
18 minute read
Mother’s Day Gift Guide
Mother’sDay
Pandemic or no pandemic – there’s no excuse to skimp on mom this Mother’s Day. Shelter-in-place may have cancelled out your traditional brunch plans, but there are still ways to celebrate mom’s special day, including a breakfast delivery from her favorite restaurant. And, what better time than now to think of mom and shop local as small businesses are struggling to recover from a month of closure. Several local retailers offer curbside pick-up or local deliveries for online purchases, but you can also shop online and then purchase and pay by phone then pick up curbside.
Flowers and chocolates are rarely bad ideas, but other gift ideas abound for moms with varying tastes and interests. If you’re behind on your shopping, here are some great ideas to get you started.
For Mother’s Day, Give Some Love to Mom and Your Small Business Neighbors
Summer Nights
A chic and stylish tassel-edge cashmere shawl from Nepal is the perfect wrap for her summer evenings outdoors. $895
https://maisonkstyle.com

Upgrade Mom’s Floral Arrangement
Melt her heart with a one-of-a-kind artisan arrangement such as these Sarah Bernhardt Peonies, anemones, lilacs, and roses. $195 www.hoguefloral.com

All About the Flora
Help mom keep it all together with this stylish, bohemian chic floral print leather wristlet pouch made in Italy. $98
www.johnnywas.com


The Mom Cuff
Part Wonder Woman, part fashion diva, no doubt she will adore this timeless vintage gold-plaited Chanel Cuff. $1,750
www.shopmarcus.com
Blushing Beauty
Keep her blushing with an aromatic and light facial oil that nurtures and protects the skin with organic herbal botanicals and precious rose attar. $20
www.maharaniacademy.com

GiftGuide
Spring Affair
Indulge mom with a luxurious and pampering Peony Deluxe Bath and Body Package featuring floral notes of peony and lily of the valley with hints of apple, amber and peach. $145
www.coast2coastcollection.com

Under Cover on the Riviera
Give mom something bold and beautiful to wear, such as this Antibes stripe coverup made from soft
Turkish cotton – perfect for a day at the beach, lounging poolside or anytime you want to feel stylish and comfortable. $88
https://rivieratowel.com
All That Glitters
Dazzle mom with this personal luxury gift set featuring a sleek metallic travel bag filled with precious stone earrings, fragrant body care, gold and pearl hair pins and Catherine Greenup Designs Gold Foil Enclosure Card (a $350 value). All sets will be gift-wrapped and shipped or locally delivered for free! $206 with current 30% off sale.
https://www.wendyfoster.com



Flower Power
These Chanel vintage white leather earrings are in full bloom. $1,150
Peregrine Galleries (805) 969-9673
Runaway Mummy
Meet the perfect running shoe for moms looking for a smooth ride and plush running experience. $150
www.sbrunningco.com


Noble Woman
Who wouldn’t love a jewelry gift from Bryant & Sons? This elegant tricolor rose, white, and yellow gold band accented with 83 diamonds at 1.02 carat is perfect for everyday wear and adds a dash of glamour to any outfit. $2,750
https://bryantandsons.com
Mother’sDayGiftGuide


Birds of a Feather
These artisan hand-carved Asian mango wood salad servers with feather handle detail are the perfect accent for any meal. $52
https://botanikinc.com Sol De Riviera
Mom will love this classic petite rose one-piece suit with square neckline and delicate spaghetti straps. Made in Brazil with UPF 50+ fabric. $250
https://www.sodemel.com
Quarantine Comfort
Give mom the gift of comfort with these vintage heart-print sweatpants made with supersoft cotton fabric. $157
www.whiskeyleather.com



Delightful Arrangement
Surprise mom with an elegant Hibiscus Glass Bud Vase, mouth blown in Tuscany, nestled in VIETRI’s signature gift box with straw reminiscent of authentic Italian packaging. $48 to $54
https://letterperfectsantabarbara.com

A Scents of Place
Gift mom the ultimate luxury blend of travel, design, and scents with Voyage Et Cie’s rose-scented Perfum W Pouf Tuilleries ($90) and the orange blossom aroma of Eau De Parfume Barcelona ($56).
www.baskecalifornia.com

All Frills and Comfort
Mom will absolutely adore this Celestine nightgown and negligee made in fine Swiss cotton and European lace. $560
www.shopglamourhouse.com
Fields of Joy
Grown in Santa Ynez Valley, a trio of handprinted linen lavender sachets is a wonderfully scented gift for the mother in your life. $50
www.raoultextilesstore.com



Pink Perfection
Add a touch of elegance to mom’s wardrobe with a pair of opal and gold dangle earrings with diamond accents. $4,500
www.silverhorn.com
Tahitian Treasure
Update her pearl collection with a Tahitian Black Pearl necklace accented with18k gold barnacles. $3,840
www.imagineartfulthings.com

Spice Girl
Treat mom to an intimate cooking class where she will discover the tantalizing flavors of Mediterranean cooking from seasoned Chef Nimita Dhirajlal. $75 per person
www.nimitascuisine.com


The Reveler
Wow your special lady with a pink sapphire revel ring made with 18k royal yellow gold accented with nine bezel-set rose cut pink sapphires and white diamonds. $3,550 www.danielgibbings.com


Cacao California
Nothing says “I love and appreciate you” more than a box of organic handmade chocolates with the added flair of the California chocolatier style. $29
www.santabarbarachocolate.com
Seafaring Woman
Set mom on course (stair-master style) with this extrastable superior Hobie paddleboard. $1,799
http://www.mountainairsports.com
She’s Fresh
Mothers tired of the toilet paper shortage and yearning for an elevated sense of freshness will absolutely love Brondell’s Swash DS725 Electronic Bidet Toilet Seat. With features including a warm air dryer, custom front and rear washes, a heated seat, even a cool blue nightlight. $399
www.brondell.com
Show Me the Bubbles! The 2016 Fesstivity Blanc de Blancs is perfect for a virtual tasting with mom. Set up a Zoom call so that you can all sip together and compare notes. $43
www.fessparkerwineshop.com
LOOK MA (Continued from page 14) with her husband Diego and two daughters, three and six, to Santa Barbara in 2017 to teach at UCSB. Shortly after the pandemic was declared, her five colleagues, all professors at UCSB, met on March 14 to discuss forming a team to set up a testing platform in the UCSB Labs. Six days later, as Governor Newsom announced the shelter-in-place order for California, all the labs were subsequently closed, threatening to shut down progress on the new test concept before work had even begun. “When we closed all the labs, all of our other research stopped,” Carolina recalls, “we asked for authorization to do this project.” The UCSB administration was convinced to proceed on a minimal basis.
“We were only allowed a few people, a total of six people from all four labs. Taking into consideration that our labs are normally staffed with between ten to twenty people each, we were really working with a skeleton crew.”
The core team included Molecular Biologist Max Wilson who joined the faculty in 2018, neuroscientist and head of the Neurobiology Lab at UCSB Dr. Kenneth S. Kosik, Ms. Arias, and Diego.
“The assay (test) was developed in about a month,” Carolina adds. “Everyone was working day andnight on this. We all bring something very different to the table. The teamwork was amazing.”
As Carolina and her husband Diego have sheltered at home, they both continue to teach their courses and take interdepartmental Zoom meetings while home schooling their two high energy three- and six-year-old daughters. Oh, and developing a game changing CRISPR based genome test for the coronavirus on the side.
“Yeah, it’s pretty interesting,” Carolina remarks in a cascade of laughter. “Both of us are working on this COVID-19 project and having the girls here. It’s a lot of different directions that we have to pay attention to at the same time.”
Daughters chime in, make requests, even while she’s being interviewed, but Carolina seems to have endless good humor, patience, and focus.
“It’s madness here as you can imagine,” she says. “I was worried because here I am presenting to my big virology class, and of course, there could not be a better time to be teaching virology. Diego is teaching a grad class, and sometimes we have meetings at the same time. When our daughters come around, we’re like, okay, just go watch some Sesame Street and we’ll be back.”
At the same time, it’s turned out to be a rich, educational experience for her children and they have the priceless opportunity to be close to their parents and their work in the middle of a critical project during an extremely difficult time.
“I was so concerned about homeschooling,” she recalls, “I printed some coloring pages from a biochemistry coloring book for adults and gave it to my three-year-old and I was like, okay, we’re going to sit down and color something. She said, I want to color DNA. So, I asked, you know how DNA looks?”
Her daughter shuffled through the pages of the coloring book and stopped. “This is DNA,” she said. Carolina was astonished.
“So, you know, homeschooling methods can vary. My three-year-old knows the structure of DNA. And my older daughter learned about the pairing of DNA from The Magic School Bus. I’m happy.” This is common sense. Is it a virus? How common is it? All this entails testing. The second stage is resourcing. Do we have what we need to fight this disease, which in this case, means our hospitals. Do our hospitals have sufficient supplies, equipment, and protection to safely deal with an epidemic? The third stage is sustainability. How will we live long term with the virus until we have a vaccine, or it goes away?
Right now, in the United States, we’re looking at sustainability, the third stage, without having adequately addressed the first stage, testing. So that’s a nightmare for everybody. With the wild claims and misinformation we hear every day, it creates an unreality as we face putting our lives on the line in reopening.

Indicators and thermocycler that helps grow the sample for testing
Current Testing Modes Have Significant Issues
“You cannot fight a fire blindfolded,” WHO Director General Tedros AdhanomGhebreyesus famously said on March 16, 2020, “and we cannot stop this pandemic if we don’t know who is infected.”
Currently there are two basic categories of tests marketed under different names that are in use. The first is a PCR test, also known as a swab test, which detects if a person is currently infected. The second type of test is a serology test, which is also known as an antibody test. This test is designed to detect through a blood sample if a person has already been exposed to the coronavirus, by detecting if antibodies are present or not.
While both types of tests exist in the United States, there are multiple problems that complicate the situation. Firstly, many of these tests are costly and require specialists and expensive lab equipment. Another issue is the high probabilities of false negatives and positives prevalent with the existing tests. One of the very best molecular tests has a 10% probability of false positives and a 12% probability of a false negatives.
The serology tests can give a false positive due to the many types of other coronaviruses in our environment, one of which is the common cold. Another crucial problem is that elements in the tests have been in short supply. One reason is worldwide demand. Another reason is that so much of our healthcare supplies have the little label “Made in China” on them.
“We don’t make these things domestically. The same with all these masks. Everything was produced, of course, somewhere in Asia,” stated Dr. Henning Ansorg, the Santa Barbara County Public Health Officer.
7 – 14 May 2020 MONTECITO JOURNAL44 “Any mother could perform the jobs of several air-traffic controllers with ease.” – Lisa Alther The Virus – A Replication Machine
The coronavirus and every virus, in fact, is just basically fat and protein, or put more scientifically, a nucleic acid molecule in a protein coat. It doesn’t “live” except in conjunction with this terrible way it creates disease. The human body is the perfect environment for it. Its entire drive for existence is to replicate. Its reproduction in the human body sets off these things called cytokines, small proteins released by many different cells in the body including those of the immune system and that’s what gets people in trouble.
Sometimes the body’s response to infection can go into overdrive. In some patients, excessive or uncontrolled levels of cytokines are released. These are called Cytokine Storms which then activate more immune cells, resulting in hyperinflammation. Cytokine storms are a common complication not only of COVID-19 and flu but of other respiratory diseases caused by coronaviruses such as SARS and MERS. They are also associated with non-infectious diseases such as multiple sclerosis and pancreatitis. In some people the inflammation causes scarring in the lungs and the patient can’t recover. Three Stages of Pandemic
We’ve all heard that testing is important for hospitals to deal with incoming patients, but testing is equally, if not more crucial, to economic recovery. Testing doesn’t cure the coronavirus, but it’s the antidote to the shutdown and allows the country to open up safely without going back into another shutdown.
It’s important to keep in mind the three simple stages of dealing with any epidemic. When a disease takes hold, the first stage in addressing it is research. Reagents – The Underbelly of The Testing Shortages
Both types of test require complex and pure “reagents,” and plenty of them. A reagent is a fancy word for the main ingredient of any chemical-based test. Reagents are the chemical that allows the test to be processed. Put simply, without reagents the government test kits are useless.
“All the major countries in the world are wanting the same thing at the same time,” said Doris-Ann Williams, chief executive of the British In Vitro Diagnostics Association, which represents producers and distributors of the lab tests used to detect coronavirus.
Despite the considerable number of viral epidemics these past two decades like SARS in 2003, MERS in 2012, 2015, 2018, Ebola in 2014-16, 2019 and Zika in 2015-16, most countries still don’t stockpile reagents.
Guess who does? China. But by mid-January, China, the world’s leading maker and exporter of reagents, had also run low on supply as the outbreak spread in Hubei Province and beyond.
With the two major testing modalities dependent on reagents, UC Santa Barbara’s team tackled a new way to develop a test for the virus that did not require a reagent. CREST – A CRISPR Coronovirus Test
Based on CRISPR gene editing technology, UCSB’s CREST uses the RNA cutting Cas13 protein for the virus. For coronavirus detection, the researchers programmed a different RNA protein to recognize specific sites of the virus’s genome.
Using previously available off the shelf lab technology, the RNA is programmed to give off fluorescence when it is cut after locating the Cas13 enzyme. In simple terms, if a fluorescence is detected in test readings, the virus is present. If there is no fluorescence, then there is no virus present. Without the use of reagents, with a CREST test, COVID-19 can be detected with a high degree of certainty. Still to be vetted and put through trials of course.

Extract Amplify Detect
Like every test before it, CREST takes a sample, a swab, from a subject and then amplifies or grows that sample so there is more of the sample to work with. Where CREST differs is in the method of detection which utilizes the Cas13 protein and fluorescence.
An Eye to Economy and Adaptability
Some of the other researchers who participated in the project seen here at the UCSB Labs include Jennifer Rauch, Eric Valois, Sabrina C. Solley, Friederike Braig-Karzig, Ryan S. Lach, and Naomi J. Baxter, all from the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology at UCSB
But this isn’t just another test. It’s also a drive to create a process that doesn’t require expensive equipment, doesn’t need highly trained personnel, and can be deployed easily worldwide and in all socio-economical environments. The recent DIY-Bio movement has made equipment affordable, Bluetooth-enabled, and field-ready.
“We’re using equipment that has been used in the jungle or even on a sidewalk,” Carolina offers.
Once finalized and properly trialed the test will potentially be a cheaper
Testing with Dr. Lynn Fitzgibbons at Cottage Hospital
While developing this test, Arias is also teaming up with top Cottage Hospital infectious disease specialistDr. Lynn Fitzgibbons on a parallel project. The two are setting out to create a small sampling pool of 1,000 subjects from the community, partly to trial the application of their test and partly to test for prevalence in the community. The trial is using the conventional RT-PCR test as well as UCSB’s new CREST. The two hope to gather more concrete information on the actual presence of the virus in our community among both symptomatic and asymptomatic residents.
“Dr. Arias is an excellent virologist, with the energy, experience, and brilliance to lead us through the most important viral public health challenge of these last thirty years,” Dr. Fitzgibbons offers. “She is also a phenomenal role model for so many women in science, representing the ultimate triple threat: a skilled and brilliant scientist, a devoted and compassionate mother, and a lovely, humble and fun person. I’m excited that my own daughter is growing up in a world with role models like Dr. Arias around.”
“It appears that the UCSB team has produced what Dr. Deborah Birx asked for – a testing breakthrough,” said Joseph Incandela, UCSB Vice Chancellor for Research. “They did it while shifting to teaching remotely, taking care of kids at home, and all the other challenges. This is phenomenal, and I hope that we can now navigate the path of FDA approval quickly, for everyone’s sake.”
Well that’s a potential breakthrough Dr. Birx can hang her neck scarf on. The circumstances have presented a unique opportunity to witness the best of science, and of scientists. This could be a game-changer and it was developed right here in Santa Barbara.
Meanwhile who knows how Carolina’s daughters might change the world. Identifying the DNA genome at three years old, having grown up immersed in so much creativity, innovation, knowledge, and affection, what will she do next? Hopefully Carolina Arias’ curious, irrepressible girls will be part of the first Post-COVID Generation who will remember today as a long past chapter that changed the world in significant ways. So many changes we will spend our time adjusting to, they will have already absorbed. •MJ
Thankyou To These businesses whose supporT helped make Crane CounTry day sChool’s VirTual Family beneFiT suCha suCCess!

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