North Coast Journal 06-13-2024 Edition

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Harvest Hub bridges the gap between farms and tables

Humboldt County, CA | FREE Thursday, June 13, 2024 Vol. XXXIV Issue 24 northcoastjournal.com
Le f t overs No
5 Juneteenth joy 17 No bioplastics for bivalves
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Being the BEST ain’t no game! The BEST work hard to get where they are, so let everyone in Humboldt know about them. boh.northcoastjournal.com It’s time to VOTE for the BEST! Cast your votes for your favorite people, places and things once per day through June 30th at #n cjb oh24 Round II: VOTE! June 4-30, 2024 Winners! Announced in the North Coast Journal Aug. 1, 2024 edition June 21-30, 2024 First there was Burger Week. Then came Taco Week. See participating restauarants and unique specials in the June 20th edition of the North Coast Journal or at #NCJRestaurantWeek Now, get ready for NCJRestaurantWeek.com 2 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

PUBLISHER

Melissa Sanderson melissa@northcoastjournal.com

NEWS EDITOR

Thadeus Greenson thad@northcoastjournal.com

ARTS & FEATURES EDITOR

Jennifer Fumiko Cahill jennifer@northcoastjournal.com

DIGITAL EDITOR

Kimberly Wear kim@northcoastjournal.com

CALENDAR EDITOR

Kali Cozyris calendar@northcoastjournal.com

CALIFORNIA LOCAL NEWS FELLOW

Kelby McIntosh kelby@northcoastjournal.com

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

John J. Bennett, Simona Carini, Wendy Chan, Barry Evans, Mike Kelly, Collin Yeo

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Holly Harvey holly@northcoastjournal.com

GRAPHIC DESIGN/PRODUCTION

Heidi Bazán Beltrán, Dave Brown, Rory Hubbard ncjads@northcoastjournal.com

SENIOR ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE

Bryan Walker bryan@northcoastjournal.com

ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE

Asia Benoit asia@northcoastjournal.com

Rene Kindinger rene@northcoastjournal.com

Heather Luther heather@northcoastjournal.com

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

Mark Boyd classified@northcoastjournal.com

BOOKKEEPER

Deborah Henry billing@northcoastjournal.com

OFFICE MANAGER/DISTRIBUTION

Michelle Dickinson michelle@northcoastjournal.com

Press Releases newsroom@northcoastjournal.com

Letters to the Editor letters@northcoastjournal.com

Events/A&E calendar@northcoastjournal.com

Music music@northcoastjournal.com Classified/Workshops classified@northcoastjournal.com

WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY 4PM TO 5PM

June 13, 2024 • Volume XXXV Issue 24 North Coast Journal Inc. www.northcoastjournal.com ISSN 1099-7571 © Copyright 2024 4 Mailbox 4 Poem Discovering Juneteenth 5 News Multi-day Juneteenth Event Celebrates a ‘Liberated Future’ of Unity and Diversity 9 NCJ Daily Online 10 On The Cover No Leftovers 17 On the Table Banning Plastics and Bioplastics at Oyster Fest 18 Humboldt Made Special Advertising Section 19 Get Out! A New Season and New Conference for the Crabs 20 The Setlist River Man 21 Nightlife Live Entertainment Grid 23 Calendar 26 Screens The Importance of Bad Boys: Ride or Die 27 Workshops & Classes 34 Sudoku & Crossword 34 Classifieds On the Cover
Kenney
Fred Diekmeyer of Luna Farm with Megan at the Arcata Farmers Market. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill
safe at home during a high scoring day for the
Read more on page 19.
The North Coast Journal is a weekly newspaper serving Humboldt County. Circulation: 18,000 copies distributed FREE at more than 450 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. CIRCULATION COUNCIL VERIFICATION MAIL/OFFICE 310 F St., Eureka, CA 95501 707 442-1400 FAX: 707 442-1401 www.northcoastjournal.com
Troy Harding slides
in
Crabs.
Photo by Matt Filar
CONTENTS
Entertainment Calendar 15 SATURDAY SATURDAY TUESDAY TUESDAY
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Great Job?

Editor:

I am writing in response to the advertisement placed on page 4 of the June 6 edition stating that “Cal Poly Humboldt President Tom Jackson is doing a great job.”

Really? I hope the NCJ netted a few dollars from this ad at least. I totally respect our right to speech. But … . Who is this person that was silent when students voiced their opinions?

Who is this person that has no voice in our community?

I’m a bit flummoxed to see the signatories of this letter from outside districts. What do you hope to accomplish? I’m watching another school get demolished in Gaza, yet you all wish to shower praise on an absentee university president. Who are you? Why can’t we all gather for peace rather than pour more gas on the dry grass out our back doors.

Sam A. Flanagan, Bayside

Editor:

It’s hard to believe that 153 individuals, let alone Cal Poly Humboldt alumni, are capable of such egregious factual and mathematical errors claiming, “… less than 100 students disrupted the education of more than 5,000 students!” (The “Cal Poly Humboldt President Tom Jackson is doing a great job” ad on page 4 of the June 6 NCJ.)

In fact, it was Mr. Jackson who closed the campus and it was the student protesters at CPH and abroad educating hundreds of millions by finally breaking self-censorship of university investments in U.S. weapon’s manufactures and Israeli industries profiteering from the apartheid and genocide of Palestinian civilians, still killing children since last October, totaling more than 15,000.

It is not too much to demand CPH President and military veteran Tom Jackson to first exhaust diplomatic engagement with

Discovering Juneteenth

A white woman, I had learned the history of horrors: grisly holds of jammed slave ships, cruel auctions of black families torn apart, picnics at lynchings of castrated bodies.

Then at seventy-five I learned, dismayed, that it took two full years for news of Lincoln’s proclamation to reach slaves in Texas, not knowing they were free until June 19, 1865.

Seventy-five before I learned of what has been Blacks’secret holiday, Juneteenth.

Finally, a national day for all to celebrate, to honor the heroines who give us hope from Sojourner Truth to Ruby Bridges, from Phyllis Wheatley to Alice Walker, from Rosa Parks to Michele Obama, from Harriet Tubman to Ketanji Brown Jackson.

— Pat McCutcheon

his “campus community” prior to a costly campus closure and authoritarian call for a costly multi-agency paramilitary response to minor property damage.

O ering to review investments and disassociate CPH from companies and governments actively involved in facilitating the Palestinian genocide would have enabled a voluntary end to students’ protest.

George Clark, Eureka

Write a Letter!

Please make your letter no more than 300 words and include your full name, place of residence and phone number (we won’t print your number). Send it to letters@ northcoastjournal.com. The deadline to have a letter considered for the upcoming edition is 10 a.m. Monday. ●

4 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
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Multi-day Juneteenth Event Celebrates a ‘Liberated Future’ of Unity and Diversity

After spending four years celebrating Juneteenth with events aimed at educating the local community, Black Humboldt is shifting its focus to a broader theme of celebrating the Black experience.

“Our very first Juneteenth, we just had to have our Black partners trust us, that this is what Black communities did,” says Monique Harper-Desir, the nonprofit’s co-founder. “[When] we brought [Juneteenth] here, people were like, ‘We don’t know what this is.”

Since Black Humboldt’s founding in 2018, the organization has been working to build unity through community events like Juneteenth, and next week it will host the fifth annual festival, holding events and gatherings across Humboldt, including Fortuna, Eureka and Arcata, to commemorate the freeing of slaves.

Juneteenth is a national holiday celebrating the day the U.S. fully recognized that freedom, and dates to June 19, 1865, when Union soldiers, led by Maj. Gen.

Gordon Granger, arrived in Galveston, Texas, with news that the war had ended and that the enslaved were free. President Abraham Lincoln had signed the Emancipation Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863, but due to the resistance of slave owners and a resulting delay in spreading the news, many slaves didn’t know they were free until two and a half years later.

“I think it really represents how little this country has cared about African people or people descended from Africa that two years could pass,” Harper-Desir says, adding the hope is this year’s festival will continue progress in the face of adversity, noting, “This year’s multicultural event focuses on the theme of ‘visions of a liberated future.’”

Having lived in Humboldt for nine years, Harper-Desir, like many Black transplants who relocated to the area, says she found refuge in Humboldt County’s natural beauty and rural quietness — a place the opposite of her previous home in New York City. But she was confronted

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with the stark reality of the lack of Black representation within the community.

According to the U.S. Census, Black people make up less than 2 percent of Humboldt’s population in a county that’s still 82 percent white. (Nationally, Black people make up 14 percent of the population.)

The holiday is increasingly important and empowering to Black communities throughout the United States, including those in Humboldt County.

Eureka NAACP President Kintay Johnson says it speaks to the local need for a Juneteenth event that it has survived, despite being started during the pandemic.

“It brings to the forefront the work that Black Humboldt does,” Johnson says. “It’s an opportunity to learn, but also celebrate each other.”

Organizers of this year’s event say its theme was born from the organization’s belief in co-habitation and all-inclusive togetherness. “We’re really trying to create that sense of community and belonging, and that we’re all interconnected,” Harper-Desir says.

The multi-day celebration will take place Wednesday, June 19, through Saturday, June 22, o ering a variety of events accessible to community members of varying ages and income levels.

Black Humboldt also changed the tabling rules this year so organizations that provide a resource that’s available and of benefit to the Black community can table and share information in exchange for a $50 donation.

“It gives people that don’t belong to the Black community a chance to see our community in action, that connection and what it looks like when we come together,” says Harper-Desir.

The four-day celebration is designed to o er something for everyone, kicking o with the Juneteenth Hip-hop Show at RampArt in Arcata on Wednesday, which will start with a free family fun time at 4 p.m. before a paid concert starts at 8:30

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Serving up greens and plantains in the Mother’s Cooking Experience stall at the 2023 Juneteenth celebration

p.m., featuring musical acts including Krayzie Bone, Sloan Bone and EmCee Radio Active. The Cal Poly Humboldt Black Student Union BBQ will offer free food and refreshments from 3 to 7 p.m. the following day at Jefferson Park in Eureka before a 21-and-over Juneteenth Karaoke Takeover begins at Richard’s Goat Tavern and Tea Room at 8 p.m., with costumes and themed outfits “highly encouraged.” An open mic and art night at Eureka’s Friday Night Market at the Old Town gazebo is free and begins at 5 p.m. Also on Friday night, the festival will host a Juneteenth Family Skate Night at Fortuna’s Rohner Park from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.

But the main attraction is the Multicultural Festival on Saturday, June 22, which will feature various educational opportunities, like a yoga class at 10:30 a.m. and a “Back to the Land Movement” workshop at 2:30 p.m., both at Adorni Center in Eureka. But Harper-Desir says organizers tried to “limit the number of speeches and focus more on the celebration.”

“Personally, I remember growing up

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northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 7
at Halvorsen Park. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill

you go to the Juneteenth festival, and you just have fun,” she says, noting this is a departure from previous local Juneteenth events. “The goal with our very first one, we were going to fill the park with Black-owned businesses and Black artists. There just wasn’t many of us even calling ourselves a small business, and now we have over 22 businesses this year.”

Harper-Desir says organizers also have been intentional about who they choose to platform and why.

“We’re having this local band called Object Heavy,” Harper-Desir says of the group scheduled to take the stage of 6 p.m. at Eureka’s Halversen Park on June 22. “The lead singer is this lovely Black man … the community loves Object Heavy. We brought the House of Marc Jacobs up because we’ve got a little like Pride. Every time we platform someone we’re hoping that someone with more resources and access than Black Humboldt will say, ‘Oh dang, I love this artist! I want to book them at my event or whatever it might be.’”

On the Black Humboldt website under the “Juneteenth celebration 2024” tab, vendors, local performers and volunteers, can sign up to be a part of the festival. Johnson, who noted he appreciates the city of Eureka’s efforts to reduce red tape and make the events possible, says he hopes folks will come out and participate.

“Though we know it’s a federal holiday, don’t just take the day off — use that time to attend the event to learn and educate yourself,” he says, noting that he’s lived in Humboldt for more than 20 years and he’s excited to see organizations tailor

services and events for the local Black community. “This is something that is new for Humboldt.”

Harper-Desir says she hopes people leave the events with a fuller picture of the Black experience and what’s possible within it.

“I really hope they understand and grasp how many different types of Blackness there are, but some people think there’s one way to being Black,” she says. “Even Black folks think that, and we take [that] to heart at Black Humboldt. We’re hoping that at this event, people are like, ‘Wow, this is the future I see for myself as a community member myself, as an ally, and all the ways that the Black community is building.’”

For more details about the Juneteenth celebration starting June 19 and a complete list of events, as well as ways to participate in Saturday’s festival virtually, visit blackhumboldt.com/juneteenth-festival-schedule. l

Kelby Mcintosh (he/him) is a California Local News Fellow placed with the Redwoods Listening Post (RLP). The California Local News Fellowship is a state-funded initiative to support and strengthen local news reporting. Kelby’s reporting comes courtesy of a partnership between RLP, North Coast Journal Inc., and Access Humboldt. For more on the California Local News Fellowship, visit fellowships.journalism. berkeley.edu/cafellows.

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LaToya Fields at the 2023 Juneteenth celebration at Halvorsen Park. Photo by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill

Journal Named Finalist for State, National Awards

The North Coast Journal has been named a finalist in eight categories in the 2023 statewide California Journalism Awards, as well one category in the national Association of Alternative Newsmedia awards.

The California Journalism Awards are bestowed annually by the California Newspaper Association, which was founded in 1888 and has more than 500 member papers throughout the state. The awards contest is judged by volunteers from member newspapers’ newsrooms, with the top five submissions receiving honors and the winner announced at an event next month.

The Association of Alternative Newsmedia awards, meanwhile, have been held annually since 1996, with judging done by a “a panel of distinguished industry experts and academics” who evaluate each submission’s “journalistic integrity, originality, impact and contribution.”

The Journal’s submissions receiving recognition this year reflect the hard work of not just the editorial and design teams that produced them, but the entire North Coast Journal Inc., which works daily to put out two weekly newspapers and a variety of special publications. The honors also reflect the support of Journal readers and advertisers, who enable all we do.

With all that said, here’s a look at finalist submissions that will be in the running for top honors next month.

California Journalism Awards

Coverage of Local Government — Digital Editor Kimberly Wear’s “‘A Symbolic Gesture,’” detailing the unprecedented legal and constitutional questions surrounding Arcata’s Measure M, which sought to put the Earth flag atop all others on city property.

A&E Coverage — Arts and Features Editor Jennifer Fumiko Cahill’s “Drag for the Next Generation,” an exploration of the purpose and power of all-ages drag shows as they continued in the face of local and national backlash.

Community Calendar — Calendar Editor Kali Cozyris’ weekly eight-day calendar of local events, which spotlights a few while offering the most comprehensive

local listings in Humboldt (and possibly the state).

Profile Story — News Editor Thadeus Greenson’s story “‘When the Lord Restored Our Fortunes,’” a profile detailing the mission, capture and liberation of Jeffery Woodke, a local missionary who was kidnapped and held hostage in Western Africa for six years, five months and five days.

Writing — Cahill’s editorial “Lessons of a Drag Hag” explaining the way drag has changed her perspective on life and community, teaching her “how to love your community harder than anyone can hate it.”

General Excellence — The Journal was named a finalist in this category based on its performance in other judging categories, as well as its complete issues from Jan. 12 and Jan. 19, 2023.

Environmental Reporting — Greenson’s “Undamming (and Restoring) the Klamath,” explaining the nuts and bolts of the largest dam removal project in United States history, as well as plans to restore the Klamath River basin to its natural state.

Informational Graphic — Production Manager Holly Harvey’s map depicting California prison case reviews under a pilot prosecutor-led resentencing program, and how Humboldt County’s three cases reviewed out of a possible 393 at the time fell far behind the programs’ other eight counties.

Association of Alternative News Media

Investigative Reporting — Greenson’s “The Soeth Files,” which used internal affairs investigative reports, video footage obtained through a public records lawsuit and witness accounts to detail a local deputy’s track record of questionable uses of force and misleading statements. This story has already received a Free Speech and Open Government Award from the First Amendment Coalition, as well as a James Madison Freedom of Information Award from the Northern California chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.

Pride on Parade in Eureka

The seventh annual Redwood Pride Summer Festival gets underway on the morning of June 8 under foggy skies with the Pride Parade marching from the Adorni Center through Old Town Eureka. See the full slideshow at northcoastjournal.com.

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 9
— Journal Staff POSTED 06.06.24
ncj_of_humboldt northcoastjournal newsletters ncjournal northcoastjournal.com/ncjdaily northcoastjournal FROM DAILY ONLINE
Photos by Mark Larson The Redwood National Park booth at the Day Festival was a popular stop as staffers Sierra Coley and Brett Lang help attendees with their hands-on art projects. Pride Parade participants arrive in rainbow capes.

No Le f tovers

Harvest Hub bridges the gap between farms and tables

Story and photos by Jennifer Fumiko Cahill jennifer@northcoastjournal.com

Michael Peterson and his son Nicolas are unloading pillowcase-sized bags of purple Brussels sprouts from their Willow Creek Farm truck. There are boxes of pale green bok choy and sacks of rainbow carrots, too, stacked up outside the entrance to the Harvest Hub run by the North Coast Growers Association (NCGA) on West End Road in Arcata. All of it is already spoken for, with somewhere to go from here. Some is headed for the menu of the South G Kitchen food truck, and some will wind up in kids’ lunches at Coastal Grove and Burnt Ranch schools. The bulk is headed for Food for People’s open pantry for those in need. But the Petersons needn’t haul the food to all those buyers, nor will they have to follow up for payment.

Standing to the side, Harvest Hub Director of Cooperative Distribution Megan Kenney looks on like a child watching birthday presents being stacked, a wave of brown hair cresting over her glasses. Under the umbrella of the NCGA and a steering committee of stakeholders, she’s shepherded the Harvest Hub program through its development into a nonprofit intermediary between producers and buyers, connecting local farms to some 18 schools, a handful of restaurants and a growing number of people facing food insecurity. At a long stainless-steel table in late winter, volunteer Robyn Gorecki weighs potatoes from Wild Rose Farm and places them into open paper bags. She also adds apples, mung beans, Brussels sprouts, leeks and winter squash to be delivered to the

100 or so participants in the Harvest Box program, a kind of CSA box that draws from 40 participating farms. For $25, people who might not otherwise have access to farmers market produce due to disability, transportation or juggling care for young children can get a half-dozen kinds of fruits and vegetables delivered to them for a rate equal or lesser than the farmers market price. And delivery by the program’s van means fewer cars on the road and fewer emissions.

“It’s kind of the gateway,” says Kenney, explaining how farmers who sign up with the Harvest Box program can learn the ropes of all the protocols involved in supplying farmers markets, schools, restaurants and grocery stores, independently or through the Harvest Hub. That might mean laying out safety and irrigation plans, and equipment cleaning protocols, or tracking and tracing produce for potential recalls. Kenney and other sta and volunteers are on hand to walk them through the requirements, opening up possibilities for selling to more and larger buyers than a stall on the Arcata Plaza a ords.

Once the produce is dropped o at the hub, farmers bring invoices to the bookkeeper, who tallies up single bulk payments each week, covering combined sales to all the restaurants, schools and grocers who ordered. It’s a good deal simpler for farmers than invoicing individual restaurants, sometimes for a single $30 case of product at a time, and chasing down small payments all over the county. It’s easier, too, if a buyer doesn’t pay their bill for any reason. “We have an insurance

policy,” says Kenney, which covers the organization for unpaid bills. Unlike smaller, less established farms that might not be able to make payroll if accounts don’t pay up or are delayed, “we have a little cushion and grant money to pay some of our employees,” says Kenney. “So it’s not as huge a hit as if a farmer doesn’t get a $1,000 payment, especially for farms in their first five years, where everything is in $10 increments.”

Once Kenney gets a list of what’s coming in from the farms, the available inventory is posted on the Harvest Hub website. Wholesale buyers can log in from Monday afternoon until Wednesday morning to order beef or mushrooms by the pound, and daikon and rainbow chard by the case, from a number of farms. Then, they can pay for it all in one place. The site has information on farms, as well, like whether they’re certified organic like Willow Creek Farm, low-till and oxen-powered like Shakefork Farm, or practice low-stress cattle handling like Bear River Valley Beef.

Once the last orders are in Wednesday morning, farmers get individualized lists of which produce and how much of it they need to bring to their scheduled weekly

drop-o at Harvest Hub. Every crown of broccoli already has a place to go, whether that’s a cafeteria or restaurant kitchen, or to feed those coping with food insecurity. No leftovers.

At Willow Creek Farm, Michael Peterson says he’s just started picking zucchini, while carrots, beets and corn are still a few weeks away. “I like a field tomato, I’ll take a bite and throw it over my shoulder for luck,” he says. He also likes being on the farm, planting, harvesting and planning crop rotations for his 17 acres. “I would like to cut back on the amount of time I spend away from the farm,” he says. “And the hub does that for me.”

“The convenience of the drop-o is that it’s all consolidated. I can go there and unload a pallet,” Peterson continues, noting it saves him the time and fuel expense of making deliveries around the county. The ordering system also frees him from substantial marketing duties. “It saves me all the e ort of keeping in touch with all the [consumers],” and reaching out to new ones beyond his core wholesalers. “Markets that we didn’t know existed are now asking us for product” via Harvest Hub’s online ordering system, he says. “What it boils down to is you got the schools,

10 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
Harvest Hub Coordinator Hailee Nolte packs up the van to make deliveries.
ON THE COVER

the restaurants, the little mom-and-pop places, and they can get the list of what’s available each week.”

Especially in winter, Peterson says the farm has often produced more than the county could absorb, so he’s sold his vegetables through Bay Area wholesalers, like Veritable Vegetable, before they went overripe. But Veritable Vegetable draws from geographically broader markets, he says, putting Willow Creek Farm up against “megafarms” and high-production outfits in Southern California, which can be tough to beat on price. This year, however, “Because there was more demand locally [through Harvest Hub], I didn’t have to go out of the area.” That, he says, means a break for him in terms of delivery cost and time, as well as his vegetables’ carbon footprint when sold through out of area wholesalers, noting, “There’s product that goes all the way to San Francisco and then it comes back up to Eureka.”

Selling through Harvest Hub has also been fairly easy for Peterson, who finds his farm’s name carries more weight with buyers here in Humboldt. He says the transition to using the hub’s ordering system has been smooth, and the community of buyers and producers has been

welcoming and supportive. “Megan is just a go-getter — she’s just been awesome to work with,” he says.

Ed Cohen, owner of Earthly Edibles, farms his “30-ish acres” in Korbel. If you’re eating organic broccoli from a local market right now, it’s probably from his farm. Cohen is a longtime member of NCGA and a member of the Harvest Hub’s steering committee. “The hub is playing a cool part where they’re reaching a lot of small places … and they’re giving newer, younger farms an opportunity,” he says. Earthly Edibles is among the producers on the Harvest Hub website, having signed on as soon as it was up and running, and Cohen makes weekly drop-offs, same as many other farmers. But as a larger farm with larger grocery store accounts separate from Harvest Hub, Earthly Edibles has different needs.

“I’m a local high-production organic farm,” he says. “Around here, there’s probably three or four of us [of similar size] that produce a lot for local stores and markets … and we are basically shadowing each other, going to the same stores and restaurants.”

He’s long hoped to come together to organize a shared delivery truck — much larger than Harvest Hub’s current delivery van — to accommodate larger farms and cut back on time, cost and carbon output for all of them. It wouldn’t be cheap, he admits, but it would reduce the number of vehicles on the road and farmers’ costs. “It would just allow us to spend more quality time on the farm or with our families,” he says, noting, “I’m relatively close but it’s still a full day delivering” during the busy season.

“We’re still in the infancy of what the hub is going to be,” he says, adding, “Megan is an amazing woman who’s heading this up … so I think it’s going to happen; it’s just not going to happen overnight.”

Daniel Emmenecker, co-owner of South G Kitchen, is one of the customers waiting for deliveries from Harvest Hub. He’d heard about the Harvest Boxes, and he knew Kenney from Redwood Curtain Brewery, where the South G Kitchen truck and its upscale pub fare are fixtures. “The moment I could start ordering, I started ordering immediately,” he says, beginning with winter Brussels sprouts, shitake mush-

FATHER’S

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707-443-3161 | Mon-Sat 10-5:30 • Sun 11-5 | 2nd & A Old Town Eureka DAY SALE! RELAXATION Continued
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12 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

rooms, Little River Farm pea shoot greens, daikon, bok choy and heirloom carrots.

“It’s exciting because every week I jump on [the website] and there’s always new things. … Everybody isn’t supposed to have everything all the time.” His enthusiasm for local produce led him to a spot on the Harvest Hub steering committee and he’s hopeful about its long-term impact.

“Honestly, I think it’s the best thing in Humboldt County, this focusing on our food system … this is what’s going to uplift the farmers in our area,” Emmenecker says. The mutual support between entrepreneurs and farmers, he says, “is part of the reason why I live here.”

Without the hub, Emmenecker explains, outside of the farmers market, he’d have to take time to visit the farmers themselves or, without access to a local wholesale distributor, shoulder the added expense of going through a local retailer. The latter, he says, is unlikely to pencil out with the already slim profit margins of a restaurant business. He had been ordering organic produce from the Bay Area’s Veritable Vegetable, but he prefers to support local growers and says he’s getting better product at similar cost. (Brussels sprouts, it turns out, are seldom improved by the round-trip journey.) “To source local produce, it’s hard, it’s expensive, it’s a huge endeavor.”

Small wonder then that ordering ingredients from a corporation like Sysco appeals to so many restaurant owners whose

budgets are already stretched thin.

“A lot of people complain about the food and quality here, but I think we need to fix the food system and then the food culture here,” Emmenecker says, noting that bridging the gap between local farmers and commercial kitchens, as Harvest Hub does, is a start. “I hope everybody else gets on board.”

According to Kenney, NCGA member Woody Ryno Farms owners Chris and Amber Ryno first posed the possibility of a food hub at a regular meeting. Shortly after, Kenney got a primer on food hubs at a conference. Her experience in the food industry, both in a restaurant and at Tomaso’s, gave her some familiarity with distribution challenges. “I was like, ‘Oh my god, this is exactly it,’” she says. “The pandemic sort of kicked it into high gear because shelves were empty but there were no shortages at the farmers market.”

The missing connections between local producers and local buyers and consumers was laid bare. It also highlighted the need to prepare for emergencies — like the weather, power and other calamities that can hit isolated areas like Humboldt extra hard — that might disrupt supply chains and block the transportation of food to and from the remote North Coast.

The next step was finding a location. “My husband and I would be driving by abandoned buildings and I’d be like, ‘That

Continued on page 15 »

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 13
ON THE COVER Continued from page 11
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could be a food hub,’” Kenney says, laughing a little at her own single-mindedness.

The space that became the hub is 6,000 square feet, the former home of Humboldt Farms cannabis processing, though not all of it is taken up by Harvest Hub. NCGA’s headquarters are upstairs, as are the o ces of Natural Decadence, Humboldt Made and Ashley’s Seafood, as well as the Open Door Community Health and Wellness Garden Program. There’s also a kitchen the NCGA hopes to convert into a space for cooking classes and demonstrations.

Downstairs, there’s a 38 degree cold storage room, a serendipitous relic of the former cannabis business that allows the hub to hold produce to be shipped out. It is also occasionally used to help producers, who might not have access to such a facility, store their crops longer for farmers market sale. Earlier in the year, Crazy River Ranch, for example, had a corner stacked with apples in boxes. “Normally, they’d be done with their season,” says Kenney, but the cold storage allowed the farm to keep apples fresh for sale. As the early summer season picks up, more and more fruits and vegetables will crowd the room. While restaurants and grocers are

perhaps some of the first businesses that come to mind as destinations for wholesale local produce, institutions like schools are where the volume is at. Kenney says she expected plenty of red tape, but was pleasantly surprised by how ready local schools were to connect with Harvest Hub and its associated farmers.

Eureka City Schools’ eight school sites, charter schools and educational facilities serve three meals a day: totaling roughly 1,050 breakfasts, 1,800 lunches and 600 after school supper program meals, according to Food Services Director Kevin Ralston. “Eureka City Schools has always been pretty good about reaching out to local partners,” he says, including Earthly Edibles and Clendenen’s Cider Works. But when COVID threw schools and their meal programs into chaos, new protocols meant switching to sealed, pre-packaged food. He says the schools were slowly reintegrating fresh produce, “Then suddenly with Harvest Hub, we have access to all the local farms.” He says there was little if any resistance to using the program from the school board and the response has been positive.

That includes the response from the kids. Golden beets roasted as a side dish

at the high school were a surprise hit. ECS is looking at new USDA-approved recipes to make the most of local kale, quinoa and beets this winter, too. “We want to use them [Harvest Hub] as much as we can all year round,” Ralston says.

“It’s worth it to spend a little more,” says Ralston. “The quality is fantastic, the relationships that we’re building are great … everything coming o the truck is organic and that’s an improvement.” An added bonus to featuring fresh fruit and vegetables has been “folding in that educational component,” he says, showing kids “this is what an organic vegetable tastes like.” For the coming school year, Eureka City Schools applied for a farm-to-school grant that Ralston hopes will pay for events like farmer visits, tastings and field trips to partner farm sites. “The full food cycle is what we’re shooting for,” he says, noting Harvest Hub is listed as primary purchasing partner on the application along with an organization called Grow Together

Continued on next page »

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 15
ON THE COVER Continued from page 13
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Robyn Gorecki weighs potatoes for Harvest Boxes.

that manages the school garden at Alice Birney Elementary School.

Stella Swenson, kitchen manager at Coastal Grove Charter School, is similarly enthusiastic about sourcing produce through Harvest Hub. But in contrast to large purchasers like Eureka City Schools, Coastal Grove serves some 150 kids lunch per day. “It’s been amazing. They’ve made it very easy for us. The website is very easy to use. We just get on there, pick what we want to use for the following week and

order it. The school’s menu is largely from scratch, so the fresh produce is vital, and the feedback on the resulting meals has been overwhelmingly positive.

Before Harvest Hub, Swenson says Coastal Grove’s kitchen ordered through Veritable Vegetable. “It’s definitely been nice to hone into the local produce here,” she says. Students appreciate the fresh produce, too, she adds. “I can tell the di erence when I eat strawberries that were picked yesterday as opposed to ones picked a week ago, and I think they can, too.”

As Food for People’s local food resources coordinator, Allison Kenney (no relation to Meghan) runs the nonprofit’s gleaning program, picking up and distributing excess produce from farmers’ fields, unsolds from markets, and fruits and vegetables from individuals whose gardens and trees runneth over. As closely as she works with NCGA and its members, it’s not surprising she’s also part of the Harvest Hub’s steering committee.

Previously, on top of its gleaning program, Food for People ordered produce for its food pantry from individual farmers. The organization was an early adopter of Harvest Hub’s service and Alli-

son Kenney says, despite some clunkiness in the beginning, it’s been a boon for her organization. “It really streamlines things instead of having six di erent farmers coming in.” Food for People, she says, also received $200,000 in federal assistance funds for produce purchased through an aggregation center, and Harvest Hub fits that bill. There’s fluctuation week to week depending on what’s available but since December, Food for People has received more than 34,400 pounds of local produce through the hub. The only downside she can think of is personal, saying with a sigh and a smile in her voice, “I miss chitchatting with the farmers, calling and texting with them … just getting to catch up with the farmers.”

“There’s a lot of potential there for future partnerships, not just with our organization, but with others,” says Allison Kenney. “I think it’s a really great thing that was lacking here in Humboldt.” ●

Jennifer Fumiko Cahill (she/her) is the arts and features editor at the Journal Reach her at (707) 442-1400, extension 320, or jennifer@northcoastjournal.com. Follow her on Instagram @JFumikoCahill.

16 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
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Banning Plastics and Bioplastics at Oyster Fest

onthetable@northcoastjournal.com

If each of the more than 12,000 people in attendance at Arcata Bay Oyster Festival restrained themselves to only two orders of grilled Pacifics served with disposable forks, 24,000 sets of plastic prongs would likely make their way to landfill. Events of such a scale not only create a lively community, but also literal tons of waste. Even bioplastics made of natural materials designed to decompose don’t always break down quickly enough, leading to challenges when composters turn their waste into soil.

To help reduce the amount of garbage at this year’s festival, the Arcata Chamber of Commerce and Bright and Green — a local business encouraging sustainable dishware for events — have joined forces. Organizers are banning all types of single-use plastics, including bioplastics, ensuring all cups and dishes at the 2024 Oyster Festival are locally compostable.

“Events can be one of the biggest waste drivers for our community and we want to have a good reputation with keeping everything clean,” Gloria Baker, operations and events manager for Arcata Chamber of Commerce, said. “I think [banning all plastics] is important because it kind of puts us in a position, being one of the largest events in Arcata, to influence others to do the same thing.”

Leading up to the decision to ban bioplastics, Bright and Green Director Carly Tambling researched options for composting bioplastics locally. She discovered that

because they didn’t decompose as quickly or thoroughly as advertised, some of them had to be sorted out and sent to the landfill, and only certain types of bioplastics could be composted.

That said, Lloyd and Stacey Barker from Local Worm Guy, the team responsible for handling Oyster Festival waste, believe using bioplastics is still much better than relying on regular plastics. “As much as [bioplastics] cause us some di culties in a production sense, I think in a global sense they are a much better alternative to regular plastics. I don’t want them to be too vilified because, realistically, if we are going to use plastic, bioplastic is a much better alternative,” Lloyd Barker said. He says while it’s not a perfect solution, it’s not without some promise.

He estimates that roughly 90 percent of bioplastic bags decompose, whereas only around 10 percent of bioplastic cutlery breaks down in a reasonable amount of time for his composting system. Even though bioplastics are designed to decompose alongside food and plant waste, there is significant variation in their e ectiveness.

When available, Lloyd Barker encourages plant and bamboo products and reusable alternatives.

Bright and Green’s approach to sustainability at the festival is multi-faceted. The company will sell and promote reusable dishware at the event, but also work with vendors to build a comprehensive guide

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 17
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to compostable products. “For the waste reduction management, we work really, really closely with the vendors in order to manage waste and reduce it,” Tambling said, adding that work begins “months and months” before the event.

Instead of sipping from single-use plastics, festival-goers must bring their own cups, or buy stainless steel or hard plastic cups on the plaza from Bright and Green. “We weren’t prepared to go with reusable everything this year, but we did make a huge step in banning bioplastics so all cups are reusable,” Tambling said. And those 24,000 forks won’t pile up in a landfill.

Combined, these e orts substantially impact waste reduction. Local Worm Guy processed a massive amount of compost at last year’s Oyster Festival and may see even more this year. “Last year, Local Worm Guy took home 10 cubic yards of compost,” Tambling said. “That’s all waste diverted [from landfills]. That’s adding extra value to the community.”

Oyster Fest isn’t the only local event reducing waste this year. Bright and Green provides a reusable exchange program for

dishware at many smaller events. “Right now, we’re doing a pilot program with the farmers market,” Tambling said. “[At] the farmers market, a lot of the vendors have reusable cups and cutlery and right next to the trash cans we have a place where you can drop them o .” Customers can take the green-colored dishware from vendors and replace it when done with their meal. If everything goes as planned, a similar system could be implemented at larger festivals in the future. The community can help reduce waste at the Oyster Fest, too. If you volunteer as a Trash Talker, you can help guide festival-goers in sorting their waste into the correct bins, reducing the workload of dividing compost, recycling and trash later. Sign up to be a Trash Talker at m.signupgenius. com/#!/showSignUp/10C0B49AFAF28A2FACE9-48293090-zero. Volunteers will receive two drink tickets and a meal ticket. ●

Sasha love (she/her) is a feature editor for the Arcata High Pepperbox and a freelance writer for local publications.

18 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
ON THE TABLE Continued from previous page
Stella Lewis and Caroline Garza getting tips from Carla Tambling, an Oyster Fest board member, on what goes where at the 2023 festival.
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A New Season and New Conference for the Crabs

Like a lot of people, I drive by the empty Arcata Ball Park in the winter months, longing for sunny days at the yard. The Crab Grass Band plays in my head with the cheers of “Tip Tip Hooray,” the chanting of “Nanananana BATBOY!” and even our famous hecklers. The promise of summer and Humboldt Crabs baseball brings a smile. Last Friday night, on the final day of May, the North Coast’s greatest show on dirt returned for a landmark 80th season and our Crabbies did not disappoint.

Returning for his third year with the team, McKinleyville’s own Cameron Saso started on the mound. Pitching on opening night, in front of family and friends at the ballpark he grew up going to, Saso threw five shutout innings and picked up the first win of the summer. He did it in front of a crowd full of kids like he used to be. How can you not be romantic about baseball?

And with that, the 80th season was underway. The Crabs, who usually play independently and host a variety of teams from California, Oregon and Washington are now a part of the Pacific Empire Conference and will participate in conference play with hopes of winning a championship this summer. They will be taking on the Lincoln Potters, the Medford Rogues, the West Coast Kings, the Healdsburg Prune Packers, and the Solano Mudcats. When asked about the new schedule, pitching coach Eric Giacone, who returns for his 11th season, acknowledged it would present some new challenges. “I think it will be more competitive, for sure. We used to have a series or two in a row with competitive teams, then a few where we’d cruise — that won’t be the case this summer. I see Healdsburg and Medford are off to great starts. Once we get into conference play, it should be a grind every night.”

The Crabs will still host a robust home schedule, which was a concern for locals who are used to the slates of the past, but there will be a couple roadtrips. This just means fewer off days and the inevitable dog days of summer for a team full of players who have already played a full college season. After getting through what is always a whirlwind first week, head coach Robin Guiver is ready to settle in and get in the swing of the summer. “With the college playoffs wrapping up, we still have four or five guys

that will be joining the team in the coming weeks to get us to full strength. We have a couple of arms that will really add depth and round out our pitching staff, which will be great because we are not going to have a lot days off. We are still piecing things together, trying to define roles and really just settle in. Guys are learning about the town, where to get groceries, food, new weather, learn each other, so that’s all just part of the first week.”

Giacone echoed his head coach’s sentiments, saying, “It’s just about the guys settling in and coming together.”

The first few games were a mixed bag for the Crabs and, after dropping Friday’s series opener to the Fresno A’s 6-2, they found themselves sitting at 3-2 to start the season with two pivotal and tone setting games remaining in the weekend. On Saturday night, the bats would come alive. The Crabs put up 11 runs on 13 hits behind early season offensive stand-out Javier Felix. Felix, who already has a bit of a blue collar cult following for sporting one farming glove instead of batting gloves, further endeared himself to the Crabs’ faithful with a three-hit, five-RBI performance that featured his second homerun of the summer. Troy Harding added three hits and four RBIs to pace the good guys and provide more than enough insurance for starting pitcher Caleb Ruiz, who would dominate for six frames, allowing one run and striking out eight. Hayden Bode took the ball from there striking out five, while allowing just one run over three innings of relief.

The bullpen has been a big bright spot early on and will likely be leaned upon this summer with the new schedule and format. With players coming to the Crabs after a full season already, fatigue and player safety are factors, especially with pitchers. “Priorities 1, 2 and 3 with me are getting players home and back to their schools healthy and ready to go for next season,” said Giacone. “But I think we have a lot of great depth, and we still have a few showing up. Our bullpen has been great and, besides an inning or two, so have the starters.”

Sunday’s action would not disappoint. Near perfect weather and a large crowd sprinkled with fairy dust from the Fairy Festival on the plaza would pave the way for another offensive explosion from the Crabs. Javier Felix continued his hot start with two more hits and an RBI. Billy Ham had two

hits, including a double and two RBIs, and sweet-swinging lefty Trent Keys got on the board with his first homerun of the summer. Starting pitcher Nolan Long would do what all good starters do; after giving up a run and dodging some bullets in the first two frames, Long settled in and got better as he went, carving up the Fresno lineup while striking out six batters over five solid innings. The southpaw picked up his second win of the summer following last week’s win against Seals Baseball, in which he gave up one run over five innings while striking out seven. He’s dealing, folks.

The Crabbies are back in action this week against Berkovich Honor before starting a weekend set with the Novato Knicks. All game times are at 6:30 p.m., with the exception of the Sunday, June 16 (Tie-Dye Day), day game, which will start at 12:30 p.m. The Crabs hit the road after that, so make sure to get out to the yard this week.

Heckles of the Week

To a curly-haired opposing pitcher: “You look like a poodle,” and, “You look like you wear cargo shorts.”

To No. 5 on the Fresno A’s n second base: “Five, your fly is down!” and, “Made you look Five!”

Welcome back and go Crabs, go. l

Follow this summer’s coverage of Crabs Baseball home games at northcoastjournal.com.

Brandon Dixon (he/him) is is a former All American who played college baseball for Orange Coast College, Point Loma Nazarene and the Peninsula Oilers. Husband and father to two little girls, he’s also the host of The Brando Show podcast.

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 19
Nolan Long delivers during another winning start on Sunday. Photo by Matt Filar
GET OUT

River Man

Aldous Huxley had a regular column in Esquire Magazine in the mid-1950s where he once observed, “The most distressing thing that can happen to a prophet is to be proved wrong; the next most distressing thing is to be proved right.” He was revisiting the legacy of his novel A Brave New World during the oozing aftermath of the McCarthy era and the emerging age of the Beats. A pivotal influence on our most secular century, the 20th, Huxley wasn’t a prophet in the biblical sense but he was tuned-in, and it’s worth noting that he succumbed to his cancer — fortified with injections of LSD — on the same day that John F. Kennedy and C.S. Lewis also died. I don’t know what any of that means cosmically, but I’m using it as a tool to say my own thinking has changed. I now accept a confluence between the spiritual and the material that exists like a river that disappears underground. I don’t need to figure out its unknown destination, hearing the flow is good enough for now. Float on.

Thursday

The Basement is once again the place to be when it comes to pre-gaming for the coming end of the work week. Tonight, the doors open at 7 p.m., and sometime after that you will find a performance by one of our county’s more unique and industrious gigging acts, the Blueberry Hill Boogie Band. If you know, you know, and if you don’t, this one’s free to get in.

Friday

The Outer Space is throwing a show tonight at 8 p.m., headlined by a new favorite band of mine, the funk and dance, honkin’ squawkers Hermit Crab. Also on the bill are spoken word artist Dylan Collins, dark folk act Tsunga and a performance art/electro drone group called KMRO, which stands for “Karma Means Revolutionary Overthrow.” And while that declaration seems to me to be wallowing in the contradictions of spiritual materialism more than moving in action based on dialectical historical measures, I’m willing to keep an open mind if you are. Entrance

to this all-ages, sober space show is $5-$20 but nobody will be told to scatter because of a lack of cash-ola.

Saturday

Every so often I get to hop up on the table and cause a little ruckus by kicking off the cutlery and breaking some dinnerware in the service of crowing about a can’t-miss, great show put on by artists from the misty lost days in my old home of New Orleans. Tonight is just such a hoedown, because one of the most strange and fantastic duos from the 504 are playing in the 707. I am, of course, talking about the Quintron and Miss Pussycat show at the Miniplex at 9 p.m. ($20, $15). Come hear Q’s homemade drum machines and bespoke electronic Wurlitzer warlock whirlpools of glorious sound spun around the supernatural puppetry theatrics of Miss P. Delightful nighttime antics spin and crackle in my cherished memories from the Spellcaster Lodge, pre-Katrina times of my wild youth. These two are living treasures of the world, and their place in the epicenter home of the greats of my favorite city in the universe is as certain as the restless weight of the Mississippi River. Stop reading this babble and go see them!

Sunday

in on the fun. Just do me a favor: Make the birthday boy feel like a king for the day and give the musicians as good as they give back. Fun, fun, fun.

Monday

The Shanty knows about putting on great shows largely because the good people there don’t have to, it is secondary to the function of the place as one of the best bars in California (I’m dead serious). So when there is a show happening, it’s done for all the right reasons, without the desperation of a venue undercutting the fun. Bartender Nick Nava is celebrating his 55th with a barbecue and metal show, and he wants me to tell you all about it, which I am thrilled to do. San Francisco thrashers Molten, featuring long time bay-bay scene regular, guitarist Chris Corona, will be shredding the stage with local pit warriors Death Doula. It’s a bar-time matinee with a 4 p.m. start and no cover needed to get

With so much else going on this week, I think I’ll pause the show to celebrate the music of another star who departed last year. Jean Knight was a soul and R&B singer whose big voice and bold phrasing belied her humble Catholic upbringing in New Orleans. If you have heard her sing — and you have very probably heard her sing — it was on the 1971 Stax Records smash hit “Mr. Big Stuff,” sourced from the album of the same name. That record is a great starting point for the uninitiated, and its strutting declaration of empowered lady funk is a fine place to pull up a quick sidebar about the keys-player and producer. Wardell Quezergue was one of the great geniuses of the Crescent City, a fellow whose ability to translate the vastness of NOLA’s musical forms into his own effortless language is comparable to what Shakespeare did with Elizabethan English. Known by many as “the Creole Beethoven,” Quezergue produced and played funk, jazz, R&B with the casual ease of a master. He wrote orchestral music, too, true to his own birthright. If you can find a copy of his A Creole Mass, you will hear localized religious devotion in the same vibe as Athena was revered in ancient Athens.

Tuesday

At 8 p.m. this evening at the Miniplex, a very interesting and talented experimental instrumental trio will be playing on the

screen-backed stage. Guitarist Bill Orcutt, saxophonist and composer Zoh Amba and drummer Chris Corsano are the members. They each contain enough brilliance to be memorialized forever on one of those music recordings we throw into the goodie bag on a deep space probe destined for a Hail Mary trajectory into the eternal vacuum in search of intelligent life beyond the beyond. Together, they made an album from a session last summer called The Flower School that is quite a thing. The $25 at the door ($20 in advance) is really nothing to pay to be put in a place between madness, trance and ecstasy.

Wednesday, Juneteenth

RampArt Skatepark is holding a hip hop show tonight at 8 p.m. hosted by local artist Attribute and the lineup looks like it’s well worth a midweek getdown. Top of the roster is Krayzie Bone, a key player and founding member of seminal ’90s hip hop mavericks Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, as well as affiliated rapper “Big” Sloan Bone and Bone Thugs official DJ Pozition. Also on the bill is special guest Emcee Radio Active, as well as Kemistree, DJ L Boogie, All’Love Aundrea and Mona Loki Door tickets are $25, and for $10 more you can get a VIP upgrade that includes drink tickets and choice seating. Food will be sold — I have heard barbecue — and there will also be a full bar. If you have it in you for a Juneteenth hip hop celebration of Hump Day, this is the spot. l

Collin Yeo (he/him) is basically saying he’ll be more annoying about topics other than politics. He lives in Arcata.

20 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
Molten plays the Shanty at 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 16. Photo by Brian Pritchard, courtesy of the artists
SETLIST

Nightlife

Got a gig or an event? Submit it to calendar@northcoastjournal.com by 5pm Thursday the week before publication. Tickets for shows highlighted in yellow are available at NorthCoastTickets.com. More details at northcoastjournal.com. Shows, times and pricing subject to change by the venue.

ARCATA THEATRE LOUNGE 1036 G St. (707) 616-3030

THE BASEMENT 780 Seventh St., Arcata (707) 845-2309

BEAR RIVER CASINO RESORT

11 Bear Paws Way, Loleta (707) 733-9644

BLUE LAKE CASINO WAVE LOUNGE 777 Casino Way, Blue Lake (707) 668-9770 Wave: Latin Night w/DJ Pachanguero 9 p.m. Free Wave: Dr. Squid (classic rock, country, hits) 9 p.m. Free

CENTRAL STATION SPORTS BAR

1631 Central Ave., McKinleyville (707) 839-2013

FIREWATER LOUNGE 27 Scenic Drive, Trinidad (707) 677-3611

CRISP LOUNGE

2029 Broadway, Eureka, (707) 798-1934

EUREKA VETERANS MEMORIAL HALL 1018 H St. (707) 443-5341

FIELDBROOK WINERY

4241 Fieldbrook Rd., (707) 839-4140

HISTORIC EAGLE HOUSE

139 Second St., Eureka (707) 444-3344

HUMBOLDT BREWS

in Joke! Comedy Open Mic 8-10 p.m.

856 10th St., Arcata (707) 826-2739 Reel Genius Trivia 6:30-8:30 p.m.

THE JAM

915 H St., Arcata (707) 822-4766 Hip Hop Thursdays (DJ) 9 p.m. Free

THE LOGGER BAR

510 Railroad Ave., Blue Lake

MADAKET PLAZA

Foot of C St., Eureka Michelle Lambert (pop/folk) 6-8 p.m. Free

THE MADRONE TAPHOUSE

421 Third St., Eureka (707) 273-5129

MARIO'S MARINA BAR 533 Machi Rd., Shelter Cove (707) 986-7600

MINIPLEX

401 I St., Arcata (707) 630-5000

MOUNTAIN MIKE'S PIZZAFORTUNA 1095 S Fortuna Blvd., Suite 48, (707) 777-7550

MOUNTAIN MIKE'S PIZZA - MCKINLEYVILLE 1500 Anna Sparks Way, (707) 203-8500

Rhythm Revue (soul, R&B, funk) 6-8:30 p.m. Free

Earl Thomas w/The Anthony Cullins Band, Brett McFarland & The Freedom Riders (blues) 8 p.m. $25

The Lost Dogs Band (blues) 9-11 p.m. Free

The Lost Dogs (blues, rockabilly) 7-10 p.m. Free

Karaoke 8 p.m. Free

Pool Tournament 6 p.m. $10, [W] Kara-Smokey! 7 p.m. Free

[T] Humboldt Comedy Open Mic 7-10 p.m. Free

[T] Baywater Blues Fusion Dance 7:15-9:15 p.m. $5-$15 sliding, free for kids 12 and under

PARTS NAPA Know How

655 Redwood Drive Garberville 923-2732 See Richard, Lori, Garrett, Adrian, Joe and Shannon for All Your Automotive Needs! Check us out at napaonline.com

[M] Karaoke 9 p.m. Free, [W] Weds Night Ting (DJs)

[W] Reel Genius Trivia. 6-8 p.m. Free

Anna Tivel (quartet), Sam Weber (folk, Ameriana) 7:30 p.m. $15

Far Out Party w/DJs Pandemonium Jones and Tactile 4 p.m.-midnight Free

Quintron & Miss Pussycat (NoLa) 9 p.m. $20

The People's Joker (film) 6:30 p.m. $10, G.O.A.T Karaoke 8:30 p.m. two-drink minimum

[T] Bill Orcutt/Zoh Amba/Chris Corsano 8 p.m. $25, [W] Queer Futures (film) 6:30 p.m. $8

[T] Reel Genius Trivia. 6-8 p.m. Free

[W] Reel Genius Trivia. 6-8

THURS 6/13 FRI 6/14 SAT 6/15 SUN 6/16 M-T-W 6/17-6/19
VENUE
Fuego
Finding
5-8 p.m.
5 p.m. All ages
(DJs) 9pm $15
Nemo (2003) (film)
$8, $12 with Poster, Pre-show
Blueberry Hill Boogie Band 8-11 p.m. Free Flashback Friday! 1970s Edition (DJs) 8:30 p.m. $5
dancing lessons) 7-9 p.m. Free Thirsty Bear: Stand-Up Comedy Night 8 p.m. Free, DJ D'Vinity (club hits) 9 p.m. Free Thirsty Bear: Mojo Rockers (classic hits) 9 p.m. Free Thirsty Bear: Karaoke Sundays 9 p.m. Free
Thirsty Bear: Thirsty Bear: Bootz N Beers (country music/line
Karaoke 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Free [M] Pool Tournament 6 p.m., [W] Karaoke 8 p.m.-midnight Free
CHER-AE HEIGHTS CASINO
Firewater
[T]
Lounge: TBA
Up
Free Smoke N' Joke Comedy Night 7 p.m. $5 Open Mic Night (15-minute time slot) 6:30 p.m. Free [M] Pete's Projecting Again!
7-9 p.m. $5, [T]
(comedy/variety)
Blue
p.m. Free OUTER SPACE ARCATA 837 H St.
Hermit Crab, Dylan Collins, Tsunga, KMRO 8 p.m. $5-$20 PALE MOON BREWING COMPANY 600
St.,
7, Arcata (707) 351-1518 Lunar Laughs #6 (stand-up comedy) 8 p.m. $5 PAPA WHEELIES PUB 1584 Reasor Rd., McKinleyville, (707) 630-5084 Live Music TBA 6-9 p.m. CALENDAR
(707) 633-9160
F
Suite
NAPA
Stop in and shop at our Humboldt Made Marketplace! #Support Local Businesses #ChooseHumboldt 1300 CENTRAL AVE MCKINLEYVILLE SIXRIVERSBREWERY.COM AVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE LOCAL MARKET! Continued on next page » northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 21

RAMPART SKATEPARK

700 South G St., Arcata (707) 826-0675

REDWOOD CURTAIN BREWERY & TASTING ROOM 550 South G St., #4, (707) 826-7222

REDWOOD CURTAIN BREWERY

MYRTLE AVE. TASTING ROOM, 1595 Myrtle Ave., Eureka, (707) 269-7143

ROCKSLIDE BAR & GRILL 5371 State Route 299, Hawkins Bar Jimi Je Jam Nite (Hendrix, Prince, funk, blues) 7:30 p.m. Free THE SANCTUARY 1301 J St., Arcata (707) 822-0898

HENRY COMEDY CLUB

Fifth St., Eureka (707) 845-8864

VENUE THURS 6/13 FRI 6/14 SAT 6/15 SUN 6/16 M-T-W 6/17-6/19
[W] Juneteenth Hip Hop Show w/ Kemistree, Mona Loki, All'Love Aundrea, EmCee Radio Active, Sloan Bone, Krayzie Bone 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. $25
Summer Music Series Live Music w/FROGBITE
p.m. Free
3-6
Liv Music TBA 6-9 p.m. Free [M] Trivia Night 6-9 p.m. Free
Summer
Harmony, Your Local Flora, Sneaky Mandy, Sequoia Rose noon to 6 p.m. $5-$20
415
Drink & Draw 6 p.m. Free, The Xperts 9 p.m. $10 X (stand-up) 7 p.m. Free, Parnell O'Mooney's 30 Minutes (stand-up) 9-11 p.m. $10, The Latest Show 11 p.m. $5 CU Next ... Eugene (LGBTQ showcase) 9-11 p.m. $10, Braturday Night Live 11 p.m. $5 Comedy Church 1-3 p.m. Free; Stand-up Comedy Workshop 7-8 p.m. Free; Sunday Open Mic 7 p.m. Free [M] Evan Vest's Let's Watch .... Illegal Smile (2006) (film) 9-11 p.m. Free, [T] Metal Tuesday 7-11:30 p.m. $5, [W] Wednesday Open Mikey 9 p.m. Free
SHANTY 213 Third St., Eureka (707) 444-2053 Molten, Death Doula (metal) 4 p.m. Free SIX RIVERS BREWERY, TASTING ROOM & RESTAURANT 1300 Central Ave., McKinleyville (707) 839-7580 Good Time Charlies (psychy garage folk) 6-8 p.m. Free Anna Hamilton Trio (original blues) 6-9 p.m. Free SPEAKEASY 411 Opera Alley, Eureka (707) 444-2244 Friday Night Jazz 8-10 p.m. Free Jenni and David and the Sweet Soul Band (soul, funk) 7-10 p.m. Free [T] Tuesday Night Jazz 7-10 p.m. Free Continued from previous page CALENDAR There’s no job too small. CELL : 707-621-3511 MESSAGES : 707-274-7072 FIND US ON FACEBOOK • CRACK REPAIR • PATCHWORK • REMODELS • NEW CONSTRUCTION Serving Lake and Mendocino County Crack The Vault Escape Room - Ferndale California SCHEDULE ONLINE ow OPEN! Now OPEN! www humboldtshometownstore com LOCATED WITHIN 394 Main Street, Ferndale WALK-INS ARE WELCOME DURING NORMAL STORE HOURS. RESERVATIONS REQUESTED PRIVATE PARTY RESERVATIONS AVALIABLE • Celebrating Local Schools • Local Creations & Gifts • Visitor Information In The Ritz Building (707) 798-1806 218 F St. EUREKA Submit your gigs online: northcoastjournal.com HEY, BANDS. 22 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
at the Sanctuary w/ Ponies of
SAVAGE
THE

Calendar June 13 – 20, 2024

The annual Taste of Trinidad returns to Saunders Park on Thursday, June 20 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m . ($20). Sample delicious food and drinks from restaurants across Trinidad and greater Humboldt County in the beautiful and quaint seaside setting of Trinidad. Adding to the lively atmosphere, there will be music by Ponies of Harmony and painting demonstrations by local artist Antoinette Magyar. Get there early to receive your complimentary tasting glass while supplies last.

13

ART

Indulge in Humboldt’s favorite coastal culinary delight at the 34th annual Arcata Bay Oyster Festival on Saturday, June 15, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Arcata Plaza (free entry). It’s a day filled with live music, beer, wine and cider, shucking contests, kids’ activities and, of course, a multitude of scrumptious oyster concoctions created by local chefs all competing for the Best Oyster title. This family-friendly event celebrates community and the bountiful offerings of the sea. For more information, visit arcatabayoysterfestival.com.

Thursday

Figure Drawing at Synapsis. 7-9 p.m. Synapsis Collective, 1675 Union St., Eureka. With a live model. Bring your own art supplies. Call to contact Clint. $5. synapsisperformance.com. (707) 362-9392.

May/June Art Show. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 569 S. G St. Copies of winning artwork from the 21st annual Student Bird Art Contest are on display.

Wa Hinthil Come North - Group Pomo Exhibition. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Goudi’ni Native American Arts Gallery, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata. Extended run of an exhibition focusing on Pomo worldview through artwork, regalia, photography and basketry. Curated by Meyo Marrufo (Eastern Pomo) features 11 artists. Through June and by appointment. Free. rbg@humboldt.edu. artfilm.humboldt. edu/galleries/goudini-native-american-arts-gallery/wahinthil-come-north. (707) 826-3629.

LECTURE

“The Ecology of the Butterflies of the Marble Mountain Wilderness”. 6:30-8 p.m. Natural History Museum of Cal Poly Humboldt, 1242 G St., Arcata. The museum presents a talk by biogeographer Robert Frenau. Free. natus@humboldt.edu. (707) 826-4480.

MUSIC

Eureka Summer Concert Series. 6-8 p.m. Madaket Plaza, Foot of C Street, Eureka. Open-air concert by the bay every Thursday during summer except July 4. June 13: Michelle Lambert (pop/folk), free. June 20: The Undercovers (covers).

EVENTS

Oyster Fest VIP Experience at Humboldt Bay Social Club. 5-8 p.m. Humboldt Bay Social Club, 900 New Navy Base Road, Samoa. Enjoy craft drinks, an oyster barbecue, live music and coastal scenery, and visits by local oyster farmers. $150. gloria@arcatachamber.com. arcatabayoysterfestival.com/. (707) 897-6004.

Humboldt County celebrates Juneteenth with a multi-day, countywide cultural event from June 19-23. The festivities begin with a Juneteenth Kick Off Family Party at RampArt Skatepark on Wednesday, June 19, from 4 to 7 p.m. Later, catch artists like Krayzie Bone from Bone Thugs N Harmony at the Juneteenth Hip Hop Show at RampArt from 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m

There’s a BSU Barbecue on Thursday, June 20, from 3 to 7 p.m. at Jefferson Community Center and an all-ages free skate at the Fortuna Skating Rink on Friday, June 21 , at 5 p.m.

The celebration continues on Saturday, June 22 with a festival at Halvorsen Park from noon to 10 p.m. , offering food, local vendors, performances and kids’ activities. The event commemorates the abolition of slavery in America and promotes freedom, diversity and community. Visit blackhumboldt.com/juneteenth-celebration for the full schedule.

FOOD

Henderson Center Certified Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Henderson Center, Henderson near F Street, Eureka. Fruits and vegetables, baked goods, jams, nursery plants, music and hot food vendors. No pets allowed, but trained, ADA certified, service animals are welcome. CalFresh EBT customers receive a market match at every farmers market. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation.org. northcoastgrowersassociation.org/hendersoncenter. html. (707) 441-9999.

Willow Creek Certified Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Veteran’s Park, Gower Lane, Willow Creek. Fruits and vegetables, fish, music and hot food vendors. No pets allowed, but trained, ADA certified, service animals are welcome. CalFresh EBT customers receive a market match at every farmers market. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation.org. northcoastgrowersassociation.org/ willowcreek.html. (707) 441-9999.

GARDEN

Community Compost Drop-Off. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Freshwater Farms Reserve, 5851 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. Redwood Community Action Agency offers food waste drop-off (up to 5 gallons/week). Bring kitchen or yard food scraps and help build compost for the community u-pick garden at the reserve. Email or call to sign up. Sliding scale donation to $10. mdrummond@rcaa.org. (707) 269-2071.

OUTDOORS

Nature Quest. 3-6 p.m. Headwaters Forest Reserve, End of Elk River Road, 6 miles off U.S. Highway 101, Eureka. Explore trails and share mindfulness practices, group conversation and other eco-therapeutic activities. Transportation available for Eureka residents. Call to pre-register. Free. chaskell@eurekaca.gov. eurekaheroes.org. (707) 382-5338.

14 Friday

ART Arts! Arcata. Second Friday of every month, 4-8 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Businesses all across

Weekly Preschool Storytime. Eureka Library, 1313 Third St. Talk, sing, read, write and play together in the children’s room. For children 2 to 6 years old with their caregivers and other family members. Free. manthony@co.humboldt.ca.us. humboldtgov.org/Calendar.aspx?EID=8274. (707) 269-1910.

FOOD

Garberville Farmers Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Garberville Town Square, Church Street. Meat, eggs, produce, oysters, plants, mushrooms, jam, hot food and art. No pets are allowed, but trained, ADA certified, service animals are welcome. CalFresh EBT customers are able to receive a market match at every farmers market. (707) 441-9999.

MEETINGS

Language Exchange Meetup. Second Friday of every month, 5-7 p.m. Familia Coffee, 1350 Ninth St., Arcata. Speak your native language. Teach someone a language. Learn a language. familiacoffees.com/. (925) 214-8099.

15 Saturday

DANCE

Arcata stay open late with music, art on display, live art and more. gloria@arcatachamber.com. arcatachamber. com. (707) 897-6004.

Life Drawing Sessions. 10 a.m.-noon. Redwood Art Association Gallery, 603 F St., Eureka. Hosted by Joyce Jonté. $10, cash or Venmo.

Wa Hinthil Come North - Group Pomo Exhibition. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Goudi’ni Native American Arts Gallery, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata. See June 13 listing.

BOOKS

Weekly Preschool Story Time. Eureka Library, 1313 Third St. Talk, sing, read, write and play together in the children’s room. For children 2 to 6 years old with their caregivers. Other family members are welcome to join in the fun. Free. manthony@co.humboldt.ca.us. humlib. org. (707) 269-1910.

MUSIC

Live Music Fridays. 6-8:30 p.m. Fieldbrook Winery, 4241 Fieldbrook Road. Live music, wood-fired pizza, beer and wine. Free entry. fieldbrookwinery.com.

THEATER

The Prom. 7:30 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theatre, 447 Main St. Four eccentric Broadway stars in need of a new stage hear that trouble is brewing around a small-town prom. $18, $16 students, seniors, children. ferndalerep.org/.

EVENTS

Friday Night Market. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Old Town, Eureka, 317 Third St. A bustling farmers market, arts and craft vendors, bar featuring Humboldt-produced beverages, a variety of food vendors and live music for dancing on three stages. Free.

FOR KIDS

Kid’s Night at the Museum. 5:30-8 p.m. Redwood Discovery Museum, 612 G St., Eureka. Drop off your 3.5-12 year old for interactive exhibits, science experiments, crafts and games, exploring the planetarium, playing in the water table or jumping into the soft blocks. $17-$20. info@discovery-museum.org. discovery-museum.org/ classesprograms.html. (707) 443-9694.

Trinity Ballet Academy’s “A Few Of Our FavoriteThings”. 4:30-6:15 p.m. Van Duzer Theatre, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata. Celebrating 25 years with a gala performance featuring variations from classics like Sleeping Beauty to tributes to American choreographers. $20, $12 child under 12. (707) 839-1816.

Glitter & Gold: A ‘70s Vibe. 5-6:45 p.m. Arkley Center for the Performing Arts, 412 G St., Eureka. The Ferndale Dance Academy celebrates over 20 years of dance with this upbeat performance by dancers ranging from child through adult. $25, $15 ages 10 and under, free for kids under 3. learn2dance@ferndaledance.com. ferndaledance. com. (707) 496-0805.

MUSIC

Live Music Saturdays and Sundays. 2-4:30 p.m. Fieldbrook Winery, 4241 Fieldbrook Road. Enjoy live music, wine/beer and food. June 15: Jim Lahman Band, June 16: Canary and the Vamp, vintage swing and jazz. Free entry. fieldbrookwinery.com.

THEATER

The Prom. 7:30 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theatre, 447 Main St. See June 14 listing.

Wusatoumuduk: We Make It Burn. 7 p.m. 5th and D Street Theater, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. The Wiyot Tribe and NCRT present a staged reading of a new multi-media play about cultural fire. There will be community talkbacks after each reading. Free. ncrt.net.

EVENTS

Arcata Bay Oyster Festival. 10 a.m.-5 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. gloria@arcatachamber.com.

Open House, Plant Sale and Silent Auction. 11 a.m.noon. Carol Sund Farm Center, 4635 Broadway, Eureka. Open house, plant sale and silent auction to benefit and expand Butler Valley activities and client opportunities. Help clients help themselves by supporting their products. Free admission. (707) 443-0923.

Garberville Rodeo - Rodeo in the Redwoods. . Southern Humboldt Community Park, 1144 Sprowel Creek Road, Garberville. Enjoy bucking broncos, barrel racing, parade, barbecue, live music and more. garbervillerodeo.org. Continued on next page »

File
Photo by Mark Larson Adobe Stock
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 23

CALENDAR

Continued from previous page

FOOD

Arcata Plaza Farmers Market. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Arcata Plaza, Ninth and G streets. Humboldt-County-Grown and GMO-free produce along with plants, meats and other products. Live music.

GARDEN

Sequoia Park Ivy League. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Sequoia Park, 3414 W St., Eureka. Drop in anytime. Meet at the Glatt St. fountain at Glatt and T streets. Training and supplies provided. Kid-friendly, but kids must be accompanied and managed by their guardian/s. Free. hatwood@eurekaca.gov. eurekaca.gov/Calendar.aspx?EID=1579&month=4&year=2024&day=20&calType=0. (707) 441-4218.

MEETINGS

Toastmasters International. Third Saturday of every month, 7-8 a.m. Virtual World, Online. Members meet to deliver and evaluate prepared and impromptu speeches to improve as speakers and leaders. Meetings stream at https://tinyurl.com/zoomwithmidday and https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9239283290. distinguished@rocketmail.com. 4139.toastmastersclubs.org. (855) 402-8255.

OUTDOORS

Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Bird Walk. 8:30-11 a.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary, South I Street. Bring your binoculars and meet trip leader Chet Ogan at the end of South I Street (Klopp Lake) in Arcata for easy-to-walk trails and an opportunity to view a diverse range of birds. Free. www.rras.org.

FOAM Marsh Tour. 2 p.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 569 S. G St. Meet leader Paul Johnson for a 90-minute, rain-or-shine. After discussing the workings of the wastewater treatment plant, he will focus on the small, little-known creatures living along the trail (e.g., galls, caterpillars, bugs). Free. (707) 826-2359.

Forest Restoration at Rohner Park. Third Saturday of every month, 9-11 a.m. Fortuna Firemen’s Pavilion, 9 Park St. Remove invasive English ivy and French broom. Tools and gloves available but you are encouraged to bring your own. High winds or heavy rain cancels. Light snack provided. Free. unde1942@gmail.com. (707) 601-6753.

Nature Quest Day Walks. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Headwaters Forest Reserve, End of Elk River Road, 6 miles off U.S. Highway 101, Eureka. Redwood hikes, reflective practices and more. See flyer for more information.

Sue-meg Village Tour. 2-3 p.m. Sue-meg State Park, 4150 Patrick’s Point Drive, Trinidad. Explore the rich history of Sue-meg Village and the continuing traditions of the Yurok People through this unique tour experience, helping to celebrate community and culture. Meet in front of the visitor center. Free.

ETC

Thursday-Friday-Saturday Canteen. 3-9 p.m. Redwood Empire VFW Post 1872, 1018 H St., Eureka. Enjoy a cold beverage in the canteen with comrades. Play pool or darts. If you’re a veteran, this place is for you. Free. PearceHansen999@outlook.com. (707) 443-5331.

16 Sunday

ART

Trinidad Artisans Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Murphy’s Market Deli, Trinidad, 1 Main St. Art, crafts, live music and barbecue Every Sunday through Sept. 13. Free. murphysmarkets.net. (707) 834-8720.

DANCE

Afro-Fusion Feel and Flow. 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. The Sanctuary, 1301 J St., Arcata. Explore and enjoy a fusion of West African movements from Guinea, Senegal, Liberia, Congo and Mali with the genre of Afro beats and traditional West African drumming. $10-$15. together@sanctuaryarcata.org. sanctuaryarcata.org. (707) 822-0898.

Glitter & Gold: A ‘70s Vibe. 2-3:45 p.m. Arkley Center for the Performing Arts, 412 G St., Eureka. See June 15 listing.

MOVIES

The People’s Joker. 6:30 p.m. Richards’ Goat Tavern & Tea Room Miniplex, 401 I St., Arcata. A painfully unfunny aspiring clown grapples with her gender identity, forming an illegal comedy troupe and a fascist Caped Crusader. Ages 21 and up. $10. info@miniplexevents. com. miniplex.ticketleap.com/the-peoples-joker/. (707) 630-5000.

Finding Nemo (2003). 5-8 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Pre-show 5p.m. Movie 6 p.m. Rated G. 1hr. 40min. All Ages. A timid clownfish sets out on a journey to bring his captured son home. Enjoy themed cocktails, retro-video games, and a curated pre-show. $8, $12 with Poster. info@arcatatheatre.com. facebook.com/ events/465549522670344/. (707) 613-3030.

MUSIC

Live Music Saturdays and Sundays. 2-4:30 p.m. Fieldbrook Winery, 4241 Fieldbrook Road. See June 15 listing. Summer at the Sanctuary. 12-6 p.m. The Sanctuary, 1301 J St., Arcata. All ages. Live music by Ponies of Harmony, Your Local Flora, Sneaky Mandy, Sequoia Rose and musicians from the Sanctuary’s Experimental Musicians Union. Poetry by Dylan Collins. Food and drinks available, photo booth and art activities. $5-$20. sean. pitney@gmail.com. sanctuaryarcata.org. (707) 834-2957. HBG’s Summer Music Series. 1-3 p.m. Humboldt Botanical Garden, 7351 Tompkins Hill Road, College of the Redwoods campus, north entrance, Eureka. Enjoy live music in the garden every first and third Sunday from June-Oct. June 16: The Latin Peppers. hbgf.org. Wine and Jazz. Third Sunday of every month, 3-5 p.m. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. Monthly performance series highlighting Humboldt County performers. Regular admission. humboldtarts.org.

THEATER

The Prom. 2 p.m. Ferndale Repertory Theatre, 447 Main St. See June 14 listing.

Wusatoumuduk: We Make It Burn. 2 p.m. 5th and D Street Theater, 300 Fifth St., Eureka. See June 15 listing.

EVENTS

Old Town Vintage Market. Third Sunday of every month, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. G Street Between Second and Third in Old Town Eureka, 211 G St. A day of local vintage clothing, art and craft vendors, food, music by DJ Goldylocks and more. hello@theredwoodretro. com. instagram.com/p/C4SHqQauD0X/?img_index=1. (707) 601-9667.

Garberville Rodeo - Rodeo in the Redwoods. Southern Humboldt Community Park, 1144 Sprowel Creek Road, Garberville. See June 15 listing.

FOR KIDS

Mini Masters Program. Third Sunday of every month, noon. Morris Graves Museum of Art, 636 F St., Eureka. Families participate together in this art-making workshop linked to the Storytime book. Projects that inspire literacy, creativity and community geared toward children 2-5 years, but all children are welcome. This

24 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

month’s storybook: The Boy with Flowers in His Hair by Jarvis. humboldtarts.org.

FOOD

Father’s Day Barrel TriTip Barbecue. 12-3 p.m. Willow Creek China-Flat Museum, 38949 State Route 299. 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.

Mattole Grange Pancake Breakfast. 8-11 a.m. Mattole Grange Hall, 36512 Mattole Road, Petrolia. All the pancakes you can eat made from scratch, organic pasture raised eggs cooked any way you like, choice of bacon or sausage, co ee, milk and organic orange juice. $15, free for kids 6 and under. mattolegrangehall@gmail. com. mattolegrange.org/pancake-breakfast/.

OUTDOORS

Art and Nature at the Refuge. Third Sunday of every month, 1-4 p.m. Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge, 1020 Ranch Road, Loleta. Art and nature exploration activities for all ages and abilities with monthly themes. Drop in between 1 and 4 p.m. Rain or shine. Free. denise_seeger@fws.gov. fws.gov/refuge/humboldt-bay. (707) 733-5406.

Dune Restoration Volunteer Days. Third Sunday of every month, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Ma-le’l Dunes North, Young Lane, Arcata. Help restore the biodiversity of the coastal dunes with the Dune Ecosystem Restoration Team. No experience necessary. Snacks and tools provided. Meet at the Ma-le’l Dunes North parking lot a few minutes before 10 a.m. dante@friendsofthedunes.org. friendsofthedunes.org/dert-days. (707) 444-1397.

Eureka Waterfront Birding Trip. 9-11 a.m. Eureka Waterfront, Foot of Del Norte Street. This relatively urban trail o ers the potential to observe species abundance and diversity compared to many more remote locations. Watch out for cormorants, loons, grebes and even otters diving for their meals in the bay alongside the trail. This walk is on a flat, paved trail that is wheelchair accessible. Free. thebook@reninet.com. rras.org.

Eureka Waterfront Guided Birding Trip. Third Sunday of every month, 9-11 a.m. Eureka Waterfront, Foot of Del Norte Street. Wth leader Ralph Bucher. This relatively urban trail o ers the potential to observe species abundance and diversity compared to many more remote locations. Email to sign up. Free. thebook@ reninet.com. rras.org.

Habitat Restoration Volunteer Work Day. 9 a.m.noon. Trinidad State Beach, Trinidad State Beach. Volunteers will work with park sta to remove invasive species such as English ivy from various locations. Gloves and tools provided. All participants will receive a free day pass to Sue-meg State Park. Wind/rain/smoke may cancel. Please meet at the corner of Stagecoach and Anderson roads. Free. desten.mertens@parks. ca.gov. (707) 677-3109.

NRLT Trail Work with Humboldt Trails Council. 9 a.m.-noon. Freshwater Farms Reserve, 5851 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. Enjoy local trails? Learn how to maintain a hiking trail and manage invasive plants with the Northcoast Regional Land Trust at their ambassador property. Free.

17 Monday

Life Drawing Sessions. 6-8 p.m. Redwood Art Association Gallery, 603 F St., Eureka. See June 14 listing.

MOVIES

Humboldt County in 2006 and starring Emmy- Award winner Jack Hanrahan. Special edition with a panel of actors and writers. Free. savagehenrycomedy.com.

FOOD

Dinner and Bingo. Third Monday of every month, 5-8 p.m. Van Duzen River Grange, 5250 State Route 36, Carlotta. Enjoy a family-friendly dinner (menu changes monthly), then test your luck with bingo. All ages. $10 dinner, $10 for 10 bingo cards. vanduzengrange@gmail. com. instagram.com/vanduzengrange. (707) 296-4161. Miranda Farmers Market. 2-6 p.m. Miranda Market, 6685 Avenue of the Giants. Fresh produce, mushrooms, beef and pork, eggs, honey, crafts, body products, jams and plants. (707) 441-9999.

ETC

Homesharing Info Session. 9:30-10 a.m. and 1-1:30 p.m. This informational Zoom session will go over the steps and safeguards of Area 1 Agency on Aging’s matching process and the di erent types of homeshare partnerships. Email for the link. Free. homeshare@a1aa. org. a1aa.org/homesharing. (707) 442-3763.

18 Tuesday

DANCE

Baywater Blues Fusion Dance. 7:15-9:15 p.m. The Historic Eagle House, 139 Second St., Eureka. Half hour dance lesson followed by social dancing. Come solo or with a friend to learn and enjoy partner dancing to blues and modern music. $5-$15 sliding, free for kids 12 and under. baywaterbluesfusion@gmail.com. facebook. com/profile.php?id=100089815497848. (707) 496-4056.

FOOD

Fortuna Certified Farmers Market. 3-6 p.m. 10th and Main streets, 10th and Main streets, Fortuna. Fruits and vegetables, crafts, music and hot food vendors. No pets allowed, but trained, ADA certified, service animals welcome. CalFresh EBT customers receive a market match at every farmers market. Free. info@northcoastgrowersassociation.org. northcoastgrowersassociation. org/fortuna.html. (707) 441-9999.

Shelter Cove Farmers Market. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Gyppo Ale Mill, 1661 Upper Pacific Drive, Shelter Cove. In-season produce, veggie starts, plants, grass-fed beef, pastured poultry and eggs, flowers, soap, herbal products and arts and crafts. gyppo.com. (707) 441-9999.

Taco Tuesday Potluck. Third Tuesday of every month, 6-8 p.m. The Sanctuary, 1301 J St., Arcata. Prep and tortilla making at 6 p.m., community meal at 6:30p.m. Bring a dish to share or a donation. Everyone helps clean. $5-$20. together@sanctuaryarcata.org. sanctuaryarcata.org.

MEETINGS

Fortuna Parent Project. 6 a.m.-8 p.m. Gene Lucas Community Center, 3300 Newburg Ave., Fortuna. A 10-week series that addresses topics like improving family relationships, e ective discipline to improve school attendance and performance, reduce substance use, negative peer influences and how to address destructive behavior. Free. fortunatc@bgcredwoods.org. glccenter.org. (707) 617-8160.

Humboldt Cribbage Club Tournament. 6:15-9 p.m. Moose Lodge, 4328 Campton Road, Eureka. Weekly six-game cribbage tournament for experienced players. Inexperienced players may watch, learn and play on the side. Moose dinner available at 5:30 p.m. $3-$8. 31for14@ gmail.com. (707) 599-4605.

Evan Vest’s Let’s Watch ... Illegal Smile. 9-11 p.m. Savage Henry Comedy Club, 415 Fifth St., Eureka. Filmed in Continued on next page »

ART
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ETC

English Express: An English Language Class for Adults. Virtual World, Online. Build English language confidence in ongoing online and in-person classes. All levels and first languages welcome. Join anytime. Pre-registration not required. Free. englishexpressempowered.com. (707) 443-5021.

19 Wednesday

ART

Wa Hinthil Come North - Group Pomo Exhibition. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Goudi’ni Native American Arts Gallery, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata. See June 13 listing.

BOOKS

Family Storytime. Third Wednesday of every month, 3:30 p.m. Blue Lake Library, 111 Greenwood Ave. Enjoy stories with local storyteller Kit Mann every third Wednesday of the month. For children of all ages with their caregivers and other family members. Free. humlib. org. (707) 668-4207.

MOVIES

Queer Futures. 6:30 p.m. Richards’ Goat Tavern & Tea Room Miniplex, 401 I St., Arcata. Four short films explore “fat beauty and liberation, gender-affirming healthcare, nonbinary siblinghood in ballroom culture, and the anonymous connections of a decades-old LGBTQ hotline.” Weekly queer night Big Mood follows at 8 p.m. in the front room. Ages 21 and up. $8. info@miniplexevents.com. miniplex.ticketleap.com/queer-futures/. (707) 630-5000.

EVENTS

Juneteenth Hip Hop Show. 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. RampArt Skatepark, 700 South G St., Arcata. Hosted by Attribute, featuring Kemistree, Mona Loki, All’Love Aundrea, EmCee Radio Active, Sloan Bone and Krayzie Bone from Bone Thugs N Harmony and more. Full bar available and barbecue plates for sale. Part of the 2024 Juneteenth Multiday Cultural Celebration. $25. blackhumboldt@gmail. com. www.facebook.com/events/412256965104028/. (707) 840-4641.

Juneteenth Kick Off Family Party. 4-7 p.m. RampArt Skatepark, 700 South G St., Arcata. Part of the 2024 Juneteenth Multiday Cultural Celebration. rampartskatepark.org.

Juneteenth Multi-Day Cultural Celebration. Countywide. Community-wide event celebrating freedom, diversity and community with local Black vendors, workshops, music, performances and Knowledge for Power sessions. Commemorating the ending of slavery in the U.S. Full schedule online. blackhumboldt.com/ juneteenth-celebration.

MEETINGS

Mother’s Support Circle. Third Wednesday of every month, 10 a.m.-noon. The Ink People Center for the Arts, 627 Third St., Eureka. Mother’s Village circle for mothers with a meal and childcare. $15 to attend, $10 childcare, sliding scale spots available. (707) 633-3143.

20 Thursday

ART

Figure Drawing at Synapsis. 7-9 p.m. Synapsis Collective, 1675 Union St., Eureka. See June 13 listing. May/June Art Show. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 569 S. G St. See June 13 listing. Wa Hinthil Come North - Group Pomo Exhibition. 11

a.m.-2 p.m. Goudi’ni Native American Arts Gallery, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata. See June 13 listing.

MUSIC

Eureka Summer Concert Series. 6-8 p.m. Madaket Plaza, Foot of C Street, Eureka. See June 13 listing. Pierson Park Music in the Park. 6-8 p.m. Pierson Park, 1608 Pickett Road, McKinleyville. Enjoy a fun evening listening to live music and playing lawn games throughout the summer. Free.

THEATER

EXIT Theatre’s Short Play Festival. EXIT Theatre, 890 G St., Arcata. The 2024 fest received 175 plays for consideration. Full stage productions of 12 selected plays by local, national and international playwrights, featuring local actors, directors and technicians. theexit.org.

The Poor of New York. 8 p.m. Dell’Arte, 131 H St., Blue Lake. A classic American melodrama updated for our times. Directed by Michael Fields. Through July 7. Outdoors in the amphitheater. $20-$25. dellarte.com.

EVENTS

Juneteenth Multi-Day Cultural Celebration. Countywide. See June 19 listing.

Taste of Trinidad. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Saunders Park, behind Chevron, Trinidad. Sample food and drinks from restaurants in the Trinidad and greater Humboldt area. Complimentary tasting glass (while supplies last).Live music by Ponies of Harmony and live paintings by Trinidad artist Antoinette Magyar. $20. TrinidadCalif.com.

FOOD

BSU Barbecue. 3-7 p.m. Jefferson Community Center, 1000 B St., Eureka. Part of the 2024 Juneteenth Multiday Cultural Celebration.

Henderson Center Certified Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Henderson Center, Henderson near F Street, Eureka. See June 13 listing.

Willow Creek Certified Farmers Market. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Veteran’s Park, Gower Lane, Willow Creek. See June 13 listing.

GARDEN

Community Compost Drop-Off. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Freshwater Farms Reserve, 5851 Myrtle Ave., Eureka. See June 13 listing.

OUTDOORS

Nature Quest. 3-6 p.m. Headwaters Forest Reserve, End of Elk River Road, 6 miles off U.S. Highway 101, Eureka. See June 13 listing.

Heads Up …

The Arcata Marsh Interpretive Center seeks weekend volunteers to stay open. Shifts are 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. or 1 to 5 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays, and include welcoming visitors, bookstore register, and answering questions. You must be at least 18, complete paperwork and fingerprinting (free through Arcata Police). One-on-one training. Call (707) 826-2359 or e-mail amic@cityofarcata.org.

The Humboldt Local Agency Formation Commission seeks applications from members of the public interested in serving on the commission as a regular public member. To obtain an application, visit humboldtlafco.org or email info@humboldtlafco.org. The deadline is June 14.

Become a volunteer at Hospice of Humboldt. For more information about becoming a volunteer or about services provided by Hospice of Humboldt, call (707) 267-9813 or visit hospiceofhumboldt.org. l

The Importance of Bad Boys: Ride or Die

BAD BOYS: RIDE OR DIE. I was prepared to blame prevailing global conditions as much as my own skepticism for sleeping on Bad Boys for Life (2020) as long as I did. In sitting to revisit the franchise and attempt to organize my thoughts about it, though, I discovered that I could not, in fact, attribute my truancy to the pandemic. No, it was long months before, when some of us thought the world might end for entirely di erent reasons, that chapter three in the saga of detectives Lowery (Will Smith) and Burnett (Martin Lawrence) took its bow.

And so we must defer only to my own bad attitude about the integrity of a sequel so many years on and in the hands of unknown (to me) directors, with aging stars whose recent performances had been underwhelming, to explain my not having seen the thing until almost four years later. When I finally did, though, I was welcomed back into the hyper-stylized, foulmouthed, cordite-tinged world of an invented Miami I had once known and loved so well. (The DVDs of Bad Boys, 1995, and Bad Boys II, 2003, look down on me from the shelf as I type.) As such, I was forced to examine my own shifting, misplaced attitudes about something that had, for years, brought me something like joy.

As with so many objects of fascination found in youth, maturation can prove a corrosive and complicating influence. The aphorism that one must put aside childish things, even if we strain to disbelieve it, is reinforced by the daily rigors of “growing up” and many of us mistakenly, in our attempts to evolve a sense of art and self and the world, conflate simple enjoyment with simple-mindedness. In that middle period, the thrashing that precedes the calm of beginning to not give a damn about the aesthetic opinions of culture at large, it can be all too easy to conflate complexity or thematic heaviness with importance. It’s the trainwreck of outside influence and the self, and it can apparently take a lifetime to sift through the wreckage, much less undo the damage.

Quite a bit of pseudo-academic posturing and philosophical gymnastics in service

of a bunch of movies about ultra-violent cops. But there is something about the continued life of the Bad Boys canon, about the rediscovery of visceral thrills and vertiginous camera work, that grounds the movies in freedom of simple pleasures, but also continues to elevate the form. Maybe big, dumb movies, well-executed, support an ecosystem that makes room for small, smart ones.

One of the many knotty roots of this conundrum, of course, is the 800-pound gorilla of big dumb movies done well: Michael Bay. As much pleasure as we all derived from his early work (Bad Boys chief among them), his increasingly grody public persona, the accounts of his notso casual misogyny and the overbearing self-seriousness of his middle and late periods has quickly begun to overshadow it. It has become, I think, a toxic rite of passage for film bros to recoil from and then re-embrace Bay and his movies, but there’s not enough space to wade into that swamp here. My feelings remain complicated but I must admit that Bay, as a stylist, did as much to define the American cinema of the modern era as anybody. Springing, as so many directors did, from the music video generation, Bay invented a visual language that has been as frequently cribbed and shaded as Spielberg’s lens-flares, Tarantino’s speeches and Meyers’ kitchens. He’s problematic and egocentric; what could better define American movies?

And who better to interpret his influence than a couple of Belgians (Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah) who grew up on it. The directing duo have found a way, with drones aplenty, to carry the Bay torch without simply copying the moves and, through the cosmic luck of high finance, have been able to do it with the full cooperation of Smith (did I say problematic?) and Lawrence.

26 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
SCREENS
CALENDAR
NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
Continued from previous page

In practical terms, defunding is more about reallocating resources to non-policing entities that deliver social, health and other services to cope with issues like mental illness and homelessness. Bad Boys: Ride or Die

To be clear, there are limits to this apologia. The plots of Bad Boys movies are not and have never been particularly burdened by sophistication, nor have the characters been particularly susceptible to change. As case in point, the entire tone and arc of Ride or Die are pretty much laid out in the trailer. But we’re not really showing up for surprises in this case, are we? I should hope not. For those who have or will, I don’t understand but I hope your disappointment might be tempered by the old-school, grand-scale silliness of what you saw. Sure, the climax isn’t quite as climactic as it could be (just like the last time out), but it may be part of the pleasure of the enterprise that it can actually leave us wanting more, at least more than it makes us want to leave. R. 115M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK. ●

John J. Bennett (he/him) is a movie nerd who loves a good car chase.

NOW PLAYING

BABES. Besties Eden (Ilana Glazer) and Dawn (Michelle Buteau) are tested when one of them has a baby. R. 109M. MINOR. FURIOSA: A MAD MAX SAGA. Gritty action prequel to Fury Road starring Anya Tay-

WORKSHOPS & CLASSES

List your class – just $5 per line per issue! Deadline: Friday, 5pm. Place your online ad at classified.northcoastjournal.com or e-mail: classified@northcoastjournal.com

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lor-Joy and Chris Hemsworth in villain mode. R. 148M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK, MINOR.

THE GARFIELD MOVIE. The languid housecat meets his shady bio-dad. Voiced by Chris Pratt, Ving Rhames and Hannah Waddingham. PG. 101M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK.

I SAW THE TV GLOW. Late-night couch potato-ing takes a supernatural turn for a teen. PG13. 100M. MINOR.

IF. Cailey Fleming and Ryan Reynolds star in a comedy about a girl who can see imaginary friends. PG. 104M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK.

INSIDE OUT 2. All the feels are back in this animated sequel, now with Anxiety! PG. 96M. BROADWAY (3D), MILL CREEK (3D), MINOR.

KINGDOM OF THE PLANET OF THE APES. A sequel to the primate power struggle skipping ahead generations. PG13. 145M. BROADWAY.

THE RELENTLESS PATRIOT. Documentary about painter Scott LoBaido. BROADWAY. THE WATCHERS. Dakota Fanning plays a woman trapped with strangers, seemingly entertaining alien creatures. Twist! The director is Ishana Shyamalan. PG13. 102M. BROADWAY, MILL CREEK.

For showtimes call: Broadway Cinema (707) 443-3456; Mill Creek Cinema 8393456; Minor Theatre (707) 822-3456.

50 and Better

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northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 27
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 27

NOTICE OF PROPERTY TAX DELINQUENCY AND IMPENDING DEFAULT

Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3351, 3352

I, Amy Christensen, Humboldt County Tax Collector, State of California, certify as follows:

That at close of business on June 30, 2024, by operation of law, any real property (unless previously taxdefaulted and not redeemed) that have any delinquent taxes, assessments, or other charges levied for the fiscal year 2023-24, and/or any delinquent supplemental taxes levied prior to the fiscal year 2023-24 shall be declared tax-defaulted.

That unless the tax defaulted 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 may be sold subsequently at a tax sale to satisfy the tax lien.

That a detailed list of all properties remaining tax-defaulted at the close of business on June 30, 2024, and not redeemed prior to being submitted for publication, shall be published on or before September 8, 2024.

That information concerning redemption or the initiation of an installment plan of redemption of taxdefaulted property will be furnished, upon request, by Amy Christensen, 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.

Executed at Eureka, Humboldt County, California, on May 22nd, 2024. Published in the North Coast Journal on June 6th, 13th & 20th, 2024.

NOTICE OF IMPENDING POWER TO SELL TAX-DEFAULTED PROPERTY

Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3361, 3362

Pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code 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.

Note: The power to sell schedule for nonresidential commercial property is three or more years of tax-defaulted status, unless the county adopts, by ordinance or resolution, the five-year tax default schedule.

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 lowincome 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, 2024, 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 Amy Christensen, 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 2024, 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.

LEGAL NOTICES
Amy Christensen Humboldt County Tax Collector
PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2015, FOR TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR FISCAL TAX YEAR 2014-15: ASSESSMENT NO. ASSESSEE’S NAME TO REDEEM BY 06/24 215-213-016-000 ANDRES, JAMES $1790.37 PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2016, FOR TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR FISCAL TAX YEAR 2015-16: ASSESSMENT NO. ASSESSEE’S NAME TO REDEEM BY 06/24 107-144-023-000 SHOWEN TIM/ SHOWEN DIANE & SHOWEN, PATRICIA $41,251.51 109-241-031-000 BUCK SCOTT M $6642.64 215-300-009-000 BREMER LONNY D $3397.68 517-021-019-000 CLEARWATER REAL ESTATE HOLDINGS LLC CO $39408.25 PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2017, FOR TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR FISCAL TAX YEAR 2016-17: ASSESSMENT NO. ASSESSEE’S NAME TO REDEEM BY 06/24 033-071-020-000 LAPRIORE ROBERT M JR $828.93 040-092-003-000 CARTER AINSWORTH SM $5,677.55 306-171-002-000 RAMIREZ LUCIA J MWSE $12,152.12 503-333-011-000 CAMPBELL NICHOLAS & GOODENOUGH MARINA $12,628.02 PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2018, FOR TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR FISCAL TAX YEAR 2017-18: ASSESSMENT NO. ASSESSEE’S NAME TO REDEEM BY 06/24 001-224-018-000 TRENT CHRISTOPHER W & TRENT ROBIN A/ TRENT FAMILY TRUST $19755.97 008-142-003-000 NELSON ERIC P/ KISKILA BERTINE/ NELSON DONALD/ NELSON NICK JR/ TORONI LOIS $6880.15 052-152-012-000 BARKER LILLIE M/ BARKER LILLIE M REVOCABLE TRUST $7029.57 077-222-014-000 ARELLANO JOSE $22886.56 107-236-003-000 SOOS BRIAN J II $19676.50 107-236-015-000 SOOS BRIAN J II $26920.39 210-042-018-000 MORRIS CANDICE & DINUR-LORANGER ELIAH $26785.88 220-141-009-000 JACOVINI JOSEPH $32497.47 223-221-002-000 KRUGER VINCENT P/ GRAY CAROL L LIVING TRUST/ GRAY CAROL L/ KRUGER RUBEN P $5892.64 300-051-028-000 WANDEL CODY R & TAMARA M $4379.91 305-231-013-000 RANKIN ANGGIE S C $9394.40 316-086-011-000 VISTA RIDGE LLC CO $26279.86 401-245-007-000 EGGEL MARGARET M $9277.09 510-081-024-000 EANNI JOEMMA $2237.94 511-041-011-000 BORN BRETT E $74421.61 516-011-046-000 EDWARDS JOHN C $47910.46 530-141-002-000 PU-LIK-LAH LLC $24743.68 PROPERTY TAX DEFAULTED ON JULY 1, 2019 FOR THE TAXES, ASSESSMENTS AND OTHER CHARGES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2018-2019 ASSESSMENT NO. ASSESSEE’S NAME TO REDEEM BY 06/24 004-012-004-000 FULTON GARY O $4,298.75 005-122-004-000 MARTIN HENRY W JR & PATSY L/ HEWITT BERTHA/ HEWITT BERTHA V/ MARTIN PATSY L TRUST $6,381.86 009-014-011-000 LEWIS LINDA L $7,562.90 014-252-016-000 HARTRIDGE CATHERINE G $6,410.99 021-271-002-000 MCDONALD MARGARET $9,975.22 033-011-005-000 GUERRERO RONNIE $3,936.88 033-011-006-000 GUERRERO RONNIE $1,464.07 28 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

033-011-031-000 GUERRERO RONNIE

033-011-034-000 GUERRERO RONNIE

033-011-039-000 GUERRERO RONNIE

033-011-042-000 GUERRERO RONNIE

033-211-006-000 HERMES PAUL L & HERMES SARAH M

033-211-026-000 HERMES PAUL L & HERMES SARAH M

052-222-003-000 WARD MICHAEL

052-261-026-000 UNDERWOOD SCOTT

$2,692.89

$1,847.35

$1,388.45

$1,620.84

$1,470.47

$5,276.18

$22,453.54

$3,509.92

052-322-041-000 LEGENDRE SHANE A $2,724.22

053-172-016-000 BARATTI JOSEPH P $9,820.82

053-191-008-000 WILLIS DONALD/ WILLIS DONALD TRUST

$2,267.74

077-291-022-000 MOORE ERIC S & SHAWNI D $6,559.99

077-291-023-000 MOORE ERIC S & SHAWNI D

$20,754.35

081-021-039-000 MEAGHER THOMAS/ JOAN & WILLIAM TRUST/ MEAGHER WILLIAM E ESTATE OF $1,460.66

100-201-049-000 MICHEL CLINTON R & GALLAGHER PATRICIA

106-061-059-000 WHYTE DANIEL & HULLINGS SHARI

$10,647.97

$24,545.30

107-233-009-000 MANDELOV GUEORGUI T $4,333.81

107-300-008-000 MANDELOV GUEORGUI T $8,150.00

108-015-013-000 MARGETTS STACEY $1,313.72

109-041-025-000 PETERSON EVAN J $3,251.89

109-081-037-000 ALTINYELEKLIOGLU MEHMET $3,881.51

109-091-052-000 BROWN JOEL R/ BROWN JOEL R LIVING TRUST $9,472.80

109-131-014-000

& URSULA

109-241-013-000 MARTIN RALPH G & BETTY R $2,123.77

109-251-020-000 COGGIN NAZARETH A & FIELS ROBERT C $3,509.17

109-261-032-000 SENAPATI VENKAT R & PATRA PATTAM P

109-281-027-000 MARGINEANU DANILA

109-291-001-000 OSTROM CLIFFORD E/ CHAMPIONS REV TRUST

109-301-004-000

109-301-045-000 MORRIS RODNEY & VICKI

109-341-004-000 DEAN SYBILLE

$30,756.11

Continued on next page »
$3,022.09
DONER
PARNELL MARYANN C
109-161-009-000
COLONEL V $3,329.12 109-201-010-000 KRAMER MARSHALL E
$3,364.55
$1,823.41
$2,937.02
$3,475.48
$2,146.18
1 CREATIVE DEAL LLC
$11,590.28
M $3,564.81
PIRZADEH DARA $3,658.40 109-341-028-000 PIRZADEH DARA $3,658.40
MCDANIEL DARRELL A $95,177.61 109-351-054-000 MCDANIEL DARRELL A $44,487.51 110-111-009-000 HARDING MICHAEL B $15,575.11 110-111-011-000 CRISS MICHAEL $20,063.96 110-111-012-000 CRISS ALEJANDRO A $4,143.74 110-181-050-000 DEIM JOHN R III $9,099.89 110-261-011-000 DEAN SYBILLE M $3,972.55 110-291-011-000 CORTAZAR JIM $63,754.99 052-072-019-000 OSORIO SOCORRO $8,430.35 110-291-033-000 JACOBSEN MICHAEL M $3,225.46 111-011-013-000 HENRICKS JOHN D/ ROGERS THOMAS R & SALLY A/ DOCKERY LIVING TRUST/ DOCKERY JERRY L & JEANETTE H $4,223.49 111-021-003-000 MARTIN RALPH G & BETTY R $2,199.96 111-081-012-000 MARCOTULLI KATHLEEN $3,080.62 111-081-052-000 MARCOTULLI KATHLEEN $2,737.73 111-111-016-000 O’BRIEN CAROLE & HUMBOLDT COUNTY TRUST $6,963.56 111-151-066-000 PRICE ANITA D $5,819.85 201-253-011-000 TRENT CHRISTOPHER W/ TRENT CHRISTOPHER W LIVING TRUST $13,178.61 203-291-022-000 TUTTLE LLOYD $1,742.43 203-291-023-000 TUTTLE LLOYD $2,943.08 203-291-028-000 JONES JAY E $2,376.65 204-350-015-000 WOOLLEY LINDA & LISA $3,584.55 208-231-002-000 DOCTORS HEARTH LLC $26,496.93 210-044-012-000 FERREBEOUF EMILE & HA HAIVINH $60,016.80 210-051-013-000 MEYER MARY L $1,442.15 210-192-025-000 DONATHAN AMY N $13,497.69 210-250-024-000 5150 INVESTMENT GROUP LLC $314,891.62 211-092-017-000 POGUE JAMES M $16,132.03 212-182-027-000 FRAZIER JAMES A $1,794.74 212-263-048-000 REED JAMES E $19,884.17 216-013-013-000 EAST BRANCH HOMESTEAD LLC CO $869.04 216-013-015-000 EAST BRANCH HOMESTEAD LLC CO $20,880.83 216-014-011-000 EAST BRANCH HOMESTEAD LLC CO $2,441.53 216-142-009-000 BULLOCK DANIEL R $21,384.34 216-261-053-000 PALAMARA TONY $58,128.69 216-381-025-000 NIELSEN DOROTHY $11,621.50 217-411-001-000 KEBEDE HENOKE $58,969.01 218-021-008-000 MAHER THOMAS
$16,786.75 218-091-001-000 MORSE CHARLES F III $16,749.00 220-231-037-000 CLARKE
JR & HONDA LISA M $2,347.08 221-111-025-000 LUALLIN SHERRI $10,591.43 221-111-028-000 REA THOMAS
$11,444.70 221-202-028-000 NELSON
$30,869.66 221-221-036-000 HOWARD DEVIN $47,696.89 223-123-005-000 JACQUES EMRY $61,409.32 223-221-001-000 ROSE
$40,538.82 303-091-067-000 HUNT
109-341-027-000
109-351-053-000
J
THOMAS G
C
MICHAEL T
JERI & RAVENSWING MICHAEL
JAMIE S $1,502.27 306-391-011-000 ELLSWORTH, DENNIS SR ELLSWORTH, YOLANDA ELLSWORTH, RICKY SR ELLSWORTH, RINA
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 29

507-430-004-000

514-032-002-000 WRIGHT BARBARA D

514-162-007-000

515-291-044-000

522-121-015-000 RINESMITH MYRNA S/ SNYDER GLADYS M

522-142-030-000

524-041-018-000 MCCLELLAN JANET D & EDWARD K $20,473.88

524-114-011-000 FERRARA KIA $823.60

524-191-006-000 LOR SHOUA & YANG MOR

531-071-022-000 MYERS RICHARD L, HENDERSON JOSEPH L/ MYERS ANDREA J / MYERS, EVERETT D/ MYERS, EVERETTA R, MYERS, GILBERT J MYERS, SYLVESTER L & TRULL GEORGIANNA

531-076-021-000 MYERS, RICHARD L

GLORIA & DUNN JENNIFER L & TRENTON W

$449.60

NOTICEOFPETITIONTO ADMINISTERESTATEOF LEILANILYNNEBUBIER

CASENO.PR2400146

Toallheirs,beneficiaries,creditors, contingentcreditorsandpersons whomayotherwisebeinterestedin thewillorestate,orboth,of LEILANILYNNEBUBIER

APETITIONFORPROBATEhasbeen filedbyPetitionerTABBWILLIAM BUBIER

Thepetitionforprobaterequests thatTABBW.BUBIER beappointedaspersonalrepresen− tativetoadministertheestateof thedecedent.

THEPETITIONrequeststhedece− dent’swillandcodicils,ifany,be admittedtoprobate.Thewilland anycodicilsareavailableforexam− inationinthefilekeptbycourt. THEPETITIONrequestsauthorityto administertheestateunderthe IndependentAdministrationof EstatesAct.(Thisauthoritywill allowthepersonalrepresentative totakemanyactionswithout obtainingcourtapproval.Before takingcertainveryimportant actions,however,thepersonal representativewillberequiredto givenoticetointerestedpersons unlesstheyhavewaivednoticeor consentedtotheproposedaction.) Theindependentadministration authoritywillbegrantedunlessan interestedpersonfilesanobjection tothepetitionandshowsgood causewhythecourtshouldnot granttheauthority.

AHEARINGonthepetitionwillbe heldonJuly11,2024at1:31p.m.at theSuperiorCourtofCalifornia, CountyofHumboldt,825Fifth Street,Eureka,inRoom:4

Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visithttps://www.humboldt.courts. ca.gov/

IFYOUOBJECTtothegrantingof thepetition,youshouldappearat thehearingandstateyourobjec− tionsorfilewrittenobjectionswith thecourtbeforethehearing.Your appearancemaybeinpersonorby yourattorney.

attorneyknowledgeableinCali− fornialaw.

YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable fromthecourtclerk.

Petitioner: TabbW.Bubier 18692SeclusionWay SantaAna,CA92705 (949)230−6056 Filed:June4,2024

SUPERIORCOURTOFCALIFORNIA COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT 6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−213)

NOTICEOFPETITIONTO ADMINISTERESTATEOF RAYMONDKENNETHELLIOTT, akaRAYELLIOTT, akaRAYMONDK.ELLIOTT CASENO.PR2400144

Toallheirs,beneficiaries,creditors, contingentcreditorsandpersons whomayotherwisebeinterestedin thewillorestate,orboth,of RAYMONDKENNETHELLIOTT,aka RAYELLIOTT,akaRAYMONDK. ELLIOTT

APETITIONFORPROBATEhasbeen filedbyPetitionerBRETTELLIOTT

Thepetitionforprobaterequests thatBRETTELLIOTT beappointedaspersonalrepresen− tativetoadministertheestateof thedecedent.

THEPETITIONrequestsauthorityto administertheestateunderthe IndependentAdministrationof EstatesAct.(Thisauthoritywill allowthepersonalrepresentative totakemanyactionswithout obtainingcourtapproval.Before takingcertainveryimportant actions,however,thepersonal representativewillberequiredto givenoticetointerestedpersons unlesstheyhavewaivednoticeor consentedtotheproposedaction.) Theindependentadministration authoritywillbegrantedunlessan interestedpersonfilesanobjection tothepetitionandshowsgood causewhythecourtshouldnot granttheauthority.

thecourtandmailacopytothe personalrepresentativeappointed bythecourtwithinthelaterof either(1)fourmonthsfromthe dateoffirstissuanceofletterstoa generalpersonalrepresentative,as definedinsection58(b)oftheCali− forniaProbateCode,or(2)60days fromthedateofmailingor personaldeliverytoyouofanotice undersection9052oftheCalifornia ProbateCode.OtherCalifornia statutesandlegalauthoritymay affectyourrightsasacreditor.You maywanttoconsultwithan attorneyknowledgeableinCali− fornialaw.

YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable fromthecourtclerk.

AttorneyforPetitioner: JamesJ.Aste LawOfficeofJamesJ.Aste POBox307 Ferndale,CA95536 (707)786−4476

Filed:May30,2024

SUPERIORCOURTOFCALIFORNIA COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT

6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−205)

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

Amy Christensen Humboldt County Tax Collector Executed at Eureka, Humboldt County, California, on May 22nd, 2024. Published in the North Coast Journal on June 6th, 13th & 20th, 2024.

IFYOUAREACREDITORora contingentcreditorofthedece− dent,youmustfileyourclaimwith thecourtandmailacopytothe personalrepresentativeappointed bythecourtwithinthelaterof either(1)fourmonthsfromthe dateoffirstissuanceofletterstoa generalpersonalrepresentative,as definedinsection58(b)oftheCali− forniaProbateCode,or(2)60days fromthedateofmailingor personaldeliverytoyouofanotice undersection9052oftheCalifornia ProbateCode.OtherCalifornia statutesandlegalauthoritymay affectyourrightsasacreditor.You maywanttoconsultwithan attorneyknowledgeableinCali− fornialaw.

YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable

AHEARINGonthepetitionwillbe heldonJune27,2024at1:31p.m.at theSuperiorCourtofCalifornia, CountyofHumboldt,825Fifth Street,Eureka,inDept.:4

Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visithttps://www.humboldt.courts. ca.gov/

IFYOUOBJECTtothegrantingof thepetition,youshouldappearat thehearingandstateyourobjec− tionsorfilewrittenobjectionswith thecourtbeforethehearing.Your appearancemaybeinpersonorby yourattorney. IFYOUAREACREDITORora contingentcreditorofthedece− dent,youmustfileyourclaimwith thecourtandmailacopytothe personalrepresentativeappointed bythecourtwithinthelaterof either(1)fourmonthsfromthe dateoffirstissuanceofletterstoa generalpersonalrepresentative,as definedinsection58(b)oftheCali− forniaProbateCode,or(2)60days fromthedateofmailingor personaldeliverytoyouofanotice undersection9052oftheCalifornia ProbateCode.OtherCalifornia

NOTICEOFTRUSTEE'SSALE UNDERDEEDOFTRUSTTITLE ORDERNUMBER:2430250CAD LOAN:COASTCENTRALFILE:PFI− 242001A.P.N.:522−422−009−000 YOUAREINDEFAULTUNDERA DEEDOFTRUSTDATED06/02/2015. UNLESSYOUTAKEACTIONTO PROTECTYOURPROPERTY,ITMAY BESOLDATAPUBLICSALE.IFYOU NEEDANEXPLANATIONOFTHE NATUREOFTHEPROCEEDING AGAINSTYOU,YOUSHOULD CONTACTALAWYER.NOTICEis herebygiventhatPLACERFORE− CLOSURE,INC.,astrustee,or successortrustee,orsubstituted trusteepursuanttotheDeedof Trustexecutedby:DONALD ACKERMANANDPATRICIAV. ACKERMAN,HUSBANDANDWIFE ASCOMMUNITYPROPERTY Recorded06/05/2015asInstrument No.2015−010877−19inbook,page ofOfficialRecordsintheofficeof theRecorderofHUMBOLDT County,California,andpursuantto theNoticeofDefaultandElection toSellthereunderrecorded2/14/ 2024inBook,Page,asInstrument No.2024−001951ofsaidOfficial Records,WILLSELLon06/28/2024 Atthefrontentrancetothe CountyCourthouseat8255th Street,Eureka,CA95501at11:00AM ATPUBLICAUCTIONTOTHE HIGHESTBIDDERFORCASH (payableatthetimeofsalein lawfulmoneyoftheUnitedStates), allright,titleandinterestconveyed toandnowheldbyitundersaid DeedofTrustinthepropertysitu− atedinsaidCountyandStatehere− inafterdescribed:Asmorefully describedonsaidDeedofTrust. Thepropertyaddressandother commondesignation,ifany,ofthe realpropertydescribedaboveis purportedtobe:200FORESTVIEW DR.,WILLOWCREEK,CA95573The undersignedTrusteedisclaimsany liabilityforanyincorrectnessofthe streetaddressorothercommon designation,ifany,shownherein. Totalamountoftheunpaidbalance oftheobligationsecuredbythe propertytobesoldandreasonable

LEGAL NOTICES
309-201-004-000 SENESTRARO CLYDEAN M $5,632.99 315-082-004-000 GESS BRYCE $55,046.26 316-012-008-000 FRIDAY RIDGE PROPERTIES LLC CO $6,150.06 316-086-017-000 VISTA RIDGE LLC CO $51,129.88 316-111-003-000 SHILOH HOLDINGS LLC CO $49,554.97 316-196-002-000 MASSEI MYRIAH F $5,394.56 317-062-005-000 LBJ-CSJ LLC CO $1,922.82 317-063-010-000 LBJ-CSJ LLC CO
317-200-001-000 VIVACE HOLDINGS INC $10,806.08
$213.28
$1,837.57
504-101-019-000 RAMSEY LOGAN C
507-370-013-000 GOWING THOMAS H $14,133.72
WEST END ROAD INDUSTRIAL PARK INC $600.48
$5,277.78
CARMEN
$595.61
ROBERT E
AZALEA ALLIANCE LLC $80,210.88
SMITH
$6,100.13
522-115-002-000
NATHAN K
$2,890.64
SHERMAN-WARNE
$37,008.20
JILL
522-445-008-000 KIMBER REBECCA S $4,864.90
$3,206.19 530-101-005-000 COATE ALVIN & COLE TIM $8,137.06
$1,839.43 532-142-016-000 SIMPSON VIVIAN K $4,293.51 532-142-018-000 BACON GERALD $1,078.85 300-281-001-000 ROBINSON
$10,937.11
ROBINSON
WOOD AUDREY R $784.84 203-093-002-000 BENNETT WILLIAM $823.68 522-032-011-000 THREE CREEKS HOLDINGS LLC $13,958.66
301-031-004-000
GLORIA & DUNN JENNIFER L & TRENTON W $3,006.36 009-252-021-000
Continued from previous page 30 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

Thepropertyaddressandother commondesignation,ifany,ofthe realpropertydescribedaboveis purportedtobe:200FORESTVIEW DR.,WILLOWCREEK,CA95573The undersignedTrusteedisclaimsany liabilityforanyincorrectnessofthe streetaddressorothercommon designation,ifany,shownherein. Totalamountoftheunpaidbalance oftheobligationsecuredbythe propertytobesoldandreasonable estimatedcosts,expensesand advancesatthetimeoftheinitial publicationoftheNoticeofSaleis: $128,665.16Inadditiontocash,the trusteewillacceptacashier’scheck drawnonastateornationalbank,a checkdrawnbyastateorfederal creditunion,oracheckdrawnbya stateorfederalsavingsandloan association,orsavingsassociation, orsavingsbankspecifiedinSection 5102oftheFinancialCodeand authorizedtodobusinessinthis state.Intheeventtenderother thancashisacceptedtheTrustee maywithholdtheissuanceofthe Trustee’sDeeduntilfundsbecome availabletothepayeeorendorsee asamatterofright.Saidsalewillbe made,butwithoutcovenantor warranty,expressorimplied, regardingtitle,possession,or encumbrances,tosatisfythe indebtednesssecuredbysaidDeed, advancesthereunder,withinterest asprovidedtherein,andtheunpaid principalbalanceoftheNote securedbysaidDeedwithinterest thereonasprovidedinsaidNote, fees,chargesandexpensesofthe trusteeandthetrustscreatedby saidDeedofTrust.NOTICETO

NOTICE INVITING BIDS

1. Notice is hereby given that the Governing Board of the JACOBY CREEK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICT (“District”), of the County of HUMBOLDT, State of California, will receive sealed bids for A PORTION OF DSA App #01-117353 (REVISION # 1) and DSA App #01-117746 (CCD #2) Project (“Project”) up to, but not later than, 1:00 p.m., on WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 2024 and will thereafter publicly open and read aloud the bids. All bids shall be received at the office of the District Office at 1617 Old Arcata Road, Bayside, California.

orsavingsbankspecifiedinSection 5102oftheFinancialCodeand authorizedtodobusinessinthis state.Intheeventtenderother thancashisacceptedtheTrustee maywithholdtheissuanceofthe Trustee’sDeeduntilfundsbecome availabletothepayeeorendorsee asamatterofright.Saidsalewillbe made,butwithoutcovenantor warranty,expressorimplied, regardingtitle,possession,or encumbrances,tosatisfythe indebtednesssecuredbysaidDeed, advancesthereunder,withinterest asprovidedtherein,andtheunpaid principalbalanceoftheNote securedbysaidDeedwithinterest thereonasprovidedinsaidNote, fees,chargesandexpensesofthe trusteeandthetrustscreatedby saidDeedofTrust.NOTICETO

2. Each bid shall be completed on the Bid Proposal Form included in the Contract Documents and must conform and be fully responsive to this invitation, the plans and specifications and all other Contract Documents. Copies of the Contract Documents are available for examination at the following exchanges and copies may be purchased through them:

- Federation of CA BX: 530-343-1994

- Humboldt Builders Exchange: 707-442-3708

- Medford Builders Exchange: 541-773-5327

- Shasta Builders Exchange: 530-221-5556

Also, the Contract Documents are available from Akemi Dean with Siskiyou Design Group, Inc. Please request the link via email to akemi@siskiyoudesigngroup.com.

3. Each bid shall be accompanied by cash, a cashier’s or certified check, or a bidder’s bond executed by a surety licensed to do business in the State of California as a surety, made payable to the District, in an amount not less than ten percent (10%) of the maximum amount of the bid. The check or bid bond shall be given as a guarantee that the bidder to whom the contract is awarded will execute the Contract Documents and will provide the required payment and performance bonds and insurance certificates within ten (10) days after the notification of the award of the contract.

POTENTIALBIDDERS:Ifyouare consideringbiddingonthisprop− ertylien,youshouldunderstand thattherearerisksinvolvedin biddingatatrusteeauction.You willbebiddingonalien,notonthe propertyitself.Placingthehighest bidatatrusteeauctiondoesnot automaticallyentitleyoutofree andclearownershipoftheprop− erty.Youshouldalsobeawarethat thelienbeingauctionedoffmaybe ajuniorlien.Ifyouarethehighest bidderattheauction,youareor mayberesponsibleforpayingoff allliensseniortothelienbeing auctionedoff,beforeyoucan receivecleartitletotheproperty. Youareencouragedtoinvestigate theexistence,priority,andsizeof outstandingliensthatmayexiston thispropertybycontactingthe countyrecorder’sofficeoratitle insurancecompany,eitherofwhich maychargeyouafeeforthisinfor− mation.Ifyouconsulteitherof theseresources,youshouldbe awarethatthesamelendermay holdmorethanonemortgageor deedoftrustontheproperty.

4. The successful bidder shall comply with the provisions of the Labor Code pertaining to payment of the generally prevailing rate of wages and apprenticeships or other training programs. The Department of Industrial Relations has made available the general prevailing rate of per diem wages in the locality in which the work is to be performed for each craft, classification or type of worker needed to execute the contract, including employer payments for health and welfare, pension, vacation, apprenticeship, and similar purposes. Copies of these prevailing rates are available to any interested party upon request and are online at http://www.dir.ca.gov/DLSR. The Contractor and all Subcontractors shall pay not less than the specified rates to all workers employed by them in the execution of the Contract. It is the Contractor’s responsibility to determine any rate change.

POTENTIALBIDDERS:Ifyouare consideringbiddingonthisprop− ertylien,youshouldunderstand thattherearerisksinvolvedin biddingatatrusteeauction.You willbebiddingonalien,notonthe propertyitself.Placingthehighest bidatatrusteeauctiondoesnot automaticallyentitleyoutofree andclearownershipoftheprop− erty.Youshouldalsobeawarethat thelienbeingauctionedoffmaybe ajuniorlien.Ifyouarethehighest bidderattheauction,youareor mayberesponsibleforpayingoff allliensseniortothelienbeing auctionedoff,beforeyoucan receivecleartitletotheproperty. Youareencouragedtoinvestigate theexistence,priority,andsizeof outstandingliensthatmayexiston thispropertybycontactingthe countyrecorder’sofficeoratitle insurancecompany,eitherofwhich maychargeyouafeeforthisinfor− mation.Ifyouconsulteitherof theseresources,youshouldbe awarethatthesamelendermay holdmorethanonemortgageor deedoftrustontheproperty.

5. The schedule of per diem wages is based upon a working day of eight hours. The rate for holiday and overtime work shall be at least time and one half.

6. The substitution of appropriate securities in lieu of retention amounts from progress payments in accordance with Public Contract Code §22300 is permitted.

7. Pursuant to Public Contract Code §4104, each bid shall include the name and location of the place of business of each subcontractor who shall perform work or service or fabricate or install work for the contactor in excess of one-half of one percent (1/2 of 1%) of the bid price. The bid shall describe the type of the work to be performed by each listed subcontractor.

propertytobesoldandreasonable estimatedcosts,expensesand advancesatthetimeoftheinitial publicationoftheNoticeofSaleis: $128,665.16Inadditiontocash,the trusteewillacceptacashier’scheck drawnonastateornationalbank,a checkdrawnbyastateorfederal creditunion,oracheckdrawnbya stateorfederalsavingsandloan association,orsavingsassociation, orsavingsbankspecifiedinSection 5102oftheFinancialCodeand authorizedtodobusinessinthis state.Intheeventtenderother thancashisacceptedtheTrustee maywithholdtheissuanceofthe Trustee’sDeeduntilfundsbecome availabletothepayeeorendorsee asamatterofright.Saidsalewillbe made,butwithoutcovenantor warranty,expressorimplied, regardingtitle,possession,or encumbrances,tosatisfythe indebtednesssecuredbysaidDeed, advancesthereunder,withinterest asprovidedtherein,andtheunpaid principalbalanceoftheNote securedbysaidDeedwithinterest thereonasprovidedinsaidNote, fees,chargesandexpensesofthe trusteeandthetrustscreatedby saidDeedofTrust.NOTICETO POTENTIALBIDDERS:Ifyouare consideringbiddingonthisprop− ertylien,youshouldunderstand thattherearerisksinvolvedin biddingatatrusteeauction.You willbebiddingonalien,notonthe propertyitself.Placingthehighest bidatatrusteeauctiondoesnot automaticallyentitleyoutofree andclearownershipoftheprop− erty.Youshouldalsobeawarethat thelienbeingauctionedoffmaybe ajuniorlien.Ifyouarethehighest bidderattheauction,youareor mayberesponsibleforpayingoff allliensseniortothelienbeing auctionedoff,beforeyoucan receivecleartitletotheproperty. Youareencouragedtoinvestigate theexistence,priority,andsizeof outstandingliensthatmayexiston thispropertybycontactingthe countyrecorder’sofficeoratitle insurancecompany,eitherofwhich maychargeyouafeeforthisinfor− mation.Ifyouconsulteitherof theseresources,youshouldbe awarethatthesamelendermay holdmorethanonemortgageor deedoftrustontheproperty.

8. No bid may be withdrawn for a period of sixty (60) days after the date set for the opening for bids except as provided by Public Contract Code §§5100 et seq. The District reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive any informalities or irregularities in the bidding.

regardingtitle,possession,or encumbrances,tosatisfythe indebtednesssecuredbysaidDeed, advancesthereunder,withinterest asprovidedtherein,andtheunpaid principalbalanceoftheNote securedbysaidDeedwithinterest thereonasprovidedinsaidNote, fees,chargesandexpensesofthe trusteeandthetrustscreatedby saidDeedofTrust.NOTICETO POTENTIALBIDDERS:Ifyouare consideringbiddingonthisprop− ertylien,youshouldunderstand thattherearerisksinvolvedin biddingatatrusteeauction.You willbebiddingonalien,notonthe propertyitself.Placingthehighest bidatatrusteeauctiondoesnot automaticallyentitleyoutofree andclearownershipoftheprop− erty.Youshouldalsobeawarethat thelienbeingauctionedoffmaybe ajuniorlien.Ifyouarethehighest bidderattheauction,youareor mayberesponsibleforpayingoff allliensseniortothelienbeing auctionedoff,beforeyoucan receivecleartitletotheproperty. Youareencouragedtoinvestigate theexistence,priority,andsizeof outstandingliensthatmayexiston thispropertybycontactingthe countyrecorder’sofficeoratitle insurancecompany,eitherofwhich maychargeyouafeeforthisinfor− mation.Ifyouconsulteitherof theseresources,youshouldbe awarethatthesamelendermay holdmorethanonemortgageor deedoftrustontheproperty.

countyrecorder’sofficeoratitle insurancecompany,eitherofwhich maychargeyouafeeforthisinfor− mation.Ifyouconsulteitherof theseresources,youshouldbe awarethatthesamelendermay holdmorethanonemortgageor deedoftrustontheproperty.

NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:The saledateshownonthisnoticeof salemaybepostponedoneor moretimesbythemortgagee, beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924gofthe CaliforniaCivilCode.Thelaw requiresthatinformationabout trusteesalepostponementsbe madeavailabletoyouandtothe public,asacourtesytothosenot presentatthesale.Ifyouwishto learnwhetheryoursaledatehas beenpostponed,and,ifapplicable, therescheduledtimeanddatefor thesaleofthisproperty,youmay call916−939−0772orvisitthis internetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001.Informationabout postponementsthatareveryshort indurationorthatoccurclosein timetothescheduledsalemaynot immediatelybereflectedinthe telephoneinformationoronthe internetwebsite.Thebestwayto verifypostponementinformationis toattendthescheduledsale.

PUBLIC NOTICE

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE COUNTY OF HUMBOLDT

9. Minority, women, and disabled veteran contractors are encouraged to submit bids. This bid is subject to Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise requirements.

10. This project is subject to prevailing wage requirements and bidder and its subcontractors are required to pay all workers employed for the performance of this project no less than the applicable prevailing wage rate for each such worker. If this project is for a public works project over $25,000 or for a maintenance project over $15,000, bidder acknowledges that the project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the California Department of Industrial Relations in accordance with California Labor Code sections 1725.5 and 1770 et seq

NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:The saledateshownonthisnoticeof salemaybepostponedoneor moretimesbythemortgagee, beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924gofthe CaliforniaCivilCode.Thelaw requiresthatinformationabout trusteesalepostponementsbe madeavailabletoyouandtothe public,asacourtesytothosenot presentatthesale.Ifyouwishto learnwhetheryoursaledatehas beenpostponed,and,ifapplicable, therescheduledtimeanddatefor thesaleofthisproperty,youmay call916−939−0772orvisitthis internetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001.Informationabout postponementsthatareveryshort

11. Each bidder shall possess at the time the bid is awarded the following classification(s) of California State Contractor’s license: B (General Contractor)

12. By approving these bid documents for the Project, the Governing Board finds that the Project is substantially complex and unique and therefore requires a retention amount of 5%.

13. XX Bidders’ Conference. A mandatory bidders’ conference will be held at Jacoby Creek School, 1617 Old Arcata Road, Bayside, California 95524 on Wednesday, June 19, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. for the purpose of acquainting all prospective bidders with the Contract Documents and the Project site. Failure to attend the conference will result in the disqualification of the bid of the non-attending bidder.

JACOBY CREEK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICT

By: Melanie Nannizzi, Superintendent/Principal

NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:The saledateshownonthisnoticeof salemaybepostponedoneor moretimesbythemortgagee, beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924gofthe CaliforniaCivilCode.Thelaw requiresthatinformationabout trusteesalepostponementsbe madeavailabletoyouandtothe public,asacourtesytothosenot presentatthesale.Ifyouwishto learnwhetheryoursaledatehas beenpostponed,and,ifapplicable, therescheduledtimeanddatefor thesaleofthisproperty,youmay call916−939−0772orvisitthis internetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001.Informationabout postponementsthatareveryshort indurationorthatoccurclosein timetothescheduledsalemaynot immediatelybereflectedinthe telephoneinformationoronthe internetwebsite.Thebestwayto verifypostponementinformationis toattendthescheduledsale.

NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:The saledateshownonthisnoticeof salemaybepostponedoneor moretimesbythemortgagee, beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924gofthe CaliforniaCivilCode.Thelaw requiresthatinformationabout trusteesalepostponementsbe madeavailabletoyouandtothe public,asacourtesytothosenot presentatthesale.Ifyouwishto learnwhetheryoursaledatehas beenpostponed,and,ifapplicable, therescheduledtimeanddatefor thesaleofthisproperty,youmay call916−939−0772orvisitthis internetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001.Informationabout postponementsthatareveryshort indurationorthatoccurclosein timetothescheduledsalemaynot immediatelybereflectedinthe telephoneinformationoronthe internetwebsite.Thebestwayto verifypostponementinformationis toattendthescheduledsale.

DATED: May 31, 2024 Publication Dates: 1) 06/06/24 2) 06/13/24

NOTICETOTENANT:Youmayhave arighttopurchasethisproperty afterthetrusteeauctionpursuant toSection2924moftheCalifornia

NOTICETOTENANT:Youmayhave arighttopurchasethisproperty afterthetrusteeauctionpursuant toSection2924moftheCalifornia CivilCode.Ifyouarean"eligible tenantbuyer,"youcanpurchase thepropertyifyoumatchthelast andhighestbidplacedatthe trusteeauction.Ifyouarean "eligiblebidder,"youmaybeable topurchasethepropertyifyou exceedthelastandhighestbid placedatthetrusteeauction.There arethreestepstoexercisingthis rightofpurchase.First,48hours

NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:The saledateshownonthisnoticeof salemaybepostponedoneor moretimesbythemortgagee, beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924gofthe CaliforniaCivilCode.Thelaw requiresthatinformationabout trusteesalepostponementsbe madeavailabletoyouandtothe public,asacourtesytothosenot presentatthesale.Ifyouwishto learnwhetheryoursaledatehas beenpostponed,and,ifapplicable, therescheduledtimeanddatefor thesaleofthisproperty,youmay call916−939−0772orvisitthis internetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001.Informationabout postponementsthatareveryshort indurationorthatoccurclosein timetothescheduledsalemaynot immediatelybereflectedinthe telephoneinformationoronthe internetwebsite.Thebestwayto verifypostponementinformationis toattendthescheduledsale.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Housing Authority of the County of Humboldt has developed it’s Agency Plan in compliance with the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998. A copy of the Agency Plan is available for review at www.eurekahumboldtha.org or by request. A public hearing for the purpose of receiving comments will be held on July 16, 2024 at 11:00am via Zoom. The Housing Authority will receive comments starting May 30, 2024, to the close of business, July 15, 2024. To request the Agency Plan and obtain zoom meeting information, please call (707) 443-4583 ext 219. Housing Authority hours of operation are 9:00am – 4:30pm, Monday – Friday, alternating every other Friday an off day.

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF EUREKA

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Housing Authority of the City of Eureka has developed it’s Agency Plan in compliance with the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998. A copy of the Agency Plan is available for review at www.eurekahumboldtha.org or by request. A public hearing for the purpose of receiving comments will be held on July 16, 2024 at 10:00am via Zoom. The Housing Authority will receive comments starting May 30, 2024 to the close of business, July 15, 2024. To request the Agency Plan and obtain zoom meeting information, please call (707) 443-4583 ext 219. The Housing Authority hours of operation are 9:00am – 4:30pm, Monday – Friday, alternating every other Friday an off day.

NOTICETOTENANT:Youmayhave arighttopurchasethisproperty afterthetrusteeauctionpursuant toSection2924moftheCalifornia CivilCode.Ifyouarean"eligible tenantbuyer,"youcanpurchase thepropertyifyoumatchthelast andhighestbidplacedatthe trusteeauction.Ifyouarean "eligiblebidder,"youmaybeable topurchasethepropertyifyou exceedthelastandhighestbid placedatthetrusteeauction.There arethreestepstoexercisingthis rightofpurchase.First,48hours afterthedateofthetrusteesale, youcancall916−939−0772,orvisit thisinternetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001tofindthedateon whichthetrustee’ssalewasheld, theamountofthelastandhighest bid,andtheaddressofthetrustee. Second,youmustsendawritten noticeofintenttoplaceabidso

PUBLIC NOTICE

THE HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF EUREKA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Housing Authority has completed a draft update of the EFH Tenant Selection Plan. A copy of the draft update is available for review at the Housing Authority website www.eurekahumboldtha.org or by request. The Housing Authority will receive comments regarding the TSP draft update June 6, 2024 through the close of business on July 5, 2024. To request the draft update please call (707) 443-4583 ext 219. The Housing Authority hours of operation are 9:00am – 4:30pm, Monday through Friday, alternating every other Friday an off day.

NOTICETOTENANT:Youmayhave arighttopurchasethisproperty afterthetrusteeauctionpursuant toSection2924moftheCalifornia CivilCode.Ifyouarean"eligible tenantbuyer,"youcanpurchase thepropertyifyoumatchthelast andhighestbidplacedatthe trusteeauction.Ifyouarean "eligiblebidder,"youmaybeable topurchasethepropertyifyou exceedthelastandhighestbid placedatthetrusteeauction.There arethreestepstoexercisingthis rightofpurchase.First,48hours afterthedateofthetrusteesale, youcancall916−939−0772,orvisit thisinternetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001tofindthedateon whichthetrustee’ssalewasheld, theamountofthelastandhighest bid,andtheaddressofthetrustee. Second,youmustsendawritten noticeofintenttoplaceabidso thatthetrusteereceivesitnomore than15daysafterthetrustee’ssale. Third,youmustsubmitabid,by remittingthefundsandaffidavit describedinSection2924m(c)of theCivilCode,sothatthetrustee receivesitnomorethan45days afterthetrustee’ssale.Ifyouthink youmayqualifyasan"eligible tenantbuyer"or"eligiblebidder," youshouldconsidercontactingan attorneyorappropriaterealestate professionalimmediatelyforadvice regardingthispotentialrightto purchase.Dated:05/28/2024 PLACERFORECLOSURE,INC.,assaid Trustee12190HerdalDrive,Suite9 Auburn,California95603(530)888− 8411By:STELLASHAO,TRUSTEE SALEOFFICERDIRECTIONSMAYBE OBTAINEDPURSUANTTOA WRITTENREQUESTSUBMITTEDTO THEBENEFICIARYC/OPLACER FORECLOSURE,INC.,12190HERDAL DR.,SUITE9,AUBURN,CA95603, WITHIN10DAYSOFTHEFIRST PUBLICATIONOFTHISNOTICE. PLACERFORECLOSURE,INC.ISA DEBTCOLLECTORATTEMPTINGTO COLLECTADEBTANDANYINFOR− MATIONOBTAINEDWILLBEUSED FORTHATPURPOSE.NPP0461170 To:NORTHCOASTJOURNAL

telephoneinformationoronthe internetwebsite.Thebestwayto verifypostponementinformationis toattendthescheduledsale. NOTICETOTENANT:Youmayhave arighttopurchasethisproperty afterthetrusteeauctionpursuant toSection2924moftheCalifornia CivilCode.Ifyouarean"eligible tenantbuyer,"youcanpurchase thepropertyifyoumatchthelast andhighestbidplacedatthe trusteeauction.Ifyouarean "eligiblebidder,"youmaybeable topurchasethepropertyifyou exceedthelastandhighestbid placedatthetrusteeauction.There arethreestepstoexercisingthis rightofpurchase.First,48hours afterthedateofthetrusteesale, youcancall916−939−0772,orvisit thisinternetwebsite www.nationwideposting.com,using thefilenumberassignedtothis casePFI−242001tofindthedateon whichthetrustee’ssalewasheld, theamountofthelastandhighest bid,andtheaddressofthetrustee. Second,youmustsendawritten noticeofintenttoplaceabidso thatthetrusteereceivesitnomore than15daysafterthetrustee’ssale. Third,youmustsubmitabid,by remittingthefundsandaffidavit describedinSection2924m(c)of theCivilCode,sothatthetrustee receivesitnomorethan45days afterthetrustee’ssale.Ifyouthink youmayqualifyasan"eligible tenantbuyer"or"eligiblebidder," youshouldconsidercontactingan attorneyorappropriaterealestate professionalimmediatelyforadvice regardingthispotentialrightto purchase.Dated:05/28/2024 PLACERFORECLOSURE,INC.,assaid Trustee12190HerdalDrive,Suite9 Auburn,California95603(530)888− 8411By:STELLASHAO,TRUSTEE SALEOFFICERDIRECTIONSMAYBE OBTAINEDPURSUANTTOA WRITTENREQUESTSUBMITTEDTO THEBENEFICIARYC/OPLACER FORECLOSURE,INC.,12190HERDAL DR.,SUITE9,AUBURN,CA95603, WITHIN10DAYSOFTHEFIRST PUBLICATIONOFTHISNOTICE. PLACERFORECLOSURE,INC.ISA DEBTCOLLECTORATTEMPTINGTO COLLECTADEBTANDANYINFOR− MATIONOBTAINEDWILLBEUSED FORTHATPURPOSE.NPP0461170 To:NORTHCOASTJOURNAL 06/06/2024,06/13/2024,06/20/2024

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00214

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

HUMBOLDTHEALINGHARVEST

Humboldt 2025AdamsCourt Arcata,CA95521

OscarSMogollonMaticorena 725BaysideRd Arcata,CA95521

DavidPoplin 2025AdamsCourt Arcata,CA95521

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonApril16,2024 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa

Continued on next page »
default PUBLIC NOTICE
default
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 31

Catherine Ellen Barnes

August 31, 1950- March 13, 2024

Catherine Ellen Barnes went to do God’s Laundry, her departing flight was out of Eureka, CA. She loved the sensation of flight, as she would bungee jump over the waters of Mexico. Born in Long Beach, CA to Betty Jean Hubbard (Barnes /McElhill) and Philip Barnes, she spent time as a young person fishing in Humboldt County with her Grandmother Harriet “Jane “Hubbard. Having raised her daughters Wendi D. Wood, Deborah L. Hart, & Karyn B. Hart in Martinez, CA, children of her marriage to Gregory E. Hart, she moved to Eureka in 1996 to enjoy the ocean with her Grandchildren Kelli Wood, Kevyn Harris, Dylan Hart Arnold and Gage Hart Arnold.

Being an excellent cook, she taught them how to run a proper kitchen and make pies. Any child under her influence emerged with excellent comprehension of the English language. She loved babies and considered her job done when they were able to speak in complete sentences. The friends of her children were taken under her wing as family, most notably Missy Ferguson.

As a woman of many great talents, best known publicly for her masterful capacity in Physical Therapy, Fitness Instruction, Massage Therapy, and Paralegal Services. Catherine retired from the City of Eureka after her years as a Fitness Instructor at the Adorni Center and also was a member of the team at The Spa Personal Choice, certified in Swedish and Esalon Massage earned at The McKinnon Institute. Known personally for her ability to laugh at every challenge life lobbed her way. Cat always landed on her feet.

Survived by Marge Barnes, Mark and Jeanette Barnes, children, grandchildren, nephew Phillip and nieces Marcy, Valerie, and Camila.

Brother Mark Barnes says:

My sister was at her best when she was caring for others… which was especially evident when she was caring for the elderly in the latter stages of their earthly lives. This was her special gift.

Her daughters would say their mother took doing laundry to an art form. Those of you who knew Catherine, Cathy, Cat personally will need no interpretation of these thoughts and instructions of hers, to be read upon her passing. The rest of you… just try to follow along.

• “I have gone on to do God’s laundry and offer a massage if one is wanted”

• “At my passing, in lieu of flowers, go to Bed Bath and Beyond and buy yourself a present.”

• “Cancel all my book and movie clubs… immediately!”

• “Bury me in this cooking apron.”

• “Bury me wearing these green gardening gloves.”

• “After settling my affairs, if there is any money left over, spend it buying booze for my memorial.”

• “I love to eat.”

• “If you insist on having a memorial, make it a potluck and use real plates, knives and forks. No plastic allowed.”

• “When it’s time to go… it’s time to go!”

And lastly, this joke found amongst her files…

• “When I die, I want to go peacefully, like my grandfather did, in his sleep. Not yelling and screaming like the passengers in his car.”- Will Rogers

No public service will be held. We invite you to privately celebrate and honor her as you wish. Read a book.Laugh with the funny pages. Touch high quality textiles. Walk the beach. Go fishing. Eat great food. Swim. Grow plants. Watch the birds. If you wish, support Friends of the Redwood Library, Food for People, The Rescue Mission or Hospice of Humboldt.

LEGAL NOTICES

LimitedPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonApril16,2024 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sOscarMogollon,Partner ThisApril16,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES

byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

5/30,6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−192)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00238

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

CORNERSTONECOMPUTERS

Humboldt 2858EStreet Eureka,CA95501

CornerstoneInceptionsLLC CA201412810269 2858EStreet Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonMarch9,2009 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sCoreyGrabeal,Member/CEO ThisApril25,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 5/23,5/30,6/6,6/13/2024(24−182)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00239

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas OVERTHERIDGEMOBILEBARCO.

Continued from previous page

Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sEnaNunez,Owner ThisApril30,2024 JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−200)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00240

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas HUMBOLDTGROWN

Humboldt 29371AlderpointRd Blocksburg,CA95514

600FStSte3PMB520 Arcata,CA95521

MountainCreekFarmsLLC CA201719510229 32CoronadoAve SanCarlos,CA94070

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sCollinKingery,CEO ThisApril30,2024 JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−201)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00250

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas SIMPLIFY

Humboldt 308HansenDr Fortuna,CA95540

Humboldt 29371AlderpointRd Blocksburg,CA95514

600FSt,Ste3,PMB520 Arcata,CA95521

EnaMNunez 29371AlderpointRd Blocksburg,CA95514

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sEnaNunez,Owner ThisApril30,2024 JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−200)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00241

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas GRACEREALESTATE

Humboldt

3466DowsPrairieRd McKinleyville,CA95519

Piscea CA6137241

3466DowsPrairieRd McKinleyville,CA95519

Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonApril24,2024 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sSarahColeman,President ThisMay30,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/13,6/20,6/27,7/4/2024(24−212)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00264

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

DETAILSBYWEEZY

Humboldt 432MapleLane Garberville,CA95542

POBox423 Redway,CA95560

LouiseMHenninger 432MapleLane Garberville,CA95542

MekaZHunt 308HansenDr Fortuna,CA95540

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sMekaZHunt,Owner ThisMay3,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 5/30,6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−195)

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sLouiseHenninger,Owner

ThisMay8,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−204)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00273

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

GOLDEN1CLEANINGSERVICES

Humboldt 1788ThelmaSt Fortuna,CA95540

Golden1CleaningServices,Inc. CA6140970 1788ThelmaSt

Continued from previous page
OBITUARIES
32 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00273

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

GOLDEN1CLEANINGSERVICES

Humboldt 1788ThelmaSt Fortuna,CA95540

Golden1CleaningServices,Inc. CA6140970 1788ThelmaSt Fortuna,CA95540

Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect.

Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sBrookeSollars,President

ThisMay13,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES

byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−210)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00277

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

WOLFEREALESTATETEAM

Humboldt 830BaysideRd Arcata,CA95521

5460EricsonWay Arcata,CA95521

AprilLWolfe 830BaysideRd Arcata,CA95521

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonJune3,2019 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect.

Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sAprilWolfe,Owner/Broker ThisMay14,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjc,HumboldtCountyClerk

6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−198)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00283

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

BMWOFHUMBOLDTBAY

Humboldt 1795CentralAvenue McKinleyville,CA95519

CappoManagementLXXIII,LLC FLL24000138236 43652MichiganAvenue Canton,MI48188

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted

CappoManagementLXXIII,LLC FLL24000138236 43652MichiganAvenue Canton,MI48188

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sJeffreyECappo,President

ThisMay16,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/13,6/20,6/27,7/4/2024(24−214)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00284

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas AALAWNCAREANDMORE

Humboldt 1675LincolnSt Eureka,CA95501

AaronACempa 1675LincolnSt Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sAaronCempa,Owner

ThisMay17,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

5/30,6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−188)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00286

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas ADVANCEDPAINTING

Humboldt 103OleHansonRd Eureka,CA95503

CourtneyMHall 103OleHansonRd Eureka,CA95503

DouglasFClare 1832ColumbusAve McKinleyville,CA95519

Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonMay17,2024 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonMay17,2024

Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect.

Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sCourtneyHall,GeneralPartner ThisMay17,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

5/23,5/30,6/6,6/13/2024(24−181)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00291

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

MISTLER&ASSOCIATES/STILL CENTER

Humboldt

80RobertCtW. Arcata,CA95521

2443FillmoreSt,#380−4248 SanFrancisco,CA94115

BPlusVenturesLLC CA202355112733 3400CottageWaySteG2 Sacramento,CA95825

Thebusinessisconductedbya LimitedLiabilityCompany. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonJanuary1,2024

Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sBrianMistler,Secretary

ThisMay17,2024 JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk

5/30,6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−191)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00293

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas NORTHEDGE

Humboldt 707KStreet Eureka,CA95501

ArcataEconomicDevelopment Corporation CA894895 707KStreet Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbya Corporation.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonNotApplicable Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sRossWelch,CEO ThisMay23,2024 JUANP.CERVANTES

statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sRossWelch,CEO ThisMay23,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES

byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 5/30,6/6,6/13,6/20/2024(24−184)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00299

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00299

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

HEARTSOFHONEYCREATIONS

Humboldt 5403ElkRiverRd Eureka,CA95503

MoniqueDParker 5403ElkRiverRd Eureka,CA95503

CoreenKRose 2157CaliforniaSt Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbya GeneralPartnership. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonMay28,2024

Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sMoniqueParker,Owner/Partner ThisMay28,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byth,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−197)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00301

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

STANALBAGLASS

Humboldt

483ButteCreekRoad Kneeland,CA95549

POBox3337

Eureka,CA95502

StanfordEAlbaugh 483ButteCreekRoad Kneeland,CA95549

AriannaNAlbaugh 483ButteCreekRoad Kneeland,CA95549

Thebusinessisconductedbya MarriedCouple. Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonMay28,2024

Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sStanfordAlbaugh,Owner

ThisMay28,2024

Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sStanfordAlbaugh,Owner

ThisMay28,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/13,6/20,6/27,7/4/2024(24−215)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00313

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas

SMALLWONDERSCHILDCARE

Humboldt 2607HSt Eureka,CA95501

MeganNLabinsky 2607HSt Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonAugust2019 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sMeganLabinsky,Childcare Provider

ThisMay31,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−207)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24−00314

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas HUNNYBUNNY

Humboldt 101WesthavenDr.North Trinidad,CA95570

POBox992 Trinidad,CA95570

EricaLPatrick POBox992 Trinidad,CA95570

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonAugust2019 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sEricaPatrick,Owner

ThisMay31,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES byjr,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−208)

FICTITIOUSBUSINESSNAME STATEMENT24-00315

ThefollowingpersonisdoingBusi− nessas WILDDOUGHBAKINGCOMPANY

Humboldt 1243HooverSt Eureka,CA95501

KristinaMAdams 1243HooverSt Eureka,CA95501

Thebusinessisconductedbyan Individual.

Thedateregistrantcommencedto transactbusinessundertheficti− tiousbusinessnameornamelisted aboveonApril1,2024 Ideclarethatallinformationinthis statementistrueandcorrect. Aregistrantwhodeclaresastrue anymaterialmatterpursuantto Section17913oftheBusinessand ProfessionsCodethattheregis− trantknowstobefalseisguiltyofa misdemeanorpunishablebyafine nottoexceedonethousanddollars ($1,000).

/sKristinaAdams,Owner

ThisMay3,2024

JUANP.CERVANTES bysc,HumboldtCountyClerk 6/6,6/13,6/20,6/27/2024(24−209)

NOTICEOFPETITIONTO ADMINISTERESTATEOF CAERWENWILLIAMS CASENO.PR2400140

Toallheirs,beneficiaries,creditors, contingentcreditorsandpersons whomayotherwisebeinterestedin thewillorestate,orboth,of CAERWENWILLIAMS

APETITIONFORPROBATEhasbeen filedbyPetitionerRICHARDJAMES WILLIAMS Thepetitionforprobaterequests thatRICHARDJAMESWILLIAMS beappointedaspersonalrepresen− tativetoadministertheestateof thedecedent.

THEPETITIONrequeststhedece− dent’swillandcodicils,ifany,be admittedtoprobate.Thewilland anycodicilsareavailableforexam− inationinthefilekeptbycourt. THEPETITIONrequestsauthorityto administertheestateunderthe IndependentAdministrationof EstatesAct.(Thisauthoritywill allowthepersonalrepresentative totakemanyactionswithout obtainingcourtapproval.Before takingcertainveryimportant actions,however,thepersonal representativewillberequiredto givenoticetointerestedpersons unlesstheyhavewaivednoticeor consentedtotheproposedaction.) Theindependentadministration authoritywillbegrantedunlessan interestedpersonfilesanobjection tothepetitionandshowsgood causewhythecourtshouldnot granttheauthority.

AHEARINGonthepetitionwillbe heldonJune20,2024at1:31p.m.at theSuperiorCourtofCalifornia, CountyofHumboldt,825Fifth Street,Eureka,inDept.:4,Room:4

Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visithttps://www.humboldt.courts. ca.gov/

IFYOUOBJECTtothegrantingof

Continued on next page »
northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 33

causewhythecourtshouldnot granttheauthority.

LEGAL NOTICES

Continued from previous page

AHEARINGonthepetitionwillbe heldonJune20,2024at1:31p.m.at theSuperiorCourtofCalifornia, CountyofHumboldt,825Fifth Street,Eureka,inDept.:4,Room:4

Forinformationonhowtoappear remotelyforyourhearing,please visithttps://www.humboldt.courts. ca.gov/

IFYOUOBJECTtothegrantingof thepetition,youshouldappearat thehearingandstateyourobjec− tionsorfilewrittenobjectionswith thecourtbeforethehearing.Your appearancemaybeinpersonorby yourattorney.

IFYOUAREACREDITORora contingentcreditorofthedece− dent,youmustfileyourclaimwith thecourtandmailacopytothe personalrepresentativeappointed bythecourtwithinthelaterof either(1)fourmonthsfromthe dateoffirstissuanceofletterstoa generalpersonalrepresentative,as definedinsection58(b)oftheCali− forniaProbateCode,or(2)60days fromthedateofmailingor personaldeliverytoyouofanotice undersection9052oftheCalifornia ProbateCode.OtherCalifornia statutesandlegalauthoritymay affectyourrightsasacreditor.You maywanttoconsultwithan attorneyknowledgeableinCali− fornialaw.

YOUMAYEXAMINEthefilekept bythecourt.Ifyouareaperson interestedintheestate,youmay filewiththecourtaRequestfor SpecialNotice(formDE−154)ofthe filingofaninventoryandappraisal ofestateassetsorofanypetition oraccountasprovidedinProbate Codesection1250.ARequestfor SpecialNoticeformisavailable fromthecourtclerk.

AttorneyforPetitioner: ThomasB.Hjerpe LawOfficeofHjerpe&Godinho, LLP 350EStreet,1stFloor Eureka,CA95501 (707)442−7262

Filed:May24,2024

SUPERIORCOURTOFCALIFORNIA COUNTYOFHUMBOLDT

5/30,6/6,6/13/2024(24−193)

CROSSWORD

ACROSS

1. Adoption org. 5. Dallas player, for short 8. Because of 13. “Relax!” 14. St. crosser 15. Ambassador’s assistant 16. Religious leader’s maxims (unrelated to late actor Robert) 17. Fight back 19. Night of amateur comedy or music, more formally 21. 100% accurate 22. Like the Woodsman of Oz 23. Hallow ender 24. Licorice-scented herb

28. TV network heardquartered in Ottawa 31. City between Cleveland and

Akron which hosts an annual festival for multiple births

36. All-encompassing 38. Tire filler

39. Schedule listing 40. Shel Silverstein children’s book that has drawn controversy

43. Roll of grass

44. More weird

45. “Grease” band ___ Na Na

48. “Superstore” actor Feldman

50. Be less strict

53. Washington, for one

58. Vince Gilligan, for “Better Call Saul”

59. “Circle of Friends” novelist Binchy

60. Native American emblem

61. Long period of time

62. Complete confusion

63. Like some stares or brooks

64. Miffed

65. ‘Rents, more rudely

DOWN

1. “Ye Olde” establishment

2. With feet turned in 3. Gorillaz song “___ Eastwood”

4. Texas mission to “remember”

5. “The Life and Slimes of ___ Summers” (solo performance from the host of “Double Dare”)

6. Positively profess

7. Presidential bill blocker

8. “New” capital

9. Worker’s organization

10. Lemonheads lead singer Dando

11. Carryall

12. “___ Como Va” (Santana song)

13. Almost there

18. More appropriate

20. ___ instant

25. Anti-inflammatory drug acronym

26. “___ you, Nancy, from doing harm ...” (line from “The Craft”)

27. ___ pricing

28. Green Bay Packers fan

29. Recycling container

30. Narrow bed

32. Make like a happy tail

33. “The Last King of Scotland” subject Amin

34. Neighbor of Belg.

35. “A Man Called ___” (Fredrik Backman novel turned into a Tom Hanks movie)

36. “Dynamite” K-pop band

37. 17th letter of the Greek alphabet

41. Singer/songwriter Shepard who

recurred on “Ally McBeal”

42. Not kosher, in Jewish dietary law

46. ___ rancheros (Mexican breakfast)

47. ___-ski (lodge lounging)

48. President Martin Van ___

49. Foe

51. Transmission repair franchise with a “beep beep” ad

52. “60 Minutes” reporter Lesley with an appearance in “Marcel the Shell With Shoes On”

53. Arch location

54. Eight, for starters?

55. “Big-ticket” thing 56. “You’ve Got Mail” director Ephron

57. June honoree

58. Dollar fractions, briefly

• $50,000 Hiring Incentive

• No Employee Match on Retirement • Platinum Level Health Insurance at no Employee Cost

Are you a dedicated law enforcement officer seeking a dynamic and supportive community to hone your skills and make a real difference?

The Rio Dell Police Department (RDPD) isn’t your average small-town department. We’re a highly effective, close-knit unit where your contributions will be seen and valued. We’re looking for a lateral transfer officer who’s already excelled in another department and is ready to take their career to the next level.

Why RDPD is the Perfect Fit for You:

Make a Difference: Patrol a growing community that appreciates and supports its police force. You’ll have the opportunity to directly impact public safety and build strong relationships with residents.

Be Part of the Family: Join a collaborative and supportive team where you’ll work alongside experienced officers who are passionate about their work.

Unmatched Benefits Package:

Superior Retirement Plan: Our 401(k)style plan surpasses industry standards with a 20% employer contribution. No employee match is required, putting more dollars in your pocket with each pay period. RDPD will also match an additional 4%. Unlike CalPERS, you have immediate access to your funds upon employment separation. This plan is designed to be better than what major corporations offer, and every dime of it is yours.

Top-Tier Health Insurance: RDPD provides you with platinum-level health, vision, and dental insurance – at no cost to you.

Comprehensive Benefits: We offer a competitive package that includes Spanish-English bilingual pay, POST certification incentives, generous vacation, sick, holiday, a residency incentive, and more.

Small Department, Big Impact: Here, you’ll gain diverse experience and have the opportunity to take initiative within a department that fosters your individual professional growth. This is more than a job; it’s a calling. If you’re a proven law enforcement professional who thrives in a collaborative environment and is eager to make a lasting impact, we want to hear from you.

Ready to Apply?

Please submit a cover letter and résumé in addition to the City’s standard application. Applications may be obtained at 675 Wildwood Avenue, www.cityofriodell.ca.gov or call (707)7643532. Positions open until filled. First review is Monday, July 1, 2024. Please submit via email to cityhall@cityofriodell.ca.gov Don’t miss this chance to join an exceptional team and make a difference in a community that values you!

“OUT FOR THE COUNT” ANSWERS NEXT WEEK! ©2024 MATT JONES 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 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 www.sudoku.com
© Puzzles by Pappocom 2 4 7 1 5 9 8 4 1 3 9 5 6 4 5 8 6 6 4 1 2 6 3 8 3 HARD #68 U S U A L C L A S H R E L I E F C L A P T O S E A B O R G S H O T P A R A K R O N O H P U C K E R S S M A L L C H A N G E A G S I T S L I K E D A S T E T S H T E T L S I Z E T A E E L Y S E C E N A R R T W I T C H Y E R S I B N H O N O R E E S S E N O W H E R E N E A R A X H E A D S E D E N I T E B O E I N G S N E V A D A S L I E D T O D A L E K S E L L I S N A M E O LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS TO FREESTYLE, FULL SUBSTANCE
Continued
page 37 Ready
- LATERAL
EMPLOYMENT
on
to Make a Bigger Impact? Lead the Team with Rio Dell Police POLICE OFFICER
($54,766 – $76,835 + Benefits)
County Public Notices Fictitious Business Petition to Administer Estate Trustee Sale Other Public Notices classified@north coastjournal.com LEGALS? 442-1400 ×314 34 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com
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Ready to Make a Bigger Impact? Lead the Team with Rio Dell Police

CHIEF OF POLICE

($97,980 - $138,292 + Benefits)

• $50,000 Hiring Incentive

• No Employee Match on Retirement

• Platinum Level Health Insurance at no Employee Cost

Are you a dedicated law enforcement officer seeking a dynamic and supportive community to hone your skills and make a real difference?

The Rio Dell Police Department (RDPD) isn’t your average small-town department. We’re a highly effective, close-knit unit where your contributions will be seen and valued. The Rio Dell Police Department is searching for a passionate and experienced Chief to lead our exceptional team. This is your chance to shape the future of law enforcement in a supportive community that values your expertise. Why RDPD is the Perfect Fit for You:

Make a Difference: Help a growing community that appreciates and supports its police force. You’ll have the opportunity to directly impact public safety and build strong relationships with residents.

Be Part of the Family: Lead a collaborative and supportive team where you’ll work alongside experienced officers who are passionate about their work.

Unmatched Benefits Package:

Superior Retirement Plan: Our 401(k)style plan surpasses industry standards with a 20% employer contribution. No employee match is required, putting more dollars in your pocket with each pay period. RDPD will also match an additional 4%. Unlike CalPERS, you have immediate access to your funds upon employment separation. This plan is designed to be better than what major corporations offer, and every dime of it is yours.

Top-Tier Health Insurance: RDPD provides you with platinum-level health, vision, and dental insurance – at no cost to you. Comprehensive Benefits: We offer a competitive package that includes Spanish-English bilingual pay, POST certification incentives, generous vacation, sick, holiday, and executive time off, severance, relocation, a residency incentive, and more. Small Department, Big Impact: Here, you’ll gain diverse experience and have the opportunity to take initiative within a department that fosters your individual professional growth. This is more than a job; it’s a calling. If you’re a proven law enforcement professional who thrives in a collaborative environment and is eager to make a lasting impact, we want to hear from you.

Ready to Apply?

Please submit a cover letter and résumé in addition to the City’s standard application. Applications may be obtained at 675 Wildwood Avenue, www.cityofriodell.ca.gov or call (707)7643532. Positions open until filled. First review is Monday, July 8, 2024. Please submit via email to cityhall@cityofriodell.ca.gov Don’t miss this chance to join an exceptional team and make a difference in a community that values you!

K’ima:w Medical Center an entity of the Hoopa Valley Tribe, is seeking applicants for the following positions:

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

– FT/Regular DOE

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER – FT/Regular DOE

HOUSEKEEPING SUPERVISOR (FACILITIES)

– FT/Regular ($20.44-26.81)

CHIEF HUMAN RESOURCES OFFICER

– FT Regular ($96K -$123K)

EXECUTIVE MEDICAL SECRETARY – FT Regular ($20.44 - $27.55 per hour)

COMMUNITY HEALTH REPRESENTATIVE (CHR) – FT/Regular ($19.54-26.33)

OUTREACH MANAGER/PUBLIC HEALTH

NURSE – FT/Regular ($125K - $138K) RN/PHN

FAMILY NURSE PRACTITIONER – FT/ Regular ($133K-$175K)

PURCHASED REFERRED CARE (PRC) CLERK – FT/Regular ($18.62-$25.09)

HOUSING COORDINATOR – FT/ Regular ($24.18-35.90)

ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER – FT/ Regular ($35.59 – $45.46 DOE)

FLOATING SUPPORT CLERK – FT/ Regular ($17.90 - $24.25)

ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN – FT/ Regular ($19.54 - $26.33 DOE)

HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT, MANAGER – FT/Regular ($30.60 – $35.49 DOE)

MEDICAL BILLING SPECIALIST – FT/ Regular ($17.90-$24.25 per hour DOE).

EMT-1 – Temporary and FT/ Regular ($16.00 - $18.00 DOE)

OUTREACH COORDINATOR (BEHAVIORAL HEALTH) – FT/Regular ($20.00 - $24.00 DOE)

SENIOR RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST – FT/Regular ($35.59 - $48.60 DOE)

COALITION COORDINATOR (BEHAVIORAL HEALTH) –($17.14 - $20.01 per hour)

PERSONAL HEALTH RECORD (PHR)/ MEDICAL RECORDS SPECIALIST –Regular ($18.62 - $23.77 per hour DOE)

MEDICAL ASSISTANT –($22.05 - $25.25 per hour DOE)

DENTAL HYGIENIST –Regular ($39.00-43.00 DOE)

PHYSICIAN – FT/Regular ($290K-$330K)

MENTAL HEALTH CLINICIAN –(DOE licensure and experience) LMFT, LCSW, Psychologist, or Psychiatrist DENTIST – FT/Regular ($190K-$240K)

K’ima:w Medical Center is Seeking Applicants to Fill the Following Position:

CHIEF EXECUTIVE

OFFICER (CEO) – Regular, Contractual, Salary: DOE. This position involves developing a comprehensive Rural Health Care delivery system in collaboration with the Hoopa Tribal Leaders, utilizing various funding resources. Responsibilities include overseeing the management and operation of a full health care delivery organization and ensuring compliance with regulatory guidelines. The goal is to achieve the strategic objectives of K’ima:w Medical Center and to ensure efficient, cost-effective use of resources to meet the identified needs of the service region.

EDUCATION AND/OR EXPERIENCE: Master’s Degree (Doctorate preferred) in hospital/ clinic administration, public health administration, the medical field, or related fields such as business or public administration. Training and/or coursework in health care administration; and at least five years of executive or director level experience in health care administration with Native American Programs. Knowledge of budget preparation and fiscal management is required. The candidate should possess strong human relations skills. It is essential to maintain integrity at all times and make choices based on what is best for the organization.

DEADLINE: OPEN UNTIL FILLED For a complete job description and application please visit www.kimaw.org.

All positions above are Open Until Filled, unless otherwise stated. For an application, job description, and additional information, contact: K’ima:w Medical Center, Human Resources, PO Box 1288, Hoopa, CA, 95546 OR call 530-625-4261 OR apply on our website: https://www.kimaw.org/ for a copy of the job description and to complete an electronic application. Resume/CV are not accepted without a signed application.

Please submit applications to melia.jarnaghan@kimaw.org

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL EMPLOYMENT Continued on next page » Continued from page 34
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38 NORTH COAST JOURNAL • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • northcoastjournal.com EMPLOYMENT
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A Very Unique Home!
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645 7TH STREET ARCATA

3891 CAMPBELL RIDGE ROAD, SALYER

$729,000

The idyllic river lifestyle awaits you at this remarkable ±7 acre property perched above the Trinity River! The custom-built home is beautifully finished throughout with desirable features and was designed to highlight the river views, offering a wall of windows in the living room and decks off of the bedrooms. Take the path down to your private swimming and fishing hole or enjoy the tranquility of the detached sundeck with the sound of the river. The large well-built shop building offers several uses and could be converted into an ADU to create a living space for the lucky family and friends who get to visit.

774 LARABEE CREEK ROAD, SHIVELY

$615,000

Fantastic ±19.18 acre riverfront retreat featuring a 2/2 house, large shop, open meadow, mature orchard, redwood trees, boat and fishing access, and decommissioned train tracks running through the parcel! End of the road location with all the privacy you could ask for!

6099 FOREST ROUTE 6N06, WILLOW CREEK

$639,000

Enjoy the rarity of a private sandy beach on the South Fork of the Trinity River on this ±69 acre property developed with sustainability in mind! Existing structures include a beautiful 2/1 home, yurt, open air community kitchen, and multiple shops. Large multi-acre flats leave plenty of space remaining to bring your vision to life! Bonus cannabis permits can be included in sale.

1068 HAWKINS BAR ROAD, HAWKINS BAR

$295,000

Cute & clean 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom house located in sunny Hawkins Bar! Located on over half an acre offering a fenced yard, above ground pool, garden area, gardening sheds, and carport. Enjoy exclusive Trinity River access as a part of the Trinity Village community!

2320 ADKINS COURT, MCKINLEYVILLE

$475,000

Let this clean and tidy well cared for 3 bedroom, 2 bath Cul de sac home make your life easy! Great floor plan. Sliding doors lead to the backyard patio, open sky, and an exquisite Japanese maple tree. An oversized driveway provides extra parking. Many interior and exterior updates, including architectural grade roofing, windows, doors and hardware, bathroom vanities, flooring, a Lennox heater, and fencing. All appliances included. Location is ideal for a walking and biking lifestyle.

$895,000

Perched overlooking the stunning Orleans Valley, the Historic Moses Ranch offers a breathtaking ±320 acre retreat that combines natural beauty with rustic charm and modern comforts. Beautiful 3 bed, 2 bath main house, additional guest cabin, beautiful views, wood shed, shop, and so much more!

707 SULTAN CREEK ROAD, CRESCENT CITY

$200,000

Above the fog with potential for ocean views about 10 minutes up a very well maintained gravel road sits this ±10 acre parcel. Close proximity to natural splendors like Jedediah Smith State Park and Smith River adds allure to this highly usable property with freshly grated flats ready for your dream home.

northcoastjournal.com • Thursday, June 13, 2024 • NORTH COAST JOURNAL 39
Kyla Nored Owner/Broker BRE #01930997 707.834.7979 Barbara Davenport Associate Broker BRE# 01066670 707.498.6364 Mike Willcutt Realtor
# 02084041 916.798.2107 Ashlee Cook Realtor BRE# 02070276 707.601.6702 Tyla Miller Realtor BRE 1919487 707.362.6504 Zipporah Kilgore Realtor BRE #02188512 707.497.7859
BRE
CEDAR CAMP ROAD, ORLEANS
2850
Charlie Winship Land Agent BRE #01332697 707.476.0435
NEW
LISTING!

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