limits Dance Academy presents admission: $5, $2 for seniors and students with ID, free to children 17 and under and members. janine@ humboldtarts.org. humboldtarts.org. 442-0278.

THEATER

The Dixie Swim Club. 2 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theater, 447 Main St. See June 13 listing. Les Misérables. 2 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See June 12 listing.

EVENTS

Father Oh Mary! Celebration of Life. 2-6 p.m. Bayside Grange Hall, 2297 Jacoby Creek Road. Feast with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and celebrate the life of cherished Father Oh Mary! Free. eurekasisters.org. www.baysidegrange.org. 676-3774. Rodeo in the Redwoods. Greycliff Rodeo Grounds, Greycliff, Benbow. See June 13 listing. Trinidad Artisan’s Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Town of Trinidad, Trinidad. Local art and crafts, live music and barbecue right next to Murphy’s Market. Free. 834-8720. Trinidad Fish Festival. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Trinity Street. Fish dinners, live music, a street fair, a guided walk, lighthouse tours, a scavenger hunt and music from the Pilot Rock Ramblers, Vintage Rock and Soul, Jim Lahman Band and The Downriggers. Free entrance. 677-1610.

FOOD

Food Not Bombs. 4 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Free, hot food for everyone. Mostly vegan and organic and always delicious. Free. 503-828-7421. Potluck Dinner. 6 p.m. The Logger Bar, 510 Railroad Ave., Blue Lake. Bring a dish to share with friends old and new. Free. www.facebook.com/LoggerBar.

MEETINGS

Animism International. Third Sunday of every month, 4 p.m. North Coast Co-op, Eureka, 25 Fourth St. Inquisitive thinkers are invited to a reading and discussion group. Free. animisminternational@gmail.com. www. northcoastco-op.com. 382-7566.

OUTDOORS

Bird Walk. 8-11 a.m. Southern Humboldt Community Park, 934 Sprowl Creek Road, Garberville. Jay Sooter and/or John Gaffin lead this easy, two to three-hour hike sponsored by the Redwood Region Audubon Society. Park by the kiosk near the farmhouse in the main entrance. Free. rras.org/calendar.html. 444-8001. Family Fun Day Paddles. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Drive, Eureka. Bring all of your friends and family for a paddle along the Eureka Waterfront and explore the marine environment of Humboldt Bay. No experience required and all paddling equipment will be provided. $20 adults. Free for children. hbac@humboldt.edu. humboldt.edu/ hbac. 443-4222. Father’s Day Cruise. 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. Enjoy a buffet lunch on The Madaket as it makes its way around the historical sites of Humboldt Bay. Reservations required. $32.50 general, $28.50 seniors, $22.50 kids over 4. 445-1910. Low Tide Walk. 7:30-9:30 a.m. Baker’s Beach, Scenic Drive, Trinidad. Dr. John DeMartini and biologists from the Bureau of Land Management tell some of the life stories of the inhabitants of our rocky shores. Free. 444-1397. Redwood Region Audubon Society Birding Trip. Third Sunday of every month, 9 a.m. Eureka Waterfront, Foot of Del Norte Street. Meet leader Ralph Bucher to scope birds from the public dock. Attendees will then drive to the base of the Hikshari’ Trail at Truesdale Street and bird along the trail through the Elk River Wildlife Sanctuary. Free. thebook@reninet.com. 499-1247.

SPORTS

Humboldt Crabs Baseball. 12:30 p.m. Arcata Ballpark,

Ninth and F streets. See June 13 listing.

ETC

Redwood Coast Scrabble Club. 1-5 p.m. Arcata Community Center, 321 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway. Tiles, letters and triple-word scores, oh my! 677-9242.

16 monday DANCE

t e l l a B

Friendship Circle Dance. 7-10 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Dancing for people in their 50s and older with live music featuring tunes from the 1930s, ‘40s and ‘50s. Refreshments are served during break. $4. 725-5323.

EVENTS

Meditation Party. 6 p.m. Om Shala Yoga Center, 858 10th St., Arcata. Come fill your heart with peace and love. Donation suggested. davidsandercott@gmail. com. 310-663-9879.

FOOD

Farm-to-table Dinner. 5:30 p.m. Redwood Acres Fairgrounds, 3750 Harris St., Eureka. A kickoff fundraiser for the fair features local meat, salmon, oysters and greens, as well as games and more. $40. www.redwoodacres. com. 445-3037.

It’s going to be totally awesome!

MEETINGS

Grief Support Group. 6-7:30 p.m. Jacoby’s Storehouse, 791 Eighth St., Arcata. Meet others to exchange emotional support and ideas on coping with the death of a loved one. Free. 445-8443.

SPORTS

Humboldt B-52s Baseball. 7 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. Playing the Vacaville Rattlers. $5. www. facebook.com/pages/Humboldt-B-52s-Baseball.

ETC

Cribbage Lessons. 5:30-7 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Brush up on your cribbage skills or learn how to play. Free.

2014

17 tuesday

A c o m p le t e r e s o u r ce f or k i d s o f a l l a g e s !

MUSIC

Ukulele Play and Sing Group. Third Tuesday of every month. Humboldt Senior Resource Center, 1910 California St., Eureka. All genres of music, from “Greensleeves” to “Hound Dog.” If you can carry a tune and play a stringed instrument, come party with us. We have extra songbooks. Donations appreciated. veganlady21@ yahoo.com.

FOOD

Eureka Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Old Town Gazebo, Second and F streets, Eureka. Fresh, local produce direct from the farmer. Free. 441-9999. Fortuna Farmers Market. 3-6 p.m. Main Street. Locally grown fruits, veggies and garden plants, plus arts and crafts. Free. Miranda Farmers Market. 2-5 p.m. Miranda Gardens Resort, 6766 Avenue of the Giants. Pick up produce,

continued on next page

■ ■ ■ ■

Summer Camps & Activity Programs Visual & Performing Arts Nature & Science Sports, Athletics & Adventure

ONLINE NOW!

www.northcoastjournal.com/SOF2014 northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

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Something’s Fishy There’s no better time for a good, old-fashioned fish fry than Father’s Day. On Sunday, June 15 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., the 57th annual Trinidad Fish Fest (free) takes over Trinity Street. That means you have five hours to take in all the vendors, crafts, live music and food, so much food. It’s a challenge, but we think you’re up to the task. You can start the day with a guided tour of Baker Beach at 7 a.m., or you can wait until the barbecues start smoking at 11 a.m. Participation in the festival is free, but the delicious barbeque will cost you $13 for adults and $8 for kids under 12. After you’ve filled up on fish, you can check out the tables and booths filled with wares and crafts, or you can take a tour of the Trinidad Head Lighthouse (free). You can hike to the head or take a convenient shuttle to the top; it really depends on how full you are and how much you like lighthouses. Humboldt State University’s Marine Lab (free) will open its doors from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., so you and the kids can check out the creatures the biologists have on hand. Then there’s the live music. The bluegrass blowout includes The Downriggers at 11 a.m., the Pilot Rock Ramblers at 12:15 p.m. and the Jim Lahman Band at 2 p.m. Round out the day with some funky soul jams from Vintage Rock N Soul at 3:45 p.m. The Fish Fest tips the scales when it comes to fun, so be prepared for any-fin. — Dev Richards

baked goods and more right across from the Miranda Gardens Resort. Free. www.facebook.com/Southernhumboldtfarmersmarket. Shelter Cove Farmers Market. 2-5 p.m. Downtown Shelter Cove, Machi Road. Fresh fruits, vegetables, ornamental trees and plants, all with an ocean view. Free. www.facebook.com/Southernhumboldtfarmersmarket.

Outdoors

Plant Walk. 1-3 p.m. Headwaters Forest Reserve, End of Elk River Road, six miles off Highway 101, Eureka. Join ranger Julie Clark and botanist Jennifer Wheeler on an easy walk on a paved, one-mile trail. Free. 822-2015.

Sports

Humboldt Crabs Baseball. 7 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. The Humboldt Crabs versus the Marysville Gold Sox. $8 adults, $6 students and seniors, $4 kids under 12.

Etc

Humboldt Cribbage Club. 6:15 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Play some cards. 444-3161.

18 wednesday

Photo by Jose Quezada/The Times-Standard

Art

SCRAP Training. 6:30-7:30 p.m. SCRAP Humboldt, 101 H St. Suite D, Arcata. Learn how you can contribute as a volunteer. Free. volunteer@scraphumboldt.org. scraphumboldt.org/volunteer. 822-2452.

Movies

Sci Fi Pint & Pizza Night with The Giants of Thessaly. 6 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Riccardo Freda’s 1960 Italian epic about Greek mythology’s Jason and the Argonauts. Free with $5 food or beverage purchase. www.arcatatheatre.com.

For Kids

Playgroup. 10 a.m. Discovery Museum, 501 Third St., Eureka. Playtime in the museum that provides children and families with great resources. Free. info@discoverymuseum.org. discovery-museum.org. 443-9694. Story Time. 1 p.m. McKinleyville Library, 1606 Pickett Road. Liz Cappiello reads stories to children and their parents. Free.

Food

Food for People’s Produce Market. Third Wednesday of every month, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Fortuna Community Services, 2331 Rohnerville Road. Income eligible folks are invited to pick out fresh fruits and vegetables, sample fresh produce and learn about CalFresh. Free. hmchugh@ foodforpeople.org. foodforpeople.org. 445-3166.

Meetings

Dow’s Prairie Grange Monthly Meeting. Third Wednesday of every month, 6 p.m. Dows Prairie Grange Hall, 3995 Dows Prairie Road, McKinleyville. Get involved in your community Grange. dowsgrange@gmail.com. www. dowsprairiegrange.org. 840-0100. Grief Support Group. 6-7:30 p.m. Sequoia Springs Senior Living, 2401 Redwood Way, Fortuna. Meet others to exchange emotional support and ideas on coping with the death of a loved one. Presented by Hospice of Humboldt. Free. 445-8443.

Outdoors

Cocktail Cruise. 5:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Dune Restoration Training. Third Wednesday of every month, 5-6:30 p.m. Humboldt Coastal Nature Center, 220 Stamps Lane, Manila. Train to recognize native and non-native plants and then come back to work on your

own time. Bring water and wear work clothes. Tools and gloves are provided. 444-1397. Narrated Bay Cruise. 1, 2:30 & 4 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Sports

Humboldt Crabs Baseball. 7 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. See June 17 listing.

Comedy

Comedy Open Mikey. Third Wednesday of every month, 9 p.m. Palm Lounge, Eureka Inn 497-6093, 518 Seventh St. Free. Hosted by Nando Molina with beats by Gabe Pressure.

19

thursday

Art

Art for Teens. 4:30-6 p.m. Fortuna United Methodist Church, 922 N St. See June 12 listing.

Movies

Traveling the Americas. 6:30 p.m. Access Humboldt Community Media Center, Eureka High School. Local Filmmakers Night features Ace Aseltine and his adventure films. A question and answer session follows. $5. info@accesshumboldt.net. 476-1798.

Music

Beginning Ukulele Play and Sing. 6-7 p.m. The MultiGenerational Center, 2280 Newburg Road, Fortuna. See June 12 listing. Humboldt Ukulele Group. Third Thursday of every month, 5:30 p.m. Arcata Community Center, 321 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway. A casual gathering of ukulele strummers who have fun and play together for a couple of hours. Beginners welcome and you won’t remain one long! $3. dsander1@arcatanet.com. 839-2816.

44 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Summer Concert Series. Rockin’ Down the Highway plays. 6-8 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. Dancing in the street. Free. eurekamainstreet. org. 442-9054.

Theater

Korbel V: The Secret. 8 p.m. Rooney Amphitheater, 131 H St., Blue Lake. A comedy about the ill-fated Dugan family in tough economic times. $18, $15 students, $10 kids. Les Misérables. 8 p.m. North Coast Repertory Theatre, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Events

Best of Humboldt Fair. 10 a.m. Redwood Acres Fairgrounds, 3750 Harris St., Eureka. Enjoy live music while you cruise the finest local arts and crafts, woodwork, food, brews and wine, plus livestock exhibits, small animals and carnival rides. TBA. www.redwoodacres. com. 445-3037. CR Open House. 4-8 p.m. College of the Redwoods Garberville Site, 286 Sprowl Creek Road. Tour the newly remodeled building and learn about enrolling in the classes that are offered. Free. 476-4561. CASA Open House. 5:30-7 p.m. CASA of Humboldt, 2356 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. Learn more about services for local foster children, summer advocate training, the Kid Walk fundraiser and more. Free. info@humboldtcasa. org. humboldtcasa.org. 443-3197.

Food

Food for People’s Produce Market. Third Thursday of every month, 12-2 p.m. Food for People, 307 W. 14th St., Eureka. All income eligible folks are invited to pick out fresh fruits and vegetables, sample recipes using available produce, enjoy live music and learn about CalFresh. Free. hmchugh@foodforpeople.org. foodforpeople. org. 445-3166. Henderson Center Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Henderson Center, Henderson near F Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. McKinleyville Farmers Market. 3:30-6:30 p.m. McKin-

leyville Safeway Shopping Plaza, Central Avenue. See June 12 listing.

Outdoors

Cocktail Cruise. 5:30 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Narrated Bay Cruise. 1, 2:30 & 4 p.m. C Street Market Square, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Sunset Paddle. Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center, 921 Waterfront Drive, Eureka. See June 12 listing. Trail Stewards Training. Third Thursday of every month, 9 a.m.-noon. Humboldt Coastal Nature Center, 220 Stamps Lane, Manila. Bring water and wear work clothes. Tools and gloves are provided. Free. info@ friendsofthedunes.org. 444-1397.

Sports

Humboldt B-52s Baseball. 5:30 p.m. Arcata Ballpark, Ninth and F streets. Playing the Alameda Tritons. $5. https://www.facebook.com/pages/Humboldt-B-52sBaseball.

Etc

Sip and Knit. 6 p.m. NorthCoast Knittery, 320 Second St., Eureka. See June 12 listing.

Heads Up…

Friends of the Dunes is now accepting applications for their Coastal Connections and Dune Detectives summer camps. 444-1397. The Fig Twig Market in Ferndale is looking for vendors with handcrafted, vintage, up-cycled, shabby chic items for the market in November. figtwigmarket@gmail.com. Volunteers are needed for Trinidad’s Fish Fest on Sunday, June 15. If you can help on festival day or before, contact Gail Saunders, 845-5931. SCRAP Humboldt is looking for competitors for the Rebel Craft Rumble. 633-8349. l


Movie Times Film times reflect the most current listings as of Tuesday afternoon. As schedules at individual theaters sometimes change, we recommend calling ahead to avoid any inconvenience.

Broadway Cinema

I am not introducing you to Iron Man.

Top Chef

Edge is dull, Fault charms By John J. Bennett filmland@northcoastjournal.com

Reviews CHEF. I will say, with no reservations (sorry), that I enjoyed this more than any movie this year. There’ve been bolder statements, as 2014 hasn’t exactly been a banner year so far. But for me, Chef lives in the rarefied air of legitimately great mainstream American cinema. It’s not a crazy tone poem, an oblique meditation on death or a confrontational exercise in style; it is a good story, exceedingly well told, with a warmth and fullness that, mishandled, might spell doom. Thanks to writer/director/star Jon Favreau, though, the movie’s big-heartedness is tempered with cynicism and snark to avoid feeling cloying or trite. Just as he was able to find the humor and humanity in organized crime in Made (2001), Favreau sees past the tattoos, tequila and tough talk of chef culture to get at some of the essential truths, good and bad, that unify us. When he started out in Miami, chef Carl Casper (Favreau) was one of the rising stars of the culinary scene, some kind of rebel savant. Now, a decade later in Los Angeles, real life has drained some of his juice. He’s head chef at a successful French place, sure, but he’s getting dangerously bored cooking the same menu every night. The job still takes up most of his waking hours, including time that would be better spent bonding with his young son Percy (Emjay Anthony) or mending fences with ex-wife Inez (Sofia Vergara). When Carl learns that a prominent food blogger will be reviewing

the restaurant, it renews his enthusiasm for the work. He pours himself into a special menu, only to be talked out of it by his tyrannically profit-minded boss Riva (Dustin Hoffman). A negative review follows, which in turn sends Carl into a tailspin of Twitter reprisal and terrible, hilarious face-to-face confrontation. None of which escapes the ever-vigilant eye of the Internet at large. Jobless and notorious, he can’t get anybody except Inez’s weird publicist to return his calls. So he accepts his ex-wife’s invitation to join her and Percy on a trip to Miami, where she sneakily turns him into a foodtruck owner, reintroducing him both to his son and to his love of cooking. Chef is equal parts romance, comedy, road movie and kitchen verité, and for me every element of it works. Favreau’s Carl is utterly believable as a remarkable talent stymied by the expectations and safety of routine. Anthony gives an impressively subtle performance as a son desperate to spend time with his dad, but too smart and mature to give in to fits of anger or sadness. It’s no small thing to pull off, and a testament to both actor and director that a 10-year-old should acquit himself so well. (It helps to act in a movie packed with top-notch performers doing remarkable work — Scarlett Johansson, Robert Downey Jr., Bobby Cannavale and John Leguizamo appear in roles of varying size but uniform quality.) continued on next page

1223 Broadway St., Eureka, (707) 443-3456 22 Jump Street Fri-Thu: (1, 3:45), 6:30, 8, 9:15 Chef Fri-Thu: (12:10, 2:55), 5:40, 8:25 Edge of Tomorrow Fri-Thu: (1:20, 3:35, 4:10), 6:55, 9, 9:40 Edge of Tomorrow 3D Fri-Thu: (12:30), 5:55 The Fault in Our Stars Fri-Thu: (11:45a.m., 2:40), 5:35, 8:40 Godzilla Fri-Thu: (12:55), 6:35 How to Train Your Dragon 2 Fri-Thu: (11:50a.m., 12:50, 2:25), 5, 6, 7:35 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D Fri-Thu: (3:25), 8:35 Maleficent Fri-Thu: (12:15, 1:05, 2:50), 5:25, 6:25 Maleficent 3D Fri-Thu: (3:20), 8:50 A Million Ways to Die in the West Fri-Thu: (3:50), 9:30 Neighbors Fri-Thu: (2:10, 4:45), 7:10, 9:45 X-Men: Days of Future Past Fri-Thu: (12, 3:05), 6:05, 9:10

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Mill Creek Cinema

1575 Betty Court, McKinleyville, (707) 839-2222 22 Jump Street Fri-Thu: (1:10, 3:55), 6:40, 9:25 Edge of Tomorrow Fri-Thu: (3:45), 9:10 Edge of Tomorrow 3D Fri-Thu: (12:45), 6:10 The Fault in Our Stars Fri-Thu: (12, 2:55), 5:50, 9 How to Train Your Dragon 2 Fri-Thu: (11:55a.m., 12:55, 2:30), 5:05, 6, 7:40 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D Fri-Thu: (3:25), 8:30 Maleficent Fri-Thu: (1, 3:35), 6:30 Maleficent 3D Fri-Thu: 8:50 A Million Ways to Die in the West Fri-Thu: (1:15, 4), 6:50, 9:35 X-Men: Days of Future Past Fri-Thu: (12:10, 3:10), 6:15, 9:15

Minor Theatre

1001 H St., Arcata, (707) 822-3456 Chef Fri: (3:40), 6:20, 9; Sat-Sun: (1, 3:40), 6:20, 9; Mon-Thu: (3:40), 6:20, 9 Ida Fri: (3:50), 5:55, 8; Sat-Sun: (1:45, 3:50), 5:55, 8; Mon-Thu: (3:50), 5:55, 8 Palo Alto Fri: (4:25), 6:50, 9:15; Sat-Sun: (2, 4:25), 6:50, 9:15; Mon-Thu: (4:25), 6:50, 9:15

Fortuna Theatre

1241 Main St., (707) 725-2121 22 Jump Street Fri-Sat: (12, 2:40, 5:20), 6:55, 8, 9:40; Sun-Thu: (12, 2:40, 5:20), 6:55, 8 Edge of Tomorrow Fri-Sat: (12:30, 3:55), 6:45, 9:25; Sun-Thu: (12:30, 3:55), 6:45 The Fault in Our Stars Fri-Sat: (12:45, 3:50), 6:45, 9:35; Sun-Thu: (12:45, 3:50), 6:45 How to Train Your Dragon 2 Fri-Sat: (1:45, 4:40), 7:15, 9:35; Sun-Thu: (1:45, 4:40), 7:15 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D Fri-Thu: (12:45, 3:40) Maleficent Fri-Sat: (12, 2:15, 4:35), 7, 9:20; Sun-Thu: (12, 2:15, 4:35), 7

Browse by title, times and theater.

Garberville Theatre

766 Redwood Drive, (707) 923-3580 Call theater for schedule. northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014

45


continued from previous page Chef manages to speak to a moment in contemporary culture with a light enough touch that it doesn’t feel like pandering now, and likely won’t feel dated later. Favreau takes on social media both as an identifier of the generation gap and as a vital element of modern life. But he does it so deftly that it feels completely natural, completely authentic. He lends the same attention to the details of kitchen culture and cooking technique: The movie is seasoned liberally (sorry again) with gorgeous food preparation sequences and hilarious behind-the-scenes restaurant insights that add depth and nuance. Their addition produces something truly special. R. 115m. EDGE OF TOMORROW. Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt star as future soldiers, waging a war against vaguely arachnoid aliens with a shared consciousness. For some reason, he’s stuck in a time loop that the pair learns to manipulate for the good of humanity. Both leads give compelling performances, and some of the battle sequences are exciting, but the direction is too focused on slickness and largesse, not enough on character or story. And even though the premise is undeniably clever, I think the writers are a little too proud of their creation for its own good. The resulting narrative is irretrievably muddled, and the movie as a whole is expensive-looking, competently made and also totally forgettable. PG13. 113m. THE FAULT IN OUR STARS. At least one young woman in the audience brought a whole box of tissues in to the theater with her. She planned well; by the end credits, the crowd (mostly female, mostly under 25) was all sniffles and sobs. Even if one doesn’t fit the target demographic, The Fault In Our Stars may still draw forth some tears. Hazel Grace Lancaster (Shailene

June 12June 18

Thurs June 12 - NBA Finals. All ages. Free w/food & Bev Purchase Fri June 13 - Will Durst’s BoomeRaging: From LSD to OMG Doors at 8 p.m. $15/$10 18+ Sun June 15 - NBA Finals. Doors at 4:45 p.m. All ages Free w/food & Bev Purchase Tue June 17 - NBA Finals. All ages. Free w/food & Bev Purchase Wed June 18 - Sci Fi Night ft. The Giants of Thessaly (1960) Doors at 6 p.m. All ages. Free w/food & Bev Purchase arcatatheatre.com • 822-1220 • 1036 G St.

Woodley) has terminal cancer, a withering wit and a misguided assumption that boys don’t like her. Augustus Waters (Ansel Elgort), a cancer survivor, handsome and a real nerd, sees it as his duty to disabuse her of that notion. Together they navigate love, death and eventually the canals of Amsterdam. At my wife’s urging, I read John Green’s book, upon which this is based. It struck me as well crafted, if a little indulgent in terms of nerdly writer wish fulfillment. Even though the movie retains that tenor, the strength of the lead performances and the goodness shooting through it won over even me. PG13. 126m. — John J. Bennett

Previews

22 JUMP STREET. Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill graduate to college buffoonery in the buddy-cop-comedy sequel. R. 112m. HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2. Hiccup, his dragon pal and a village full of Vikings with Scottish accents return in the sequel. PG. 102m. IDA. A young woman about to become a nun delves into her true identity and her family’s history during the Holocaust. PG13. 80m. PALO ALTO. A moody drama from another Coppola (Gia this time) has lonely teenage girls and boys longing for affection and doing reckless things. R. 100m.

Continuing

GODZILLA. The big guy returns with puny, human co-stars Aaron TaylorJohnson and Ken Watanabe. The effects impress, but there’s too much going on to focus on the lizard and its destructive glory. PG13. 123m. MALEFICENT. An atmospheric, goodlooking fantasy with a sharpened Angelina Jolie as the fairytale party crasher from Sleeping Beauty. Heavy on CGI, light on character and not quite scary enough. PG. 98m. A MILLION WAYS TO DIE IN THE WEST. And none of them live up to the MacFarlane brand or the rest of the topshelf cast (Charlize Theron, Liam Neeson and Neil Patrick Harris) in this Western comedy. R. 116m. NEIGHBORS. Suburban parents (Rose Byrne and Seth Rogen) go to war with the frat next door and their oft-shirtless prankster leader (Zac Efron) in this crude but effective comedy R. 97m. X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST. The mutants go time traveling to save the world. Pacing and exposition are rocky, but the action and the cast make an enjoyable distraction. PG13. 131m. — Jennifer Fumiko Cahill

northcoastjournal.com 46 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 ••northcoastjournal.com

List your class – just $4 per line per issue! Deadline: Friday, 5pm. Place your online ad at classified.northcoastjournal.com or e-mail: classified@northcoastjournal.com Listings must be paid in advance by check, cash or Visa/MasterCard. Many classes require pre-registration.

Arts & Crafts

BEGINNING DRAWING WITH PENCIL & SKETCH− BOOKS. Fri’s., 5−8 p.m. Fee: $130 +$40 Materials. Located at CR Del Norte Campus 883 W. Wash− ington Blvd. Crescent City Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (AC−0612) CERAMICS FOR OLDER KIDS, AGES 7−12. Bob Raymond will take your kids on an adventure with Clay. They will create various hand building projects and learn wheel throwing techniques on the potter’s wheel. Four 5−week classes offered. Mon: June 23−July 21 or July 28−Aug. 25; Tues: June 24−July 22 or July 29−Aug. 26. Class time 3−5 p.m. $80 each. 520 South G St. Arcata, (707) 826−1445, www.fireartsarcata.com (K−0626) GLASS MOBILE SUNCATCHERS. Joele Williams, Sun’s., June 22 and 29, 5:30 p.m.−7:30 p.m. Sat’s., July 19 & 26, 10 a.m.−noon. Create something beautiful and unique! Joele will guide you through the process of creating a glass mobile suncatcher. You will learn cutting, decorating, and wire wrapping techniques. Basic use of tools, materials, and safety will be covered. $50/$35 members ($15 materials fee). 520 South G St. Arcata, (707) 826− 1445, www.fireartsarcata.com. (AC−0626) PENCIL & TECHNIQUES AND PROJECTS. Sat’s., 4−7 p.m. Fee: $130 + $40 Materials. Located at CR Del Norte Campus 883 W. Washington Blvd. Crescent City Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (AC−0612) POTTERY CLASS FOR BEGINNERS AND INTERME− DIATES. Peggy Loudon. Thurs., June 26−Aug. 28, 5:30−7:30 p.m. Complete introduction to basic wheel−throwing techniques. Perfect for beginning and returning students. $185. 520 South G St. (707) 826−1445, www.fireartsarcata.com. (AC−0626) POTTERY CLASS FOR BEGINNERS AND INTERME− DIATES. With a focus on Utilitarian Form and Decoration. Weds., June 25−Aug. 27, 7−9 p.m. Complete introduction to basic wheel−throwing techniques. For intermediate students Bob Raymond will assist in mastering utilitarian forms and demonstrating a variety of decorative styles and techniques. $185. 520 South G St. Arcata, (707) 826−1445, www.fireartsarcata.com (AC−0626)

Communication

WHETHER GOD IS FAIR DISCUSSED AT LIFETREE CAFÉ. Why a caring God would come to the aid of some but not all will be discussed at Lifetree Cafe, Sun., June 15, 7 p.m. Corner of 13th & Union, Arcata. Lifetree is a Conversation Cafe. Free. (707) 672− 2919. (CMM−0612)

Dance/Music/Theater/Film

DANCE WITH DEBBIE: Do you want to know a dance for romantic love songs and ballads? Then our Eureka Nightclub two−step is for you! Try a group Salsa class in Eureka or Arcata. Private lessons also available. We make dancing fun! (707) 464−3638, debbie@dancewithdebbie.biz www.dancewithdebbie.biz (DMT−0626) MEDIA PRODUCTION TRAINING. Access Humboldt offers media production training covering camera work, pre−production, lighting, audio, and studio production. Call 476−1798 or visit www.accesshumboldt.net (DMT−0731) MUSIC LESSONS. Piano, Guitar, Voice, Flute, etc. Piano tuning, Instrument repair. Digital multi−track recording. (707) 476−9239. (DMT−0828) MYSTIC DANCE. Sat. Nights 9−11 p.m. Shape the Waves of Ecstatic Sounds Through Inner Rhythms and Outer Realms. No matter your Mood... Put it in the Dance. Let Loose. Let it All Out. Community Yoga Center 890 G Street, Arcata On the Plaza (Above Moore’s Sleepworld) $10 Advanced Ticket; $15 Door. For more info. info@mysticdance.net Tickets: www.eventbrite.com/e/mystic−dance− tickets−11724978727 REDWOOD RAKS WORLD DANCE STUDIO, ARCATA. West African, Belly Dance, Tango, Salsa, Swing, Breakdance, Jazz, Tap, Modern, Zumba, Hula, Congolese, more! Kids and Adults, 616−6876. (DMT−0626) STEEL DRUM CLASSES. Beginning Wkshp: 10 a.m.− noon May 17, $25. Weekly Beginning: Fri’s. 11:30 a.m. −12:30 p.m., May 9−30, $50. Beg/Int, Mon’s 7−8 p.m. Youth Band: Thurs’s. 4:30 p.m.−5:30 p.m. 5/8−5/29, $40. Pan Arts Network 1049 Samoa Blvd. Suite C, (707) 407−8998. panartsnetwork.com (DMT−0626) SUMMER ACTING CLASSES. Children’s Theatre for Grades 1−5 with Acting Coach Addi Forras. Tues/ Thurs., June 24−July 17, 1−3 p.m. (859) 421−1825. addiforras@gmail.com.

Fitness

DANCE−FIT. Dance, aerobics & strength training all in one class! Mon., Wed. & Fri. 9−10 a.m First class is free. Drop in for $5 per class or 14 classes for $55. No Limits tap & jazz studio, corner of 10th & K st. Arcata. 825−0922. (F−0626) NORTH COAST FENCING ACADEMY. Fencing (with swords!). Improve your mind and body in a fun, intense workout, and a very chill environment. Ages 8 and up. 1459 M St., Arcata. Contact Justin (707) 601−1657 text or phone, or email northcoastfencingacademy@gmail.com (F−0724) PILATES: INCREASE YOUR POTENTIAL THROUGH A MINDFUL MOVEMENT. Arcata Core Pilates offers beginning−advanced group Pilates Mat, reformer, chair, TRX, as well as Private Training Sessions. Our instructors are all certified. The diversity in training and background makes a deep well for clients to draw from. Call 845−8156 or email arcatacorepilates@gmail.com, website: arcatacorepilatesstudio.com (F−0626)


HuMBoldt BAY rowing AssociAtion

suMMer rowing

default

USE YOUR WORDS Hanging out & writing in Trinidad with Stephanie Silvia

SUN YI’S ACADEMY OF TAE KWON DO. Classes for kids and adults, child care, fitness gym, and more. Tae Kwon Do Mon−Fri 5−6 p.m., 6−7 p.m., Sat 10−11 a.m. Come watch or join a class, 1215 Giuntoli Lane, or visit www.sunyisarcata.com, 825−0182. (F−0626) ZUMBA WITH MARLA JOY. Elevate, Motivate, Celebrate another day of living. Exercise in Disguise. Now is the time to start, don’t wait. All ability levels are welcome. Every Mon. and Thurs. at Bayside Grange 6−7 p.m., 2297 Jacoby Creek Rd. $6/$4 Grange members. (707) 845−4307 marlajoy.zumba.com (F−0828)

Home & Garden

TINY HOME WORKSHOP. July 7−21 (weekdays). Ever want to build a Tiny Home? DIY building experience Building a Tumbleweed Home on a trailer. Learn every step in building an 18 ft tiny home. Email for details, humshane@gmail.com (HG−0626)

Kids & Teens

14TH ANNUAL MOONSTONE BEACH SURF CAMP. Water enthusiasts of all levels will enjoyably learn the aquatic skill necessary for all types of surfing while being immersed in lifeguard water safety, surf etiquette and beach and ocean awareness. Ages: 8−up. June 23−27, July 7−11, July 21−25, Aug. 4−8, at Moonstone Beach. Cost: $195, full four−day session. moonstonebeachsurfcamp.com, (707) 822−5099 (K−0619) AQUATICS CAMP. Get ready for one of the most well−known summer camps in Humboldt County! Exciting activities, including flatwater kayaking, canoeing, surfing, stand up paddling and sailing! Staff teaches water safety, environmental educa− tion and promotes positive group development. Session I: June 23−27. Session II: July 14−18 . fee: $285 *enquire about daily rates. Discount Program Fee: $265 for full week when registering participant for more than one camp, or more than one family member! Fee Includes camp staff, transportation, aquatic equipment, daily snacks and food for the camp out beginning with Thurs. dinner. Age Limit: 10 − 14 years old . Contact: 826−3357. Website: Humboldt.edu/centeractivities. (K−0619) FREE VBS. Gospel Light’s Sonrise National Park VBS. Ages 3−11 1/2. July 7−July 11. 9 a.m.−12 p.m. Arcata First Baptist, 1700 Union Street, Arcata. (707) 822− 0367. Youth and Jr. High Bible Camp Ages 11 1/2−18. Snacks and Fun are included! (K−0626) HUMBOLDT BAY AQUATIC CENTER KIDS CAMP. Session I: July 7−11. Session II: July 28−Aug. 1. Come out for a week of exploration and fun on Humboldt Bay! Campers will learn kayaking and water safety skills, as well as a respect for the wonderful marine environment that we have in Humboldt Bay. Activities include general kayak instruction and rescue techniques, Humboldt Bay ecology and history of Old Town Eureka Water− front, and a variety of games and skill−building exercises. If you have any questions, contact the Humboldt Bay Aquatic Center at (707) 443−4222. (K−0619)

MUSEUM ART SCHOOL. Summer Art Camps for kids ages 5−12 at the Morris Graves Museum of Art. One week sessions: June 23−27, July 7−12, Aug. 4−8. Level 1: 9:30 a.m.−12:30 p.m. Level 2: 1:30−4:30 p.m. $90 for members, $85 for nonmembers. Call (707) 442−0278 ext. 202, or www.humboldtarts.org to register. (K−0619) TEEN STRENGTH & CONDITIONING CAMP. Open to all teen athletes, includes exclusive, individual− ized training in the areas of plyometrics, speed development, strength development, power development, agility, Olympic lifting and flexibility. Ages 13−19. Two sessions: June 16−July 11 and July 14− Aug. 8 (2 training sessions each day). HSU Student Rec Center. Cost: $80 per session. Contact: 826− 4519. (K−0619)

Adult rowing clAsses 2-week sessions start June 17, July 15 or Aug. 19 Tues., Thurs., 5:30 - 7:30 pm, Sun., 8 - 10 am $100/ 2 week session

Junior crew Ages 11-18 Join any time! Mon., Weds., Fri. 4-6:15 p.m. $50/mo

Saturday, June 14 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. $60 (707) 677-9323 bknystef@gmail.com

For more info call Head Coach Scott Gibson at

*Based on Diane di Prima workshops

(707) 845-4752

50 and Better

OSHER LIFELONG LEARNING INSTITUTE (OLLI). Offers dynamic classes for people age 50 and over. Call 826−5880 or visit www.humboldt.edu/olli to register for classes (O−1225) ATTRACTING BEES, BUTTERFLIES & SONGBIRDS TO YOUR GARDEN. Take an outing with Terry Kramer to the Humboldt Botanical Garden and learn how to entice bees, butterflies and song birds to your garden. Fri., June 27, 10 a.m.−Noon. OLLI members $30/nonmembers $55. OLLI: 826− 5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0626) CONSCIOUS LIVING FOR LIFE ENRICHMENT. Through discussion and practice exercises, class participants will focus on how to change ingrained habits to take greater control of their thoughts and actions and live more consciously in the present. With Jane Woodward. Wed’s., June 18−25, 1 −4 p.m. OLLI members $45/nonmembers $70. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli (O−0612)

Passport to Dance

2014 A complete resource for kids of all ages!

FREE MEDICARE WORKSHOPS. Offered by Area 1 Agency on Aging’s trained HICAP counselors the second Thurs. of every month through Aug. Hour− long workshops make Medicare understandable. Drop by second floor conference room at A1AA, 434 Seventh St., Eureka. Medicare Prescription Drug Plans, 4−5 p.m., July 10. On deck: Medicare Basic for Boomers, August 14, 4−5 p.m. (O−0703)

HARNESSING THE POWER WITHIN. Join Andy Anderson to examine self−knowledge, will, and action to create an initial personal assessment. Sat., June 21−28, 2−3:30 p.m. OLLI members $15/ nonmembers $40. OLLI: www.humboldt.edu/olli, 826−5880. (O−0619)

HEADWATERS SALMON PASS HIKE. Join Julie Clark for ranger−led hike which covers redwood ecology, watershed restoration and the endangered species of the Headwaters Forest Reserve. See the largest intact stand of ancient redwoods within the Reserve on this moderate level hike. Mon., June 16, 10 a.m.−1 p.m. OLLI members $10/nonmembers $35. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli (O−0612)

continued on next page

Summer Camps & Activity Programs Visual & Performing Arts Nature & Science Sports, Athletics & Adventure

ONLINE NOW

www.northcoast journal.com/SOF2014

Summer Dance Camps

Ages 5-13

Jazz • Bollywood • Hula Creative Movement Belly Dance • Hip Hop Acting for Dancers Modern • Yoga African • Ballet ONLY$

DATES

99/wk

June 23-27 | ages 5-8 1 pm to 5 pm June 30-July 3 ages 9-13 12 pm to 5 pm

Summer Intensive for serious dancers ~ open to all

Technique • Variations • Yoga Acting • Jazz • Modern

125/wk

ONLY $

Full Days July 28 - Aug. 2. For information & eligibility call 442-7779

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

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Learn to draw anything. (707) 826-5880

LEARN TO DRAW! Demystify the drawing process by simplifying it into achievable steps. Learn about line, light and shadow, proportion and three− dimensional shapes, the foundation to under− standing how to draw anything. With Brent Eviston. Tues’s., and Thurs’s., June 24−July 10, 2−4 p.m. OLLI members $75/nonmembers $100. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0619)

Wellness & Bodywork

108 SUN SALUTATIONS FUNDRAISER FOR LOST COAST KIDS CAMP. Sat., June 14, 12:00 p.m. at Om Shala Yoga with Peggy Profant or June 21, 9:00 a.m. at Mattole Valley Community Center in Petrolia with Rupali Brown. $20 suggested donation. All proceeds support local underserved children to attend a delightful camp this summer. 858 10th St., Arcata. 825−YOGA (9642), www.omshalayoga.com, www.lostcoastcamp.org. (W−0612)

MAKING CHOCOLATE DIPPED STRAWBERRIES. Learn easy methods to temper chocolate, dip strawberries and decorate. With Chocolatier Sandra Nakashima. Sat., June 21, 9−10:30 a.m. OLLI members $25/nonmembers $50. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0619) MAKING THE BIBLE. The Complex History of a Sacred Text. Trace the Old and New Testaments including lost originals and imperfect copies. With Laurent Cleenewerck. Tues’S., July 1−22, 10 a.m.− Noon. OLLI members $65/nonmembers $90. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0626) OKAY, LET’S SEE THE MCKAY! #2. Join Jerry and Gisela Rohde for a presentation featuring maps, photos and stories. Tour the company’s mill sites, abandoned railroad grade, McKay Ranch and the redwood−paneled Burns House, the striking summer home of the owners of McKay & Co. Thurs., June 26, 6−8 p.m. and (Saturday field trip sold out − second field trip date added) Sun., June 29, 1−4 p.m. OLLI members $60/nonmembers $85. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0626) ONLINE GENEALOGY LAB. Join Michael Cooley to explore free websites to learn how to best utilize Google as a powerful genealogical resource. Fri’s., June 20−27, 2−4 p.m. OLLI members $40/nonmem− bers $65. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0619) THE JONATHAN LYONS FAMILY IN THE BALD HILLS. 1860s to 1960s. Participate in an historical presentation and discussion of three generations of the Jonathan and Amelia Lyons Family. This course includes a field trip to the Lyons’ home place, Elder, in the Bald Hills of Redwood National and State Parks. With Jim Wheeler. Fri., June 13, noon−2 p.m. and Sat., June 14, 9 a.m.−4 p.m. OLLI members $75/nonmembers $100. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli (O−0612) THE PLANTAGENET KINGS OF ENGLAND. Explore one of the world’s most fabled royal families−its successes, failures, storied events and its tangled genealogical ties. With Michael Cooley. Wed., July 2, 2−5 p.m. OLLI members $30/nonmembers $55. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0626) YOGA WITH OLLI. Improve balance, strength, flex− ibility and concentration with yoga for all levels and body types. With Laurie Birdsall. Gentle Yoga on Mon’s., July 7−28, 1:30−3 p.m. in Eureka. OLLI members $65/nonmembers $90. Or Yoga in Fortuna on Tues’s., July 1−22, 10−11 a.m. OLLI members $40/nonmembers $65. OLLI: 826−5880, www.humboldt.edu/olli. (O−0626)

Spiritual

TAROT AS AN EVOLUTIONARY PATH. Classes in Eureka, and Arcata. Private mentorships, readings. Carolyn Ayres. 442−4240 www.tarotofbecoming.com (S−0626)

ARCATA ZEN GROUP MEDITATION. Arcata & Eureka. Beginners welcome. ARCATA: Sun’s 7:55 a.m. At NorthCoast Aikido on F Street (entrance in alley between 8th and 9th, upstairs). Call 826− 1701 or visit arcatazengroup.org. EUREKA: Wed’s 5:55 p.m., First Methodist Church, enter single story building between F & G on Sonoma St, room 10. Call 845−8399 or barryevans9@yahoo.com for more information. (S−0626) FEARLESS HAPPINESS Wed., June 25th, 6:30−8 p.m. Humboldt Area Foundation, Emmerson Room, 363 Indianola Rd., Bayside. Phakchok Rinpoche, a Tibetan Buddhist teacher, will speak from the heart on sustaining unshakeable happiness and a kind, yet fearless dignity. Rinpoche will teach us how to navigate the obstacles that impede our ability to master our own minds. Cost: Donation, information@gomdeusa.org, 925−0201. (S−0619) HUMBOLDT UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOW− SHIP. We are a diverse congregation welcoming all people. Our mission is to promote personal and spiritual growth as well as a peaceful, sustainable, and socially just world. Come see for yourself on a Sunday morning at 10:30 a.m., Fellowship Way, off Jacoby Creek Rd., Bayside. (707) 822−3793, www.huuf.org. (S−0904) KDK ARCATA BUDDHIST GROUP. Under the direc− tion of Lama Lodru Rinpoche. We practice Tibetan meditation, followed by discussion. All are welcome. For more info contact Lama Nyugu (707) 442−7068, Fierro_roman@yahoo.com. Sun’s 6 p.m, Community Yoga Center 890 G St, Arcata. Our webpage is www.kdkarcatagroup.org (S−0626) RANGJUNG YESHE GOMDE, A local Tibetan Buddhist retreat center in South Leggett, invites the community to two June seminars. June 13−15, Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche will bring the wisdom of Buddha nature to light with his joyful and insightful teaching style. June 19−22 Phakchok Rinpoche, grandson of Gomde’s founder Tulku Urgyen, will give instruction on Mahamudra, the pinnacle of Tibetan meditation practice, in a way that is accessible for beginners and experienced meditators alike. Both teachers teach in English and have years of experience working with Western students. For info. and registration for these excellent programs call (707) 925−0201 or visit gomdeusa.org (S−0612)

48 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Therapy & Support

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS. We can help 24/7, call toll free 1−844−442−0711. (T−0626) DIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP. Connect with others and feel less alone. Learn effective coping skills, ways to manager strong emotions, and how to heal and live the life you want. Group meets Wed’s., starting June 18− July 23, 7 p.m− 8:30 p.m. $40 per session. To register, and location call Tamara Severn, MFT, #49815 (707) 834−3747 (T−0612) FREE DEPRESSION SUPPORT GROUP. Walk−in support group for anyone suffering from depres− sion. Meet Mon’s 6:30 p.m −7:45 p.m, at the Church of the Joyful Healer, McKinleyville. Questions? Call (707) 839−5691. (TS−0626) SEX/ PORN DAMAGING YOUR LIFE & RELATION− SHIPS? Confidential help is available. 825−0920, saahumboldt@yahoo.com or (TS−0626) SMOKING POT? WANT TO STOP? www.marijuana−anonymous.org (T−0731)

Vocational

BUSINESS TO BUSINESS CUSTOMER SERVICE & SALES TRAINING. Tues., and Thurs., June 17−August 7, 9 a.m.−1 p.m. Fee $595. Located at the CR Eureka downtown site at 525 D St. Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (V−0612) CA NOTARY PUBLIC CLASS. Tues., July 15, 8 a.m.−6 p.m. Fee: $105 + $40 to the Secretary of State. Located at CR Del Norte Campus, 883 W. Wash− ington Blvd., Crescent City. Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (V−0612) CONTINUING EDUCATION UNITS FOR CERTIFIED MEDICAL ASSISTANTS. Thurs., June 26, 6−9 p.m. Fee $30. Located at CR Del Norte Campus 883 W. Washington Blvd., Crescent City. Call (707) 269− 4000 to register. (V−0612) INJECTIONS. Saturday, June 28th, 8 a.m.−6 p.m. Fee: $100. Located at CR Main Campus. Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (V−0612) VENIPUNCTURE. Sunday, June 29th, 8 a.m.−6 p.m. Fee: $100. Located at CR Main Campus. Call (707) 269−4000 to register. (V−0612)

DANDELION HERBAL CENTER. Classes with Jane Bothwell. Beginning with Herbs. Sept. 17−Nov. 5, 8 Wed. evenings. Learn medicine making, herbal first aid, and herbs for common imbalances. 10 Month Herbal Studies Program. Feb.−Nov. 2015, meets one weekend per month with several field trips. Learn in−depth material medica, therapeutics, flower essences, wild foods, formulations and harvesting. Plant Lovers Journey to Costa Rica with Jane Both− well & Rosemary Gladstar. March 19−28, 2015. Let us guide you through the unsurpassed beauty and wondrous diversity of Costa Rica! Register online www.dandelionherb.com or call (707) 442−8157. (W−0911) GONG YOGA AND SOUND IMMERSION. At Om Shala Yoga. With Shemaia Soundwater and Heidi Laura. Fri., June 13, 7:30−9:30 p.m. $20 adv, $25 at the door. See website or call for details. 858 10th St., Arcata. www.omshalayoga.com, 825−YOGA (9642). (W−0612) MYRTLETOWNE HEALING CENTER PRESENTS! Ladies who walk with the Spirit of Healing, Summer Solstice Celebration OPEN HOUSE. Come join us for Free Chair Massage, Essential Oil sampling, Raw Chocolates, and Free Reiki Session Gift Certificates for all who attend! Sat., June 21, 7− 9 p.m. (W−0626) START YOUR CAREER IN MASSAGE THERAPY. Now enrolling. Daytime classes start September 2 at Arcata School of Massage. 650−Hour Thera− peutic Massage Certification in California, and the National Exam. Our comprehensive program prepares your body, mind and heart to become a caring, confident professional massage therapist. Call 822−5223 for information or visit arcatamassage.com (W−0626) T’AI CHI WITH MARGY EMERSON. Two programs: Traditional Long Form (Wu Style) and T’ai Chi for Back Pain and Arthritis. Eight−week term starts June 24. Begin by the third week. Daytime begin− ning classes meet at 1049 C, Samoa Blvd., Arcata (Samoa & K). Upper level classes and Wed. evening beginning class call for location. Visit a class with no obligation to pay or enroll. Call 822−6508 or e− mail margaretemerson@att.net for summer schedule and fees see www.margaretemerson.com for other details. (W−0626) YOGA ALIGNMENT CAMP: TRANSFORM YOUR PRACTICE. At Om Shala Yoga. With Peggy Profant. Mon.−Fri., June 16−20, 1−3 p.m. Five days to immerse in Anusara alignment principles. Refine, refresh, or learn for the first time! $125 series or $25 per session. 858 10th St. & 890 G St., Arcata. 825−YOGA (9642). www.omshalayoga.com. (W−0612)


Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in Cali− fornia law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person inter− ested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE−154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: William T. Kay, JR., SBN#59581 Law Office of Will Kay 628 H Street Eureka, CA. 95501 (707) 445−2301 May 29, 2014 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT

legal notices NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF ALICE LOUISE RIEDEL CASE NO. PR140154 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, ALICE LOUISE RIEDEL A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by JANICE CONN AND BARBARA BISHOP In the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that JANICE CONN AND BARBARA BISHOP Be appointed as personal represen− tative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the dece− dent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for exami− nation in the file kept by court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on June 26, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept: 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objec− tions or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the dece− dent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the Cali− fornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in Cali− fornia law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person inter− ested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE−154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court

6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−179)

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF JOYCE SWANLUND CASE NO. PR140153 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, JOYCE SWANLUND A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by JOHN B. FULLERTON In the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that JOHN B. FULLERTON Be appointed as personal represen− tative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the dece− dent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for exami− nation in the file kept by court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on June 26, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept: 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objec− tions or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the dece− dent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the Cali− fornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice

appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the dece− dent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the Cali− fornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in Cali− fornia law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person inter− ested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE−154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: Donald W. Bicknell, CSB #83266 Law Office of Donald W. Bicknell 732 5th Street, Suite H Eureka, CA. 95501 (707) 443−0878 June 02, 2014 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 6/12, 6/19, 6/26 (14−183)

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF BEVERLY B. PARKE AKA BEVERLY BRYANT PARKE CASE NO. PR14139 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, BEVERLY B. PARKE, aka BEVERLY BRYANT PARKE A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by SARA K. PARKE In the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that SARA K. PARKE Be appointed as personal represen− tative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests the dece− dent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for exami− nation in the file kept by court. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on June 19, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept: 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at

unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held on June 19, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. at the Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt, 825 Fifth Street, Eureka, in Dept: 8. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objec− tions or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the dece− dent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the Cali− fornia Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in Cali− fornia law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person inter− ested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE−154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER: Connie Miller Koshkin Law Firm 1116 Eleventh Street Arcata, CA. 95521 (707) 822−2800 May 23, 2014 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT

Katelyn Hanson #126 Louis DeSantis #73 Van Duran #248 Cassidy Hess #79 Items to be sold include, but are not limited to: Dinette table and chairs, microwave, side table, T.V, computer, clothes, large floor pillow, mattress and box spring, bed frame, head and footboard, dresser, tools plastic bins, boxes and bags (contents unknown). Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash only. Anyone interested in attending the auction must sign in at 2341 Fern Street, Eureka, CA., prior to 10:00 A.M. on the day of the auction, no exceptions. All purchased items are sold as is, where is and must be removed at the time of sale. Sale subject to cancellation in the event of a settlement between owner and obligated party. Auctioneer: Cutten Mini Storage (707) 443−2280, Bond # 0336443. Dated this 5th of June 2014 and 12th day of June 2014 6/5, 6/12/2014 (14−175)

PUBLIC SALE

Haven Kozak, Unit # 128 Rick Alton, Unit # 296 Rick Alton, Unit # 357 Rachel Hope, Unit # 413 Ronald Payton,➤ Unit # 435 Lori Sawyer, UnitNOTICES # 449 legal The continued following units located onare next pageat 180 F Street Arcata, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immedi− ately following the sale of the above units. B. Bushe’y, Unit # 4211 Kristina Crummett, Unit # 4316 Diaja Jackson, Unit # 6108 Madison Fowler, Unit # 6170 Tashina Surber, Unit # 6182 The following units are located at 940 G Street Arcata, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immedi− ately following the sale of the above units. Jared Morgart, Unit # 6334 Ry Landen, Unit # 6342 Daniel McGregor, Unit # 6420 The following units are located at 2394 Central Ave. McKinleyville, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. Holly Davidson, Unit # 2234 Frances Pederson, Unit # 5104 Antonette Martinez, Unit # 5112 Sarah Robentalt, Unit # 6228 Shelly Wilde, Unit # 9128 The following units are located at 1641 Holly St. McKinleyville, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. Rio Savage−Clanton, Unit # 9271 Robert Dixon, Unit # 9542 Orrin Brown, Unit # 9569 Items to be sold include, but are not limited to: Household furniture, office equip− ment, household appliances, exer− cise equipment, TVs, VCR, microwave, bikes, books, misc. tools, misc. camping equipment, misc. stereo equip. misc. yard tools, misc. sports equipment, misc. kids toys, misc. fishing gear, misc. computer components, and misc. boxes and bags contents unknown. Purchases must be paid for at the time of the sale in cash only. Anyone interested in attending the auction must sign in at 4055 Broadway Eureka CA. prior to 9:00 A.M. on the day of the auction, no exceptions. All purchase items sold as is, where is and must be removed at time of sale. Sale is subject to cancellation in the event of settle− ment between owner and obligated party. Auctioneer: Rainbow Self− Storage, (707) 443−1451, Bond # 40083246. Dated this 5th day of June 2014 and 12th day of June 2014

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to Sections 21700 −21716 of the Business & Professions Code, Section 2328 of the UCC, Section 535 of the Penal Code and provisions of the civil Code. The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on the 18th of June, 2014, at 9:00 AM, on the premises where said property has been stored and which are located at Rainbow Self Storage, at 4055 Broadway Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt the following: Janet Polizzi, Unit # 5006 Edwin Donahue Jr., Unit # 5310 Wayne T. Lawson, Unit # 5433 Susanna Gomez, Unit # 5440 Wayne T. Lawson, Unit # 5506 The following units are located at 639 W. Clark Street Eureka, Ca, County of Humboldt and will be sold immediately following the sale of the above units. Stephen Barrett, Unit # 2205 5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−166) Angelique Omstead, Unit # 3014 Linda Stewart, Unit # 3115 PUBLIC SALE The following units are located at Notice is hereby given that the 3618 Jacobs Avenue Eureka, Ca, undersigned intends to sell the County of Humboldt and will be personal property described below sold immediately following the sale to enforce a lien imposed on said of the above units. property pursuant to Sections 21700 Viviana Hollenbeck, Unit # 1105 −21716 of the Business & Professions Nathaniel Toering, Unit # 1169 Code, Section 2328 of the UCC, Terry Lange, Unit # 1170 6/5, 6/12/2014 (14−172) Section 535 of the Penal Code and Logan Bremer, Unit # 1185 provisions of the Civil Code. The Jennifer Fate Jahnig, Unit # 1205 DID YOU KNOW? Your fictitious undersigned will sell at a public Travis Johnson, Unit # 1622 business name statement expires auction by competitive bidding on Calandra Laird, Unit # 1724 five years from the date it was the 17th of June 2014, at 10:00 .AM, The following units are located at on the premises where said prop− last filed with the County Clerk. It 105 Indianola Eureka, Ca, County of erty has been stored and which are Humboldt and will be sold immedi− must be re-filed with the County located at CUTTEN MINI STORAGE, ately following the sale of the Clerk before it expires, or any time 2341 Fern Street, Eureka, CA., above units. you have changed the address or County of Humboldt, the following: Robin Thornton, Unit # 121 partnership. Within 30 days of filing Katelyn Hanson #126 Haven Kozak, Unit # 128 your FBN with the County Clerk, Louis DeSantis #73 Rick Alton, Unit # 296 you must begin publishing it in a Van Duran #248 Rick Alton, Unit # 357 newspaper. Publish it in the Journal Cassidy Hess #79 Rachel Hope, Unit # 413 for the required four times and a Items to be sold include, but are Ronald Payton, Unit # 435 “proof of publication” will be sent not limited to: Lori Sawyer, Unit # 449 Dinette table and chairs, The following units are located at to the County Clerk to complete microwave, side table, T.V, 180 F Street Arcata, Ca, County of the filing process. Call for reasonable computer, clothes, large floor Humboldt and will be sold immedi− rates and friendly service: 442-1400 pillow, mattress and box spring, bed ately following the sale of the frame, head and footboard, dresser, above units. • North Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 tools plastic bins, boxes and bags northcoastjournal.com B. Bushe’y, Unit # Coast 4211 (contents unknown). Kristina Crummett, Unit # 4316 Purchases must be paid for at the Diaja Jackson, Unit # 6108 time of purchase in cash only. Madison Fowler, Unit # 6170

49


legal notices FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00307

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00329

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00332

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00334

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00338

The following persons are doing Business as HUMBOLDT ANIMAL RESCUE TEAM . Humboldt, at 3954 A Jacobs Avenue, Eureka CA., 95501, PO Box 7236, Eureka, CA. 95502 Humboldt Spay/ Neuter Network 3954 Jacobs Avenue Eureka, CA. 95501 CA. #2574699 The business is conducted by A Corporation The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 02/25/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Jennifer Raymond This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 21, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following persons are doing Business as LIVE2DIVE SCUBA COMPANY, Humboldt, at 1005 J Street, Eureka, CA., 95501 Daniel J. Heinen 1005 J Street Eureka, CA. 95501 Ida D. Heinen 1005 J Street Eureka, CA. 95501 The business is conducted by A Married Couple The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 07/01/2013 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Dan Heinen, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 07, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as CHEF FOR YOU, Humboldt, at 16 Pinecrest Dr., Fortuna , CA. 95540, Robin D. Clarke Hemp Café, LLC 16 Pinecrest Dr. Fortuna, CA. 95540 The business is conducted by A Limited Liability Company The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Robin D. Clarke, Manager (Officer) This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 19, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as HUMBOLDT POWER AND WATER and HIGH LIFTER PUMP SERVICE, Humboldt, at 1155 Redway Drive, Redway, CA., 95560, PO Box 1640, Redway, CA. 95560 Theodore W. Horner 155 Redway Drive Redway, CA. 95560 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Theodore W. Horner, Jr., Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 20, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following persons are doing Business as PALEO PACKS, Humboldt, at 1725 Tomlinson., Eureka, CA. 95503, 1381 Carson Woods, Fortuna, CA. 95540 Ernie R. Albers, Jr. Carrie S. Albers 1381 Carson Woods Fortuna, CA. 95540 The business is conducted by a Married Couple The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 05/06/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Ernest R. Albers, Jr., Co−owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 21, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−188)

5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−160)

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−185)

The following persons are doing business as HUMBOLDT SPAY/ NEUTER CLINIC, Humboldt, at 3954 A Jacob Avenue Eureka, CA., 95501, PO Box 7236, Eureka, CA. 95502 Humboldt Spay/ Neuter Network 3954 A Jacobs Avenue Eureka CA. 95501 CA. #2574699 The business is conducted by A Corporation The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Jennifer Raymond, Executive Director This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 21, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−162)

5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12 (14−158)

ABANDONMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00140

5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−163)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00356

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00333

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00336

The following person is doing Busi− ness as FN DISTRIBUTORS, Humboldt, at 1634 7th Street, Eureka, CA., 95501, PO Box 4591, Arcata, CA. 95518, Adina Leone 1634 7th St. Eureka, CA. 95501 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 5/20/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Adina Leone, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 20, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as FILIGREE CAKE COOKIES & PASTRIES, Humboldt, at 2585 1/2 Eye Street, Arcata, CA., 95521 Carin M. Sorisio 2585 1/2 Eye St. Arcata, CA. 95521 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 5/14/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Carin Mari Sorosio, Owner, Sole Proprietor This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 21, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as SKIN SENSE, Humboldt, at 75 Country Club Drive, Suite # 4., Willow Creek, CA. 95573 Shauna Hill 611 China Flat Salyer, CA. 95563 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Shauna Hill, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 19, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−181)

5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−161)

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−176)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00322

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00325

The following persons are doing Business as SOL SISTERS BAKING COMPANY, Humboldt, at 39010 Hwy. 299, Willow Creek, CA., 95573, PO Box 1604, Willow Creek, CA. 95573 Jaclyn R. Smith 42175 Hwy 299 Willow Creek, CA. 95573 Marjorie B. Salas 201 Poney Creek Rd. Hawkins Bar, CA. 95563 The business is conducted by A General Partnership The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 05/15/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Jaclyn R. Smith, Co−Owner/ Operator This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 16, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as SLIDE WELLNESS, Humboldt, at 1136 Main St., #102, Fortuna, CA., 95540 Katharine M. Jackson 1136 Main St., #102 Fortuna, CA. 95540 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 5/1/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Katharine M. Jackson, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 19, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as GRAPHIC HEART DESIGN , Humboldt, at 1385 8th Street, Suite 105, Arcata, CA. 95521, Shannon C. Wisham 1961 Grange Rd. McKinleyville, CA. 95519 The business is conducted by a Married Couple The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 9/1/11 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Shannon Wisham, Creative Director/ Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 30, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−170)

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−184)

5/22, 5/29, 6/5, 6/12 (14−156)

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50 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00330

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LEGAL NOTICES CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME JOSHUA LEE BROWN CASE NO. CV140328 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT 825 FIFTH STREET EUREKA, CA 95501 PETITION OF: JOSHUA LEE BROWN TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: JOSHUA LEE BROWN For a decree changing names as follows: Present name JOSHUA LEE BROWN To Proposed Name JOSHUA LEE LEHR THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objec− tion at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objec− tion is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: July 9, 2014 Time: 1:45 p.m., Dept. 8 Superior Court of California, County of Humboldt 825 Fifth Street Eureka, CA. 95501 Date: May 21, 24, 2014 Filed: May 21, 2014 /s/ W. Bruce Watson Judge of the Superior Court 6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−173)

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00348

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00365

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00286

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00358

The following person is doing Busi− ness as HUMBOLDT MUNCHIES, Humboldt, at 577 Main St., Ferndale, CA. 95536, PO Box 71, Bridgeville, CA. 95526 Kelly R. Valentine 25384 Hwy. 36 Bridgeville, CA. 95526 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 05/13/14 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Kelly R. Valentine, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 27, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as MIRADOR GLASS, Humboldt, at 1590 Nursery Way, Suite 5, McKinleyville, CA. 95519, Bryan D. Raskin 970 Greenwood Heights Kneeland, CA. 95549 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Bryan Raskin This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on June 04, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as TRADE WIND EXCHANGE. Humboldt, at 39032−4 Hwy 299, Willow Creek CA., 95573 Summer C. Adams PO Box 921 71 Gambi Ln. Willow Creek, CA. 95573 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Summer Adams This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on April 29, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following persons are doing Business as VENUS MOTORCYCLES, Humboldt, at 1691 Glendale Dr., McKinleyville, CA. 95519, PO Box 655, Blue Lake, CA. 95525 Suzanne M. Alvernaz 1691 Glendale Dr. McKinleyville, CA. 95519 Mandi C. Kindred 725 Ranchoria Rd. Blue Lake, CA. 95525 The business is conducted by A General Partnership The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 06/01/14 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Suzanne M. Alvernaz, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on June 2, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−182)

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−178)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00359

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00368

5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19/2014 (14−169)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 14−00342

The following person is doing Busi− ness as AXIOM SURVEYING & MAPPING, Humboldt, at 4801 Patricia Dr., Eureka, CA. 95503, PO Box 6759, Eureka, CA. 95502 Philip V. Taylor 4801 Patricia Drive Eureka, CA. 95503 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 06/01/14 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Philip V. Taylor, Principal This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on June 2, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following persons are doing Business as JM Photography, Humboldt, at 1767 Mygina Ave., McKinleyville, CA. 95519, PO Box 963, Blue Lake, CA. 95525 James M. Carlson Melissa M. Carlson 1767 Mygina Ave. McKinleyville, CA. 95519 The business is conducted by a Married Couple The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on 6/1/2014 I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ James Carlson, Owner/Partner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on June 6, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

The following person is doing Busi− ness as PACIFIC GYPSIES CLOSET, Humboldt, at 2138 Old Arcata Rd., Bayside, CA. 95524 Sophia D. Whillock 2138 Old Arcata Rd. Bayside, CA. 95524 The business is conducted by An Individual The date registrant commenced to transact business under the ficti− tious business name or name listed above on n/a I declare the all information in this statement is true and correct. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). /s/ Sophia Whillock, Owner This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Humboldt County on May 23, 2014 CAROLYN CRNICH Humboldt County Clerk

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−174)

6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3/2014 (14−186)

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−168)

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Post your job opportunities! www.northcoastjournal.com 310 F St., Eureka, CA 95501 • 442-1400

What’s your food crush? We’re looking for the best kept food secrets in Humboldt. Email your tip (Is it a burger? A cookie? A fried pickle?) and we’ll check it out for the Hum Plate blog. Email jennifer@ northcoastjournal.com

6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26/2014 (14−174)

default

CEQA NOTICE OF INTENT TO ADOPT A MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION Pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines Section 15072 and Public Resources Code Section 21092, the City of Fortuna (City) is providing notice of intent to adopt a mitigated negative declaration for the “Rohner Creek Flood Control, Habitat and Seismic Improvement Project,” as described below. The public is invited to comment on the proposed mitigated negative declaration pursuant to the provisions of CEQA. The review period is 30 days and commences on June 4th, 2014. Written comments must be submitted to the City no later than July 3rd, 2014. The initial study and proposed mitigated negative declaration document is available for review during regular business hours at the City of Fortuna Community Development Department office located at 621 11th Street, Fortuna, California. Per CEQA Guidelines Section 15072 (g) (5) there are no known hazardous waste facilities or disposal sites on the project site. The project is located within the incorporated City limits of the City of Fortuna within the Rohner Creek watershed, in Humboldt County, California. The project reach encompasses approximately 5,300 feet of the Rohner Creek channel and 2,300 feet of the Hillside Creek channel as well as portions of the Rohner Creek floodplain . The project consists of in-stream channel improvements to Rohner Creek and Hillside Creek, the replacement of five bridges, a Rohner Creek field bypass swale and channel improvements through existing undeveloped agricultural pastures, and retrofitting of the 12th Street culvert. In stream improvements would achieve a 10-year flood capacity for Rohner Creek and 100-year flood capacity for Hillside Creek and the Rohner Creek field bypass swale. The City will consider adoption of the proposed mitigated negative declaration on August 4, 2014, at the City’s office located at 621 11th Street, Fortuna, California. Copies of the initial study and proposed mitigated negative declaration document are available for review at the City’s office located at 621 11th Street, Fortuna, California. For further information, please call Liz Shorey at (707) 725-1408. 6/12/2014 (14-180)

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

51


legal notices NOTICE OF PROPERTY TAX DELINQUENCY AND IMPENDING DEFAULT Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3351, 3352

I, John Bartholomew, Humboldt County Tax Collector, State of California, certify as follows: That at close of business on June 30, 2014 by operation of law, any real property (unless previously tax-defaulted and not redeemed) that have any delinquent taxes, assessments, or other charges levied for the fiscal year 20132014, and/or any delinquent supplemental taxes levied prior to the fiscal year 2013-2014 shall be declared tax-defaulted. That unless the property is completely redeemed through payment of all unpaid amounts, together with penalties and fees prescribed by law or an installment plan is initiated and maintained; the property will become tax-defaulted and may be subsequently sold at a tax sale in satisfaction of the tax lien. That a detailed list of all properties remaining tax-defaulted at the close of business on June 30, 2014, and not redeemed prior to being submitted for publication, shall be published on or before September 8, 2017. That information concerning redemption or the initiation of an installment plan of redemption of tax-defaulted property will be furnished, upon request, by John Bartholomew, Humboldt County Tax Collector at 825 5th Street, Room 125, Eureka, California 95501 (707) 476-2450. I certify or (declare), under penalty of perjury, that the foregoing is true and correct.

John Bartholomew Humboldt County Tax Collector Executed at Eureka, Humboldt County, California, on May 23rd , 2014. Published in the North Coast Journal on May 29th, June 5th, and June 12th , 2014.

NOTICE OF IMPENDING POWER TO SELL TAX-DEFAULTED PROPERTY

Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3361, 3362

Pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Codes sections 3691 and 3692.4, the following conditions will, by operation of law, subject real property to the Tax Collector’s power to sell. 1) All property for which property taxes and assessments have been in default for five or more years. 2) All property that has a nuisance abatement lien recorded against it and for which property taxes and assessments have been in default for three or more years. 3) Any property that has been identified and requested for purchase by a city, county, city and county, or nonprofit organization to serve the public benefit by providing housing or services directly related to low-income persons and for which property taxes and assessments have been in default for three or more years. The parcels listed herein meet one or more of the criteria listed above and thus, will become subject to the Tax Collector’s power to sell on July 1, 2014, at 12:01 a.m., by operation of law. The Tax Collector’s power to sell will arise unless the property is either redeemed or made subject to an installment plan of redemption initiated as provided by law prior to close of business on the last business day in June. The right to an installment plan terminates on the last business day in June, and after that date the entire balance due must be paid in full to prevent sale of the property at public auction. The right of redemption survives the property becoming subject to the power to sell, but it terminates at close of business on the last business day prior to the date of the sale by the Tax Collector. All information concerning redemption or the initiation of an installment plan of redemption will be furnished, upon request by John Bartholomew, Humboldt County Tax Collector, 825 5th Street, Room 125, Eureka, CA 95501, (707) 476-2450. The amount to redeem, including all penalties and fees, as of June 2014, is shown opposite the assessment/parcel number and next to the name of the assessee.

PARCEL NUMBERING SYSTEM EXPLANATION The Assessor’s Parcel/Assessment Number (APN/ASMT), when used to describe property in this list, refers to the assessor’s map book, the map page, the block on the map, if applicable, and the individual parcel on the map page or in the block. The assessor’s maps and further explanation of the parcel numbering system are available in the assessor’s office.

PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2006, FOR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2005-2006: Assessor’s Assessment No 013-201-006-000 511-091-035-000

Assessee’s Name & Property Address Matson Jeff, 3440 Harrison Ave/Eureka Tretten Scott, 1379 Pedroni Rd/McKinleyville

Amount to Redeem By June 2014 $ 4,435.93 $ 4,112.46

PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2007, FOR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2006-2007: Assessor’s Assessment No 109-042-039-000 110-021-031-000 004-196-007-000 109-331-031-000

Assessee’s Name & Property Address Cardenas Ruben, 767 Spring Rd/Shelter Cove Etter Franklin R, 379 Hillside Dr/Shelter Cove Squires Floyd E III & Betty J, 241 Wabash Ave/ Eureka York Tommy A & Pauline N/Fonseca Keolanalani J & Lehua K K , 554 Parsons Rd/Shelter Cove

Amount to Redeem By June 2014 $ 1,500.71 $ 1,318.34 $ 5,865.94 $ 3,081.81

PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2008, FOR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2007-2008: Assessor’s Assessment No 032-034-022-000 109-191-007-000 514-132-005-000 314-141-013-000 522-291-026-000 109-292-024-000 530-061-022-000 081-021-008-000 508-161-011-000 008-232-012-000 109-251-024-000 105-193-008-000 105-193-009-000 105-193-010-000 316-172-019-000 526-062-058-000 503-381-034-000 220-081-013-000

Assessee’s Name & Amount to Redeem Property Address By June 2014 Barnick Richard & Lea A, 351 Sprowl Creek Rd/ $ 7,917.51 Garberville Barnick Richard & Lea A , 133 Eileen Rd/Shelter Cove $ 3,579.93 Bedell Wendell D & Morton Amber $ 1,565.33 Botiller Brian V, 6810 Butler Valley Rd/Kneeland $ 18,617.51 Grable Michael L Sr, 245 Horse Linto Rd/Willow $ 8,051.50 Creek Hopkins Freida J, 635 Upper Pacific Dr/Shelter Cove $ 5,752.81 Lapiers Gary B & Marrollee $ 1,047.50 Leck Dylon, 231 Myers Ave/Myers Flat $ 4,597.07 Lowell Rebecca L, 1774 Ocean Dr/McKinleyville $ 19,650.00 Monda Michael J, 3346 High St/Eureka $ 5,707.49 Perkins Memi C, 29 Thistle Ct/Shelter Cove $ 2,435.93 Schlecht Christopher R $ 4,471.22 Schlecht Christopher R, 560 Front St/Petrolia $ 5,052.49 Schlecht Christopher R $ 2,695.56 Schwed Joel $ 6,763.09 Velasco David $ 1,037.70 Warvi Lois, 512 Ridge Rd/Arcata $ 2,019.78 Wilson Patrick $ 3,599.62

PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2009, FOR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2008-2009: Assessor’s Assessment No 525-281-012-000 110-071-008-000 216-382-060-000 109-101-025-000 507-091-021-000 109-121-018-000 520-084-013-000 201-252-001-000 108-133-019-000 109-281-020-000 053-153-008-000 053-103-021-000 109-183-017-000 109-183-018-000 111-012-002-000 109-281-037-000 109-321-004-000 109-331-038-000 203-383-019-000

Assessee’s Name & Amount to Redeem Property Address By June 2014 Achamire Eva M C/Achamire Homer D, Cotton $ 3,026.75 Anthony W/Cotton Russell E Acojedo Rogelio P, 274 Willow Glen Rd/Shelter Cove $ 2,608.87 Anderson Mark A, 5355 Rancho Sequoia Dr/ $ 3,882.95 Alderpoint Antonelli Mattie F C, 802 Wolverine Way/Shelter $ 2,592.84 Cove Backman Mark W & Susan L, 3058 Alliance Rd/Arcata $ 2,633.50 Bailey Thomas A, 190 Mink Dr/Shelter Cove $ 2,763.58 Baker Rodney A, 48 Hansen St/Orick $ 1,396.25 Barcelos Tracie M, 2810 McDermott St/Alton $ 2,725.51 Barker Hans, 3916 E Chemise Mt Rd/Shelter Cove $ 8,268.10 Barnes Claire, 130 McMains Ct/Shelter Cove $ 3,721.13 Barnett Michael L, 242 1st Ave/Rio Dell $ 9,597.74 Barnett Michael L, 460 2nd Ave/Rio Dell $ 14,797.94 Birchfield Bill & Billie Jo/Birchfield Julie A, 641 Spring $ 1,854.01 Rd/Shelter Cove Birchfield Bill & Billie Jo/ Birchfield Julie A, 651 Spring $ 1,854.01 Rd/Shelter Cove Bleuler Barbara G Tr, 592 Upper Pacific Dr/Shelter $ 3,095.34 Cove Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona $ 2,528.60 Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona, 7875 Shelter $ 2,394.25 Cove Rd/Shelter Cove Bourikian Robert & Varakian Nona, 141 Telegraph $ 2,538.17 Creek Rd/Shelter Cove Boyd Perry & Jewel, 3280 Matthew Ln/Fortuna $ 2,102.58

52 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Assessor’s Assessment No 031-181-006-000 005-074-005-000 109-341-035-000 109-341-034-000 109-311-002-000 109-362-007-000 404-031-005-000 522-301-005-000 300-052-002-000 111-061-019-000 110-021-058-000 110-261-039-000 525-291-008-000 110-201-022-000 109-041-023-000 109-211-036-000 002-082-001-000 002-231-004-000 506-051-003-000 506-061-026-000 506-061-027-000 506-112-006-000 506-121-001-000 110-021-002-000 203-092-053-000 515-331-033-000 510-231-029-000 510-081-024-000 214-021-005-000 220-291-002-000 109-211-033-000 529-361-010-000 110-231-038-000 109-362-004-000 053-141-037-000 001-047-008-000 110-071-002-000 111-051-019-000 529-361-030-000 006-311-009-000 110-211-036-000 110-211-037-000 006-073-028-000 205-011-001-000 109-241-018-000 109-311-047-000 110-151-014-000 110-181-017-000 110-211-032-000 534-193-007-000 111-112-006-000 002-231-003-000 109-261-031-000 109-362-028-000 033-011-019-000 300-041-014-000 095-081-022-000 302-071-090-000 081-021-001-000

Assessee’s Name & Amount to Redeem Property Address By June 2014 Branstetter Dennis & Steve & Terri, 667 Herbert $ 8,458.66 St/Ferndale Briggs Janice L & Michelle M, 1920 J Street/Eureka $ 2,031.00 Bukovsky Martin E J & Mellie A, 144 Willow Glen Rd/ $ 2,624.46 Shelter Cove Bukovsky Martin E J & Mellie/ Morgan Melinda, 124 $ 2,705.67 Willow Glen Rd/Shelter Cove Bukovsky Martin E J & Mellie A/ Morgan Melinda, $ 2,743.53 8025 Shelter Cove Rd/Shelter Cove Busters Ventures III LLC Co 45 Dolphin Dr/Shelter $ 13,970.34 Cove Chapman Dallas G $ 845.90 Christie Kevin L, 41 Ash Ln/Willow Creek $ 5,403.87 Cloninger Heidi L, 1940 Holly St/Eureka $ 9,251.24 Coastal Covers II Inc, 21 Fir Ct/Shelter Cove $ 28,563.78 Coastal Covers II Inc, 383 Parsons Rd/Shelter Cove $ 5,056.40 Cook Cassandra M, 174 Forest Rd/Shelter Cove $ 2,719.92 Cordova Gilbert & Genevieve $ 6,296.27 Crews Calvin F/Crews John T, Crews Robert L/Crews $ 2,667.51 William C, 2081 Toth Rd/Shelter Cove CS Paradiso Holdings LLC Co, 391 Beach Rd/Shelter $ 3,216.18 Cove CS Paradiso Holdings LLC Co, 107 Otter Ln/Shelter $ 2,545.00 Cove CUE E V LLC, 2010 First St/Eureka $ 12,383.53 CUE E V LLC $ 6,009.01 CUE IV LLC $ 1,685.32 CUE IV LLC $ 1,030.59 CUE IV LLC $ 548.11 CUE IV LLC $ 6,398.91 CUE IV LLC $ 8,529.88 Dean Paul, 7813 Shelter Cove Rd/Shelter Cove $ 2,105.82 Dick Eugene F & Bonnie S, 2800 Campton Hts Dr/ $ 4,439.45 Fortuna Dodd Jesse, 67 Berry Rd/Trinidad $ 4,309.88 Eanni Jo E, 2454 Penn Ave/McKinleyville $ 5,355.91 Eanni Joemma, 2771 Central Ave/McKinleyville $ 3,502.94 Enzenbacher Dennis J, 2875 St Hwy 254/Phillipsville $ 6,852.99 Fair Anthony, 5148 Blue Slide Creek Rd/Redway $ 36,180.63 Fink Maureen, 156 Otter Ln/Shelter Cove $ 2,659.33 Floria-Gale Beth E, 448 Ferris Ranch Rd/Orleans $ 12,268.11 Foster Nicholas S, 1709 Toth Rd/Shelter Cove $ 2,311.99 Foxy Avenue Clips Inc, 27 Dolphin Dr/Shelter Cove $ 13,830.41 Foyster Barry F/Foyster Brian F $ 529.12 Fulton Ronald & Lilly Carolyn F, 821 Summer St/ $ 1,628.51 Eureka Funesto Lamberto & Georgia, 196 Willow Glen Rd/ $ 1,160.21 Shelter Cove Gabinay Elmer H & Angelynne S, 794 Redwood Rd/ $ 5,282.73 Shelter Cove Gale Beth $ 14,314.93 Gauvaln Gwendolyn D, 2495 Hillside Dr/Eureka $ 2,364.87 Gibbs Benjamin E S & Carpenter Seth O, 640 Forest $ 2,634.12 Rd/Shelter Cove Gibbs Benjamin E S & Carpenter Seth O, 268 Burns $ 2,634.12 Ct/Shelter Cove Gomez Ana M & Lyda Kathee/ FDR Family Living $ 20,483.89 Tr/L&M Family Living Tr, 1605 Gates St/Eureka Haberstock Craig R/ Haberstock Annette A/ $ 12,650.12 Haberstock Raymond G Haifa Iyad A, 840 Telegraph Creek Rd/Shelter Cove $ 3,165.62 Hakimzadeh Debora 247 Otter Ln/Shelter Cove $ 2,853.18 Hakimzadeh Debora, 2409 Toth Rd/Shelter Cove $ 2,689.41 Hakimzadeh Debora, 1055 Hillside Dr/Whitethorn $ 2,914.53 Hakimzadeh Debora, 290 Burns Ct/Shelter Cove $ 2,441.30 Hart Lani A & Kelley Richard N $ 9,363.45 Hirst William L Jr $ 2,617.91 Hollenbeck Shelley M $ 9,561.19 Holmes Leslie J, 952 Telegraph Creek Rd/Shelter $ 3,022.12 Cove Hudson Carolyn K Tr $ 2,419.40 Hurd Pearl $ 1,761.67 Jacobsen Michael R & Darlene H, 4265 Excelsior $ 3,270.85 Rd/Eureka Jenkins Danielle $ 2,211.00 Johnson Betty L Tr $ 714.46 Keener Jill, 201 Boy Scout Camp Rd/Myers Flat $ 2,672.89


Assessor’s Assessment No 110-121-007-000 216-133-010-000 016-222-011-000 203-382-012-000 109-331-029-000 212-162-015-000 021-281-005-000 525-261-007-000 204-381-029-000 109-192-041-000 529-032-030-000 109-101-021-000 306-111-007-000 105-162-003-000 109-341-022-000 309-161-002-000 310-051-009-000 310-082-001-000 310-083-003-000 310-083-006-000 310-084-001-000 310-084-002-000 109-241-041-000 217-251-003-000 522-511-013-000 509-132-004-000 109-281-006-000 301-082-055-000 031-151-006-000 509-162-023-000 109-341-027-000 109-141-022-000 201-112-005-000 203-051-044-000 110-151-005-000 110-291-024-000 109-182-041-000 205-031-061-000 205-071-039-000 111-052-050-000 109-061-012-000 109-061-014-000 110-281-023-000 109-051-002-000 010-281-024-000 001-102-005-000 008-144-017-000 215-181-019-000 215-181-015-000 108-221-004-000 002-063-005-000 001-066-002-000 001-066-003-000 005-053-006-000 111-112-013-000 111-161-014-000 111-161-049-000 006-312-008-000 008-143-015-000 107-044-001-000 002-132-008-000

Assessee’s Name & Property Address Kelly Monica, 299 Pepperwood Dr/Shelter Cove Kercher Sterling & Sandra/Caballero Kevin R, 10373 Alderpoint Rd/Garberville Kneaper Mark A & Linnea M Tr, 2901 Hubbard Ln/ Eureka Knight Barry W Suc Tr, 3121 Matthew Ln/Fortuna Koehler Richard D III, 563 Parsons Rd/Shelter Cove Layman John E, 311 Logan Rd/Miranda Levine Zachary, 1080 8th St #9/Arcata Marshall Jacquelyne J McKay Peter H & Sandra L McLean John 415 Spring Rd/Shelter Cove Meade Dennis Miers Robert E, 758 Wolverine Way/Shelter Cove Nasca Phillip R, 2409 Meadow Ln/Eureka Neikirk Jonathan O, 227 Evergreen Way/Petrolia Nguyen Anh & Dinh, 6929 Shelter Cove Rd/Shelter Cove Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Niles Robert L Oblena Leolin D Oliver Jessi ONeill William J Tr, 145 Hillcrest Way/Willow Creek Pallin Manuel A & Irene, 2040 Nelson Rd/ McKinleyville Parrish Bishop P 3rd, 80 Shaller Ct/Shelter Cove Parsons Thomas & Machado Ashley, 310 Higgins Ave/Eureka Perkins Kim , 725 Washington St/Ferndale Phillips Melissa E , 1300 Quail Run Ct/McKinleyville Pirzadeh Dara, 36 Willow Glen Rd/Shelter Cove Porreca Paul V, 1383 Telegraph Creek Rd/Shelter Cove Premo Francine Etal/Premo Cheryl J/Premo Cyndi L/Premo Diana/ Premo Marchelle/Premo Marlena A, 291 Orchard Ln/Fortuna R & T Black Development/ Gess Cathy L/Gess Jerry J/ Poletski Dama/Poletski Richard A, 489 Kendall Ct/Fortuna Rezapour Gassem & Arellano-Raith Jennie V, 2380 Toth Rd/Shelter Cove Rezapour Gassem, 153 Combs Rd/Shelter Cove Rillamas Carl D & Brenda A, 670 Spring Rd/Shelter Cove Rio Dell Pilar LLC Rio Dell Pilar LLC Roberts Lynn E, 495 Seafoam Rd/Shelter Cove Roberts Lynn E & Sylvia A, 159 Raintree Circle/ Shelter Cove Roberts Lynn E & Sylvia A, 171 Raintree Circle/ Shelter Cove Roberts Mike, 158 Blueridge Rd/Shelter Cove Sakata Michael D & Mildred M Tr, 2122 Telegraph Creek Rd/Shelter Cove Schrack Heidi A, 3429 E St/Eureka Security National Offices LLC, 311 5th St/Eureka Shelley Tim E & Connie J, 3566 Glen St/Eureka Shiningstar Tara, 550 Harris Creek Rd/Whitethorn Shiningstar Tara, 450 Harris Creek Rd/Whitethorn Smalley Gene H/Smalley Steven P/ Doyle Sandra C Squires Floyd E & Betty J, 1637 3rd St/Eureka Squires Floyd E III & Betty J, 216 3rd St/Eureka Squires Floyd E III & Betty J, 218 3rd St/Eureka Squires Floyd E III & Betty J, 1623 G St/Eureka Stack Paul W & Elenita Stanley Carwin T, 56 Haven Ct/Shelter Cove Stanley Carwin T, 17 Cove View/Shelter Cove Stevens Lois A, 2440 Hillside Dr/Eureka Thomas Corinne E Tr, 3559 Cottage St/Eureka Toews Arlo E & Dylan A, 3000 Cartwright Rd/ Honeydew United Property Holdings LLC, 2223 4th St/Eureka

Amount to Redeem By June 2014 $ 3,853.43 $ 3,515.55 $ 44,954.01 $ 10,662.62 $ 2,099.52 $ 2,074.61 $ 13,378.18 $ 1,903.30 $ 18,100.99 $ 1,957.23 $ 4,420.90 $ 2,523.94 $ 2,479.74 $ 1,857.51 $ 2,886.48 $ 6,367.57 $ 2,551.87 $ 314.44 $ 199.50 $ 380.36 $ 344.17 $ 344.17 $ 5,070.81 $ 7,260.65 $ 29,381.21 $ 3,499.65 $ 2,443.42 $ 1,699.09 $ 8,057.52 $ 6,390.28 $ 3,228.09 $ 3,800.22 $ 4,242.29 $ 6,539.32 $ 1,408.71 $ 2,178.62 $ 3,436.16 $ 41,072.95 $ 105,772.74 $ 8,779.64 $ 2,743.36 $ 2,743.36 $ 3,653.02 $ 2,592.84 $ 32,300.67 $ 14,934.32 $ 2,332.55 $ 17,240.46 $ 3,070.62 $ 32,264.44 $ 6,994.25 $ 9,388.93 $ 2,204.57 $ 11,829.14 $ 5,516.18 $ 1,999.42 $ 2,616.63 $ 3,679.16 $ 3,824.90 $ 15,808.86 $ 251,466.63

Assessor’s Assessment No 210-191-011-000 511-182-006-000 109-131-048-000 216-252-003-000 216-261-058-000 216-252-001-000 216-252-004-000 109-211-017-000

Assessee’s Name & Property Address Vance Robert, 40400 St Hwy 36/Bridgeville Williams Greg & Rust Garry, 2309 Arthur Rd/ McKinleyville Williamson Peter, 62 Muskrat Circle/Shelter Cove Wyatt Dale & Venus, 360 Main St/Alderpoint Wyatt Dale L & Venus, 298 Sixth St/Alderpoint Wyatt Dale, 335 Third St/Alderpoint Wyatt Dale, 335 4th St/Alderpoint Zandi Abrahim, 21 Teri Ln/Shelter Cove

Amount to Redeem By June 2014 $ 4,842.42 $ 7,046.92 $ 2,947.41 $ 1,471.78 $ 4,708.42 $ 2,698.91 $ 2,106.76 $ 2,680.01

I certify or (declare), under penalty of perjury, that the foregoing is true and correct.,

John Bartholomew Humboldt County Tax Collector

MOVIE TIMES.

TRAILERS. REVIEWS. DESKTOP:

northcoastjournal.com/ MovieTimes

MOBILE:

Executed at Eureka, Humboldt County, California, on May 23rd, 2014. Published in the North Coast Journal on May 29th, June 5th, and June 12th , 2014. ,

m.northcoastjournal.com

5/29, 6/5, 6/12/2014 (14-167)

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COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS Child Welfare Services System Review We are seeking agencies to design and conduct a System Review of Humboldt County Child Welfare Services and participating agencies. This review will combine quantitative and qualitative methodologies to explore questions specific to the unique attributes of the communities within Humboldt County. Please see the website: http://www.co.humboldt.ca.us/rfp/ Or Contact Lisa Rix at Lrix@co.humboldt.ca.us Or (707) 476-4763 Proposals to be received by 5:00 p.m. on July 31, 2014 at the address listed above. Proposals received after this date will not be considered. Faxes will not be accepted. No additional information or documentation will be accepted from proposers after the proposal due date. 5/29, 6/5, 6/12, 6/19, 6/26, 7/3, 7/10, 7/17/14 (14-153)

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Hey, McGuinty! That Facebook creep? Outlaw inlaws? Roommate disaster?

Ask: heymcguinty@ northcoastjournal.com Those red curls know all.

Browse by title, times and theater.

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014

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CHURCH OF THE JOYFUL HEALER TAILGATE SALE. June 14, 9 a.m.−noon 1944 Central Ave, McKinleyville. Many vendors with lots of wonderful items. Come join us for a morning of tailgate fun.

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AIRPORT

ANSWERS NEXT WEEK!

ACROSS 1. Zenith rival 4. Part of a baseball 8. Class with dissections, for short 14. Apathetic reactions 15. To be in Paris? 16. “____ Man” (1992 movie) 17. Dyer’s vessel 18. Haunted house sound 19. Port on the Vistula 20. Spending plan of someone who has not known physical love? 23. Actor Morales 24. “Norma ____” 25. Joe 28. Project underway at the mouth of a river? 34. Turner who was known as the Sweater Girl 35. Where sailers go 36. What Davy Crockett famously organized before he perished? 41. Rice on shelves 43. Mimicked

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DOWN 44. Single in the Sun Belt? 52. Kardashian who is mom to North West 53. Feedbag morsel 54. Ye ____ Shoppe 55. Where renting a car commonly follows the use of other transportation (as evidenced by 20-, 28-, 36and 44-Across) 60. Mexican president Calderon 63. “Big” prefix 64. “Caught ____!” 65. Make fit 66. Press 67. Board member: Abbr. 68. Like a curmudgeon 69. Basis of a lawsuit 70. RR stop

1. Gunned, as an engine 2. Common poolside chair 3. Van Morrison’s “____ Weeks” 4. Big rig 5. William and Harry attended it 6. Oman man 7. It may be written on a blackboard 8. One desiring change 9. Seriously committed 10. One ___ (kids’ game) 11. Vietnam Veterans Memorial designer 12. Interview seg. 13. ____ choy 21. “Go on now!” 22. Dr. with Grammys 25. Protein-rich soup 26. Function 27. Justice Department div. 29. “Aladdin” prince 30. Have something 31. Houston-to-Chicago dir. 32. Triumphant cries

33. Butt 36. E pluribus ____ 37. Safety measure 38. Likely 39. Was up 40. Flap 41. Query 42. “____ won’t be afraid” (“Stand By Me” lyric) 45. Family-style Asian dish 46. Like weak beer 47. Biblical suffix 48. Cut (off) 49. Big name in insurance 50. Far from klutzy 51. Yield 55. Isn’t well 56. Give off 57. Prefix with dynamic 58. Composer Stravinsky 59. Harangue 60. Do Not Call Registry org. 61. Musician’s asset 62. Actress Lucy

LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS TO URBAN

FREE MEDICARE WORKSHOPS OFFERED BY AREA 1 AGENCY ON AGING’S Trained HICAP counselors the second Thursday of every month through August. Hour−long workshops make Medicare understandable. Drop by second floor conference room at A1AA, 434 Seventh St., Eureka. Next class: Medicare Prescription Drug Plans, 4−5 p.m., July 10. On deck: Medicare Basics for Boomers, August 14, 4−5 p.m.

$1,000 WEEKLY!! MAILING BROCHURES From Home. Helping home workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No Experience required. Start Immediately www.mailingmembers.com (AAN CAN) (E−0724)

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Program Supervisor Center Activities University Center, HSU

Full-time position with benefits For more information, visit:

http://tinyurl.com/aoh9ylp Deadline:

First review June 30, 2014

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  

www.sudoku.com

Opportunities

AIRLINE CAREERS BEGIN HERE. Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial assistance available. Post 9/11 GI Bill accepted. Job placement assistance. Call Avia− tion Institute of Maintenance 888−242−3214 (E−0612)

YOU’RE INVITED! House of Prayer Manila Holiness Church 1820 Peninsula Drive, Manila, (707) 443−5407, Pastor Phillip Stephens. Sunday School, 10 a.m., Sunday Worship, 11 a.m. Sun. Evening Service, 6 p.m. Thurs. Evening Service, 7 p.m.

V. EASY #30

54 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

Opportunities HOME CAREGIVERS PT/FT. Non−medical caregivers to assist elderly in their homes. Top hourly wages. (707) 362−8045. (E−0626)

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©2014 DAVID LEVINSON WILK

CROSSWORD By David Levinson Wilk

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         

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Opportunities

Opportunities

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Opportunities

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14 W. Wabash Ave. Eureka, CA 268-1866 eurekaca.expresspros.com

We are growing…

BOOKKEEPER Full−charge Bookkeeper. Full−time position at Lost Coast Brewery and Café. A/R, A/P, payroll, bank reconciliations, adjusting journal entries, financial statements. Experience with accounting and payroll software, including Quickbooks. Minimum three years’ experience as full−charge bookkeeper. Advanced EXCEL skills, and AA or BS in accounting or related subject is desired. Submit cover letter and resume to lostcoast@pacbell.net. www.lostcoast.com default

Hospice of Humboldt is growing and we have many benefitted positions available in the nursing department:

            IXOO WLPH EHQH¿WV Come join our staff of caring professionals and work in a great environment. Go to our website www.hospiceofhumboldt.org for more information and to review the job descriptions. Email your letter of interest and resume to: cburton@ hospiceofhumboldt.org Or mail to: Christine Burton, HR Director Hospice of Humboldt 2010 Myrtle Ave. Eureka, CA 95501 (707) 441-0105 x308 Hospice of Humboldt is a drug free workplace.

www.sequoiapersonnel.com

We need FIFTEEN experienced Carpenters who have their own tools and are ready to get to work! Pay range is from $15/hr to prevailing wage, DOE. Call us today to apply! CALIFORNIA MENTOR. CARE PROVIDERS needed NOW. Make extra money working from home, GREAT OPPORTUNITY. Special Needs Adults live with you. Earn up to $3600 tax−free/mo. Bring 4 references. Must have extra bedroom, HS/GED & clean criminal record. Call Sharon today for appt! (707) 442−4500 ext 16! www.camentorfha.com. (E−0626)

2930 E Street Eureka, CA 95501

707.445.9641

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**Annual JOB POOL** NCS anticipates a number of Head Start, Early Head Start & State Program job openings for our 20142015 program year. Potential positions are throughout Humboldt & Del Norte Counties and may be year-round or school-year. Anticipated start date: Late August/early September

CASE MANAGER - 1 F/T Eureka SITE ADMINISTRATOR - 1 F/T Arcata MEDICAL BILLER - 2 F/T Arcata CERTIFIED MEDICAL CODER - 1 F/T Arcata OFFICE MANAGER - 1 F/T Crescent City MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST 1 F/T Willow Creek, 1 F/T McKinleyville DENTAL HYGIENIST - 1 F/T Eureka MEDICAL ASSISTANT 1 F/T Crescent City, 1 F/T McKinleyville, 1 F/T Eureka (Spanish language required) REGISTERED NURSE 1 Temp P/T Willow Creek RN CLINIC COORDINATOR (SUPV) 1 F/T Willow Creek FAMILY PRACTICE MD/DO 1 F/T Crescent City, 1 F/T Eureka, 1 F/T McKinleyville OB-GYN - 1 F/T Arcata Visit www.opendoorhealth.com to complete and submit our online application

CENTER DIRECTOR CENTER TEACHER (Humboldt) FAMILY WORKER HOME VISITOR TEAM TEACHER/TEACHER ASSOCIATE TEACHER COMBO ASSOCIATE TEACHER (Humboldt) ASSISTANT TEACHER CLASSROOM ASSISTANT SPECIAL AIDE INTERPRETER (Spanish) COOK/ASSISTANT COOK HOUSEKEEPER SUBSTITUTES

Submit Application to: NCS 1266 9th St., Arcata, CA 95521 or NCS Del Norte Office 475 7th St., Crescent City, CA 95531 For application, job descriptions & more info, visit www.ncsheadstart.org or call 707-822-7206 or 707-464-6936 (Del Norte)

northcoastjournal.com • North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014

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the marketplace Opportunities

Opportunities

Opportunities

Auctions

Pets & Livestock

Auto Service

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AIRLINE JOBS START HERE. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qual− ified students. Housing and Job placement assistance. Call Avia− tion Institute of Maintenance 844−210−3935 (AAN CAN) (E−0626)

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CASH FOR CARS. Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1−888−420−3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN) (A−0717)

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AFRICA, BRAZIL WORK/STUDY! Change the lives of others while creating a sustainable future. 6, 9, 18 month programs available. Apply today! www.OneWorldCenter.org (269) 591−0518 info@OneWorldCenter.org (AAN CAN) (E−0101) AMERICAN STAR PRIVATE SECURITY. Is Now Hiring. Clean record. Drivers license required. Must own vehicle. Apply at 922 E Street, Suite A, Eureka (707) 476−9262. (E−0619)

PUBLIC AUCTION

WEDS. JUNE 18TH 5:15 PM ď …ď łď ´ď Ąď ´ď Ľď€ ď ?ď Šď łď Łď€Žď€ ď€Śď€ ď ˆď Żď ľď łď Ľď ¨ď Żď Źď ¤ď€ ď ?ď Šď łď Łď€Žď€ ď€Ťď€ ď ď ¤ď ¤ď Šď ´ď Šď Żď Žď ł Info & Pictures at WWW.CARLJOHNSONCO.COM Preview Tues. 11-5, Weds. 11 on

*ACOBS !VE %UREKA s

BUY SELL TRADE livestock here! 20 words and a photo, in full color for only $25 per week. 442-1400 classified@northcoastjournal.com www.northcoastjournal.com

Clothing

Garage & Yard Sale

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MOVING SALE. Washer, gas dryer, freezer, desk, entertain− ment center, BBQ, potting bench, ladders, composter, garden chipper and much more. June 14−15, 2015, 9 a.m.−5 p.m. 2015 Thiel Ave, McKinleyville.

Cleaning CLARITY WINDOW CLEANING. Services available. Call Julie 839− 1518. (S−0626) HUMBOLDT HOUSE CLEANING. Licensed & Bonded, #3860. (707) 444−2001 or (707) 502−1600. Top Rated Cleaning Service on Angie’s List in the State. First Time Cleaning 2 hours or more $10 off. (S−0731)

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CHILDREN’S MENTAL HEALTH COORDINATOR Arcata Office

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EDUCATION: EQUAL OPPORTUNITY TITLE IX For jobs in education in all school districts in Humboldt County, including teaching, instructional aides, coaches, office staff, custodians, bus drivers, and many more. Go to our website at www.humboldt.k12.ca.us and click on Employment Opportuni− ties. Applications and job flyers may be picked up at the Personnel Office, Humboldt County Office of Education 901 Myrtle Ave, Eureka, or accessed online. For more information call 445−7039. (E−0703)

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BECOME A FOSTER PARENT. Provide a safe and stable environment for youth 13−18 for them to learn & grow in their own community. Contact the HC Dept. of Health & Human Services Foster Care Hotline (707) 441−5013, ask for Peggy

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56 North Coast Journal • Thursday, June 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

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YOUR ROCKCHIP IS MY EMER− GENCY! Glaswelder, Mobile, windshield repair. 442−GLAS, humboldtwindshieldrepair.com (S−0626)

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707-840-0600

ď ?ď Ąď Łď Šď Žď ´ď Żď łď ¨ď€ ď °ď Ľď Ąď Łď Ľď€ ď Żď Śď€ ď ­ď Šď Žď ¤ď€ ď łď Šď Žď Łď Ľď€ ď€ąď€šď€šď€łď€Ž ď Šď Šď ­ď€ ď …ď Źď Śď Ľď ˛ď ¤ď Šď Žď Ť ď ˇď ˇď ˇď€Žď ­ď Ąď Łď łď Śď Żď ˛ď ´ď ¨ď Ľď ­ď Ąď łď łď Ľď łď€Žď Žď Ľď ´


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Macintosh Computer Consulting for Business and Individuals Troubleshooting Hardware/Memory Upgrades Setup Assistance/Training Purchase Advice 707-826-1806 macsmist@gmail.com

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MITSUBISHI HEAT PUMPS. Heat your house using 21st century technology. Extremely efficient, cheap to run, reason− ably priced. Sunlight Heating−CA lic. #972834. (707) 502−1289, rockydrill@gmail.com (S−0731)

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PIANO LESSONS BEGINNING TO ADVANCED ALL AGES. 30 years joyful experience teaching all piano styles. Juilliard trained, remote lessons available. Nation− ally Certified Piano Teacher. Humboldtpianostudio.com. (707) 502−9469. (M−0626) PIANO LESSONS. Beginners, all ages. Experienced. Judith Louise 476−8919. (M−0626)

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1-877-964-2001 WRITING CONSULTANT/ EDITOR. Fiction, nonfiction, poetry. Dan Levinson, MA, MFA. (707) 382−3807. www.ZevLev.com A’O’KAY CLOWN & NANI NATURE. Juggling Jesters and Wizards of Play present Perfor− mances for all Ages; A magical adventure with circus games & toys. For info. on our variety of shows and to schedule events & parties please call us at (707) 499−5628. Visit us at circusnature.com (S−0626) default

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      

A-Z 400+ Locations

IN-HOME SERVICES



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RESTAURANTS

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Musicians & Instructors

GUITAR/PIANO LESSONS. All ages, beginning & intermediate. Seabury Gould (707) 444−8507. (M−0626)

THE 2014

classified SERVICES

 

northcoastjournal.com/blogjammin

Sewing & Alterations MRS. SEW AND SEW Sewing and Alterations in Arcata. Summer special Jeans hem $10 Fast turn around time! Call Nancy (707) 499−3265

STITCHES−N−BRITCHES. Kristin Anderson, Seam− stress. Mending, Alterations, Custom Sewing. Mon−Fri., 8 a.m.− 3 p.m. Bella Vista Plaza, Ste 8A, McKinleyville. (707) 502−5294. Facebook: Kristin Anderson’s Stitches−n−Britches. Kristin360cedar@gmail.com

@ncj_of_humboldt

MORE BLOGS. EVERYDAY.

BLOGTHING + A&E + HUM PLATE northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

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Ongoing Classes Workshops Private Sessions Diana Nunes Mizer Parent Educator

EARTH RITE MASSAGE. Intuitive deep tissue massage from ORR Hotsprings CMT. 1 hour $50, 1 1/2 Hours $75. More information on facebook. Call Rick: (707) 499− 6033. Treat yourself or a loved one to healing touch. (MB−0626) HIGHER EDUCATION FOR SPIRITUAL UNFOLDMENT. Bachelors, Masters, D.D./ Ph.D., distance learning, University of Metaphysical Sciences. Bringing profes− sionalism to metaphysics. (707) 822−2111

classified HOUSING Offering Private Training and Small Group Classes in

�฀ Pilates �฀ Yoga �฀ ������฀������฀�����������฀ �����������฀��������� �฀ ���฀������฀�����฀�������฀�� �฀ ���฀������฀������฀���฀ ���������฀�����฀��������฀�� �฀ ����฀������฀�������฀����฀ ���������฀�������฀�� �฀ ������฀������������

www.sacredbodiespilates.com

ROLFING SUMMER SPECIAL 50% off first session plus free body analysis! (541) 251−1885. (MB−0626)

  featuring

Muscle Activation Techniques™:

A systematic approach to strengthen, stabilize and reduce stress at joints and surrounding muscle tissue

Gym Memberships Personal Training (707) 822-3018 info@truemotionfitness.com www.truemotionfitness.com 901 O St, Suite B, Arcata

445-7715 1-888-849-5728 HUMBOLDT DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SERVICES

443-6042 1-866-668-6543



RAPE CRISIS TEAM CRISIS LINE



445-2881

707.445.4642 consciousparentingsolutions.com

8-Week Term Starts June 24 • Traditional T’ai Chi • T’ai Chi for Back Pain and Arthritis

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758( 027,21 ),71(66

HUMBOLDT CO. MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS LINE

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with Margy Emerson

COMMUNITY CRISIS SUPPORT:

707-268-0437

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LOSE WEIGHT & KEEP IT OFF! Up to 30 pounds in 60 days. Once Daily, Maximum Prescription Strength − No Prescription Required! Free Shipping. Call (877) 761−2991 (AAN CAN) (MB−0710)

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Est. 1979

NATIONAL CRISIS HOTLINE

 

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    

NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE

1-800-273-TALK

 

SHELTER HOUSING FOR YOUTH CRISIS HOTLINE



444-2273





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Apartments for Rent

Apartments for Rent

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FURNISHED STUDIO APARTMENT IN EUREKA. All utilities. Dish TV and internet service included. $600 per month, (707) 444−8117. (R−0626)

HUMBOLDT PLAZA APTS.

Opening soon available for HUD Sec. 8 Waiting Lists for 2, 3 & 4 bedrm Apts. Annual Income Limits: 1 pers. $20,100; 2 pers. $22,950; 3 pers. $25,800; 4 pers. $28,650; 5 pers. $30,950; 6 pers. $33,250; 7 pers. $35,550; 8 pers. $37,850.

GASSOWAY APTS, MCK. 2/1 Apts, Laundry, Carport, Small Pets, Rent $765, Vac Now. www.ppmrentals.com. Rental Hotline (707) 444−9197 (R−0612)

EHO. Hearing impaired: TDD Ph# 1-800-735-2922. Apply at Office: 2575 Alliance Rd. Arcata, 8am-12pm & 1-4pm, M-F (707) 822-4104

Houses for Rent

1140 E ST. Studio Apts, Laundry, Cat & Sec 8 OK, OSRM. Rent $540 Vac Now. Rental Hotline (707) 444−9197, www.ppmrentals.com (R−0612) 2266 REDWOOD #B. 2/1 Dwnstrs Apt in Sunny Cutten, Laundry, Cat OK. Rent $760 Vac 6/8. . Rental Hotline (707) 444−9197 www.ppmrentals.com (R−0612) 230 WABASH APTS. 2/1 Units near bus lines, Carport, OSRM, Cat OK. Rent $675. Vac Now. Rental Hotline (707) 444−9197, www.ppmrentals.com (R−0612)

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Daytime Beginning Classes meet at K & Samoa, Arcata All others call for location

822-6508 Additional Info: www.margaretemerson.com

IMMACULATE HOME IN THE REDWOODS − ARCATA. Fickle Hill Rd, $2000 per month, $2500 deposit. information at: http://www.americanproprentals .com/category/arcata. Contact: niki@americanproprentals.com (R−0612)

Roommates ALL AREAS − ROOMMATES.COM. Browse hundreds of online list− ings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http://www.Roommates.com. (AAN CAN) (R−0717)

PLACE YOUR OWN AD AT:



classified.northcoast journal.com

For Schedule and Fees:

margaretemerson@att.net

1339 WILLIAMS. 1/1 Duplex, Garbage Paid, Carport, Fenced bkyard. Rent $640. Vac Now. Rental Hotline (707) 444−9197 www.ppmrentals.com (R−0612)

Treating Bulimia, Anorexia, Binge-Eating. Kim Moor, MFT #37499

Call 441-1484

PRIME BLUE LAKE LOCATION!!





KRIS SUNDEEN

816 2ND ST., EUREKA. Studio Rooms with Kitch− enette, Shared Bathrooms, All Utilities Pd., No Pets, $400/Month $600/Sec. Deposit. Call Preston, (707) 444−2199.

Apartments for Rent Houses for Rent

WONDERFUL CUSTOM HOME ON SIX SUNNY ACRES OFF WEST END ROAD

Cell: 707-498-4429 HumboldtCountyProperty.com “Making Real Estate Dreams a Reality.” DRE License# 01438846

Enjoy the end of the road privacy in this upgraded 3 bedroom 2 bath home. The open floor plan includes an upgraded kitchen with paperstone countertops and garden window. South facing fully fenced backyard is a gardener’s dream! $314,000

58 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014 • northcoastjournal.com

DRE License# 01200980 “The best move you’ll ever make.” ArcataProperty.com Cell: 707-834-1818

KAREN ORSOLICS

3 bedrooms, two baths, plus an office. End of the road privacy, yet minutes to Arcata and Blue Lake. Includes mother-in-law unit. Call Kris for more details! $639,000


Vacation Rentals

Vacation Rentals

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BEACHFRONT

Acreage for Sale

2850 E St., Eureka (Henderson Center),

VA C AT I O N R E N TA L 707

romantic 14 secluded acres rustic chic www.oysterbeach.info (707) 834-6555

707

Samoa Peninsula Eureka, CA

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269-2400

2355 Central Ave., McKinleyville

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WILLOW CREEK PROPERTY. 1.33 acres, Willow Creek Community Service District Water, underground power & phone at property. R−2 soils report and perk tested. Approved septic system design by Trinity Engi− neering. Property is zoned RST. Property is located off Highway 299 on private road one mile east of Willow Creek. Ready to build. $89,900 will consider offers. (530) 629−2031

Acreage for Sale Apartments for Rent Commercial Property for Sale Commercial Space for Rent Houses for Rent Realtor Ads Vacation Rentals

839-9093

www.communityrealty.net $759,000

3 bed, 3 bath, 2,900 sq ft beautiful custom home in Bayside on 2.6 acres that’s great for horses, bright interior w/floor to ceiling plantation windows, two master suites, guest kitchen, office.

$439,900

2 bed, 1 bath, 1,092 sq ft magnificent Trinidad haven nestled amidst 4.3 acres of second old growth redwoods, you can hear the ocean, serene & private, lifetime roof, gleaming redwood floors.

An Association of Independently Owned and Operated Realty Brokerages

$799,000 72 Acres in Sunny

Charlie Tripodi Land Agent

Blue Lake

#01332697

707.83 4.3241 Kyla Tripodi Realtor/Land Agent

707.476.0435

#01930997

707.834.7979

Trinidad Single Family Home

Beautiful house with vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, granite kitchen counter tops and island, lots of windows and a sunroom with forest views. Solar electricity, central heating, Lopi wood stove in the living room and gas stove in the bedroom provide cozy heat without the central heat. It’s a 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2078 square ft home built in 2000. House is surrounded by Trex decking and has a solar heated pool with view and relaxing spa. Grape arbor with sweet red and green table grapes. Fruit tree orchard with apples, pears, peaches, plums and more. Two 2,500 gallon spring fed water tanks. 1,000 juvenile redwood trees along with adult oak and fir trees. Large authentic smoke house for your own meat and fish creations. New 25’x 60’x 14’ barn with aluminum siding, shop and wood shed with room for a horse corral. Large enclosed dog run and kennel.

Office

Karen Mann, Realtor

(707) 839-3900 • (707) 499-8891 • BRE#01347366

karen@coastcentralrealty.com • www.coastcentralrealty.com

±30 beautiful Redwood forest acres located towards the end of Fox Farm Road. this pristine property features a 1000 sq. foot 1 bedroom craftsman home, developed off the grid power system including a hydroelectric and 2000 watt solar system, 4 car detached garage with large loft area, gardens, ocean views and more! enjoy leisure forest walks along Luffenholtz Creek which runs through the property while only 5 minutes from the quaint town of trinidad. Call Charlie or kyla today to set up your private tour of this rare property.

$759,000

REDUCED PRICE!

Orick Land/ Kneeland Land/Property acres located on mountain View Road in Property ±80 kneeland. this property is wooded with sloping

this parcel is located between orick and Weitchpec. It offers gorgeous klamath River frontage! Clirliah Creek runs right through the parcel with hydro-electric potential! a flat has already been developed for you. make this yours today!

topography. Featuring an unfinished cabin, developed building site, secondary potential building site, end of the road privacy, two year round springs, one of which has been developed, and year round property access. enjoyable valley views with a small amount of mad River access.

$175,000 $349,000

2120 Campton Rd. Ste #C – euReka, Ca 95503

w w w. h u m b o l d t l a n d m a n . c o m

northcoastjournal.com • NORTH COAST JOURNAL • THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2014

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Top of the hill, G Street, Arcata

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VISA, MC, AMEX, DISCOVER

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Visit us at www.wildberries.com

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J U N E 15 T H • F AT H E R ’ S

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F AT H E R ’ S D A Y • J U N E 15 T H •

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s ’ r e h ! t e a c i F ho C

J U N E 15 T H •

F AT H E R ’ S D A Y

• JUNE 16TH • FA THER’S DAY A •JUNE 16TH • FATHER’S DAY


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