Home for the Holidays

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JOURNAL

Who’s on Board? – The votes are in and the Coast Village Tears of Joy? – A reader sends in an ornate bottle with Association has a new board – see who they are inside, P.5

a mysterious purpose – nothing to cry over, P.34

SERVING MONTECITO AND SOUTHERN SANTA BARBARA

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23 – 30 NOV 2023 | VOL 29 ISS 47 | www.montecitojournal.net

The Thanksgiving leftovers are served, and the holiday lights are coming up. Get ready to give some gifts from the Lower Village in part one of our four-part series on holiday shopping around town. (Story starts on page 24)

The Giving List

On stands now! See what’s new this year, page 16

Autumn’s Art Affair

It’s black ties, chic dresses, and dinner with a view at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s Autumn Dinner, page 14

New Numbers

$12M is the new $7M when it comes to Montecito real estate and what you can get for your dollar, page 22

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23 – 30 November 2023


Daniel Encell Director, Estates Division Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 1170 Coast Village Road Montecito, CA 93108 Office (805) 565-4896 Email: danencell@aol.com www.DanEncell.com DRE #00976141

CLIENT REFERENCES The greatest professional compliment a client can give their real estate agent is to use their services again (and again...) So far I have had: 53 clients use my services twice; 31 clients use my services three times; 15 clients use my services four times; 8 clients use my services five times; 7 clients use my services six times; 2 clients use my services seven times; 3 clients use my services eight times; 1 client use my services nine times; 2 clients use my services ten times; 1 client use my services eleven times; and 1 client use my services thirteen times!

“He knows the market intimately and was able to guide our search, help us strategize on the formulation of our offer and attend to all of the details associated with the closing. Dan is accessible, always available and a superb professional.” ~ Ron “We have bought and sold multiple luxury properties in Montecito over the course of 15 years with Dan and his Team, and never once did they fail to deliver. He makes it as easy as picking up the phone, and telling him what you expect, and he makes it happen, fully and completely.” ~ Eric “Dan handled my two real estate transactions in Santa Barbara seamlessly and extremely professionally. Having done many real estate deals I can assure you Dan was simply the best at his profession, plus he is an all around great guy!” ~ Charles

“Dan is not only the best real estate broker I have ever worked nationwide but he is a very likable and true business professional. Dan’s legal background has been an invaluable resource. I will always reach out to Dan in the future.” ~ Lee

“He is knowledgeable and informed about

the local market. His background in law lends a sense of confidence when negotiating contracts and legal documents. I wouldn’t work with anyone else.” ~ Kathleen

“We have used Dan’s expertise multiple times when buying and selling property and have always appreciated his marketing insights and negotiating skills. Dan’s in-depth knowledge of the SB real estate market and his ability to advocate for his clients while working out a good conclusion for all, is why he is clearly the best in the area.“ ~ Chip

“I highly recommend Dan to anybody looking for an experienced and trustworthy agent, who has a full professional team supporting him.” ~ Bruce “Dan is the best agent I’ve ever worked with. He knows everything there is to know about his market, he gets deals done, he works hard for his clients, and he’s a great human being.” ~ Mark

“Dan was knowledgeable, straightforward and helpful when we were selling our home. Our transaction was smooth and easy because of Dan and his team. I highly recommend Dan: trustworthy, super informed and professional.” ~ Charity

“I have worked with Dan buying and selling on five different transactions. I have continued working with him as he is simply the BEST! I highly recommend Dan!” ~ Jean

“Dan has represented us for over two decades in acquiring and selling properties. He is very knowledgeable, professional and respected.” ~ Georgia

“I’ve worked with numerous other RE agents throughout my years, but found that my experience with Dan has proven to be the most time efficient, rewarding and successful. Without question, he kept my interests and goals foremost in both negotiation transactions achieving outstanding results each time. Absolutely a delight to work with!” ~ Igor

© 2023 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties (BHHSCP) is a member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates LLC. BHHS and the BHHS symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. BHH Affiliates LLC and BHHSCP do not guarantee accuracy of all data including measurements, conditions, and features of property. Information is obtained from various sources and will not be verified by broker or MLS. Buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information. CalDRE#: 00976141

23 – 30 November 2023

Montecito JOURNAL

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Photography : Spenser Bruce

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE illage Beat – A new board enters the CVA, Cottage Hospital’s annual toy drive eal Estate – With the market still on a roll, here are some of the finer 5 Vreturns, 22 Roptions and Jodi House at the MOXI in the $10-15M range ontecito Miscellany – Notes of Joy, a Lotusland proclamation, some sports Home for the Holidays – Dive into the first of a four-part series – 8 Mmemorabilia 24 are auctioned, and more spotlighting Montecito’s Coast Village Road – discover unique shops, eclectic – The lives of Reuben Walker Eliyahu Smith and Donnie Carolan 10 Iaren Passing remembered Tide Guide

ur Town – The Association of Fundraising Professionals was ready to 12 Ocelebrate National Philanthropy Day and the firemen are getting ready for their annual Santa Run

ociety Invites – The SBMA hosts an autumnal Artful Affair and St. 14 SVincent’s is gearing up for its own fashion show he Giving List – With the new Giving List books hitting stands now, 16 TSteven Libowitz reflects on what’s new, the nonprofits reviewed, and what giving means to you

rilliant Thoughts – The stresses and blessings of life can be our own 18 Bpersonal living Heaven or Hell

dining, and hidden treasures for this year’s holiday shopping

– An evening of flamenco is dancing through town and a 33 Ohostn Entertainment of Johnny Cash performances Your Westmont – Native oaks begin to replace eucalyptus near campus, Christmas lighting celebration, and women’s leadership lunch

lizabeth’s Appraisals – Is this 19th century bottle from a famous 34 Eophthalmologist to catch tears of joy or sorrow? oraging Thyme – The intricate flavor of this tuber comes out in this simple, 35 Fhealthy recipe that can be cooked in no thyme (okay, maybe a little thyme) alendar of Events – The Zoo is lit, Santa (and cowboys) are coming to 44 Ctown (and so are the holidays), plus more lassifieds – Our own “Craigslist” of classified ads, in which sellers offer 46 Ceverything from summer rentals to estate sales

ini Meta Crossword Puzzles he Optimist Daily – It’s a whale of change after Dominica establishes the 47 MLocal 20 Tworld’s first marine protected area dedicated to the endangered sperm whale Business Directory

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“I am grateful for what I am and have. My thanksgiving is perpetual.” – Henry David Thoreau

23 – 30 November 2023


Village Beat

Coast Village Association Seats New Board by Kelly Mahan Herrick

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he Annual Meeting for the Coast Village Improvement Association met last week at the Montecito Inn. The meeting’s purpose was the presentation of the 2024 slate to vote in the Board of Directors and to update the accomplishments and goals of the Interim Board and Executive Director. The Interim Board of Directors voted unanimously to approve the new Board of Directors. The Board went from 10 to 12 directors, and includes President Trey Pinner, Vice President Robert Miller, Treasurer Mike Chenoweth, Secretary Jason Copus, and directors Trish Davis, Francois DeJohn, Kevin Frank, Jeff Harding, Rob Kooyman, Michael MacElhenny, Thorn Robertson, and Suzi Schomer. Executive Director Beth Sullivan gave a presentation on the newly Locals, tourists, and their pets came out to Coast designed website (still under construc- Village Week last week, taking advantage of the tion) and the social media relaunch, pop-ups, sales, trunk shows, and art exhibits along which has been well received by fol- Coast Village Road. The event was just one of lowers with exceptional engagement many marketing activities planned by the Coast as seen by the data displayed. In an Village Association, which sat its new board of effort to improve the district’s “sense of directors last week. place,” the group is rebranding the area through marketing, publicity, community involvement, events, a new logo, and strategic alliances. Sullivan has been interacting one-on-one with each merchant, stakeholders, and neighbors. “I consider myself extremely fortunate to be a part of the building phase of the improvement district and feel that this district is the heartbeat of this wonderful community,” she said, noting that the inaugural Coast Village Week, which ended on Saturday with a plethora of events, pop-ups, and sales, was a great success. The winner of the raffle prize during Coast Village Week will be announced next week. Updates from Pinner and Miller, who were the interim board president and vice president, respectively, revealed that the road will be improved in 2024, starting with loading zones and improvement of the crosswalk at the Chevron station in the spring, and ending with a complete repaving of Coast Village Road from the Hot Springs roundabout to Olive Mill Road in the fall. New landscaping is planned, but it is anticipated that a sizable sum of money will need to be raised in order to support the medians’ beautification. The next board meeting is scheduled for Thursday, January 18, 2024.

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Cottage Children’s Medical Center Hosts Holiday Toy Drive Cottage Children’s Medical Center (CCMC) is hosting its annual holiday toy drive to bring some extra joy to pediatric patients during the holiday season and throughout the year. The community is encouraged to participate in the toy drive by donating new, unwrapped toys, games, and supplies for activities. There are three ways to participate in the holiday toy drive: 1. In-Person Drop-Off: Purchase toys and drop-off the unwrapped gifts at the front entrance of Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital (400 West Pueblo Street) on Tuesday, December 5 from 11:30 am to 1:30 pm and Wednesday, December 20 from 2 pm to 4 pm. 2. Contactless Delivery: Purchase toys, supplies, and gift cards through a wish list at MyRegistry.com by searching for Cottage Children’s Medical Center.

23 – 30 November 2023

Village Beat Page 64 64

Indulge in live music and sip on handcrafted cocktails in the sultry ambiance of our newest hidden gem

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Montecito JOURNAL

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Village Beat (Continued from 5) 3. Donate: Make a monetary contribution to help purchase toys by visiting www. cottagechildrens.org/cmn/donate. For gift ideas, please see CCMC’s wish list at www.cottagehealth.org/childrens/toydrive. For more information or questions about donations, please contact Ann Peyrat at apeyrat@sbch.org. The not-for-profit Cottage Health is the leader in providing advanced medical care to the Central Coast region. Specialties include the Cottage Children’s Medical Center, Level 1 Trauma Center, Neuroscience Institute, Heart & Vascular Center, Center for Orthopedics, and Rehabilitation Hospital. The Cottage Health medical staff is comprised of more than 700 physicians, many with subspecialties typically found only at university medical centers. Last year, the Cottage Health hospitals in Goleta, Santa Barbara, and Santa Ynez Valley provided inpatient care for 19,000 people, treated 81,000 patients through their 24-hour emergency departments, and helped deliver 2,000 newborns.

Jodi House Raises Funds & Awareness by Ann Pieramici Last month, 200 community members – many Montecito residents – gathered on the rooftop of MOXI, The Wolf Museum of Exploration + Innovation, to learn about Jodi House’s critical mission to empower brain injury survivors to thrive. “An Evening to Explore Jodi House,” an annual event raising awareness and funds for the brain injury support center, generated over $60,000 for the nonprofit. The evening highlighted the rehabilitation and support services that Jodi House provides brain injury survivors, serving nearly 200 community members in the past year alone. The organization offers resources, programs, and case management helping those with brain injuries recover to their fullest extent possible. “You can be vulnerable at Jodi House,” said Heather Fiore, who shared her personal story of suffering a brain aneurysm at the age of 24. Jodi House supported her throughout her recovery. “It’s always a safe place at Jodi House, and there is no fear of

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Jolene L’Hote, Executive Director Lindsey Black, event emcee Cydney Justman, and Jessica Koval (photo by Lure Digital)

judgment,” said Fiore. “Together, we celebrate the small steps that others might not recognize, but that mean so much to us.” Lindsey Black, Jodi House executive director, highlighted the vital role of Jodi House in completing the continuum of care for brain injury survivors. “Thank you all for making it possible for us to never have to turn anyone away from Jodi House because of the inability to pay,” she said. Guests enjoyed wine and hors d’oeuvres while learning more about Jodi House from its members, staff, and board. Live entertainment was provided by guitarist Chris Fossek. Jodi House Board President Adriana Mezic and Board member Kerry Kelly co-chaired the event. Event emcee Cydney Justman, executive director of Girls Inc. of Greater Santa Barbara, led the crowd in a paddle raise, that helped generate $62,205 in support of Jodi House’s programs. The event was sponsored by the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians, Jason and Lynette Spievak, Adriana & Igor Mezic and AIMdyn Inc., Diana & Terry Ingram, Mike Chenoweth of Radius Commercial Real Estate, The Santa Barbara Independent, Cottage Health, Vivian Solodkin, Dennis Forster & Cynder

Village Beat Page 384 384

23 – 30 November 2023


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2023/2024

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Presenting the world’s finest classical artists since 1919

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Montecito Miscellany Filling the Seats with ‘Joy’

Charles Yang, Ranaan Meyer, and Nicolas Kendall (photo by Priscilla)

INTERNATIONAL SERIES AT THE GRANADA THEATRE SEASON SPONSOR: SAGE PUBLISHING

by Richard Mineards

D TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2023, 7:30PM

LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC Zubin Mehta, Conductor Emeritus Seong-Jin Cho, piano

ZUBIN MEHTA RETURNS

to direct the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Santa Barbara for the first time since 1979, his first appearance in CAMA’s series since 1993! Also returning to CAMA’s series will be piano virtuoso Seong-Jin Cho, who garnered world attention in October 2015 when he won First Prize at the renowned Chopin International Piano Competition in Warsaw. PROGRAM SCHUMANN: Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op.54 MAHLER: Symphony No.1 in D Major, “Titan” (with “Blumine” movement)

ynamic duo Rick Oshay and Teresa Kuskey, in collaboration with the Santa Barbara Symphony, hosted Joy, a private concert with the Grammy Award and Emmy-winning trio Time for Three in the historic Presidio Chapel, after dinner for more than 100 guests in the tented front courtyard. The talented triumvirate – violinists Nicolas Kendall and Charles Yang, with Ranaan Meyer on double bass – best described as akin to the Jonas Brothers with vocals and classical instruments, were hugely entertaining. Just 48 hours later I was at the Granada to hear them again for another delightful show with the Santa Barbara Symphony, under maestro Nir Kabaretti, with the entertaining program including Put’s “Contact,” Borodin’s “Polovtsian Dances,” Bizet’s “L’Arlesienne Suite No. 2,” and Ravel’s “La Valse.” Many of the same musical fans were at both events, with classical guitarist Chris Fossek entertaining at the first, including Janet Garufis, Dan and Meg Burnham, Fred Brander, David Miscellany Page 364 364

Nir Kabaretti, Kathryn Martin, Rick Oshay, and Teresa Kuskey presenting Joy (photo by Priscilla)

Principal Sponsor: Mosher Foundation Sponsors: Bitsy & Denny Bacon Towbes Fund for the Performing Arts, a field of interest fund of the Santa Barbara Foundation Co-Sponsors: Anonymous (2) • Robert Boghosian & Mary E. Gates-Warren Christine & Robert Emmons • Zegar Family Fund

Tickets at the Granada Theatre Box Office (805) 899-2222 ⫽ granadasb.org COMMUNITY ARTS MUSIC ASSOCIATION OF SANTA BARBARA

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Montecito JOURNAL

Gretchen Lieff, maestro Nir Kabaretti, and Joan Rutkowski enjoying the event (photo by Priscilla)

“What if, today, we were grateful for everything?” – Charlie Brown

Santa Barbara Symphony’s Kathryn Martin and Montecito Bank & Trust’s Janet Garufis (photo by Priscilla)

23 – 30 November 2023


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IN PASSING Reuben Walker Eliyahu Smith: May 17, 1987 – November 6, 2023 Reuben spent his formative years in the hills above Santa Barbara. His early education, influenced by SB Home Schoolers and the Open Alternative School, cultivated a love for the arts, particularly in theater set building. Even as a young boy, he felt the pull of the village, finding “adopted” homes that bridged the gap between the tranquil mountain life and the vibrant pace of town. Reuben’s impact extends far beyond his roots, leaving an indelible mark on the world of transformational festivals locally and internationally. He served on the board of the Santa Barbara nonprofit Fishbon Arts Collaborative, built floats for the Santa Barbara Summer Solstice Celebration, played pivotal roles in the early years of Lucidity Festival, and later contributed to Enchanted Forest Gathering in Northern California and Envision Festival in Costa Rica. His visionary leadership and commitment to integrity resonated in everything he undertook, leaving a legacy of authenticity and community building.

“Did you love this world of ours the best way you knew how?” – Reuben Walker Eliyahu Smith

Beyond his professional pursuits, Reuben was a man of diverse passions – from music, movement, and paragliding to diving, motorcycling, festivals, gaming, and storytelling. Yet, his true passion lay in being a helper and connector. In moments of hardship, he offered not only friendship but profound wisdom and new perspectives. Reuben dedicated himself to empowering others, fearlessly navigating uncomfortable conversations, and embodying the essence of a true friend. Reuben leaves behind his birth family, Brian and Kate “Pepper” Smith, his sister Emily Smith, extended family, his beloved dog, and friends scattered across the globe. His departure leaves us equipped with more tools for navigating life and inspires us to honor his memory by uplifting our neighbors and sharing the love he so generously gave. In our collective grief, we unite to pay homage to Reuben’s legacy, vowing to be the versions of ourselves that he envisioned. Farewell, Reuben. May your spirit find profound and restful peace, and even in death, may you be running toward something beautiful, while simultaneously knowing you have been the beauty all along.

JOURNAL

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s we bid farewell to a soul who embraced life with an extraordinary fervor, we mourn the passing of Reuben Walker Eliyahu Smith. His departure leaves an indelible void, and we reflect on the poignant words from one of his own poems, asking the profound question: “Did you love this world of ours the best way you knew how?” Reuben, aged 36, departed on November 6, 2023, having traversed diverse landscapes both in terms of geography and experience. An intrepid adventurer and world traveler, he found beauty in perpetual movement, believing it was better to run toward something beautiful than away from the undesirable. His remarkable mind, a beacon of creativity, manifested in the communities he nurtured, the friendships he cherished, and the art and poetry that flowed from his being. Born on May 17, 1987, the result of a serendipitous union during the Great Peace March for Global Nuclear Disarmament,

Reuben will be remembered for his profound voice and influence on others

Executive Editor/CEO | G wyn Lurie gwyn@montecitojournal.net President/COO | Timothy Lennon Buckley tim@montecitojournal.net VP, Sales & Marketing | Leanne Wood leanne@montecitojournal.net Managing Editor | Zach Rosen zach@montecitojournal.net Art/Production Director | Trent Watanabe Graphic Design/Layout | Stevie Acuña Administration | Jessikah Fechner Administrative Assistant | Valerie Alva Account Managers | Sue Brooks, Tanis Nelson, Elizabeth Nadel, Bryce Eller Contributing Editor | Kelly Mahan Herrick Copy Editor | Lily Buckley Harbin, Jeff Wing Proofreading | Helen Buckley Arts and Entertainment | Steven Libowitz Contributors | Scott Craig, Ashleigh Brilliant, Kim Crail, Tom Farr, Chuck Graham, Stella Haffner, Mark Ashton Hunt, Dalina Michaels, Sharon Byrne, Robert Bernstein, Christina Atchison, Leslie Zemeckis, Sigrid Toye Gossip | Richard Mineards History | Hattie Beresford Humor | Ernie Witham Our Town/Society | Joanne A Calitri Travel | Jerry Dunn, Leslie Westbrook Food & Wine | Claudia Schou, Melissa Petitto, Gabe Saglie

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“Be present in all things and thankful for all things.” – Maya Angelou

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Published by: Montecito Journal Media Group, LLC Montecito Journal is compiled, compounded, calibrated, cogitated over, and coughed up every Wednesday by an exacting agglomeration of excitable (and often exemplary) expert edifiers at 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite G, Montecito, CA 93108. How to reach us: (805) 565-1860; FAX: (805) 969-6654; Montecito Journal, 1206 Coast Village Circle, Suite G, Montecito, CA 93108; EMAIL: tim@montecitojournal.net

23 – 30 November 2023


Donnie Carolan: May 28, 1957 – October 18, 2023

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onnie Carolan, 66, of Santa Barbara, California, passed away on October 18, 2023. He was born on May 28, 1957, in Morristown, New Jersey. Donnie was a passionate individual who had a deep love for music. He was actively involved in various choirs such as the Master Chorale and the Trinity Episcopal Church Choir. Donnie’s beautiful voice brought joy to many. In addition to his love for music, Donnie was also an avid sports enthusiast and had a great appreciation for wine. He enjoyed playing and listening to music, and his talent as a singer was admired by many. Donnie also found solace in art and enjoyed playing golf during his leisure time. Donnie had a successful career in management and sales, specifically in the wine industry. His expertise and passion for wine allowed him to excel in his field. Donnie is survived by his loving spouse, Floribette Carolan. He was preceded in death by his father, Kenneth Carolan, and his mother, Nancy Carolan. Donnie’s presence will be deeply missed by his family, friends, and all those whose lives he touched. May his soul rest in peace. Donnie Carolan, 1957 – 2023

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23 – 30 November 2023

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Our Town

Alison Brainard, Janet Garufis, and Catherine Remak (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

Association of Fundraising Professionals Santa Barbara/Ventura Counties Chapter 2023 Honorees Philanthropists of the Year: Palmer Jackson Jr., and James and Chana Jackson for the Ann Jackson Family Foundation (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

by Joanne A Calitri

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he Association of Fundraising Professionals Santa Barbara/Ventura Counties Chapter celebrated National Philanthropy Day with a Philanthropy Awards presentation on Tuesday, November 14, at the Santa Barbara Zoo. The event was led by their President Lauren Trujillo, her co-chairs Molly Kemper and Gerry Pantoja, and the event committee: Karen Y. Kawaguchi, Megan Nuss, Hannah Quiroz, Shannon Silk, A.J. Steinberg, and Paige Van Tuyl. The event began with a Networking Reception in the courtyard. For the

Awards Presentation, guests were seated in the Discovery Pavilion. Trujillo welcomed everyone, read the Tribal Land Acknowledgement Statement, and said, “Let’s pause and reflect on the profound impact the honorees have on the community, and thank you to our co-presenting sponsors the Kellogg Organization, Montecito Bank & Trust, and the Santa Barbara Foundation.” Remarks were given by Chairman and CEO of Montecito Bank & Trust Janet Garufis and Tammy Sims, Vice President of Philanthropic Services of the Santa Lauren Trujillo with Awards Event Chairs Barbara Foundation. Gerry Pantoja and Molly Kemper (photo by The awards emcee was Santa Barbara Joanne A Calitri) Zoo CEO Rich Block, who chided that he could speak for half an hour on the honorees, and thereafter all the honorees quipped the same line back to him. There was a video by someone who knew the honoree and talked about their contributions, then the award was presented and the honoree gave their remarks.

The 2023 honorees are: Philanthropist of the Year, Santa Barbara County: The Ann Jackson Family Foundation (Montecito) Philanthropist of the Year, Ventura County: Doug Yarrow Volunteer of the Year, Santa Barbara County: Dr. Ahmad Nooristani, Savie Health Volunteer of the Year, Ventura County: Mary Looby, Ventura County Fire Department Community Service Volunteer Professional Fundraiser of the Year: Stephanie Wilson, Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum Youth in Philanthropy: Jackson Gillies Champions for Social Justice: Simone Akila, Jordan Killebrew, and Chiany Dri, Juneteenth Santa Barbara

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Key remarks from the honorees included Palmer Jackson, who said, “Here we ask what is your passion and what do you support. My family foundation provides funding, and every member is a volunteer in the town serving on 40 different nonprofits. We love interacting and working with you.” Mary Looby said, “Everyone can find something they love and volunteer doing it!” Jackson Gillies remarked, “In Santa Barbara, we all have way more than we need, we can give, and I quote John Mayall in saying, I believe that my life’s going to see the love I give return to me.” “We dedicate our award to Sojourner Kincaid Rolle who passed away yesterday. She was my second mom. She held our Black History in Santa Barbara, with Dr. Ahmad Nooristani and Eryn Shugart PhD, Executive Director of Savie Health (photo by Our Town Page 204 204 Joanne A Calitri)

“Be thankful for what you have; you’ll end up having more.” – Oprah Winfrey

23 – 30 November 2023


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CELEBRATE THE FESTIVE SEASON IN THE HEART OF THE CALIFORNIA RIVIERA

MINDFUL HOLIDAY MARKET NOVEMBER 29 | 1 PM - 5 PM Featuring a variety of unique gifts made by more than a dozen local artisans. Proceeds to benefit Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation of Santa Barbara. Complimentary valet parking.

Society Invites

Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s Artful Affairs Autumn Dinner by Joanne A Calitri

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he Santa Barbara Museum of Art (SBMA) Board of Trustees held its sponsor supported Black Tie Autumn Dinner titled “Art’s Artful Affairs: Seasons of Change” at the museum on Wednesday, November 15, from 5:30 to 9 pm. The elegant event commenced with a champagne and wine reception in the museum’s Ludington Court Gallery amidst the fine antiquities collection of sculptures. The evening was abuzz with key sponsors and their guests coming together for an exclusive affair that highlighted works of art paired with wines, a four-course dinner, and an After Dinner lounge experience with fine port and cheese hors d’oeuvres. It is noted that the wines and port were white! The event speakers, Board of Trustees Chair Nicholas Mutton and Amada Cruz, the newly appointed Eichholz Foundation Director, were unable to attend. In their place, Event Co-Chair and Board of Trustees member Martha Townsend gave the welcoming remarks and paid homage to both Mutton and Cruz. She read a note from Cruz who said she is looking forward to the next event to meet the museum’s supporters. From there, we moved to the RidleyTree Gallery for dinner where docents held court around the artworks. I was fortunate to be seated next to SBMA Deputy Director and Chief Curator Eik Kahng at Robert Castle’s table of friends, which included his guest Fran Morrow, and Stephen W. Clark – Vice President, General Counsel, and Secretary to the Board of Trustees for the J. Paul Getty Museum – with his wife, Karen.

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Fran Morrow and Robert Castle (photo by Joanne A Calitri) “If you concentrate on what you don’t have, you will never, ever have enough.” – Oprah Winfrey

Artful Event Co-Chairs Jeanne Fulkerson and Martha Townsend (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

Carol and Michael C. Linn (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

The event program provided an insightful narration on a selection of art from the 14 key works in the gallery. The core message is to invite viewers to a new level of interacting with and experiencing art at the museum: “Spotlighting the Seasons of Change, it is Autumn, and there is power and transformation through art, stay inspired!” Works highlighted included Ansel Adams’ black and white photograph titled, Leaf Glacier Bay (1948), the six-fold screen color and ink of gold leaf by anonymous machi-eshi, or “town painters” in Kyoto; and from the Hudson River School of Landscape Artists, a painting by Jasper Francis Cropsey titled, Janetta Falls, Passaic County, New Jersey (August 9, 1846). Attendees included Betsy, Martha, and Bruce Atwater; Merryl and Chuck

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The Giving List

The Giving List Santa Barbara, 2023/24 Edition By Steven Libowitz

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ontecito Journal Media Group launched The Giving List back in November of 2020 as a way to connect two very important communities in the region: the thousands of nonprofit organizations, totally perhaps more per capita than any other county in the country, and the vast and deep philanthropic community, which supports the organizations working hard to resolve the challenges facing our people, its culture, and the environment. The Giving List book was born from our belief that storytelling isn’t just for moviemakers and singer-songwriters. Sharing compelling stories is what has connected us as human beings throughout time, and it’s much the same for powerful narratives about how nonprofits are tackling issues confronting our community. The book is organized into categories or sectors, the better to streamline con-

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nections between potential donors and the nonprofits to make sure philanthropists are putting their dollars towards issues they most care about. We’re continuously updating The Giving List book. Over the years we’ve made some refinements, and the 2023/24 book now features just 42 organizations, streamlined to give potential donors a more focused approach and maximize the impact for the nonprofits. But there’s no shortage of the areas they cover. While the category titles have changed slightly, you’ll find nonprofits addressing issues in the areas of Advocacy, Animals, Children, Community Resilience, Community Treasures, Education, Environment, Family Well-Being, Foster Care, Global Reach, Health, Homelessness & Housing, Human Rights, Public Square, Social Justice, and The Arts. The 2023/24 book might be our most balanced yet. There are a number of nonprofits who have been fea-

tured all four years, including AHA!, Community Environmental Council, National Search Dog Foundation, SBCC Foundation, and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, to name just a few. They’re profiled alongside newcomers such as Elings Park, Friends of VADA, the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation, Wayfinder Family Services, and California Missions Foundation. There’s a huge variation in size, everything from the massive Santa Barbara Foundation to the three-person RiteCare Childhood Language Center. On a similar spectrum in scope, from organizations that focus on a single Santa Barbara-facing issue such as Hillside, to those with national or even international scope like Direct Relief. What they all have in common is a devotion and dedication to making a difference.

I remain grateful for the opportunity to get a glimpse into the inner world, mission, and services offered by the organization. It’s not at all rare for me to get a lump in my throat and a tear in my eye at success stories, or feel the heat of anger at injustice, or the energy of inspiration. Cognizant of the fact that donations are often made at least partially for tax abatement, we time the publication of the new Giving List book for the end of the year, putting out the glossy bound book to reach philanthropists and their partners before Giving Tuesday, which this year falls on November 28. But as the author of this weekly column in the weekly Montecito Journal since its inception in January 2021, I am acutely aware that in Santa Barbara, every day is Giving Day, as our donors don’t stop supporting the organizations doing vital work when the calendar flips to a new year. What this column does each week is spotlight one of the organizations that is a part of the current year’s book, offering a more in-depth discussion of their work, updates on their priorities or needs, and/ or details about fundraising events or new opportunities. After penning 150 of these columns, I remain grateful for the opportunity to get a glimpse into the

“Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life.” – Melody Beattie

inner world, mission, and services offered by the organization. It’s not at all rare for me to get a lump in my throat and a tear in my eye at success stories, or feel the heat of anger at injustice, or the energy of inspiration. If there’s one constant I’ve nearly invariably heard from executive directors and development personnel is that more support is needed. While the book is directed at the community’s more deep-pocketed philanthropists, there’s truth in the cliché that it takes a village and that every dollar counts. Whether you’re wanting to place new-found millions from an inheritance or windfall, or you find yourself with a few extra dollars every once in a while, there’s a place for your generosity, whatever the amount might be. Don’t think that your donation won’t have an impact, even if all you can afford is time, as nearly every nonprofit has a need for volunteers. So pick up a Giving List book at your front door, at select local newsstands, or at our offices on Coast Village Circle. Read through it to see which nonprofits fit your charitable desires and goals or visit www.thegivinglist.com. Find out more on each organization’s website, or give them a ring. And get ready to make a difference in our own community, on Giving Tuesday and beyond. Be sure to check this space each week, too, for the latest on our Giving List partners.

23 – 30 November 2023


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11/17/23 3:19 PM Montecito JOURNAL


Brilliant Thoughts Stressed or Blessed by Ashleigh Brilliant

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t used to be called “worry” or “anxiety.” Now, I gather, the fashionable term is “stress” – and I seem to have lately been gathering plenty of it. But what is there really in life worth having such feelings about? It’s all in the mind, I think. That’s what keeps psychiatrists in business. Those professional “head-shrinkers” once based their treatment on having a dialogue with the patient. Now it’s more a matter of giving us pills to pop. In my case, I’ve had both kinds of “care.” But neither palaver nor pills have given me a good answer to the question of what life is about. One thing at least is certain – it’s something that comes and goes – and we come and go with it. That in itself is a ridiculous situation. Some people who seem to have found the answer will tell you it’s simply a matter of having a positive attitude – considering yourself too blessed to be stressed. The good things in life make it all worthwhile, they will say. There’s not much along these lines that I haven’t heard or thought about. As a professional thinker, I’ve published 10,000 separate pieces of my mind. Here are a few of the best on the current topic: I try to avoid stressful activities – that’s why I have so much free time. Please don’t tell me to relax – it’s only my tension that’s holding me together. It’s not easy – my Counsellor says I need more challenge – my Doctor says I need less stress. But what really are the best things in life? One idea we can start with is that they are notoriously free. For cat-lovers, my own take on this was that: “The best things in life are furry.”

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But at this point, I am supposed to list things like food, sex, friendship, and sunshine. It could be a long and impressive list. But at the bottom, you would have to stop, because of a little thing called Death, which (depending, of course, on how you look at it) can seem to make the whole thing meaningless. We have words to soften it, like “Passing away,” or “Kicking the bucket,” and whole institutions to deal with it, which generally come under the heading of “religions” – although some such belief systems have more to offer than others, at least when it comes to an “afterlife,” or a “next world.” Judaism, for example, has very little to say about it, compared with Christianity, whose actual founder is believed to have been resurrected. But the really positive thinkers regard this life, that we already know, as Heaven, and consider its less pleasant aspects as illusory, or at best, hardly worth dwelling on. My own feeling is that this world may indeed be all we will ever know of both Heaven and Hell. It took great thinker-poets like Dante and Milton to conceive, in detail, while still inhabiting this Earth, the nature of those other worlds. When you are in great pain, Heaven would simply be no more pain. Hell would be for it to never stop – or, even worse, to have it keep stopping and starting again. I personally had a bad “sciatic” pain, which seemed to originate in my lower back, and extend down one leg. I was advised to get steroid injections, which I did twice, without any relief. But a third time has now actually worked for several months. Is this Heaven? Hardly. When you get rid of one trouble, it enables you to give more attention to all the others. I suppose being thankful is a matter of seeing the glass as half full, rather than half empty. In one way, the word “stress” reminds me of my father. He didn’t know much about architecture, but had somewhere picked up one idea. Whenever a conversation got onto that subject, he would always indicate dismissively that he knew it was all about “stresses and strains.” Of course, that kind of stress relates to the forces acting on some material object, like a girder or beam. And the Ashleigh Brilliant born big question is always, how much can it England 1933, came to stand before it reaches a breaking point? California in 1955, to Santa That also may apply to our minds Barbara in 1973, to the and their capacity to withstand stress. Montecito Journal in 2016. One psychiatric term with which you Best-known for his illustrated may be familiar is “nervous breakepigrams, called “Pot-Shots,” down.” I had one in my early twenties, now a series of 10,000. and would happily tell you about it here email: ashleigh@west. in great detail, except that, like life, this net. web: www.ash leighbrilliant.com. article had to end.

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20 Camino Alto | Santa Barbara | 4BD/5BA DRE 02082960 | Offered at $7,499,000 Elizabeth Slifirski 805.222.0147

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19


Our Town (Continued from 12 12))

Dominica Takes a Bold Step to Protect Sperm Whales and the Environment

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n a monumental move for marine conservation, the Caribbean gem, Dominica, is set to establish the world’s inaugural marine protected area dedicated to safeguarding the endangered sperm whale. This reserve, which covers approximately 300 square miles of the island’s western waterways, is a huge step in protecting these majestic creatures and their important ecosystems. Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit stated that the island is committed to preserving these “majestic and highly intelligent animals.” His message emphasized the overall goal of protecting not only the whales but also the health of the waterways and the environment. Beyond their stunning beauty, these creatures play an important part in battling the climate problem. Sperm whales’ distinct feces behaviors are critical to the health of ocean ecosystems and the sequestration of carbon dioxide. Shane Gero, founder of the Dominica Sperm Whale Project, emphasized the significance: “Sperm whales are, in some respects, fighting climate change on our behalf.” With an estimated 500 sperm whales in the waters near Dominica, protecting this matrilineal community becomes critical. The vulnerability of female calves, as well as the sociocultural system, highlight the importance of conservation measures. Sperm whales confront a variety of threats, including ship crashes, entanglement in fishing gear, and the effects of agricultural runoff. Their population has historically been substantially reduced due to widespread whaling. Gero bemoaned the fact that the present global population is roughly 800,000, a minuscule fraction of the two million that once roamed the oceans. Dominica’s government prioritizes sustainable artisanal fishing within the reserve while also implementing efforts to conserve these gentle giants. A clearly defined shipping lane tries to reduce deadly collisions between ships and whales. The prime minister emphasized preparations for strict control to ensure that whale tourism regulations are followed, allowing for limited but respectful interactions between visitors and these spectacular creatures. Aside from their ecological importance, sperm whales represent a cultural heritage that is entwined with Dominica’s identity. Gero emphasized their communicating ‘clicking sounds,’ comparing it to a symbolic marker – evidence of their link with the island. Dominica’s remarkable move not only raises the status of sperm whales but also establishes a global precedent for ethical and compassionate marine conservation. By protecting these amazing species, the island nation is paving the way for peaceful coexistence between humans and the waters, demonstrating the transforming potential of concerted conservation efforts.

Jordan Killebrew and Stephanie Wilson (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

Jackson Gillies and Mary Looby (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

inclusion, education and love,” said Jordan Killebrew. The Nominations Committee for 2023 was: Amanda Allen, Santa Barbara Humane; Ashleigh Davis, Montecito Bank & Trust; Gerry Pantoja, Ventura College Foundation; Melissa Miller, Ventura County Credit Union; and Natalie N. Yanez, Southern California Edison. National Philanthropy Day is an occasion that shines a light on the tremendous impact of philanthropy and celebrates the remarkable individuals who have contributed significantly to enriching our world through volunteering and service. 411: https://community.afpnet.org/afpsbv/aboutus/ourchapter

Carpinteria-Summerland Fire Protection District Santa Run and Job Openings The Carpinteria-Summerland Fire Protection District has two announcements for our town: their Annual Santa Run and a call for applications for Firefighter Paramedics and Firefighter EMTs. Pat Cockrum, President of the Santa Barbara South Coast Firefighter Foundation, in conjunction with the Carpinteria-Summerland Fire Protection District, announces their 3rd Annual Santa Run on December 9. The Santa Run has the Carp-Summerland firefighters, their families, and volunteers walk the Carp-Summerland route, handing out candy canes and collecting presents for kids and cash donations in a firefighter boot. Santa Claus will be in his sleigh

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21


Real Estate

$12M Is the New $7M: Grateful to be living in Montecito By Mark Ashton Hunt

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onth after month, year after year I keep pinching myself when I realize we live in Montecito. Though we work hard and sometimes struggle to stay here, it is by no means an accident. We thought of all the places in the world (ok the southern West Coast) where we could raise our daughter and live our adult lives post L.A. and this was it. My family had lived here, my grandmother and great-grandmother had worked at the Miramar in the 1930s, it was destiny. Sadly, my family sold all their homes before I was of age to council them, but it is what it is. Living here is a cut above. It’s simple yet refined, not brand-spanking new (except the homes and some stores and restaurants… and the new freeway I suppose), but there is a nice history one feels here, that it’s a place, not built up for people to come to but was here already and drew people here to build their own dreams. Well these days that dream is a lot more expensive than it was a decade ago. I’m shocked to see homes priced at $6 or $7M that would have been $2.5M just 10 years ago. And it’s not all about the highs and lows of the market, it’s about the fact that many around the country have realized what a special place this is to own a home and spend time, whether year-round or seasonally or just on weekends. And we have the real estate choices for you as well. From a five-unit rental near the beach for just under $5M, to a condo on Coast Village Road for $2M to a mansion with ocean views on many acres, to a brand new contemporary home (which went into escrow immediately), this is a place where you can find what you need if you look hard and long enough… and if you have a realtor looking out for you that can help you not miss an opportunity or find a home that is not even listed that you may one day call your own. Today I am focusing on the $10 to $15M market. A strong point in our marketplace since the pandemic began. $12 is the new $7 and so on. What you get here for your money is everything. In the over $10M range you usually will find the listing blessed with: privacy, land, a substantial home, gardens, views, or a setting… and did I mention privacy? There are no $20M estates here where your bedroom window looks out into the bedroom of the McMansion next to you just 20 feet away. Here we have buffers, hedges, walls, trees, easements, space. Here are four diverse listings on the market right now in the $10 to $15M range and all within the Montecito Union School District for you to peruse or purchase, your call.

invites you to embrace the tranquility of your private oasis, seamlessly merging the interior and exterior spaces. Featured in the book Montecito Style published by Monacelli Press (2022).

663 Lilac Drive – $12,500,000 Set on over two south-facing acres of usable land and featuring a Cape Cod-style house that has both a historical and modern feel, this residence with its exotic gardens, rare plant specimens, and breathtaking ocean vistas is convenient to Montecito’s Upper Village. The living room boasts a towering ceiling, a striking mezzanine, inlaid wood floors, and windows that frame ocean views and mature garden views. The chef ’s kitchen is replete with a spacious center island with overhead skylights and brand-new top-of-the-line appliances. The entire upstairs is designed as an owner’s personal sanctuary and boasts soaring ceilings, a fireplace, two large walk-in closets, and a secret attic space, plus dual en suite bathrooms overlooking the sprawling grounds and ocean views. There are three additional bedrooms and down below is a large game room/office. An additional suite is located over the garage with a separate door and gate. A Moody Sister-style one-bedroom guest house is seated in the woods surrounded by rare plants. A completely refreshed treehouse, a crescent-shaped pool with an in-pool spa, and a wisteria-covered pergola equipped with a BBQ grill and mini refrigerator are in place to enjoy the outdoor lifestyle.

238 Miramar Avenue – $11,850,000

167 Pomar Lane – $12,800,000

On a quiet lane secretly hidden down an even quieter private lane is this recently remodeled, mid-century architectural home by renowned designer Jack Warner. Boasting 5 bedrooms and 5.5 bathrooms and situated between Montecito Union School and Miramar Beach, this modern estate features an open floor plan with soaring high ceilings and walls of glass. Natural light cascades through the floor-to-ceiling windows and doors, offering breathtaking views of the surrounding landscape. The living spaces and bedrooms are ingeniously arranged around a central pool, establishing a serene indoor/outdoor sanctuary. The residence features custom finishes, marble flooring, and stunningly landscaped grounds. The remarkable design

Introducing the Jacaranda Estate, an exquisite piece of history nestled in Montecito’s prestigious Hedgerow neighborhood. This Monterey Colonial-style estate, built in 1900, has undergone a meticulous restoration to preserve its timeless charm while seamlessly integrating modern luxuries. Set on 1.23 acres of lush grounds just blocks from Miramar Beach and Montecito Union School, once you pass through the double gates, step into a world where classic elegance meets contemporary comfort. The main house boasts four bedrooms, each stylishly appointed and filled with natural light. The primary suite is equally restful and beautiful. Original hardwood floors, three fireplaces, and a private study and den create an ambiance of timeless grace.

MARK ASHTON HUNT Representing Buyers and Sellers in Montecito Specializing in property valuation

If you would like me to make an appointment for you to view any home for sale in Montecito, or for a current market analysis of your home, please contact me directly. Call/Text Mark @ 805-698-2174 Mark@Villagesite.com www.MontecitoBestBuys.com DRE#01460852

22 Montecito JOURNAL

Bespoke Wine Experiences in Montecito! Are you searching for the ideal wines to grace your holiday dinners, celebrations, and gatherings? Look no further! As your local Montecito Sommelier, I will expertly curate wine selections that beautifully complement your meals, turning your event into a memorable experience. Petite Wine Traveler • Jamie Knee, Sommelier, CSW, WSET, SWS, AWE, California Wine Specialist, Rioja & Cava Educator, Champagne Certified. JamieKnee@petitewinetraveler.com

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23 – 30 November 2023


The recently remodeled chef ’s kitchen features highend appliances, including Sub-Zero refrigerators and freezers, and a La Cornue oven and range, all complemented by beautiful marble countertops. An adjoining guest house features three bedrooms, two full bathrooms, a twocar garage with private entry, a fully equipped kitchen and a sun-drenched living room with French doors leading to the pool and grounds. An enhanced smart home alarm system for the entire compound ensures convenience, security, and peace of mind. The outdoor amenities impress with a pool and spa (which include iAquaLink controls), barbecue area, and a pavilion that beckons al fresco dining. The grounds have been thoughtfully enhanced with over 4,000 new plants that harmonize with the majestic 120-plus-year-old trees. Enjoy a petite orchard yielding delicious oranges, lemons, avocados, and baby peaches.

627 Stone Meadow Lane – $13,995,000 This newly rebuilt jewel-box is in a prime location on a cul-de-sac just off famed Picacho Lane. The five-bedroom, five-bathroom, single-level home features soaring ceilings that greet you when entering this warm California Modern home where indoor and outdoor living seamlessly integrate. An oversized living room bathed in abundant natural light serves as the center of the home. Floor to ceiling pocket doors open to connect the living room to the ‘‘California Room,’’ an indoor-outdoor living area taken to the next level, creating the ideal entertainment space as well as a casual year-round living space.

The thoughtful floor plan offers four-bedroom suites plus a luxurious primary suite with large walk-in closet, fireplace, and gracious primary bath constructed with a free-standing tub, custom cabinetry, and exquisite marble steam shower. A functional media room doubles as a theater with built-in surround sound, custom seating, stylish bar, Phillip Jeffries wallpaper, and automatic blackout curtains. The home is an entertainer’s dream, with a large chef ’s kitchen equipped with an 80-inch Lacanche stove, large Calcutta kitchen island with seating for 10, True Refrigeration system, Zip water system, and Waterworks fixtures amongst numerous additional amenities. Counter to ceiling pocket doors above the sink connect the indoor and outdoor kitchens through a large pass-through bar area. The outdoor kitchen boasts Mark and his wife, Sheela numerous bar areas with ample seating, Hunt, are real estate agents. built in custom BBQ, sink, refrigeration, His family goes back nearly and infrared heating. Studded with speci100 years in Santa Barbara. men olive trees, the intricately landscaped Mark’s grandparents – Bill backyard offers multiple dining areas, and Elsie Hunt – were infrared sauna, and a stunning 60x20 Santa Barbara real foot white bottom pool with inset jacuzzi, estate brokers for fountains, and large Baja shelf. 25 years.

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NEVER STOP EXPLORING

Home for the Holidays Lower Coast Village Road by Kelly Mahan Herrick and Jeff Wing

T Thank you for shopping small

Locally owned and operated for over 42 years 14 State Street | 962-0049 | Mon-Sat 10-6, Sun 10-5 mountainairsports.com

he first in a four-part series on shopping locally in Montecito, we’re throwing some light (and a lot of love) on our shade-dappled Lower Village: Montecito’s Coast Village Road and beyond, which has long been a shopping and dining destination for locals, visitors, and lucky accidental tourists. We don’t want to boast our main street’s amazing array of experiences. On the other hand, here it goes. In our sun-splashed Montecito Country Mart there are over a dozen highly curated shops, several delightful restaurants, a coffee shop, and an ice creamery. One of the Mart’s longest retailers, Mate Gallery, is owned by two part-time locals: Matt Albiani and Ron Brand, who have brought a little slice of their New England Visit Peregrine Galleries for a unique collection style to the West Coast and our painterly of ethnographic, vintage, and designer jewelry, little village. Think nautical and maritime including rare finds from Chanel and Native accessories and gifts, foreign vintage tex- American artifacts, curated since 1984 tiles, and a rotating roster of special collections including Albiani’s own photographs. There’s also signature eyewear from Cynthia Benjamin and darling children’s clothing and gifts from Poppy Marché. Grab a coffee or lunch at locally-owned Merci. Fuel up! An afternoon of mood-elevating purveyance stretches before you as you head east on Coast Village Road. Just up the road a piece is Fab Spectacles Central, more commonly known to locals as Occhiali Fine Eyewear. This lovely sunlit chamber could be a cave stuffed with loot, its interior bejeweled with frames of every known description – and more than a few that defy description. Occhiali serves up 20/20 vision with a side of uncommon high style, and in a place that doubles as a crossroads of neighborly chit chat. If there is a cozier spot for an ocular upgrade, we haven’t found it. Across from Montecito Bank & Trust, you’ll stumble upon True Love Always. An eclectic, stylish mix of globally sourced must-haves for home and wardrobe. Inspiration from owner Lori’s travels plus daughter Olivia’s editorial eye make it a destination for the new and next. Nearby Peregrine Galleries, one of the road’s oldest shops, continues to offer ethnographic jewelry and art, including collectible vintage designer jewelry by Bakelite, Georg Jensen,

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“Showing gratitude is one of the simplest yet most powerful things humans can do for each other.” – Randy Pausch

23 – 30 November 2023


23 – 30 November 2023

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Holidays (Continued from 24 24)) and a little-known upstart named Chanel. You will also find Native American jewelry and artifacts. Owner Marlene Vitanza has manned the shop since its opening in 1984. She is always adding new pieces and treasures to the store’s eye-pleasing cases.

Auctioneers & Appraisers

Homer is one of the newer additions to Coast Village and the leather-bound brainchild of Terry Pillow – a local face and legend of men’s apparel from Tommy Bahama to Coach and more. Located near Tre Lune at 1129 Coast Village Road, Homer features the finest handmade leather goods, incorporating organic processes and truly intricate craftsmanship.

Discover Homer, showcasing Terry Pillow’s expertly crafted, organic, handmade leather goods – a testament to timeless style and quality

The Irving Berlin Platinum, Sapphire and Diamond Ring. Est. $200,000 – 400,000. Auction December 14.

This world is nothing if not an aromatic grab bag of exquisite variety. Lily got the memo – and may even have written the memo. So deeply delightful and diverse are the objets d’émerveillement you’ll find there (if you’ll pardon our French), you can walk in with a troubled expression and walk out with a grin that speaks serenity. Amethyst votive? Gold tulip Pippa Small earrings? A forearm chiming with conversation-spurring, flexible 24k gold-flake-and-polyvinyl-carbonate bangles? You may have to see to believe.

Consignment Day Tuesday, December 5

Our Specialists will be in the Santa Barbara / Montecito area collecting Jewelry, Watches, Art, Silver and more for auction consignment or outright purchase. Please contact us to schedule a private in-person or virtual appointment.

Information & Appointments

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SHOWROOM HOURS MON-FRI 10-5, SAT BY APPOINTMENT 805.450.0599 10 FIGUEROA ST SANTA BARBARA CA 93101

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23 – 30 November 2023


Across the street, Kevin and Katie Frank’s boutique, K. Frank, specializes in men’s and women’s designer clothing, shoes, jewelry, and accessories. The stylish husband-and-wife duo pointedly offer relevant fashion collections from around the world, and delight in dressing their clientele – helping them hone in on their individual sense of style. Each season the Franks curate a collection with a true commitment to styling, quality, fabric, and manufacturing, coupled with a dedication to exceptional customer service. The Franks’ shop windows are showing off gorgeous coats and flannels for both men and women, as well as fuzzy scarves and hats for the cooler weather. Step into Lily’s world of wonder, where an array If jewelry is on your list, South African- of delightful items from amethyst votives to Pippa born Daniel Gibbings has been quietly Small earrings transforms every visit into a joyful plugging away at his Coast Village design discovery. workshop and retail outpost for over a decade. Now one of the world’s premier jewelers, Gibbings appeals to Hollywood celebrities, fashion models, and other discerning individuals drawn to his unique, classically inspired designs, and eye for detail. Daniel often combines pure silver and 22-karat gold in his creations, which can also feature coins and other artifacts as well as precious gemstones in all the vibrant hues our generous Earth can offer. Daniel has also created a line of stunning, unique engagement and wedding rings, as well as bridal jewelry. Another not-to-miss jeweler on the road is Silverhorn Design Studio, which is owned by Mike and Carole Ridding. The Riddings opened their first store on Coast Village in 1986, and have downsized to a smaller design studio, located at 1235 Coast Village Road. Each piece designed at Silverhorn is hand made using centuries-old

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Need help with your holiday libations? Let our experienced staff and Certified Sommelier assist you! Voted Best Wine Shop in Santa Barbara Independent’s 2020, 2022 & 2023 Reader’s Poll

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23 – 30 November 2023

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Holidays (Continued from 27 27))

Celebrate Coast Village Week with us with our Happy Hour menu Thursday & Friday from 3pm to close and Saturday from 2pm to close! Located in the Montecito Inn with al fresco dining, Coast & Olive welcomes locals and travelers from afar to indulge in California cuisine. Executive Chef, Chris Mottola, offers a menu that features local California produce, fresh seafood, roasted chicken, home-made pastas, and other savory dishes, paired perfectly with artisan cocktails and awardwinning California wines among others from around the world.

Visit Silverhorn Design Studio for handcrafted, elegant jewelry pieces, where the Riddings’ expertise in artisanal craftsmanship shines in every unique, sophisticated design

artisanal craftsmanship. The results? Literally unique works of understated elegance. From bold gemstone rings to dainty diamond earrings, Silverhorn offers a collection of fashionable and sophisticated jewelry. Watch their master jewelers wielding their craft right there in the studio. It’s okay to stare. The Lower Village is home to several bespoke boutiques, offering a selected mix of luxury clothing brands and home décor. Whistle Club showcases a tightly-curated assortment of women’s clothing, accessories, and gifts from both emerging designers and industry favorites. Owner Rebecca McKinney says she focuses her offerings on quality, integrity, ethical production, and design – and seeks to spark joy for her customers through their experience in the store. On racks now are textured handwoven twill wraps, statement puffer jackets, and fluffy scarves. Nearby, Kimberly Phillips Hayes keeps her beloved shop, Maison K, stocked with the most beautiful and unique home decor, furnishings, clothing, and accessories from her travels around the world. Hayes is particularly drawn to a neutral and natural palette and this time of year the shop oozes with cold weather coziness – think soft cashmere coats in creams and beiges, warm throws for sofas or beds, beautiful and practical Paris-made ceramics

1295 COAST VILLAGE ROAD, MONTECITO, CA WWW.COASTANDOLIVE.COM (805) 690-3920

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“Wear gratitude like a cloak, and it will feed every corner of your life.” – Rumi

23 – 30 November 2023


for holiday tablespaces – and more. A visit to Maison K truly feels like you are transported to a different part of the world. Does fine art stir your coffee? You’re in luck, to say the least. This is the neighborhood of Portico Fine Art Gallery, whose quietly dazzling collection of mesmerizing contemporary landscapes, still life, and figurative works may send you into a swoon. Representing such contemporary masters as Dennis Newell, John Budicin, Jordan Pope, and other celebrants of this polychromatic life, Portico prides itself on thoughtful curation of stirring, singular works of art. As it happens, you are now close enough to Coast Village Road’s Waterhouse Gallery to strike its door with a tactically flung color wheel (if that is your fancy). Sung Eun Kim’s glowing urban cityscapes, Ann Sanders’ breath-slowing plein air daydreams, Ralph Waterhouse’s enfolding oceanscapes and roseate sunsets, Albin Veselka’s textured statements… the Waterhouse Gallery continues its 40-year run of inexhaustible, deeply felt excellence drawn from a dynamic roster of strikingly original artists. Allora by Laura on the corner of Coast Village Road and Coast Village Circle is always a great place to shop for classic and timeless luxury clothing. Marrying fine European clothing with California’s laid-back style, Allora offers an elevated daily aesthetic as well as special event ensembles, curated for each individual client by a knowledgeable staff, ready to help. In addition to clothing, the shop offers fine jewelry from designers including Kai Linz and Ali Grace, as well as a limited selection of handbags

THE LARGEST SELECTION OF HOME FURNISHINGS ON THE CENTRAL COAST!

Holidays Page 304 304

Moving Miss Daisy LLC Your Trusted Resource

WHISTLE CLUB

Estate Sales Downsizing Consignments and Auctions

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histle Club offers an elegant selection of women’s apparel, footwear, and jewelry, featuring pieces from top independent designers and industry favorites. With a commitment to quality, integrity, and design, this boutique provides a premium shopping experience in Montecito, showcasing thoughtfully curated collections that speak to discerning tastes.

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Website Scan

LOUIS JOHN Designer fashion consignments, estate wardrobes and assessments. Instagram:@louisofmontecito

3845 State Street La Cumbre Plaza

805-770-7715

1235 Coast Village Rd., Ste. C Montecito, CA 93108 whistleclub.com * Quilted Jacket with Slightly Cropped Silhouette and Faux Fur Collar

2938 San Marcos Ave Los Olivos,CA Open 10-5 Everyday (805)-693-2913 www.loulosolivos.com

loulosolivos 23 – 30 November 2023

223 Anacapa Street | 805.364.2447 | Santa Barbara, CA 93101 Thu-Sat 12-5 | Sun-Mon 11-4 | Private Appointments Available sbmidmod | sbmidmod.com Montecito JOURNAL

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PERFEC T GIF T S FOR THE HOL ID AY SEASON

Holidays (Continued from 29 29))

Choose from our wide variety of premium olive oils, balsamic vinegars, gourmet foods as well as our selection of beautiful homeware items including handmade olive wood products. We have a little something for everybody!

Silverhorn WE SHIP TO ANYWHERE IN CONTINENTAL USA • ORDER IN STORE OR ONLINE 927 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 | (805) 886 4342 | www.VivaOliva.com

OPEN NEXT SATURDAY AT NOON!

EL CARRO LANE

LINDEN AVE.

CARPINTERIA AVE.

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ST. JOSEPH’S FIELD 1531 Linden Ave.

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or over 40 years, Silverhorn has been renowned for its handcrafted jewelry, using rare gemstones and exemplary craftsmanship. Known for award-winning creativity, each piece is artfully crafted with precision. At their Design Studio in Montecito, clients can observe artisans at work and explore a gallery of fine jewelry, choosing from finished pieces or commissioning bespoke designs. 1235 Coast Village Road Montecito, CA 93108 www.silverhorn.com *Rare Brazilian Cabochon Paraiba Tourmaline surrounded by 114 diamonds, set in 18 kt yellow gold and platinum.

Handcrafted, bespoke hats.

and shoes. Offering several trunk shows and special events per season, Allora is the place to see and be seen on Coast Village. Proximal to Allora is artist Cassandria Blackmore’s Gallery, which draws shoppers in with her eye-catching reverse paintings on glass, showcased on the gallery’s white walls and in the windows. Blackmore, who opened the shop in 2020, is world-renowned for her unique work, which has been exhibited and collected internationally. She began reverse painting when she was painting a self-portrait on glass, and in frustration, threw it to the ground, spilling her glass of wine in the process. From such happy accidents are epiphanies made. As she moved the pieces back together, Cassandria realized she had created a new medium. Her work has only grown more startlingly rich in the intervening years. Right across the street from Lucky’s and the Honor Bar you will find a repository of matchless contemporary fine art to help round out your CVR Walk with some right-brain nourishment. The frankly astonishing Caldwell Snyder Gallery will reframe your perspective with stunning work from today’s most acclaimed visual artists. Deladier Almeida’s popping, almost disturbingly gorgeous landscapes rub shoulders with Charles Arnoldi’s embraceable color bursts, while Tom Fruin’s tactile sculptures of scavenged plexiglass, steel, and plastic strikingly remind us that beauty is a found medium. Caldwell Snyder’s vanguard collection will stay with you… To make sure you are picture perfect for the holidays, you might also consider visiting Montecito Med Spa, which offers a discreet, luxurious space in which to experience the latest innovative techniques for facial and body enhancements, under the care and expertise of clinical professionals. Owned by Karen Neary, MSN, RN, the Med Spa specializes in innovative therapies

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30 Montecito JOURNAL

“Gratitude is when memory is stored in the heart and not in the mind.” – Lionel Hampton

Get holiday-ready at Montecito Med Spa, offering a range of advanced facial and body treatments for rejuvenation and beauty, expertly delivered in a luxurious, discreet setting

23 – 30 November 2023


LaLa Arcada 28 Anniversary Arcada La Arcada La Arcada La Arcada La Arcada La Arcada Plaza La Arcada La Arcada Plaza La ArcadaPlaza Plaza Plaza La Arcada Plaza Plaza La Arcada Festive Fridays Festive Fridays Plaza PlazaFestive Fridays

including EMSCULPT NEO, Potenza RF Microneedling, Elite IQ hair removal, TempSure Firm cellulite treatments, TempSure Envi treatments, FlexSure body boost treatment, HydraFacial, Liquivida IV therapy, and an array of injectables including Botox, Xeomin, Juvederm, and others. These treatments target concerns such as aging skin, sun damage, unwanted hair, wrinkles and fine lines, cellulite, and more. Your body is a lovely vessel whose natural beauty Montecito Med Spa is expert at optimizing.

mainstream wine labels – including a large selection of French and Italian wines – the duo also hand selects local wines, increasing their selection and setting themselves apart from other repositories of spirit and grape. Herrick and Brunello pride themselves on working closely with many vendors to stock the store with the right products; if a customer is looking for something that they don’t carry, they will avidly hunt it down and, if possible, special order it. Whether it is comfy yet fashionable clothing with a California-flair, custom jewelry, or just a bottle of something to bring to the holiday table, Coast Village Road is as charming a destination as its cozy name infers, and offers myriad options for your holiday shopping.

Plaza Festive Fridays

If you’re looking to imbibe this holiday season, or are seeking the perfect bottle of specialty liquor or wine to gift, make sure to stop into the Liquor & Wine Grotto. How can three little words and an ampersand summon such warm vibes? Step into the grotto and feel for yourself. While the store has been in existence since 1976, current owners Jason Herrick and Brian Brunello have spent the last 13 years perfecting the shop, and forming connections with loyal clientele. The guys have carefully selected an array of wine, spirits, liquor, and beer, drawing both locals and tourists to their enclave of bottles. They have an impressive offering of small-batch bourbon, whiskey, and tequila, perfect to craft those cozy cocktails at your holiday gatherings. In addition to carrying hundreds of competitively priced,

28th Anniversary

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Festive Fridays Festive Fridays

If you need a little more help on what to look for this season, scan this QR code for more gift ideas!

Christmas Wa Plaza Plaza Christmas Walk Christmas Walk Christmas Walk Christmas Walk Wednesday, Nov. 2023 Christmas Wednesday, Nov. 29, 29,Walk 2023

Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm Wednesday, 29, 2023 Wednesday, Nov.pm 29,Nov. 2023 5:00 - 8:00 8:00 pm • Photos with2023 Santa Wednesday, Nov. 29, 5:00 pm pm • Holiday Music and Caro 5:005:00 pm - 8:00 pm pm 8:00-• Fresh-Popped pmpm Popcorn 5:00- Santa pm 8:00 • Photos with • A Chance of Snow Flurri • Photos with Santa • Photos with Santa • Holiday Music Carolers Photos withand Santa • Lots of Holiday Goodies • Holiday Music•with and Carolers • Photos Santa • Holiday MusicMusic and Carolers • Fresh-Popped •Popcorn Holiday and Carolers • Fresh-Popped Popcorn Bring the family for Music and Carolers • A•Chance of Snow Flurries •Holiday Fresh-Popped Popcorn • Fresh-Popped Popcorn holiday fun and merriment • A Chance of Snow Flurries • Lots of Holiday Goodies •A Chance of Snow Flurries • •Fresh-Popped Popcorn A Chance ofLaSnow Flurries Arcada Plaza - 1114 State Street at Fig • Lots of Holiday Goodies • Lots Goodies Bring the family forof Holiday LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com holiday fun and merriment! • State & Fig Ace Rivington • La Tavola Bring•the family for

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• Lewis and Clark • Lucky Puppy Optical • Mizza • Petit Valentien • Renaissance Consignment • Salon U • SBMA Museum Store

• The Barber S • The Crafter’s • Urban Optic • Waterhouse • YES Store •

holiday and merriment! Bring the fun family for Bring the family for holiday funState merriment! Arcada- 1114 Plaza -and 1114 State Street at Figueroa La ArcadaLa Plaza Street at Figueroa Pizza Mizz LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com holiday fun and merriment! LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com La Arcada Figueroa • State & Fig • AcePlaza Rivington - 1114• State La Tavola Street at &The FigBarber Shop • Ace Rivington • Andersen’s Bakery Tavola • Lewis and Clark La Arcada•LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com Plaza -•• LaLewis 1114 State Street• State at ••Figueroa The Crafter’s Barbieri & Kempe Winesand •Clark Lucky Puppy Optical • The Barber Shop Library • Andersen’s Bakery Pizza Mizza • Urban Optics • Catherine Gee • Mizza LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com • The Crafter’s Library • Barbieri & Kempe Wines • Lucky Puppy Optical • State• Waterhouse & Fig • Ace Rivington • La Tavola • Petit Valentien Gallery • Coast 2 Coast Collection • Catherine Gee LaArcadaSantaBarbara.com

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• Mizza

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YES Store • Renaissance Consignment • The •Barber Shop • Andersen’s Bakery • Field Trip • Lewis and Clark • State &• Fig • Ace Rivington La •Tavola • Waterhouse Gallery • Coast 2 Coast Collection Petit Valentien • Gallery • 113 • Salon U Pizza Mizza • The Crafter’s Library • Barbieri & Kempe Wines • Lucky Puppy• Optical • Hook & • Press Museum Store • YES Store Shop • FieldBakery Trip • Renaissance Consignment • The Barber • Andersen’s Lewis and ClarkSBMA UrbanMizza Optics • Catherine Gee • Mizza • Gallery 113Wines • Salon U Optical •• Pizza • The Crafter’s Library • Barbieri & Kempe • Lucky Puppy • Waterhouse Gallery • Coast 2 Coast Collection • Petit Valentien • Hook & Press • SBMA Museum Store • Urban Optics • Catherine Gee • Mizza • Field Trip • Renaissance Consignment • YES Store • Waterhouse Gallery • Coast 2 Coast Collection • Petit Valentien • Gallery 113 • Salon U • Pizza StoreMizza • Field Trip • Renaissance Consignment • YES • Hook & Press • SBMA Museum Store • Gallery 113 • Salon U • Pizza Mizza • Hook & Press • SBMA Museum Store

Our 56th Season!

Ho Ho Ho & Fa La La

Local Artwork in Santa Barbara Since 1968

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Enjoy Holiday Shopping U

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SALE Holiday Hours for December Monday J U LY– Saturday 2 2 ND U 10amT H – R5:30pm AUG 8 T H – 5pm Sunday 11am 25 – 75% OFF on selecTed iTems n o s p e c i a l o r d e r s o r l ayaway s . w e w i l l b e c l o s e d T U e s d ay j U ly 2 1 s T i n p r e pa r a T i o n .

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1235 COAST VILLAGE ROAD MONTECITO, CA 805.565.2800 • WWW.WHISTLECLUB.COM • @WHISTLECLUB

23 – 30 November 2023

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WINTER 2023

VANDENBERG: WHERE ROCKETS MEET RIVIERA

JAMES CAMERON

ON TERMINATING HIS TIME IN SB AFTER 25 YEARS: THE EXIT INTERVIEW

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WINTER • 2023

Morgan Neville: ULTIMATE MONTECITAN?

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“I feel gratitude in my heart each time I can meet someone and look at his or her smile.” – Elie Wiesel

23 – 30 November 2023


On Entertainment The Flamenco Flair by Steven Libowitz

Your Westmont

Project Promotes Fire Resilience, Biodiversity

M

aria Bermudez has a metaphor she likes to employ to describe flamenco – what for her has been a lifelong passion and something hard to describe. “The beauty of flamenco is that it’s like a very big fan,” she said. “When you open a fan, it’s got all those ridges that are all equal. And that’s very much like the different facets that exist in flamenco. There’s classical flamenco dance, there’s modern flamenco, there’s fusion flamenco, and there’s gypsy flamenco, and all the variations and elements in between.” Gypsy flamenco is a specialty for Bermudez, who grew up in Southern California but has roots in Jerez de la Frontera near Seville in Spain, where flamenco is a way of life, and where she has called home for more than 30 years. “Gypsies are born into it,” she explained. “They grow up with it, and it’s an art form that is passed down from generation to generation. It’s not schooled, there’s no academies. Flamenco is something that they learn as soon as they come out into the world. It comes from a culture that had a lot of pain and struggle, and all they had to survive was their singing and their music. It’s easier now, but it still holds true to this day even as flamenco has become such a major export, being seen and heard on stages and in stadiums and opera houses everywhere.” Bermudez is among those spreading the gospel of the art form – one who has been recognized by being named an official Flamenco Ambassador by her hometown of Jerez in 2022 – in recognition of her 30-plus-year career in performing and promoting flamenco. She splits her time between Spain and Santa Barbara, where she’s taught dancing since the late 1990s, taking over Linda Vega’s studio in 2020 and creating Flamenco! Santa Barbara, where she serves as artistic director. Through Flamenco! Santa Barbara, Bermudez has organized “Sonidos Gitanos” (Gypsy Sounds), an evening that features nearly a dozen revered superstars of gypsy flamenco from Spain to perform in an intimate evening of passionate music and dance at the Lobero Theatre on Sunday, November 26, one night after the ensemble appears at Walt Disney Concert Hall under the auspices of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. The 23 – 30 November 2023

Zeke Choi, Janell Balmaceda, and Toula Nielsen plant new oaks

by Scott Craig, photos by Brad Elliott

A Flamenco dancer Maria Bermudez

showcase includes José Maya, Diego Amador, Diego Carrasco, Pelé De Los Reyes, Carmen Grilo, Curro Carrasco, Manuel Valencia, Ané Carrasco, Coral De Los Reyes, and Ana De Los Reyes. Madrid-based flamenco dancer José Maya is an international superstar of the art form, one who has shared the stage with such pop stars such as Marc Anthony, Beyoncé, Björk, and Juan Luis Guerra as well as flamenco stars Antonio Canales, Juan Ramírez, and Farruquito, among others. Maya also performed in the Romani French filmmaker Tony Gatlif’s film Vertiges. “He’s a phenomenal performer and you’ll see that right away,” Bermudez said. “He’s been on big stages all around the world, performed with all the masters of the flamenco industry. He’s also been on stage with the Rolling Stones because he’s just that dynamic.” What’s surprising, though, is that, other than Bermudez herself, Maya is only one of the artists who is actually dancing. That’s not an accident. “We’re very familiar here in Santa Barbara with dancing through Fiesta and all the studios,” Bermudez explained. “Dance is the most appealing because it is visually beautiful and lush, with all

n ecological restoration project near the Westmont campus has begun with students, faculty, and staff planting about 45 native coast live oaks. This first phase focuses on an area where Montecito Fire removed many dead and dying eucalyptus trees last summer along the Westmont Creek between the Las Barrancas faculty homes and Carr Field. The project has been fully funded by the Regional Wildfire Mitigation Program (RWMP) Landscape Domain with work so far amounting to about $32,000. Spatial Informatics Group-Natural Assets Laboratory (SIG-NAL) is developing the project, managing the work and facilitating projects to accomplish ecosystem science goals while increasing wildfire resilience in the wildland urban interface. Project managers Janell Balmaceda, sustainability coordinator and garden manager, and Laura Drake Schultheis, assistant professor of biology, said the site, along the Westmont Creek between the Las Barrancas faculty homes and Carr Field, had been identified as a high-risk fire zone. Once fire officials began removing the eucalyptus trees, they decided to apply for a grant. Neighbors, Santa Barbara County and

fire officials, and college staff all supported the project. Many of them witnessed the 2008 Tea Fire, which spread quickly through the eucalyptus-lined creek bed. “Our goals include increasing fire resilience and biodiversity on campus, as well as providing an opportunity to care for God’s creation,” Balmaceda says. Schultheis, who earned a master’s and doctorate in ecology at UC Santa Barbara, says the project has benefited her students by encouraging them to get their hands in the dirt to planting the trees. “It means they’re helping to improve their home, by beautifying and improving it,” she says. “Any time we can get our hands on something, it helps us feel connected to it. It also helps the learning come alive.” They’ve worked with several consultants on the project, including Watershed Progressive, a consulting collaborative, and Dave Muffly, a senior arborist and horticulturist with Oaktopia. “We’ll install a beautiful palette of California plants in later phases of the project,” Balmaceda says. “We hope the ecological restoration project offers numerous benefits to the Las Barrancas and Westmont communities through

Your Westmont Page 414 414

Dave Muffly of Oaktopia explains the planting process

On Entertainment Page 394 394

Montecito JOURNAL

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Elizabeth’s Appraisals Tears in a Bottle by Elizabeth Stewart

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R sends me a photo of a pink and blue gold gilded porcelain bottle with an ornate gold stopper and interesting “scoop” or funnel to the top in gilded metal. SR calls it a MOURNING BOTTLE, and says it was a gift of Sir Benjamin Rycroft (1902-1967), a pioneer in corneal surgery, and one of the most influential ophthalmologists of the past century, to his daughter-in-law. SR is a relative of Sir Benjamin, who was responsible for the restoration of sight and repairs to the eyes of hundreds of WWII veterans; he also pioneered organ donation. How fitting that Sir Benjamin would have given his new daughter-inlaw a tear-catcher! The theory went that a lady would cry into the funnel held to the nose, save the tears, and when the tears evaporated, mourning was OVER... Here’s the problem: did this custom exist in the early to mid-19th century,

A closeup of what appears to be a courting scene

Real Estate Appraiser Greg Brashears California Certified General Appraiser Gift Trusts, Probate, Divorce, Seller Pre-Listing, Buyer Cash Purchase

V 805-650-9340 EM gb@gregbrashears.com

34 Montecito JOURNAL

Was this catching tears of joy or sorrow?

or is it a modern myth developed by “Tear Catcher Gifts” years ago? There is evidence of these little bottles in ancient times, and occasionally they ARE called tear-catchers by museums, or tear jars, or lachrymatories. On display at the Museum of Wigan Life in Leigh, England, a small glass bottle from AD 30 found in Egypt is called a tear jar in their exhibit Ancient Egypt Rediscovered, focusing on life and death rituals. But scholars of European scent and ritual such as Nuri McBride (The Death Scent Project), writes that “Victorian Tear Catchers are TRASH.” She believes they are more likely European rosewater bottles if porcelain (and these often have spouts for pouring the rosewater), or “throwaway” (disposable) glass perfume sample vials if they are long and narrow and English. SR’s bottle is NOT glass, and it is too small to be a rosewater bottle. I am, however, skeptical that it was brought

out when mourning. I am confused by the bright colors and flashy gilding if it was to be used to catch the tears of an early to mid-19th century mourner; an English lady in mourning in the 19th century wore black matte crepe fabrics with NO SHEEN, and wore only dark muted jewelry such as of jet, bog oak, or vulcanite. A French lady in mourning, if she lost her husband, would wear black, grey, or violet for 18 months, did not raise her voice above a whisper, ate alone, and took few visitors. So I am not sure if SR’s fancy bottle would be acceptable to a lady (or her society) if she were expected to be in deep black mourning. I have a theory that SR’s bottle is not exactly a mourning bottle but a HOPEFUL bottle, used to catch tears of longing for a distant sweetheart, perhaps at war (plenty of wars were happening in France in the second quarter of the 19th century, whereupon I date this bottle). This would explain the sentimental courting couples pictured and the bright pinks and blues and golds. In ancient times, notably in the Middle East, tears were hallmarks of care; it is said that the Divine will never let a tear go unnoticed: in David’s prayer (Psalm 56:8), he says “You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears into your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.” And in fact, we DO read records of tomb discoveries of small bottles said to be for tears, meant to show honor and devotion to the dead. But by the 19th century,

Letter from Sir Benjamin

even though we do read of these mourning bottles in fiction, we have little evidence, only examples of the MANY porcelain and glass bottles to hold perfumes, smelling salts, floral waters, scented vinegars, “kumkums” (of Middle east exotic florals), or unguentum (for unguents). Still, this was a gift given by one of the world’s foremost eye doctors. I doubt Sir Benjamin Rycroft would have mixed up sources for such a bottle. And we do find Civil War mentions of wives and sweethearts collecting their tears for the presentation of the same bottle upon a soldier’s return. SR’s bottle appears to be Continental, however. As Nuri McBride, the perfume scholar, writes: maybe these mythic mourning bottles are “just a metaphor for measuring immeasurable loss.” I believe SR’s to be indeed a tear collection bottle, however, because of the provenance. But I would think it to be a tear bottle filled for a soldier fighting far afield, and a ritual to mark the time of longing. This ‘matches’ the sentimentality of the mid-19th century nicely, exhibited as a public performance.

Elizabeth Stewart, PhD is a veteran appraiser of fine art, furniture, glass, and other collectibles, and a cert. member of the AAA and an accr. member of the ASA. Please send any objects to be appraised to Elizabethappraisals@ gmail.com

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23 – 30 November 2023


Foraging Thyme

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The earthen, nutty, and complex flavor of sunchokes is definitive of fall (photo by H2ase via Wikimedia Commons)

Directions: 1. In a medium saucepan, cover sunchokes with cold water and add kosher salt. Bring to a boil over high heat, reduce heat to a simmer, and cook for about 10 minutes or until a paring knife inserted into a sunchoke comes out easily. Do not overcook. 2. Drain sunchokes and allow to cool slightly. 3. When cool enough to handle, place sunchokes on a cutting board and working with one at a time, use the bottom of a heavy skillet to press firmly on each one until it’s flattened but still in one piece. Repeat with remaining sunchokes. 4. In a large cast iron skillet over medium heat, add olive oil and allow to get hot. Add sunchokes in a single layer and cook, without moving, until well browned, about 3 minutes. Flip and repeat on the other side. Add the Miyoko’s butter and thyme to the pan, spooning the melted butter over the tops of the browned sunchokes. 5. Transfer to a serving platter and sprinkle with Maldon salt and black pepper.

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11/2 tablespoons olive oil 2 tablespoons unsalted Miyoko’s butter 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, picked and chopped 1/2 teaspoon Maldon salt 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

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1 pound sunchokes, washed well and trimmed of any bad spots 2 tablespoons kosher salt

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his nutty little tuber may be small, but she makes up for it in personality and flavor! I found some gorgeous sunchokes this week at Mt. Olive Farm. The sunchoke or Jerusalem artichoke is nothing like the globe artichoke and is in fact a member of the sunflower family. The root is the edible part and tastes like a cross between a water chestnut, hazelnut, and jicama. When eaten raw, they are crunchy and mildly sweet; when cooked, they are creamy and so delicious. This knob-like root is a good source of B vitamins. Sunchokes contain thiamine or Vitamin B1, which is essential for metabolizing carbohydrates as well as keeping our muscles and nervous system functioning. Sunchokes also contain inulin, a type of fiber that is not only great for keeping us feeling full and satisfied, but also amazing for keeping our gut healthy. This dietary fiber has a prebiotic effect on the gut, creating an awesome environment for our healthy gut bacteria. The fiber in these roots also helps control cholesterol, blood pressure, and aids in regularity. They are also a great source of iron, which helps build red blood cells, as well as copper, which aids in the absorption of iron. Lastly, and one of my favorite things about sunchokes, they contain sulfur, which is a compound that helps rid your body of toxins. They have a high amount of sulfur-containing amino acids, which benefit the body by cleansing and healing. Let’s get cooking!

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35


Miscellany (Continued from 8)

Bob Murphy, UCSB Director of Athletics Kelly Barsky, Holly Murphy, and UCSB Head Baseball Coach Andrew Checketts with memorabilia of Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros (photo by Priscilla)

Bolton and Gonzalo Sarmiento, Chris and Mindy Denson, Gretchen Lieff, Howard Jay Smith and Tricia Dixon, Larry Gosselin, Erin Graffy, Riley and Dacia Harwood, Peter and Kathryn Martin, Maitland Ward, Steve Thompson, Joan Rutkowski, Earl Minnis, Catherine Remak, Lisa Osborn, emcee John Palminteri, Richard and Amanda Payatt, Michele Profant, Donna Reeves, Robert Adams, and Robert Ooley and Rodney Baker. Quite the blast...

Lotusland Forever Lotusland, the 37-acre botanical paradise that is celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, received a Happy Birthday gift from Mayor Randy Rowse, when he presented board members of the historic estate with a colorfully inscribed vellum proclamation on behalf of our Eden by the Beach. The tony twosome, Laura Bridley and Jeanne Anderson, joined the Montecito garden’s Executive Director Rebecca Anderson in receiving the honor next to the popular Japanese garden. As part of the celebrations, a Lotusland Forever campaign has been launched to raise $30 million for the unique attraction, considered one of the world’s 10 best gardens, with $15 million going towards an endowment ensuring its future and a further $15

Lotusland Trustee Daniel Bifano with guests Lisa and Bill Bodrogi (photo by Priscilla)

million for renovations on the property that dates back a century. A blooming good idea...

A Sole-ful Intention There was a lot of sole searching going on when Bob and Holly Murphy, co-owners of Coast 2 Coast Collection in La Arcada, hosted a “jock hop” at La Cumbre Club to raise funds for the men’s baseball and basketball teams at UCSB. Forty-five items of sports memorabilia were up for grabs in the sports trunk show including a Jack Nicklaus autographed Masters flag for $2,000, a Magic

Mayor Randy Rowse and First Lady Janet Rowse with Lotusland Executive Director Rebecca Anderson and Cindy McClelland (photo by Priscilla)

First Lady Janet Rowse and Mayor Randy Rowse presenting the proclamation to Trustees Laura Bridley and Jeanne Anderson (photo by Priscilla)

36 Montecito JOURNAL

Marcie and Danny Contreras, continuous supporters of UCSB’s Boosters for Basketball and Baseball since 1983 (photo by Priscilla) Brian and Jeanie Hill with Shaquille O’Neal’s 22-inch basketball shoe (photo by Priscilla)

Johnson’s L.A. Lakers signed basketball shirt for $2,250, and, clearly, the star of the show a single size 22 Shaquille O’Neal autographed sneaker for $1,650. “I’ve done this four or five times and it has been very successful,” says Bob. “I am a great supporter and donor to both teams, and give 20 percent of the monies raised to the athletes.” His latest bash was expected to raise around $10,000 with nearly 80 sports fans attending. Bravo!

cert with his “Partita” and Liszt’s “Années de pèlerinage: Italie.” A joyous evening...

Chase’ing the Trailblazer Simon Kerry, great nephew of the late visionary Pearl Chase, has been busy publicizing his book Miss Chase: Santa Barbara’s Trailblazer in our rarefied enclave. Simon, 53, educated at Eton College, as

Miscellany Page 404 404

CAMA’s Night of Magic and Music British pianist Stephen Hough, making his fifth appearance with the Community Arts Music Association, mesmerized in a Masterseries concert at the Lobero. Hough, 61, who was recently knighted by King Charles, received a Master’s Degree at the Juilliard School in New York, was clearly at the top of his game with his Yamaha grand piano playing Mompou’s “Cants Magics,” Debussy’s “Estampes,” and Aleksandr Scriabin’s “Sonata No.5” He wrapped up the entertaining con-

“The thankful receiver bears a plentiful harvest.” – William Blake

Pianist Stephen Hough impresses (photo by Sim Canetty-Clarke)

23 – 30 November 2023


Our Town (Continued from 20 20))

Society (Continued from 14 14))

The CarpSummerland Fire Protection District Santa Run 2022 (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

Betsy, Bruce, and Martha Atwater (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

on top of Carp-Summerland FF Engine 61 with holiday lights and Santa helpers. Also in the Santa Run are antique fire engines and local politicians. The route starts at 5 pm at the Linden Avenue beachfront in Carpinteria, down to Carpinteria Avenue, Casitas Pass Road, and stops at Carro Lane towards Via Real. Santa will arrive in Summerland at the Fire Department on Lillie Avenue around 6 pm and pro- Santa Run map ceed through Summerland by way of Whitney Avenue to Banner Avenue and back to the Fire Department. In an interview, Cockrum, who founded the Santa Run, shared: “Our mission is to support the citizens of Carpinteria and Summerland any way we can, whatever need arises. Our donations have gone to great organizations in the front country of Santa Barbara. Carpinteria Giving Tree and Santa Barbara Transition House have been valuable assets in our mission to support the community and get the presents we collect to families in need. Fill the boot funding is used to support our community events throughout the year where we make efforts to have family-oriented events without bringing financial burden to the community. Any funding goes towards the three pillars of our mission: supporting our community, your firefighters, and your fire department. We are grateful for any support our community can bring to help our cause. Whether Carpinteria or Summerland, we all stand together and support each other for the better of our community.” With the toys donated, the cash funds local FF projects like sponsoring kids as junior lifeguards, teaching CPR in high schools, setting up at the annual Avocado Festival teaching kids how to safely do a rescue in a burning house, and many other year-round activities. Join in the annual parade, grab a new toy and cash to donate, and look for Santa and his firefighter team on December 9! In addition, the Carp-Summerland Fire Protection District has a few prized job openings. All interested need to apply by December 6. They are seeking to fill Entry Level and Lateral Positions for Firefighter Paramedics and Firefighter EMTS. The positions offer high-quality EMS training and working with the Wildland Firefighting teams and Water Rescue teams that cover the coastline. Carp-Summerland Fire Protection District For more info on employment and to job QR code apply, hit the QR code in the photo! 23 – 30 November 2023

Chuck and Merryl Zegar (photo by Joanne A Calitri)

Zegar; SBMA Board of Trustees Secretary Lynn Cunningham Brown and member Chris Brown; T.V. Executive Sheraton Kalouria; Board of Trustees Treasurer of Casa del Herrero Gary Bradhering; Anne Towbes; philanthropists Mike and Carol Linn; and Honorary Committee Chair Kandy Luria-Budgor. The Event Committee members are Karen Brill, Kathleen Feldstein, Christian McGrath, Jeanne Towles, Lynn Cunningham Brown, Michael C. Linn, Nicholas Mutton, and Gregg Wilson. Check the museum’s website for the next artful dinner event in 2024! 411: www.sbma.net

St. Vincent’s 14th Annual Holiday Fashion Show St. Vincent’s Santa Barbara CEO and President Rosa Paredes with Dr. Regina Ruiz, Vice President of Development and Marketing, are announcing their 14th Annual Fashion and Luncheon Show at the Rosewood Miramar Beach Montecito on Saturday, November 25, 10 am to 1:30 pm. For tickets to be one of the lucky 300 attendees, visit www.stvincents-sb.org/events/fashion-show-luncheon/. The event is sponsored by Claudia Lash and Pat Lupo, who founded the event in 2009. All proceeds fund St. Vincent’s Family Strengthening Program for homeless mothers and their children, which is in its 27th year. Attendees will be treated to our town’s and internationally known designer Catherine Gee, whose designs are worn by A-Listers like Halle Berry, Charlize Theron, Naomi Watts, Kate Bosworth, Alma Har’el, Camilla Belle, Olivia Wilde, Molly Sims, Eva Longoria, and Alessandra Ambrosio. Gee will narrate her curated selections as her models walk the banquet room for guests to view them close up. I interviewed her on what fashions we will be treated to and being a part of the event. She shared: “We will be showcasing the Fall Winter ‘23 collection, which is debuting printed cashmere sweaters and silky cargo pants amongst our classic silk blouses, slip dresses, kimonos, and pret-a-porter styles! Key colors of high-risk red, army green, black, electric orchid, and our Signature prints of equestrian prints, paint swirls, Peruvian quartz. I am tremendously proud to be playing a small part for St. Vincent’s in furthering their profoundly important work in the community. Coming from a nonprofit background as well, I understand the hard work and value in raising money to transform lives.” For children’s fashion, the California Kids Collection, a new eco-friendly fashion line based out of Ventura, will be showing their selections on child models. The luncheon is a sit-down affair with guests in their holiday best. There is a silent auction of holiday baskets hand-made and crafted by volunteers. A guest speaker who Joanne A Calitri has graduated from St. Vincent’s Family is a professional Strengthening Program will present her international success story, how the program helped her, photographer and and what she is currently doing. 411: http://stvincents-sb.org https://catherinegee.com https://californiakidscollection.com

journalist. Contact her at: artraks@ yahoo.com

Montecito JOURNAL

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Village Beat (Continued from 6) Sinclair, Angela Hsu & Jordan Pinsker, Nasif, Hicks, Harris & Co., LLP, Kennedy Accounting Systems, Coast Hills Credit Union, Institution Ale, Jordano’s, and Margerum Wine Company. Donna and Jerry Wustman founded Jodi House in Santa Barbara in 1982 after their 19-year-old daughter Jodi suffered a Traumatic Brain Injury after being hit by a drunk driver. Jodi House provides rehabilitation and support services to brain injury survivors, regardless Mark and Sheela Hunt at the Jodi House event (photo of the ability to pay. Its programs are supportive and communiby Lure Digital) ty-based, consisting of structured activities that facilitate community reintegration. Jodi House has proven effective in establishing independence for survivors, helping them obtain meaningful employment and volunteer opportunities, and supporting them as they and their families recover, Kelly Mahan Herrick, reconnect, and move forward in also a licensed realtor with our community. Berkshire Hathaway Home Jodi House is located at 625 Services, has been editor at Chapala Street in a distinctive large for the Journal since Victorian house that was the for2007, reporting on news in mer home of Chad’s Restaurant for Montecito and beyond. 15 years.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: LONGEVITYON, 5455 8th Street #8, Carpinteria, CA, 93103. SCSB Protective Services, 5455 8th Street #31, Carpinteria, CA, 93103. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on November 8, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 2023-0002604. Published November 22, 29, December 6, 13, 2023 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are

38 Montecito JOURNAL

doing business as: MEXIPALI, 734 Olive St., Santa Barbara, CA, 93101. Dibya S Singh, 734 Olive St., Santa Barbara, CA, 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on October 20, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 2023-0002467. Published November 22, 29, December 6, 13, 2023

are doing business as: In-Shape Family Fitness, 1318 S. Broadway, Santa Maria, CA, 93454. In-Shape Solutions, LLC, 2800 March Lane Suite #220, Stockton, CA, 95219. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on October 31, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 2023-0002552. Published November 15, 22, 29, December 6, 2023 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Cherry Bomb Cocktail and Bartending Services, 480 Toro Canyon Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93108. Joseph W Cordero, 480 Toro Canyon Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93108. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on October 4, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 20230002373. Published November 8, 15, 22, 29, 2023

ra Corp; Stillpoint Santa Barbara; Stillpoint SB; Still Point SB; SSB; Stillpoint, 212 Cottage Grove Ave Ste B, Santa Barbara, CA, 93101. Still Point Santa Barbara, 212 Cottage Grove Ave Ste B, Santa Barbara, CA, 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on November 3, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 2023-0002580. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Published November 15, NAME STATEMENT: The NAME STATEMENT: The 22, 29, December 6, 2023 following person(s) is/ following person(s) is/are are doing business as: doing business as: Still FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Via Maestra; Enoteca; Point Santa Barbara Corp; NAME STATEMENT: The Via Maestra Enoteca, Stillpoint Santa Barba- following person(s) is/ 3413 State Street, Santa “Thanksgiving day is a jewel, to set in the hearts of honest men.” – E.P. Powell

Barbara, CA, 93105. Bitar Restaurant Group Enoteca LLC, 3413 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA, 93105. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on October 23, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 20230002478. Published November 8, 15, 22, 29, 2023 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Farm to Fork Social Club Catering, 480 Toro Canyon Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93108. Joseph W Cordero, 480 Toro Canyon Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93108; Angelina E Cordero, 480 Toro Canyon Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93108. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on October 4, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 20230002372. Published November 8, 15, 22, 29, 2023 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: Serenidad Therapy, 7142 Del Norte Dr., Goleta, CA, 93117. Susan Gonzalez, 7142 Del Norte Dr., Goleta,

CA, 93117. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on September 27, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 20230002326. Published November 1, 8, 15, 22, 2023 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE No. 23CV04571. To all interested parties: Petitioner Irina Georgieva Chongova filed a petition with Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara, for a decree changing name to Irina Chongova Nau. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Filed October 26, 2023 by Narzralli Baksh. Hearing date: December 15, 2023 at 10 am in Dept. 4, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Published November 1, 8, 15, 22, 2023 23 – 30 November 2023


On Entertainment (Continued from 33 33))

Cashing In Back in 1961, Johnny Cash and his then-wife Vivian hired contractors to build them a home in the hills of Casitas Springs, the small town near Ojai in Ventura County. Custom designed to fit the singer’s specifications, the home even featured a wall-mounted turntable and a writing room for Cash. The country singer was going through a dark period at the time, including dealing with drug addiction, and he moved away only a few years later. But the area’s obsession with Cash, as elsewhere in the nation, has never really faded. There was a Johnny Cash Tribute Festival called The Roadshow Revival that took place every summer from 2009-17 at the Ventura Fairgrounds, where such acts as Kris Kristofferson, X, The Blasters, Wanda Jackson, Carlene Carter (Cash’s step-daughter), Reverend Horton Heat, and Billy Joe Shaver paid their respects to the Man in Black, who passed away in 2003. Over the years there have also been untold imitators who have 23 – 30 November 2023

made careers by walking the line – dressing like, and shaping their voices to sound like Johnny Cash himself to perform tribute shows, including Ventura’s own the Mighty Cash Cats. Now, the Cash-curious are getting two more opportunities, as another pair of Cash-centric shows are jumping into the ring of fire and heading our way: a single-night tribute concert to the Man in Black at the Lobero by a guy named James Garner, and Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash, the Broadway hit musical that has an extended run at the Ensemble’s New Vic as part of the 2023-24 season. Coincidentally, Garner’s take on Cash at the Lobero takes place on November 30, the same night that Ring of Fire begins previews for its December 2-17 run. For Garner, the more attention on Cash the better, as the singer-rhythm guitarist has been obsessed with the Man in Black since the first time he heard Cash sing. That was on a cassette tape in 1991, when the 11-year-old Garner discovered that his dad – who kept to himself when he wasn’t working at a cotton farm, same as Cash – was going to see the singer at a local concert in Hanford, California. “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town” rumbled out of the speakers, and Garner was a goner. “It was like the whole world opened up,” Garner recalled in a baritone speaking voice that echoes Cash. “It sounded so different than anything on the radio, so sparse in instrumentation and Cash’s voice was so huge, telling this story that resonated deep in me, and I was hooked.” The experience launched Garner into a “years-long deep dive – it was all Johnny Cash all the time for me as a kid, even up through my college years. I wore black all the time and he was all I listened to in my car and at home.” It wasn’t until his mid-20s that Garner was able to channel his Cash-centricities beyond karaoke when a drummer at a roadside bar in Lodi heard him sing and suggested they form a tribute band. Over the last 16 years, Garner and his quartet have played more than 600 professional shows, including one Folsom State Prison in 2008 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Cash’s famous album. The tribute show focuses on the earlier hits from Cash’s career, including “Folsom Prison Blues,” “Ring of Fire,” “I Walk the Line,” and many more, including B-sides and deeper cuts that resurrect the classic Johnny Cash voice and rhythm. “The hits can fill the show, but he had a huge catalog, so we try to pull out some songs that the audience may not ever have heard Johnny sing,” he said. Over the years, Garner and the band have even released three full-length albums, which are hits with his fans.

Here come’s a run of Johnny Cashthemed events (courtesy photo)

“I always tell them to listen to the real deal and go buy Johnny Cash records, but I guess they want to have something to take home at the end of the night,” he said. “I mean, I’m not Johnny Cash. I tell the stories behind the songs, but I talk about him in the third person at the show. I’m still just a fan.” ETC’s Ring of Fire is a very different animal, a jukebox musical that employs five actor-musicians that eschew impersonation to tell Cash’s life story through his songs spanning his full career. Audiences will likely find the experiences quite different. And to complete the circle of coincidences, the Broadway at the Granada series launches its new season with The

JOURNAL

the glamorous dresses. But the music and the singing is the foundation to flamenco dance. So we are focusing on the music and the singing and how that inspires us to move. You can’t experience flamenco without the music. This is why the dancer dances so passionately and so beautifully because they are interpreting what they’re hearing, rather than it being choreographed.” True to Bermudez’ mission, the show features both legends and several of the next generation of singers and musicians – including members of the same family and nearly all hailing from Jerez de la Frontera. To name just a few: Diego Carrasco is a legendary flamenco singer, composer, and guitarist, while his son Ané Carrasco is a flamenco percussionist. Diego Amador is a flamenco jazz multi-instrumentalist, singer, and composer, known as “El ‘Ray Charles’ Gitano” for his piano technique, who has collaborated with flamenco’s biggest stars as well as jazz artists Pat Metheny, Charlie Haden, and Chick Corea. Pelé De Los Reyes is a flamenco-fusion singer, composer, and founder (with fellow troupe member Curro Carrasco) of Navajita Plateá, who have been nominated for two Latin Grammy Awards. “I wanted people to hear the music from across time,” Bermudez said. “Fusion is very organic. They’re still gypsies with a traditional foundation from Jerez, where the first sounds of flamenco were heard. There’s a certain dynamic to the rhythms, very specific to here, but everybody has their own take on it. Our dancer is spectacular, but the audience is going to get to see the musicians in their own element, not in the background.”

Cher Show – which employs three different actresses to portray the star singer in succeeding eras of her career – on December 6 and 7, smack in the middle of Ring of Fire’s run.

Steven Libowitz has covered a plethora of topics for the Journal since 1997, and now leads our extensive arts and entertainment coverage

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Miscellany (Continued from 36 36))

A Lucky Face

Simon Kerry promotes new book on his great-aunt Pearl Chase (photo by Priscilla)

were princes William and Harry, and Cambridge University, also holds the title of 11th Earl of Kerry, and in due course will become Marquess of Lansdowne, living in the splendid stately pile Bowood House on 4,000 lush acres in Wiltshire. The 240-page book is a lavish tribute to his relative who toiled for 70 years working on preservation, social services, and civic activism, serving on hundreds of committees and receiving more than 80 national, state, and local awards, including two honorary doctorates. Kerry, who spoke to the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation at the Presidio Chapel and a bijou reception at Tecolote, the bibliophile bastion in the Upper Village, traces Chase’s early life and college years at UC Berkeley through to her move to Santa Barbara and her indelible impact on both here and the nation. Quite the character...

Yellowstone star Cole Hauser has a distinct Santa Barbara connection and has just become the face of Lucky Brand’s holiday collection. Hauser, 48, recounts his “idyllic” upbringing in our Eden by the Beach with his film producer mother Cass Warner. Hauser, who has co-starred with Carpinteria actor Kevin Costner on the CBS series for five years, says he likes Lucky Brand’s “authenticity and quality.” “The legacy spans decades and continues to represent the true spirit of American craftsmanship,” he tells Heidi Parker of London’s Daily Mail, my former employer. The brand was founded 40 years ago by Gene Montesano, owner of Lucky’s and Tre Lune on Coast Village Road, and Barry Perlman. Clearly it’s in the genes...

Tea Time at the Club Members and special guests of Montecito Bank & Trust’s MClub, on a cultural tour of Japan, were treated to a rare invitation to visit and partake in a tea

40 Montecito JOURNAL

ceremony with Kobori Sojitsu, the 13th Grand Master of the Enshu Sado School in Tokyo. The invitation, not normally available to the public, was made possible by Condor Express owner Hiroko Benko, a family member and cousin to the tea master, who performs the ceremony for the Emperor of Japan and other dignitaries. The tea ceremony originated more than 430 years ago when Kobori Enshu was appointed Superior Grand Tea Master, ranking him at the top of the feudal lord tea practitioners of that period, bringing elegance to the culture of the tea ceremony and ushering in a new era of artistic refinement and peace. The ceremony is routed in Zen Buddhism and love of beauty.

Let Them Eat Goop

Hiroko Benko and Kobori Sojitsu, 13th Grand Master of the Enshu Sado School (courtesy photo)

Santa Barbaran and Yellowstone star Cole Hauser (photo by Greg Hernandez)

Gary Simpson, Dirk Brandts, Maria McCall, Kobori Sojitsu, Brendon Twigden, Danuta Bennett, Katherine Murray-Morse, and Jill Nida (courtesy photo)

Montecito actress Gwyneth Paltrow is bringing her Goop beauty products to the masses. Her new line is branded good.clean. goop and it is being sold at Target and on Amazon. Unlike its higher priced sibling, the new range features $58 eye cream, a $100 cleanser, with most products priced under $40. The Oscar winner, 51, announced the news on Instagram, posting three photos

MClub and Santa Barbara residents with Grand Tea Master Kobori Sojitsu (courtesy photo) “As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them.” – John F. Kennedy

of herself in front of a Target store. Other products include Daily Juice Cleanser for $19.99, a fruit facial polishing scrub, Wide Awake Eye Serum for $24.99 each, and Healthy Aging Serum for $39.99.

A Titanic Auction As a first-class menu served on the doomed ocean liner Titanic on April 11, 1912, just sold at a U.K. auction house for $103,000, it reminded me of an exact replica for the menu I received at the annual gala dinner of the New York Explorers Club at New York’s Waldorf Astoria in 1986. It features the red White Star line burgee alongside the letters RMS Titanic and I had it signed by Robert Ballard, who discovered the ship’s wreckage in 1985, and Sir Edmund Hillary, the first man to conquer Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak, in May 1953, who were both speaking at the boffo bash. An extremely treasured memento...

An Illuminating Evening The Music Academy’s Hahn Hall was socially gridlocked when the ILLUMINATE Film Festival, a leading event for evolutionary cinema, celebrated its 10th anniversary and move to Santa Barbara from Sedona, Arizona. The fun fest included an exclusive screening of The Monk and the Gun, a charming and provocative feature film set in Bhutan in 2006, that recently premiered at the Telluride and Toronto film festivals, followed by a Q & A with the movie’s writer and director Pawo Choyning Dorji. “We are thrilled to celebrate a major anniversary and move to Santa Barbara,” says Téana David, the festival’s executive director. Among supporters turning out were Anne Towbes, Judi Weisbart, Danette Wolpert, Belle Hahn, Xorin Balbes

Miscellany Page 424 424

23 – 30 November 2023


Your Westmont (Continued from 33 33)) tree lighting, hot cocoa, and opportunity to take photos with Santa on Wednesday, November 29, from 5-7 pm on Kerrwood Lawn. The family-friendly event is free and open to the public. Children’s photos with Santa begin at 4:30 p.m. and the lighting of Kerrwood Hall and a nearby redwood tree will take place around 5:30 pm. Holly Beers, professor of religious studies, will read A Christmas Story before the crowd sings “Silent Night” together. Christmas tree ornaments made from the Pickle Tree will be available for purchase. A coastal live oak gets a drink in its new home

fire mitigation and resilience, increase of biodiversity, research opportunities for undergraduate students, conservation, and a great example of Christians engaged in caring for God’s creation.”

Celebrating the Start of Advent Westmont celebrates Advent, the season leading up to Christmas, with “Let There be Light!” a festive gathering,

Luncheon Empowers Future Women Leaders The Westmont Women’s Leadership Council Luncheon features Natalie Taylor, certified financial planner and behavioral financial advisor, on Friday, January 19, 2024, 12-2 pm in the Global Leadership Center. A limited number of tickets, which cost $100 per person, may be purchased online at westmont.tfaforms.net/4651902. For more information or to learn about sponsorship opportunities, please contact Toni Ramos at tramos@westmont.

The lighting of Kerrwood Hall is November 29

edu or call (805) 565-6050. Christine Emmons, who has been involved with Santa Barbara’s art, music, and education nonprofits for more than 30 years, will receive the 2024 Lady Leslie Ridley-Tree Spirit of Santa Barbara Award at the luncheon. The director of Emmons Capital Investments, she serves on the board of the Community Arts Music Association, chairs CAMA’s International Circle, and is a trustee of the Mosher Foundation. “We look forward to joining local community leaders, professionals, and alums to hear from an empowering and inspiring speaker while enjoying a wonderful lunch,” says Sarah Camp, assistant vice president for college advancement and parent relations. “This event directly supports Westmont’s female students as they pursue an education and prepare to make an impact in their vocation and their community.” Taylor, frequently quoted in major publications such as Business Insider,

Huffington Post, and Forbes, has focused her 20-year career on helping people align their finances with what really matters to them. As a professional speaker, she is passionate about helping people cultivate a plan for their finances based on their values and goals so they can not only make progress, but find confidence, balance, and peace along the way. Established in 2016, the luncheon and council seek to recognize and empower women – professors, staff members, alumnae, friends, and students – to create a tradition of female leadership and support at the college and to connect women in the community and strengthen their ties to Westmont. Current members include chair Denice Fellows, Kim Crawford (’00), Courtney DeSoto (’94), Amy Eddy (’02), Anna Grotenhuis, Robin Long (’06), Cheryl Miller, Sherry Nasseri (’00), Drew Parisi (’05), Mindy A. Wolfe (’99), and Kimberly Yim (’94). The current council builds on the extraordinary contributions of its founding council, co-chairs Anna Grotenhuis, Penny Jenkins, and Andria Kahmann, as well as Kirsten Moore, women’s basketball head coach and associate athletic director. Past speakers include Teresa Goines (2016), Kathy Ireland (2017), Shauna Niequist (2018), Megan Alexander (2019), Tamika Catchings (2020) and Lupita Knittel (2023).

Scott Craig is manager of media relations at Westmont College

Natalie Taylor speaks at the Westmont Women’s Leadership Council Luncheon January 19

23 – 30 November 2023

Montecito JOURNAL

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Miscellany (Continued from 40 40))

Colin Richardson and Yvette Giller in front with Mike Bryant, Peter Martin, and Sue and Ed Birch standing (photo by Priscilla)

Xorin Balbes, Sandra de Castro, Téana David, Belle Hahn, and Elizabeth Riley (photo by Priscilla)

Jamie Perham, Art Cisneros, Darius Fisher, and Tomas Tedesco (photo by Priscilla)

can also drink wine and eat canapés while checking out the merchandise.” Among the purveyors were Peter Martin, husband of Santa Barbara Symphony head honcho Kathryn, who sold 20 of his children’s books, jewelry from the Diana Paul Studio in Santa Ynez, and local bling king Bob Bryant, floral oil paintings by Wendy Seifried from Malibu, and a selection of honeys from local beekeeper Colin Richardson. Quite the buzz...

Lynda Nahara, Mickael Blancho, Linda Spann, and Humberto Perez (photo by Priscilla)

Early to Arise Warbler Katy Perry’s mother, Mary Hudson of Arise International, is hosting the third annual 5K run-walk on Yolanda Terbell, Romy Reicker, chocolates table host Marley Van Sicklen, beauty lounge owner Tanna Rae Zahary, and purchaser Carola Nicholson (photo by Priscilla)

With his ILLUMINATE 2023 Film Festival Director’s Choice Award is Pawo Choyning Dorji, director and writer for The Monk and The Gun (photo by Priscilla)

and Truman Davies, Rinaldo and Laila Brutoco, and Jerry Eisenberg and Caroline McDougall.

December 2. The event, a fully sanctioned race, will take place along the beach on the soccer field at Chase Palm Park. It brings together community participants with music and festivities following the race. Awards will be given to the top three runners and walkers. Last year’s event raised more than $20,000 that was used for upgrades to the Bethel House, a branch of the Santa Barbara Rescue Mission, including two patios, furniture and landscaping, as well as Christmas presents for all clients. This year, says Mary, the fundraising goal is $50,000 to complete the upgrading work. For more information check out https://www.arise5k.org/event-info.

Sightings Oprah Winfrey at the Beverly Hills engagement party of Amazon tycoon Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez at the home of media tycoon Barry Diller and his fashion designer wife Diane von Furstenberg... Singer Katy Perry and actor fiancé Orlando Bloom at the Dolce & Gabbana gala in New York... Actress Gwyneth Paltrow at the Manhattan gala of the Council of Fashion Designers of America. Pip! Pip!

Here Come the Holidays Christmas got off to an early start at the venerable Santa Barbara Club with the launch, for the second year, of its holiday boutique. The event was founded by general manager Linda Spann with her choosing the 18 vendors showing their wares to members of the club, founded in 1892. “It’s a great way to shop with a great selection of wares,” says Linda. “They

42 Montecito JOURNAL

At the Santa Barbara Club after boutique shopping are Hazel Blankenship, Dan and Meg Burnham, and John Blankenship (photo by Priscilla)

“Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.” – Marcus Tullius Cicero

From musings on the Royals to celebrity real estate deals, Richard Mineards is our man on the society scene and has been for more than 15 years

23 – 30 November 2023


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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Calendar of Events

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24

by Steven Libowitz FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 Spencer @ Roy – Pep up from the post-turkey stupor with a veteran local musician at a venerable downtown hangout when Restaurant Roy hosts Spencer Barnitz tonight. It’s a Black Friday party and a Digital Record Release event offering the first chance to hear the new Spencer the Gardener release, Shine On, produced by Emile Millar, who will also be on hand to play some songs live. The art on the walls is by Ken Nack in a show entitled “Unfinished Business” celebrating what would have been the artist’s 100th birthday in 2023 – which also happens to be the 30th anniversary since Roy Gandy opened the joint. As Spencer says in an email: Black Friday has never been so bright. The full Spencer the Gardener band will also be appearing 7-10 pm tomorrow night, November 25, at Tony’s Pizzaria in Ventura (186 E. Thompson Blvd., 805-643-8425 or www.tonyspizzaria.net.) WHEN: 7:30 pm WHERE: 7 West Carrillo St. COST: free INFO: (805) 966-5636 or https://restaurantroy.com Tree Lighting Ceremony – Paseo Nuevo might soon be slated for the wrecker’s ball in favor of a housing and offices complex, but til then the once-proud outdoor mall patterned after the city’s Spanish adobe motif welcomes shoppers and revelers with a passel of holiday events. First up this season is its second annual Tree Lighting Ceremony where locals and visitors of all ages can enjoy an enchanting evening under the stars in Center Court, beginning with Santa Barbara Mayor Randy Rowse leading the tree lighting, symbolizing the start of the holidays as a light “snowfall” dusts Paseo Nuevo. Share holiday wishes with Santa Claus and capture the cherished moment with photos – or if you prefer, connect with The Grinch, who will also make an appearance. In a nod to inclusivity, photos in the Peppermint Parlor from 4-5 pm will be a designated space providing a quiet and secluded environment for children who may require additional support. The festivities also take place in Captain Fatty’s Beer Garden both during and after the ceremony where DJ Darla Bea will fill Center Court with the spirit of the season, playing lively holiday tunes all evening. WHEN: 5-8 pm (Snowfall continues beginning at 6 pm every Friday, Saturday and Sunday through December 24) WHERE: 651 Paseo Nuevo COST: free INFO: (805) 963-7147 or www.paseonuevosb.com/events

Cowboy Christmas – Santa Ynez Valley’s new wintertime family favorite rustic holiday experience returns for another season of unforgettable activities for all ages at the stable of Santa Ynez Valley Horseback Ride, a working public riding stable that offers trail rides along the Santa Ynez River for the public, as well as riding lesson programs for kids and adults. Among the attractions: The Daring Elf Adventure (Pony Ride Experience), The Tipsy Ornament Challenge (Horse Riding Challenge), a visit from Santa plus Meet-and-Greet where you can sit in Gene Kelly’s vintage sleigh, the Tipsy Ornament Challenge (horseback), the Rowdy Reindeer Ride (mechanical bull), Christmas Pony Decorating, Wooden Ornament Decorating Station, Mt. Crumpet Climb (Hay Bale Pyramid), Lasso Arena, plus games, obstacle course, petting zoo, hot cocoa bar, and more. The fun happens every Friday & Saturday from Black Friday to two days before Christmas. A portion of ticket sales benefit the Santa Barbara Youth Collective. WHEN: 3-7 pm November 24-December 23 WHERE: River View Park, 151 Sycamore Drive, Buellton COST: $19.95 adults, $16.95 kids 12 & under, free for under 2 (Each paid admission includes an All-Access Pass to participate in all 10 event experiences at least one time.) INFO: (805) 705-5458 or www.syvcowboychristmas.com

Lane Farms Christmas Patch – Get into the holiday spirit and shop for the perfect, or perfectly imperfect, Christmas tree at the Lane Farms Christmas Patch, the seasonal sensation at the suburban Noleta farmland. Browse through the vast inventory to select from fresh Noble Fir, Nordman, or Douglas Fir trees, all grown at a tree farm in Oregon. Slip over a few yards away to challenge your spatial skills by going through the corn maze, which is constructed to be fun for people of all ages. Can you make it out without having to follow a 10-year-old kid who’s running from entrance to exit in less than a minute? Lane Farms Christmas Patch also boasts farm animals, tractors, and farm equipment to spend a few minutes connecting to a working family farm. On your way out, grab fresh fruits at the produce stand to practice making a homemade holiday pie prior to the actual holiday meals. WHEN: Open 10 am-8 pm daily November 24-December 17 WHERE: 308 S. Walnut Lane COST: free INFO: (805) 964-3773

ONGOING ZooLights – With the first of the wintery holidays in the rear-view mirror, Santa Barbara Zoo’s second annual after-hours walk-through light show pumps up the wattage. Guests get to experience a glowing display of handcrafted, silkadorned lanterns patterned in animal and nature themes as the Zoo transforms into a magical world of lights featuring thousands of installations powered by more than 50,000 LED bulbs. Discover the underwater seascape, beautiful birds, interactive areas and dozens of other animals all on the Zoo’s beautiful grounds during the larger-than-life immersive experience that’s all-new for 2023. WHEN: 4:30-8:30 pm November 24-26 & 29-30 this week; continues selected dates through January 14 WHERE: 500 Niños Dr. COST: $20-$32 INFO: (805) 962-5339 or www.sbzoo.org/zoolights

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Gypsy Swing Is the Thing – San Lyon took their name from the hometown of the three original members – Paige Herschell (vocals, melodica, and kazoo) from San Antonio, Texas; Dani Vargas (guitar and vocals) from Santiago, Chile; and Jenna Colombet (violin, vocals, and drums) from Lyon, France. They formed in Los Angeles back in 2019 to play a winning mix of early 20th century Hot Club Gypsy Jazz and American Jazz standards popularized in the 1920s to 1940s, as well as original music. The group has since expanded to a quartet, adding Katie Cavera from southern Indiana on stand-up bass, banjo, and vocals, but keeping the same approach and name. They have released several albums and are continuing to write more original vintage-sounding songs together, but even their renditions of standards such as “Please Don’t Talk About Me When I’m Gone,” “Puttin’ on the Ritz,” “Cheek to Cheek,” and “It Don’t Mean a Thing if it Ain’t Got that Swing” have that je ne sais quoi air of authenticity with an original flair. At their latest SOhO show several months ago, San Lyon had the swing dancers coupling up on SOhO’s wood floor in front of the stage and earned an immediate standing ovation, so tonight should be a great way to beat those mid-week blues. WHEN: 7:30 pm

“Gratitude is a divine emotion: it fills the heart, but not to bursting; it warms it, but not to fever.” – Charlotte Brontë

23 – 30 November 2023


RING OF FIRE:

Out of ‘The Office’: Reflecting with Rainn – Rubicon Theatre Company ramps up its new series of special events called “An Evening With…”, featuring acclaimed actors and others in both conversation and performance. The series kicks off tonight with three-time Emmy-nominated and SAG Award-winning actor Rainn Wilson, best known for his portrayal of Dwight Schrute on NBC’s multi-award-winning hit sitcom The Office. Wilson’s theatrical career includes performing on Broadway opposite Patrick Stewart in The Tempest and appearing in the Tony-nominated London Assurance. He also played the lead in the political farce The Doppelganger at Steppenwolf Theatre. On screen, Wilson recently completed filming Lessons in Chemistry with Oscar-winner Brie Larson, and his filmography includes roles in Jerry and Marge Go Large, Blackbird, Juno, Galaxy Quest, and Almost Famous. At the Rubicon, Wilson invites audiences to delve into the depths of his professional career via an interview with Rubicon’s founding artistic director Karyl Lynn Burns, followed by a short dramatic reading and a Q&A session with the audience. Proceeds are earmarked to support Rubicon’s artistic and educational programs. WHEN: 8 pm WHERE: Ventura Center for Spiritual Living, 101 S. Laurel St., Ventura COST: $39.50 main floor, $20 in the balcony ($20 additional for a Meet-andGreet with Wilson following the event, including a photo op and book signing plus light backstage refreshments) INFO: (805) 667-2900 or www.rubicontheatre.org

WHERE: SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State Street COST: $20 INFO: (805) 962-7776 or www.sohosb.com La Arcada Christmas Walk – The more than 20 shops, bistros, and galleries that line the paseo known as La Arcada Plaza once again sponsor one of the earliest and most anticipated holiday season events. La Arcada’s 28th Annual Christmas Walk is a free family affair full of holiday fun and merriment perfect for a picturesque Santa Barbara evening. Enjoy lots of holiday goodies, fresh-popped popcorn, and holiday music, including carolers and choirs, plus a chance to snap a photo with Santa and share in good holiday cheer. And be sure to keep your eyes peeled as the weatherman says there’s a chance of snow flurries to sprinkle some white stuff on the popular interactive sculpture garden setting featuring the famous turtle fountain. WHEN: 5-8 pm WHERE: La Arcada Plaza, 1114 State St. COST: free INFO: (805) 966-6634 or https://laarcadasantabarbara.com/events-experiences

The cast of Ring of Fire Photo: Zach Mendez

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28

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The Amazing Audra – Entertainers don’t come a whole lot more versatile and accomplished than Audra McDonald, the Juilliard-trained soprano who would be one of the rare EGOT stars if opera counted for the O rather than an Oscar. As it is, her c.v. boasts a record-breaking six Tony Awards – more performance wins than any other actor and the only one to win in all four acting categories – plus two Grammy Awards and an Emmy, not to mention a National Medal of Arts honor. McDonald will lend her rich, soulful voice to works from Broadway, the Great American Songbook, and more in an intimate evening concert in the cozy confines of UCSB Campbell Hall. WHEN: 7 pm WHERE: Campbell Hall COST: $60-$100 INFO: (805) 893-3535 or https://artsandlectures.ucsb.edu

CHASE PALM PARK FIELD 9 AM REGISTRATION 10 AM START 11 AM KIDS FUN RUN

23 – 30 November 2023

ARISE5K.ORG ALL MONIES RAISED GO DIRECTLY TO THE SANTA BARBARA RESCUE MISSION’S BETHEL HOUSE. THE 18 WOMEN CURRENTLY LIVING THERE WILL GET CHRISTMAS PRESENTS AND THE HOUSE WILL CONTINUE TO BE RENOVATED. THIS IS ARISE’S THIRD YEAR HELPING BETHEL HOUSE.

EVENT ENTRY ADULTS $25 STUDENTS $10 CHILDREN 3-9 FREE

Montecito JOURNAL

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Furnished 2BR/1BTH guesthouse avail. in 30 days, after accepted application, on a very well-located five-acre estate near the San Marcos Pass on W. Camino Cielo, ten min. to State St.; 20 min. to all the Santa Ynez Valley offers: $3500 mo. incl. utility use w/in reason: water, garbage, electricity, propane, Wi-Fi, laundry, and easy parking. Only top professionals who are neat, clean, and organized are invited to apply. NP/NS/ ND No texting. Landline: 805-964-1891; cell: 208-755-2616 Cell is best: 10 am-8 pm

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Photo Booth Rentals for any event or occasion www.TruMusicLighting.com Call or text Moi (805) 403-6275 IN SEARCH OF REAL ESTATE We buy land and homes in any condition. Call 805-722-5792 for a free quote DONATIONS NEEDED Santa Barbara Bird Sanctuary Menagerie 2430 Lillie Avenue Summerland, CA 93067 (805) 969-1944 Donate to the Parrot Pantry! At SB Bird Sanctuary, backyard farmer’s bounty is our birds best bowl of food! The flock goes bananas for your apples, oranges & other homegrown fruits & veggies.

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$10 MINIMUM TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD It’s simple. Charge is $3 per line, each line with 31 characters. Minimum is $10 per issue. Photo/logo/visual is an additional $20 per issue. Email Classified Ad to frontdesk@montecitojournal.net or call (805) 565-1860. All ads must be finalized by Friday at 2pm the week prior to printing. We accept Visa/MasterCard/Amex (3% surcharge) “When asked if my cup is half-full or half-empty, my only response is that I am thankful I have a cup.” – Sam Lefkowitz

Volunteers Do you have a special talent or skill? Do you need community service hours? The flock at SB Bird Sanctuary could always use some extra love and socialization. Call us and let’s talk about how you can help. (805) 969-1944 VOLUNTEERS NEEDED K-9 PALS need volunteers to be foster parents for our dogs while they are waiting for their forever homes. For more information info@k-9pals.org or 805-570-0415.

23 – 30 November 2023


Mini Meta

Last Week’s Solution:

By Pete Muller & Frank Longo For each of the first five mini crosswords, one of the entries also serves as part of a five-word meta clue. The answer to the meta is a word or phrase (six letters or longer) hidden within the sixth mini crossword. The hidden meta answer starts in one of the squares and snakes through the grid vertically and horizontally from there (no diagonals!) without revisiting any squares. PUZZLE #1 1

2

N I C E G O F O R AWO L S M I L D E N D

D A Y H A R P O U S I N G L I N E A A N K A

E N U F T I T O T A T A R W I T H O L I N

B R A S S L E M O N A T O L L N I N E K E G

C O S T T R I C E T I L E S O M E N S P E R E

S A G E R C L I V E R A B I N A M B L E P O S S E

GAME

USING

TWO

BLANK

TILES

SCRABBLE

PUZZLE #3

PUZZLE #2 3

4

1 4

2

3

1

5

6

6

6

7

7

7

8

8

Down 1 One half of sex education? 2 Map magnification, maybe 3 Comes down with 4 Super Mario 3D World console 5 Do also called a "natural," for short

Across 1 Something a suit often holds 4 Ace of base, maybe? 6 Barreled toward 7 They may be long, slim, or astronomical 8 Video game whose sequel was Riven

4

2

Down 1 They have thought processes 2 One that "rises" in a 2023 "Transformers" film 3 Word after lost, low, or latte 4 Part of AFK 5 Luck's title?

3

1 5

2

5

3

1 6

7

7

8

8 9

Down 1 "You're Still the One" singer 2 Part of WWJD 3 Bhindi, in Indian cuisine 4 "Boo'd Up" singer Mai 5 It may hold eggs, ink, or pollen

Across 1 Doth possess 5 Person born on April Fools' Day, e.g. 7 With 2-Down, cities plus their suburbs 8 Like blood, sweat, and tears 9 Informal states?

2

3

4

5

6

7

Across 1 It's due in Italy 4 Combatants in the Battle of Endor 6 "NCIS" actress San Giacomo 7 Shade similar to amethyst 8 "Didn't you leave something out ...?"

Down 1 Common one-word photo caption 2 Landmark that offers visitors a "Victory or Death" audio tour 3 Strings pulled in paradise? 5 "Landscape ___ Invisible Hand" (2023 film) 6 Arson-investigating org.

META PUZZLE

4

6

8

5

Across 1 Sound accompanying scratching 4 Something found among the irregulars 6 Marble Madness maker 7 Dangle a carrot in front of 8 Temple newbie, e.g.

PUZZLE #5

PUZZLE #4 1

3

4

5

Across 1 Lead-in to Boi, Sean, or Daddy Kane, in rappers' names 4 Its nose is smelled, but doesn't smell 5 How Carlos Alcaraz finished at Wimbledon in 2023 6 Teases relentlessly 7 Give the heave-ho

2

9

Down 1 "The Silence of the ___" (film in which Billy Zane plays Jo Dee Fostar) 2 See 7-Across 3 Line on a spine, perhaps 4 It's associated with frequency frequently 6 Base for some ink and ice cream

Across 1 Department between Oise and Pas-de-Calais 6 Not cloudy, in Saint-Cloud 7 Insurer with a purple heart in its logo 8 Brings down with a wrecking ball, say 9 Elicit a nudge from a bedmate, maybe

Down 1 Unforgettable closing lines? 2 Brand of fake fat 3 Square meal part at Passover? 4 Person who digs rock 5 Use a rubber on

LOCAL BUSINESS DIRECTORY WE BUY BOOKS Historical Paintings Vintage Posters Original Prints

805-962-4606

info@losthorizonbooks.com

LOST HORIZON BOOKSTORE now in Montecito, 539 San Ysidro Road

STEVEN BROOKS JEWELERS Estate & Insurance Appraisals Graduate Gemologist G.I.A Estate Jewelry & Custom Designs Jewelry Buyer stevenbrooksjewelers.com 805-455-1070

23 – 30 November 2023

Trusted Caregiver Looking for ONE client

15+years of experience in caring for the elderly. PERSONAL CARE, DRIVER, LIGHT CLEANING, COOKING, COMPANY Available weekdays minimum of 20 hours per week

Lori Alvanoz 805-245-4550

Andrea Dominic, R.Ph. Emily McPherson, Pharm.D. Paul Yered, R.Ph. 1498 East Valley Road Montecito, CA 93108

Phone: 805-969-2284 Fax: 805-565-3174

Compounding Pharmacy & Boutique

Concrete Patios

BBQ's

Driveways

Fireplaces

Walkways

Masonry

Diego Carrillo - Owner Call/Text 805-252-4403 SERVING THE 805 • LIC#1099725 Montecito JOURNAL

47


LUCKY’S

steaks / chops / seafood . . . and brunch • Morning Starters and Other First Courses • Fresh Squeezed OJ or Grapefruit Juice � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 8/10

• Sandwiches •

choice of hash browns, fries, mixed greens, Caesar, fruit salad

Vegetarian Burger, 5 oz� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22 choice of cheese (burger patty is vegan)

Grilled Artichoke with choice of sauce � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 16

Lucky Burger, 8 oz�, � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 28 choice of cheese

Bowl of Chopped Fresh Fruit w/ lime and mint � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 12 Giant Shrimp Cocktail � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 36

Burrata Mozzarella (Puglia), basil and ripe tomato� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22 French Onion Soup, Gratinée � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 17 Matzo Ball Soup � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 17 Lucky Chili w/ cornbread, cheddar and onions � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22

• A La Carte • Brioche French Toast w/ fresh berries and maple syrup � � � � � � � � � � � 19 Waffle w/ fresh berries, whipped cream, maple syrup � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 16 Cambridge House Rope Hung Smoked Salmon, � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 29 toasted bialy or bagel, cream cheese, olives, tomato & cucumber

• Eggs and Other Breakfast Dishes • choice of hash browns, fries, sliced tomatoes, fruit salad Classic Eggs Benedict w/ julienne ham and hollandaise � � � � � � � � � 26 California Eggs Benedict w/ spinach, tomato, avocado � � � � � � � � � � 24 Smoked Salmon Eggs Benedict � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 28 Wild Mushroom and Gruyere Omelet � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22 Home Made Spanish Chorizo Omelet w/ avocado � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22 Petit Filet 7 oz� Steak, and two eggs any style � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 59 Corned Beef Hash, and two poached eggs � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 26

Grilled Chicken Breast Club on a Soft Bun� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 28 bacon, lettuce, tomato and avocado Sliced Filet Mignon Open Faced Sandwich, 6 oz� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 32 mushroom sauce, french fries Pastrami Reuben � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 26 sauerkraut and gruyere on rye

• Salads and Other Specialties • Wedge of Iceberg � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 18 roquefort or thousand island dressing Arugula, Radicchio & Belgian Endive Salad � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 17 reggiano parmesan, balsamic vinaigrette Caesar Salad � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 16 w/ grilled chicken breast � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 31 Seafood Louie � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 47 two shrimp, 2 oz� crab, avocado, egg, romaine, tomato, cucumber Charred Rare Tuna Nicoise Salad � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 42 Lucky’s Salad � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 25 romaine, shrimp, bacon, green beans, peppers, avocado, roquefort Cobb Salad tossed with Roquefort dressing � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 29 Chopped Salad � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 25 arugula, radicchio, shrimp, prosciutto, cannellini beans, onions Sliced Steak Salad, 6 oz�, � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 32 arugula, radicchio, belgian endive and sauteéd onion Dos Pueblos Abalone (4pcs) � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 40

Mixed Vegetable Frittata w/ Gruyere � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22

Jimmy the Greek Salad with Feta � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 20

Huevos Rancheros, two eggs any style � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � 22 tortillas, melted cheese, avocado and warm salsa

join us for brunch saturday and sunday 9AM-2:30PM and for lunch fridays 11AM-2:30PM reservations via OpenTable or by phone 805-565-7540 1279 Coast Village Road, Montecito


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