Bay news

Page 1

Volume 28

Issue 45

March 23 - April 5, 2017

YOUR COMMUNITY IN YOUR HANDS LOS OSOS MORRO BAY CAYUCOS CAMBRIA

YourBayNews.com Visitors to the Cayucos Sea Glass Festival March 11 pose for a portrait with some of the local mermaids. More photos on Page 37. Photo by Neil Farrell

See Inside and Online

Udderly Osos Paid For Page 4

Dinner and a Movie Page 36

Fisherman’s Had His Fill of Quotas

City Seeks Amgen Volunteers

By Neil Farrell

By Neil Farrell

n the end it came down to 200 pounds of cow cod. That’s how close the make-or-break point came for Tiffany and Capt. Rob Seitz, of the CFV South Bay, who for the past 5 years have been the only local trawl fishing boat to lease from the Morro Bay Community Quota Fund’s share of the overall allowable take of the U.S. West Coast Groundfish Fishery. The overall quotas, covering Washington, Oregon and California, are set by the federal Pacific Fisheries Management Council or PFMC, and enforced by the National Marine Fisheries Service or NMFS. Both are under NOAA. It’s a mixed-stock fishery of more than 90 species of flatfish, roundfish, and other types, caught in waters of 200 fathoms (1,200 feet depth) and deeper. The most efficient way to fish that deep is to drag a net across the seafloor, but fishermen also use long lines of hooks and fish traps. Indeed, all this quota system got started in the first place because it was believed that trawl nets damaged the seafloor.

he City of Morro Bay is looking for volunteers to help with its hosting of an upcoming leg of the 2017 Amgen Tour of California professional bike race, the City announced last week. Deputy City Manager, Ikani Taumoepeau, who is heading up the event for the City, said they need 150-200 volunteer “course marshals” to man the course for Amgen’s Stage 3, set for Tuesday, May 16. Course marshals will work with the police to keep the route safe for racers and spectators. They will only be placed on the route, which winds from South Bay Boulevard, through Morro Bay State Park onto Main Street, turning onto the Embarcadero at Marina and then up Harbor Street to the finish line at Harbor and Morro Avenue. Volunteers will have front row seats to the race and get some cool, tour swag and a race T-shirt. Volunteers will be needed from 2-4 p.m. as the racers make their way into town to the finish.

See Fish, page 4

See Amgen, page 8

I

T

Small Business Spotlight facebook.com/yourbaynews

YourBayNews.com


C O N T E N T S

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Simply Clear Marketing and Media Team

news

cc life

Bret Colhouer publisher bret@simplyclearmarketing.com

SLO, Los Osos Projects Win Awards ......................3

Now and Then

Theresa-Marie Wilson executive editor t@simplyclearmarketing.com

Advisory Board Slots FIlled......................................5

Adventure Girl

Office Hours Canceled .............................................5

Community Calendar

Neil Farrell managing editor The Bay News neil@simplyclearmarketing.com

Police Blotter.........................................................6-7

Art Talk

Music Show Benefits Radio Station .........................8

Framed

Camas Frank managing editor The Coast News frank@simplyclearmarketing.com

Rotary Masquerade Ball a Hit ..................................9

Good to be King

Michael Elliott sports reporter sports@simplyclearmarketing.com

Celebrate Sidney Willson Young’s Music ...............11

Mark Diaz business reporter mark@simplyclearmarketing.com

Letters To The Editor .............................................10

Nightwriters Talley Farms Recipe

24-Hour Paddle Fundraiser Set for April 15 ..........12

Healthy Living

TBID Event Grants Available..................................13

Michelle Johnson art director

Frosh Essayists Honored........................................13

Christy Serpa editorial design

Jammin’ with Gillie Wheesels ................................13

Cal Poly Sports Easter Happenings Entertainment

Liver Transplant Music to Her Ears ........................14

Holly Tolvert administrative assistant

Dinner and a Movie

Police Warn About Jury Duty Scam .......................35

Justin Stoner graphic marketing

Cuesta Honors Nine at Awards Lunch ...................36

Karita Harrskog event and marketing assistant admin@simplyclearmarketing.com

Sea Glass Fest Brings Lovers of Mermaids Tears ..37 Udderly Osos Utterly Paid For...............................38

ADVERTISING

Jessica Micklus sales manager jessica@simplyclearmarketing.com

Osos Woman Earns Leadership Award .................38

Dana McGraw senior advertising executive dana@simplyclearmarketing.com

CLC to Discuss 2017 Plans.....................................38

Zorina Ricci coast news advertising executive z@simplyclearmarketing.com

Pianist Returns for House Concert ........................38

Water Independence and the WRF .......................39

9

Morro Bay Chamber ..............................................40

Carrie Vickerman bay news advertising executive carrie@simplyclearmarketing.com

S

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS & PHOTOGRAPHERS

ho

ut

Erin O’Donnell King Harris Judy Salamacca Michael Gunther Ray Ambler SLO Nightwriters Teri Bayus Vivian Krug

ut O

David Diaz digital marketing

This is a publication of SCMM., Copyright 2007–2016 all rights reserved. One free copy per person. Additional copies can be obtained at our offices 615 Clarion Court, #2, San Luis Obispo, CA, 93401. Simply Clear Marketing and Media makes every reasonable effort to ensure the accuracy of its contents. Please notify us if information is incorrect.

Morro Bay’s Citywide Yard Sale is Saturday-Sunday, April 1-2. Shop 100 or more yard sales scattered across town. See the map in the centerfold of this week’s Bay News People Helping People of Los Osos is holding its Annual Yard Sale fundraiser Friday-Saturday, April 7-8 at the South Bay Community Center

business matters Bottom Line................................ 41 Biz Briefs .................................... 42

The 2nd Annual Eroica California Vintage Bike Tour is SaturdaySunday, April 8-9 in Paso Robles. See: eroicacalifornia.com for information

Financial Focus ........................... 44 Featured Folks ........................... 46 Using Ecotourism to Engage ..... 47

phone (805) 543-6397 fax (805) 772-4625 615 Clarion Ct., #2, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

www.YourBayNews.com

Call 543-NEWS

C H E C K O U T W H AT E LS E W E H AV E T O O F F E R :

d i g i t a l p r e s e n c e • c o m m u n i t y n ews • eve n t s • m a g a z i n e s

Avila Beach News


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

News

3 PRICED TO SELL AT $87,500!

SLO, Los Osos Projects Win Awards By Neil Farrell

3395 S Higuera St #20 San Luis Obispo, CA 93401 Mobile home unit has been a loving work in progress. 1 Bedroom 2 Bath, 936 sq. ft. Newer roof, new electrical, new plumbing, new kitchen cabinetry. Space rent of $625.34 includes water, trash and sewer. Owner must live on premises and be at least 55. One pet, 30 lbs or less.

Hwy 101 overpass at LOVR San luis Obispo. File photo.

T

hree infrastructure projects in San Luis Obispo won awards from the Central Coast Chapter of the American Public Works Association or APWA, an advocacy group for public works professionals, the City announced. But it was the County that took the top overall prize for finally putting an end to the sewer wars in Los Osos. Each of the SLO projects won first place in its category, and SLO took top honors in four of the five categories. The projects were: • Los Osos Valley Road exchange in the Transportation greater than $15 million category; • The San Luis Obispo Skate Park at Santa Rosa Park, in the Structures between $2 and $5 million category; • The Jack House elevator removal project in the Historical Project less than $2 million category; and, • The Toro Street creek bank stabilization in the Environmental Project Less Than $2 million category. Each project is now eligible for overall, “Project of the Year” honors. The LOVR Interchange project made it to the final selection for Project of the Year but did not advance. That project widened an overburdened interchange that was originally built in 1962 and had become mired in traffic jams, due to extensive commercial and residential development in the immediate area. The 15,500 square foot concrete skate park was built after 200 skateboarders descended on City Hall in 2007, advocating that old wooden skate ramps at the park needed to be replaced with a modern venue. The Jack House project removed a non-historical elevator installed in 1973, restored a bay window and the

RE/MAX Del Oro Leslie L Lee, CRS, GRI, SFR

house’s original historic look. The Toro Street creek bank restoration stabilized an eroded wall that could have caused the collapse of a creek bank and forced closure of Toro Street. “The awards result from the efforts of City staff, the Council and the public,” SLO Public Works Director, Daryl Grigsby said in a news release. “And we’d like to congratulate the project managers and construction inspectors who brought these projects from an idea on paper to finished and operational City improvements that benefit everyone in our beautiful City.” The Los Osos Wastewater Treatment Plant Project won for Environmental Project more than $15 million (it actually came in at $183M), and also took the top honors for the Chapter’s Project of the Year. “After tallying the vote,” reads an announcement on the APWA website (see: centralcoast.apwa.net), “it was clear that one project is the winner. Congratulations to the County of San Luis Obispo for winning the Overall Project of the Year Award for the Los Osos Wastewater Project. “A complicated and difficult project, and the award is well deserved. The project will now be submitted to the National APWA for Project of the Year Consideration. Let’s all root that the project wins on the National Level.” Managing, after more than 30 years of starts and stops, to finally build a sewer in Los Osos, a project that had grown in infamy among public works and engineering professionals worldwide, should have a pretty good chance at the national title, perhaps even be the sentimental favorite going in.

Broker Associate BRE#01218232 (805) 528-2020 (Mobile) (805) 459-7670 (Mobile) 2lesliellee@gmail.com 857 Santa Rosa St San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

KELLY’S FEATURED LISTING! www.888SaintMary.com

888 Saint Mary, Cayucos: Open Sat, April 1st, 11am-2pm OCEAN VIEW VACATION BEACH HOUSE IN OLD CAYUCOS Beat the heat in this large family home with separate entrances and privacy for extended family, guests, granny unit, or even a rental. Two blocks to beach and close to downtown shops and restaurants. Two bedroom, 2.5 bath home which PUJS\KLZ H SHYNL MHTPS` YVVT ^P[O VJLHU ]PL^Z NHZ ÄYLWSHJL HUK UVU JVUMVYTPUN full kitchen. Backyard and patio off the master bedroom. $950,000

Vacant Vaca Va cant n lots available in Cayucos and Cambria. Call for Details.

Call C all tthe h Broker with the SOLD signs! g

Kelly Vandenheuvel K Broker Associate; GRI CalBRE#01472453

I Can Sell Yours Too Call Me Today! www.centralcoastsales.com www w ww w w..ce ww .c ce c en entr ntr nt ttrra alc lc lco kellyv@centralcoastsales.com kel k ke elly llyv y v@ yv @ce @c c ce e en ntttrra n alc lc c

805-471-1046


4

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Fish, from page 1 The Nature Conservancy (TNC) in 2006 bought out nearly all the trawl permits and in many cases the boats too, from fishermen in Morro Bay and Port San Luis, as well as other ports — 13 total permits. This was followed by the PFMC’s establishment of the “Individual Fish Quota” or IFQ system in 2011 to manage the fishery off Oregon, Washington and California. When the IFQ was formally adopted, TNC was in possession of millions of pounds of fish quota that went with the permits they’d bought (some of the boats were scrapped, others sold and the South Bay was leased by the late-Eddie Ewing from TNC to continue trawl fishing here). The Community Quota Funds were begun in Morro Bay as a way to keep the fish traditionally caught in local waters being landed locally, to help keep the docks working, the ice plant working and the commercial fishing facilities open and more viable. That major change in the largest year-round fishery has led directly to the current situation, where a measly 200 pounds of cow cod is the proverbial straw that broke one fisher family’s back. “We were trying to make this fishery work,” said Tiffany Seitz, sitting in a half-finished new fish market on the docks that they had been planning to open for about a year, but will now take with them back to Astoria, Ore. That’s where they came from specifically to take part in the community quota fund program. Rob Seitz was in at the start of the Community Quota Fund, serving on its board for several years, even as he leased fish from it. Jeremiah O’Brien now fills the “fisherman’s” spot on the Board. Others are Harbor Director Eric Endersby, the current board president; Andrea Lueker, the PSL harbor director and vice president; Cal Poly Marine Biology Professor Dr. Dean Wendt; UCSB Prof. Robert Deacon; fisheries consultant, Edward Backus of Newport, Ore.; and Chris Kubiak, who is the director at the Cable Fisheries Liaison Committee, is the Secretary (see: www. morrobaycommunityquotafund.org). The Seitz’ leased the South Bay from TNC and then bought it. But, “We didn’t have ownership in the quota,” said Rob Seitz. “So we had to lease every pound of fish.” Fishermen who had permits in 2011 when the IFQ went into effect, were allocated quota shares, which are a commodity able to be bought and sold. And leasing Morro Bay’s quota fish came with numerous other stipulations, such as being required to join the California Groundfish Collective or CGC, an association of eight (now seven after the South Bay left) commercial fishing vessels home ported in Fort Bragg, Half Moon Bay and Morro Bay. The South Bay and one other boat were the only two from here. How it works is that each of the ports (Port San Luis is part of the Morro Bay Quota Fund), has community quota, a list of catchable species that are further subdivided in categories of “Target Species” and “Overfished Species” and accounted for down to the pound. Target species like Dover sole, Pacific

cod, and sablefish are plentiful and quotas measure in the millions of pounds per year, according to information provided by the Community Quota Fund’s director, Dwayne Oberhoff, who has a private firm, Ecological Assets Management, LLC. It’s the overfished species, like the aforementioned cow cod, plus Boccaccio rockfish and yellow eye rockfish, some six species in all that is the real key to the whole fishery. As explained in the CGC’s 2015 Annual Report to the PFMC, “Many fishery participants face the challenge of a limited supply of quota pounds of federally-declared overfished species, which constrains the harvest of more abundant species as many of those stocks are caught together and can be difficult to avoid.” The CGC report states it has just 1,920 pounds of cow cod quota and the entire West Coast only gets 3,175. And because of the overfished species, the fleet hasn’t caught all the target fish it’s legally entitled to. Catching fish at such depths is not an exact science but the fishery is regulated in a scientific manner, with poundage limits for each species being declared the “sustainable” limit, a number that changes every year. But perhaps the regulation that sticks in Rob Seitz’ craw the most, is that he must take a paid “observer” on every trip costing the boat $500 a day. Observers count each fish the net pulls up and the when, where and how many fish were caught is put into an electronic database to share with other CGC boats and closely watched by regulators. If a fisherman exceeds his quota of any of the species, he must buy more quota somewhere, either through the Collective or on the open market, because in this business, every fish counts and a boat can’t go fishing again until that poundage is covered. “Because catch of overfished species is not entirely predictable,” reads CGC’s report, “a fisherman could unintentionally harvest his or her entire annual quota allocations for one or more of the overfished species during one trip or one set, even when taking reasonable measures to avoid those species. If too many overfished species are caught, the entire fishery can be closed by fishery managers.” So that’s how 200 measly pounds of cow cod can turn a man’s fortunes in this tough business. But there’s been much more that has led to the Seitz’ pulling up stakes and not all of it is the quota

News system’s fault. The necessary s u p p o r t facilities to haul and make repairs to the South Bay are lacking and fuel prices are high. Plus, this is a very expensive fishery to participate in. S o m e 5-percent of the gross on each trip goes to TNC to recoup costs from when it bought out the local trawlers. And 3% goes to NOAA for its expenses regulating the fishery (total of 8% administration fees). They had to form a non-profit marketing business, the Central Coast Seafood Marketing Association or CCSMA, to match the Fort Bragg Groundfish Association and the Half Moon Bay Groundfish Marketing Association in the Collective. But Tiffany Seitz said it was a joke. Their “association” consisted of just themselves and the costs were another $3,000 hit. “It ended up being an entity but not a legitimate entity,” she explained. So they dissolved it in May 2016 and that’s when their troubles started. Closing the CCSMA meant no longer being in the Collective, which is a requirement of the MB Community Quota Fund in order to lease their quota. It’s written in the bylaws and Rob Seitz said he tried to get the Quota Fund to change the bylaws, so he could still lease their fish, but the board wouldn’t do it. So when he needed to find 200 pounds of cow cod, he’d lost access to it. The Seitz’ and the Quota Fund Board have been going round and round over the situation, with Rob and Tiffany’s frustration growing. Their seafood marketing efforts have gone well, processing and selling the fish directly to several local restaurants, and creating a smoked fish retail product that has won awards under the “South Bay Wild” brand. They’ve also helped keep Santa Monica Seafood Co., which leases the dock, busy. Their efforts have been celebrated in local promotions and they’ve integrated well into the community, even hosting fish fries at a homeless shelter in Atascadero. But with no quota to catch, they decided to give it up and return to Oregon. All the frustration boiled over on Feb. 22 in National Fisherman Magazine, when Rob Seitz wrote a letter, highly critical of environmental nongovernmental organizations, especially the TNC, and their involvement in fisheries. In turn he criticized the Quota Fund and the board members did not take kindly to it. (See: www. nationalfisherman.com/viewpoints/ west-coast-pacific/california-captainwary-ngo-investment.) This reporter met in the Harbor Office with Quota Fund Executive Director, Oberhoff, and board members O’Brien and Endersby. Of note, The Bay News interviewed

O’Brien nearly 10 years ago, after he and another fisherman testified in Congress against the quota system, calling it a disastrous way to regulate fisheries. They took the anti-catch shares issue “as far as we could,” said O’Brien, acknowledging his past stance. But when it happened anyway and TNC ended up with the fish quota, his feelings changed. “No fisher person in Morro Bay had the right or ability to catch a single pound of groundfish,” he explained. Endersby noted that the quota system for all its faults, “is part of the regulatory life, you have to live with it.” He added that there was pressure on the groundfish fishery to end trawling long before the quota system was put in. TNC bought 13 permits and there was also a federal permit buyout before that, said O’Brien. “Forty-two percent of the groundfish landings were by trawlers. That’s what this whole ‘catch shares’ was all about. No one in town had any fish in the catch shares. If you have no access to these fish and others do, what’s that all about?” He said his stance changed when the community quota system was begun. “TNC had people fishing for them. Fast Eddie was the first and Rob Seitz was the second. From a fisherman’s perspective, we wanted to make sure Morro Bay retained the ability to catch the fish off our coast.” When 10% of the quota was allocated to “community fishing groups,” O’Brien said, “No one knew what that was, so we formed a group, incorporated into the Morro Bay Community Quota Fund. We had to legitimize this.” The original board, which included Rob Seitz, also had former Mayor Janice Peters and Poly’s Dr. Wendt representing the scientific community. “That legitimized the operation as a real community quota fund. It was the first on the West Coast,” said O’Brien. Endersby said there was “no rule book” for how to navigate what everyone admits is a very complex system of management. “We’re figuring this out as we go,” said Oberhoff. The Quota Fund got access to 30 species of fish but didn’t get quota for some of the “overfished species” particularly canary rockfish and yellow eye but has 607 pounds of cow cod, which are pledged to the CGC’s pot. The approximate value of the local quota is $1.9 million, covers about 4 million pounds total, and there’s five permits available, though only two — and now just one — is being used. (Bill Blue of CFV Britta Michelle also leases local quota and fishes with traps.) “Every pound of fish, you have to own it [quota],” said O’Brien. “For example, say you catch 132,000 pounds of petrale, and you look at what you own. If it’s 131,000 pounds, you’re in trouble. You now owe those fish and you need to get that thousand pounds from another fisherman. It’s all paperwork.” Oberhoff added that the fishery is “100-percent observed. That’s why we had such little interest,” even though there is technically no restrictions on gear types. He likened the CGC or “California Risk Pool” as it was formerly called, to an insurance policy. “That’s all it is.” See page 5


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

News

From page 4 Belonging to the CGC is a main requirement for the MB Community Quota Fund and Endersby called it one of the founding principles. “This is not the Wild West anymore,” said Endersby. “You can’t just fish wherever you want.” O’Brien said the information sharing is intended to make sure fishermen don’t go to the wrong place to fish and catch the overfished species (for which there is little quota). Rob Seitz said the information sharing with fishermen in Fort Bragg and Half Moon Bay was useless for him down here and things might have worked better if there were another trawler working the local waters to actually share information with. Instead it all became a big paperwork and reporting headache. The Seitz’ couldn’t understand why the bylaws couldn’t or wouldn’t be changed and the Quota Fund couldn’t justify changing one of their cornerstone rules. And when the Seitz’ shut down the non-profit marketing association and quit the CGC, both requirements to participate, it all fell apart. They had leased fish left over and Rob Seitz planned to fish through the end of March. Then he, Tiffany, and their sons, who also work on the boat, will say good-bye to Morro Bay. So is there any future for this convoluted mess? Maybe. The National Marine Fisheries Service, the enforcement agency for the PFMC, is looking into reopening the closed Rockcod Conservation Area, where no fishing is allowed. “That will increase interest,” O’Brien said. But the major sticking point is still the observer program. “The feds are fully aware of the costs of the observers. It’s a huge drawback to the whole industry.” And some of the overfished species that are causing so much trouble have rebounded and could be removed from the list. The Quota Fund Board is sorry things didn’t work out with the Seitz’. “It’s an unfortunate situation that happened with Rob,” Endersby said. “But he wanted us to change one of our main tenants and we were unwilling to do that.” As for what’s next? Oberhoff said he would put the word out that there’s quota to be caught here and hopefully they can keep it locally. Otherwise, “We’ve got bills to pay,” he said. “We’ll have to lease it to someone else, outside of Morro Bay.” They would lease it out at market rates, too instead of the current rates that were set in 2014. The quota is good for the whole West Coast Fishery and not specific to Central Coast waters. Endersby summed it up, “Right now, we’ll take anyone we can get.”

5

Advisory Board Slots Filled

T

he Morro Bay City Council has filled a number of advisory board vacancies, several of which carried over from last December’s round of appointments, which left a few spots empty for a lack of applicants. The City had two spots to fill with the Tourism Business Improvement District or TBID Advisory Board, choosing Steven Allen to fill the “Hotelier Member-at-large” spot that ends on Jan.31, 2021; and Sean Green to fill a “Community Member-at-large” spot for the term ending January 2019, according to information from the City Clerk. A Public Works Advisory Board (PWAB) vacancy was filled with Chris Erlendson, whose term will end in January 2021. Chuck Spagnola will fill the City’s seat with the County Transportation Advisory Committee that became vacant with the election of Red Davis to city council last November. Davis had been the City’s representative on CTAC since 2002. Spagnola’s term goes through January 2021. With Davis serving on CTAC for more than a decade, City Clerk Dana Swanson said she asked the SLO Council of Governments (CTAC is a subcommittee of SLOCOG) if there were term limits for the position? “The response was CTAC Bylaws allow each member to serve so long as the appointing body allows or until resignation,” Swanson said in a staff report. “However, having the same committee member serve for many years allows continuity and understanding of the issues that affect the County.” The Citizens Finance Advisory Committee or CFAC had two seats that the council filled with Walter Heath (term ends January 2019) and Dawn Addis (January 2022). Others who applied but were passed over include Amanda Birdsong and Peter Frans Hagen for the “memberat-large” spot on TBID (members represent specific stakeholder groups). CTAC also had James Costanzo, Heath, and Malcolm McEwen apply for the available position (applicants could apply for more than one position but only be appointed to one). The PWAB spot also had Heath and McEwen apply. And Homer Alexander, Erlendson, Jean Johnson, John Martin, McEwen and Ron Reisner also applied for the finance committee.

Office Hours Canceled

D

ist. 2 County Supervisor Bruce Gibson canceled his March 23 office hours at the Sea Pines Lodge in Los Osos. The next scheduled office hours are from 4-5 p.m. at the same location on Thursday, April 27. The office hours are a chance for

constituents to meet with their County representative to discuss concerns or issues they might have. For more information about the District 2 office hours, contact Gibson’s office at 7814338.

$13.00 WEEKDAY / $14.00 WEEKEND

$14.00 WEEKDAY / $15.00 WEEKEND

Clearance SALE 25-50% OFF Selected Items

AMERICAN MADE

WE SPECIALIZE IN AMERICAN MADE APPAREL. HERE ARE SOME OF OUR LINES: KAREN KANE

HOUR GLASS

NIKIBIKI

ILLUMINATION

HARDTAIL

NEW MODE

GROVE

SWEET CLAIR

NYDJ

SUN & MOON


6

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Simply Clear Marketing & Media

Arroyo Grande • March 16: A female on the 400 block of Traffic Way was placed under arrest for battery, public intoxication and resisting arrest. That is going to be a hangover that lasts for months. • March 14: Someone was found asleep behind the wheel and was showing symptoms of being under the influence of narcotics. Ol’ Sleepy (Stony? How about Dopey?) was placed under arrest for alleged possession of heroin and drug paraphernalia. • March 11: Some dude was reportedly acting inappropriately toward female patrons at Ralph & Duane’s. The employees asked the lewd lothario to leave, but he refused and punched one of them in the face. A scuffle ensued and the bent fool exited the business with the help of multiple employees. He was found to be too hammered to reasonably care for himself safely, and was taken to the County B&B, where he will be well taken care of. • March 11: Some All Star was found to be allegedly lying about his identity, in possession of a controlled substance, driving trashed and stoned, and being under the influence of a controlled substances. Upon discerning the scofflaw’s true identity, he naturally had several outstanding warrants, too. • March 8: CPS monitoring software identified a user on the BitTorrent Network in Pismo Beach, who was sharing child pornography on the Internet. • March 5: Some unlucky soul with a prior felony conviction was contacted during a traffic stop. He was found to have a concealed, loaded handgun and was driving tippled.

Morro Bay • March 12: Police got a call at 6:44 p.m. from a woman on Elena who said a man was cursing and yelling at her, “causing her to feel harassed, anxious and fearful,” and she no doubt needs a safe space. No arrest was made. No word on whether she was a Millennial. • March 12: A tree fell on a car in the 700 block of Napa. Police documented it for the lawsuit to follow. • March 11: A citizen in the 300 block of Dunbar found out two credit cards were opened in his name without his permission and the thieves went on a $1,400 spending spree somewhere in Ohio. • March 11: Police stopped a vehicle at 5:26 p.m. in the 700 block of Morro Bay Blvd., for “multiple traffic violations.” She was also cited for no license, as she apparently never learned to drive either. • March 10: It was quite a week for one

Police Blotter regular customer. She was contacted on March 3 at 5:39 a.m. in the 500 block of Atascadero Rd., and tossed to the nick for suspicion of being high on drugs. On March 8 at 4 a.m. in the 1000 block of Main she was again arrested for suspicion of being deep in her cups. On March 10, police were called to an RV park by the Dunes in the 1700 block of Embarcadero when she was caught using the facilities “without paying for the services.” She was cited and released. At 2:47 p.m. the same gal, 32, was in the 500 block of Quintana and was arrested for suspicion of petty theft, possession of stolen property and illegal lodging. After apparently being released the next evening at 10, the busy lady was arrested in the 700 block of Quintana for suspicion of being high on drugs, for another ride on the Magical LE Carousel. • March 9: Someone stole a bunch of underground cable stashed at the back of the power plant property by Pacific Wildlife Care. • March 8: Someone stole a bike from the 700 block of Quintana. Police found it and returned it, and the caze is solved. • March 8: Someone shoplifted a bottle of booze from a store in the 900 block of Main. • March 7: Police responded at 5 p.m. to a motel in the 2800 block of Alder where a guest had checked out in his or her room. • March 7: Police were notified of a young girl getting pornographic images via text messaging from an unknown pervert using an unfamiliar number. • March 7: At 11:13 a.m. in the 700 block of MBB police arrested another spifficated belle of the ball. • March 6: Someone in the 300 block of MBB had their garbage can stolen, in yet another example that people will steal anything. • March 6: Police at the high school started a crime report regarding the sexual battery of a juvenile. • March 5: Police responded at 6:43 p.m. to the 700 block of MBB for a reported attempted arson. Logs indicated a man allegedly poured lighter fluid all over his apartment floor “with the intent to light a fire.” He was taken to the County

• March 5: Police responded to the 2400 block of Main where they had some vandal on video surveillance breaking a window. • March 5: At 4:46 a.m. police contacted a transient man, 25, camping where they can’t collect a tax. He was checked into the County B&B.

• March 1: Police contacted a probationer at 10:20 a.m. in the 2300 block of Nutmeg. He was arrested for a violation and of course resisting arrest and was referred for a mental health timeout.

• March 5: At 2:58 a.m. police contacted a disorderly woman, 24, at the police station on MBB. She was arrested for suspicion of being forshnicked.

• March 1: Police responded at 8:10 a.m. to the 900 block of Quintana for a disturbance. They arrested a transient couple for living on the edge.

• March 4: Police responded to Reno Court where two juveniles got into an argument over make up that escalated into a fight.

• Feb. 28: Police responded to a store in the 2600 block of Main and arrested a 52-year-old train wreck for attempted petty theft, attempted battery and of course being three sheets to the wind.

• March 4: At 3 p.m. police responded to a disturbance in the 700 block of MBB. A 40-year-old loudmouth was arrested for allegedly using “offensive language in public to provoke a physical response,” a.k.a. them’s fightin’ words. He was taken to the cooler to chill. • March 3: Police took a report of a City employee of the Community Development Department who “has been receiving ongoing, harassing phone calls” from no doubt another satisfied customer. In an unrelated case, at 12:30 a.m. the 4th, police roused and arrested a transient man, 40, camping out behind City Hall. When they returned at 2:44 a.m. they found presumably the same guy’s undisclosed property stashed behind an enclosure at City Hall. • March 3: Police stopped a guy riding a bicycle at 10:40 a.m. at Main and Hwy 41. Logs indicated the guy allegedly “threatened to shoot the officer with the officer’s gun,” no doubt an empty threat, but nevertheless, the dingus was arrested for suspicion of “threatening an officer while in the performance of his duties,” i.e. fighting the war on anti-social behavior and reckless bike riding. • March 3: Police at the high school arrested some honor student for allegedly assaulting his or her parent. • March 3: Someone left a black, rolling, duffle bag with a pair of men’s boots inside at the station house. • March 2: Police responded to the 900 block of Embarcadero where a 32-yearold man was being detained on a citizen’s arrest for suspicion of having sticky fingers.

“Police responded to a store in the 2600 block of Main and arrested a 52-year-old train wreck for attempted petty theft, attempted battery and of course being three sheets to the wind.” lockup with a most appropriate request for a mental health evaluation.

700 block of Embarcadero reported being harassed.

• March 1: Police found an illegal campsite in the Dunes in the 1300 block of Embarcadero, for this they need a drone?

• March 1: At 12:13 p.m. a woman in the 2800 block of Main fell, hitting her head, and landing in the hospital via ambulance. • March 1: Some tormented soul in the

• Feb. 28: A dude in the 900 block of Pacific reported his surfboard was stolen out of his basement, which sounds like an inside job. • Feb. 27: Police found another transient campsite in the trees at the high school, but apparently no Dunites were in residence.

Pismo Beach • March 14: A car at North Beach Campground that appeared to be parked for a while had a dog, a wallet, and a meth pipe inside it. • March 14: A refrigerator was left for several days in front of a home on the 900 block of Longview, as the war on blight continues its struggles. • March 14: About $600 worth of shirts were stolen from the Tommy Hilfiger Store in the Outlet Center. Not long after, $400 worth of clothing was reported stolen from Ralph Loren. • March 14: Some dude, who had been drinking, tried to steal sandals from Pancho’s Surf Shop. When employees tried to stop him, things got physical. The father of the thief paid for the shoes. • March 14: Someone on the pier reported a suspicious man who was possibly under the influence and brandishing a knife. Another train wreck was bleeding from the mouth. One arrest was made for drunk in public, which explains a lot. • March 14: It was a case of misplaced blame on the 2600 of Solano. A caller reported that a neighbor was harassing him saying that she was associated with law enforcement and that he was a criminal. It turned out that his “record” was a actually rumor started by some gossiper. Stay tuned for the next episode of As the Beach Turns… • March 14: Some bar reject was sitting in front of California Fresh drinking a beer. Reportedly he was told to knock it off and became argumentative. • March 13: Someone at the Cliff’s


Simply Clear Marketing & Media • March 23 - April 5, 2017

reported that a woman, possibly on Price, was screaming. It turns out that she had gotten into a loud argument with someone on the phone and was waiting for a ride, which will no doubt be fun. • March 13: A lawnmower was stolen from OSH. One green thumb was busted. • March 13: A woman gave $4,000 to someone she met online so that he could fly out to the area. He didn’t show up and she got a call saying that he was in jail.

• March 17: Police were called at 1:36 a.m. to a disturbing couple that was kicked out of the Library and was apparently chewing it up in Bubblegum Alley. They’d blown the place before police arrived.

“Some dude was reportedly acting inappropriately toward female patrons at Ralph & Duaneʼs. The employees asked the lewd lothario to leave, but he refused and punched one of them in the face. A scuffle ensued and the bent fool exited the business with the help of multiple employees. He was found to be too hammered to reasonably care for himself safely, and was taken to the County B&B, where he will be well taken care of.”

• March 12: A caller reported a man was down the cliff near the Sea Crest Resort. The caller did not know how he got there or if he needed help. When police tried to get him to safety, he reportedly became combative and appeared disoriented. Cal Fire was called to the scene to perform a cliff rescue but the guy wanted nothing to do with it and didn’t try to get off the rocks. When a Cal Fire firefighter got in the water and made contact with him, the guy ran away and continued to be uncooperative. Harbor patrol said that they would monitor him.

• March 12: Two people were reportedly smoking weed just north of the pier. As it turns out, they were smoking a cigar, which is still not legal on the beach.

San Luis Obispo • March 17: Police were called at 4 a.m. to the 400 block of Marsh for two urban miners wearing headlamps prospecting through the donation bin at a thrift store. • March 17: Police stopped a suspicious vehicle at 2:30 a.m. on Monterey. The driver, 21, was busted outside Splash Café and Bakery for being toasted.

• March 17: At 1:14 a.m., someone in the 1100 block of Madonna sang, “Someone’s knockin’ on the door, Somebody’s ringin’ the bell, Do me a favor, Call the police, Don’t let ‘em in, Oooh-yeah, yeah…” • March 17: Police were called around midnight to the 1500 block of Calle Joaquin where some disturbing fellow, full of the blarney, was singin’ in the parkin’ lot of Margie’s Diner, irritatin’ the fine folks at the Hampton Inn. • March 16: Police were called at 10:54 p.m. to the 600 block of Morro to run off a transient, alleged loiterer camping between two buildings. At 10:50, a woman in the 1300 block of Foothill reported walking past a suspicious man sitting in a parked truck with the interior light on some 20 minutes ago. Police couldn’t find the guy, as after a half hour, he no doubt turned off the light. • March 16: At 9:23 p.m. someone in the 3500 block of Higuera reported a man drove his car over the roadway median

s +ARATE s %SCRIMA s 4AI #HI

and blew out his tires in front of Zoey’s Consignment Shop, a case of maybe the guy ought to consign his car. • March 16: Police got a call at 9:20 p.m. from a woman in the 1700 block of Osos asking for a welfare check of the area around the Kamma Kamma Gamma Sorority House. Only two officers responded, spent a half hour there, and of course there was no report. • March 16: Police got a report at 10:56 p.m. in the 800 block of Higuera of a guy having trouble parallel parking his vehicle, almost hitting two cars outside Victoria’s Secret, the pitfalls of no doubt having just one hand on the wheel. • March 16: Police were called at 8:35 p.m. to the 600 block of Marsh where some lunatic was yelling and cursing about “GENOCIDE!!!” outside the 7-Eleven.

7

example of why we need SWAT.

• March 16: Police were called at 6:42 p.m. to the 500 block of Dana for a trespasser. Some apparently illiterate transient man jumped over a fence posted “Do Not Enter,” as apparently the world is yours when you live outdoors. At 6 p.m. an irate car owner in the 1100 block of Madonna said a guy just whizzed on his car tire and front end, as the world’s apparently your toilet too.

• March 16: Someone reported a traffic hazard in the 300 block of Santa Barbara, a red plastic gas can and chainsaw were left in the street by Taco Bell.

• March 16: Police responded at 8 p.m. to Vons on Broad after some guy tried to steal a shopping cart full of booze. They got the cart back but the brazen hooch thief escaped.

• March 16: At 3:17 p.m. a citizen reported a guy laying in a planter in the 1200 block of Monterey and not moving but the caller thought he wasn’t dead, dead drunk maybe, but breathing. At 3:21, another panicky citizen reported driving past a car on Montalban and Santa Rosa with a guy lying underneath and they thought the car had fallen on him.

• March: 16: A citizen reported seeing several 20-gallon jugs filled with an unknown liquid in the bushes on the Bowden Ranch, 50 yards past Sitting Rocks, wherever the heck that is.

• March 16: At 3:04 p.m. someone in the 1300 block of Phillips complained about a guy “pounding on a forge” for the past 2 hours. The apparent blacksmith wasn’t being too loud.

• March 16: Some snitch reported seeing three guys smokin’ the evil weed in an alley on Funston, something everyone should get used to fast.

• March 16: Police were called at 12:11 p.m. to the 1000 block of Nipomo for a belligerent fellow playing guitar and panhandling outside the Children’s Museum, no doubt quite the exhibit too. He was advised to take the show on the road.

• March 16: A citizen complained at 6:59 p.m. about some transient man blocking the sidewalk with his meager belongings in a shopping cart at Morro and Walnut. He’d shuffled off before they arrived. In an unrelated case but a minute later someone asked police to check the welfare of a suspicious guy standing on the sidewalk of the Santa Rosa Street overpass talking to himself. He too apparently talked himself into leaving before police arrived.

• March 16: Police and fire were called at 8:45 a.m. to the 1400 block of Descanso for an oven fire. The gourmet put the fire out himself. • March 16: Some scoundrel smashed a car window parked in the 600 block of Henderson.

• March 16: Some dingus didn’t put the barricades for Farmer’s Market up right and cars were slipping through at Garden and Marsh, in this week’s

Eligible for a

30%

Federal Tax Credit Receive an average of $850 with federal tax credit eligiblity

Chet’s Tubular Skylights New Skylight & Sun Tunnel Installation Replace & Repair Existing Skylights Velux Skylights – Engineered Not to Leak No Matter How Severe the Weather

800.824.3877 805.528.1801 Licensed Roofing Contractor # 448726


8

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

News

Music Show Benefits Radio Station

M

orro Bay’s 97.3 FM The Rock community radio station will host its 4th Annual Fundraiser Concert featuring some favorite local bands, set for 6 p.m. Friday, March 31 at the Morro Bay Vet’s Hall, 209 Surf

St. Estero Bay’s only volunteeroperated and listener-supported community radio station will wrap up its annual donation drive with live, local music from Jill Knight with Kenny Lee Lewis (of the Steve

Miller Band), Mama Tumba, and Guy Budd with Inga Swearingen. Admission is free and there will be beer on tap, wine (bring your ID) for sale, and multiple food trucks, plus a silent auction. “There’s no question that there

is a lot of great musical talent here along the Central Coast,” said 97.3 The Rock Founder and President, Hal Abrams. “At 97.3, we strive to be the voice for all this talent.”

Amgen, from page 1

begins the next day in Santa Barbara According to Amgen, “The riders will enjoy a little of everything they have come to expect from California: beaches, sand dunes, vineyards and wineries, a little climbing, lots of spectators, and lush countryside. Over the course, the riders will be accompanied by Amgen staff in cars and on motorcycles, and escorted by the Highway Patrol. The set up crew for the finish will likely start early that day, as Amgen finish lines are quite a production, with large tents and inflatable archways, electronic clocks and race announcers. The schedule for road closures is being finalized and will be published and available before the race, so residents can plan accordingly. As this will be the end of a long day of racing, the riders can be expected to be strung out along the course taking perhaps a half hour for all to cross the line. This will be very different from last year, when after hours of pre-race hoopla with hundreds of spectators at starting line, the riders took all of 10 minutes to go from Morro Rock up Main Street to Yerba Buena, where they caught the highway and were gone, reaching Monterey in just over 5 hours. The 7-stage Amgen Tour of California is the most prestigious professional cycling race in the U.S. and attracts the best riders and cycling teams from around the world. Among the expected riders is Peter Sagan, the 2015 overall Amgen Tour of California winner who has a record 15, Stage victories since 2010. Sagan is the reigning World Champion and will race with his recently launched team, BORA-hansgrohe, and compete in the Amgen Tour for the seventh consecutive year. He was also the winner of last year’s stage that started in Morro Bay in 5-hours 16:33-minutes. “Racing in the Amgen Tour of California is always one of my top priorities every year,” Sagan said in a news release. “While spectacular to watch from a scenic standpoint, the route is consistently tough and challenging and one that brings out the best in all of the riders. The incredible fans and all of the cities of California that we get to visit truly makes the Amgen Tour of California one of the best experiences of the year for me.”

If readers would like to volunteer, go online to: www. amgentourofcalifornia.com/ volunteer, then click on the Stage 3 link and fill out the application. You will be contacted with details before the event. This is the second year in a row that Morro Bay has hosted the Amgen Tour, which is watched on TV by millions of people around the world. Last year the City was the site of the start of one stage at Morro Rock that took riders up Hwy 1 to Monterey, and this year will host a finish. Stage 3 starts that morning in Pismo Beach, wends its way south and then back north passing through Guadalupe, Orcutt, Nipomo, Arroyo Grande and San Luis Obispo and finishing in Morro Bay. It’s some 115 miles, with up and downhill runs and long stretches of flat road. Stage 4

Men’s Stage 3 May 16, 2017 City of Morro Bay Finish


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

Community

Rotary Masquerade Ball a Hit

C

ayucos Rotary Club held its Annual Masquerade Ball on March 18 at Cayucos School, bringing out the whimsical side of the community to raise money for the Cayucos School and other Rotary projects. County Superintendent of Schools Jim Brescia, who used to be Principal at Cayucos, emceed the event, presiding over a lively, live auction, which had bidding wars erupt over some fabulous, donated cakes and pastries. Top sale this year was some $1,300 for a raspberry chocolate cake. Photos by Neil Farrell

SEWING & QUILTING

Cooking and Healthy Lifestyle

CLASSES By Professional Chefs

EMBROIDERY MACHINE Join The Sewing Café’s VIP text club to receive exclusive offers, discounts, and updates! Text SEW1 to 51660 and receive 15% OFF of any one sewing item

SALES SERVICE EDUCATION

Text COOK to 51660 and receive 15% OFF of your first class

54 Five Cities Dr. PISMO BEACH (805) 295-6585

127 E. Main St. SANTA MARIA (805) 922-1784

9


10

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Opinion Letters To The Editor

Sanctuary Fight Like Witch Trials We are currently engaged in character assassinations similar to the Salem witch-hunts, and burning people at the stake over made-up or perceived transgressions. One of the County Supervisors was accused of taking money from “Big Oil,” but when we look to see what Big Oil is, it turns out to be a couple of propane companies and JB Dewar, who sells fuel and oil to fishermen, farmers, ranchers, and other local companies. Dist. 3 Supervisor, Adam Hill, accused the fishing industry of throwing in with Big Oil. These slanderous remarks from a consummate whiner were no surprise to us, nor were the rants and misconceptions of the other prosanctuary vote that has had absolutely no contact with the commercial fishermen, harbor department, or any city official before writing his support letter to the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration. These are the constituents in his district that he is sworn to represent. I am truly astounded at an issue that has so many people divided. May I make a suggestion to those sanctuary advocates that think this is an oil issue? Drop the sanctuary and let’s go after the real issue, if it is oil. Then we might all be standing

When you’re in the mood for Mexican...

shoulder to shoulder on the same issue instead of divided over something it is not. Furthermore, if we do not have local control, then why were the supervisor chambers packed, or why was this being addressed at all. Jeremiah O’Brien, Morro Bay

Thanks to PG&E Crews I am saying “Thank you” to Pacific Gas & Electric for restoring our electrical power during late December 2016 into February 2017, including a new transformer in my neighborhood during the Winter 2016-17 season. Along with Charter Communications having a 2-hour outage with digital cable television, internet access, and land line telephone right after Pacific Storm Lucifer, named by Kevin Martin of the private weather alert system, called Southern California Weather Force. I own and operate a weather station service called Cheshire Weather Bureau Administrative Headquarters WSO and the O stands for office, since 1984 and into the late 1980s and 1990s. What I don’t enjoy is President Trump cutting 17% to National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration and a 5% cut to the National Weather

Service which is understaffed and will be undermined severely with those cuts, for general weather forecasting including severe weather forecasting, and hurricane and tropical systems. This is wrong to all weather enthusiasts and meteorologists alike. In closing, I have the commercial weather Internet sites as The Weather Channel and Accu Weather, etc. to make up for the unprepared cuts that are truly unwanted and not needed.

have a safe place to get their education, but instead, part of it was used to pave the parking lots on closed schools. In turn, now they are giving free use of the closed school space to create a dangerous element on property that we are still paying for. The money that they do collect does not go back into the upkeep of that closed school property — it goes into the general fund that can be used for whatever they choose. NOT for the children. The Sunnyside School location has several childcare locations on the property and this Los Osos Community Coalition draws a group of individuals that are not to be in the presence of children. Nor do we want them roaming our streets in the middle of the night looking for a place to sleep or to steal whatever they can find. Put a stop to this insane nonsense and refer these people to the Department of Social Services. They have the ability to establish an individual solution for those that are on the streets. These off-the-wall groups of people that form services and accept donation are not helping anyone except themselves. A free toothbrush or a free bar of soap is not the answer to their problem.

Scott C. Presnal, Morro Bay

Homeless Don’t Belong on School Campus Read this and then you can see what is drawing so many mentally ill, alcoholic, drug addicted, child molester, homeless, back into our community. We had a huge problem on the Sunnyside School campus and it took months to clean it up. Now the closed school is being used by the School District as a moneymaker by renting out space for profit, not for the education of our children, but they are allowing our hard earned tax dollars to fund these ill fated attempts to create an unsafe environment for our children, our seniors, and the rest of our community. The bond money on your property tax bill was to be used for the children to

Los Osos

Let us do the cleaning so you don’t have to.

Teresa Sawyer, Los Osos

1130 Los Osos Valley Rd. Los Osos, CA 93402 (805) 534-9778 8am - 9pm every day

SUPER SPECIALS

FOR NEW CUSTOMERS 3 HOURS FOR

$99 5 HOURS FOR

SAVE 40-70% ON GROCERIES.

$160

SINCE 1985

*Terms & conditions may apply. Additional services offered. Expires 2/28/17

MEXICAN RESTAURANT

Party trays available! 0DUJDULWDV %HHU :LQH 6RXSV 6DODGV 3DVWDV 'DLO\ 6SHFLDOV 'RJ )ULHQGO\ 3DWLR Taquito Tuesday:

Competitive rates for all types of cleaning, including: ࠮ )P ^LLRS` ^LLRS` TVU[OS` JSLHUPUN ࠮ 4V]L V\[ TV]L PU ࠮ *VTTLYJPHS ZWHJLZ ࠮ (M[LY ZWLJPHS L]LU[ JSLHU \W ࠮ :WYPUN JSLHUPUN ࠮ :WLJPHS L]LU[ WYLWHYH[PVU JSLHUPUN ࠮ +LLW JSLHUPUN (UK T\JO T\JO TVYL

4 Taquitos for $5! ³DGG ULFH EHDQV IRU )LUH 5RDVWHG 9HJHWDEOH 6RXS ³ VP OUJ 2848 N. Main St, Morro Bay 772-5686 %UHDNIDVW /XQFK 'LQQHU DP WR SP 'D\V D :HHN $OO ,WHPV $YDLODEOH WR *R

DUSTY LADY CLEANERS www.DUSTYLADYCLEANERS.com

805-234-6326

BEAUTIFUL, HUH?

$

4

OFF

$40 minimum purchase (Excludes alcohol & dairy)

Valid at Los Osos Grocery Outlet only. One coupon per person. No cash value. Not valid with any other offer or discount. Excludes gift card purchases. Expires 3/31/17.


Community

Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

11

Friends Will Gather to Celebrate Sidney Willson Young’s Music

F

olk music artists will gather to celebrate one of their own when local ensembles perform the music of Los Osos’ Sidney Willson Young from 2-4 p.m. Sunday, March 26 at Coalesce Bookstore Chapel, 845 Main St., Morro Bay. The show features members of The Belles, Three Sheets to the Wind, and the Coffee Horze and will be joined by special guests, Steve Watt of the Thunder Canyon String Band, Elita Chaffin of Dovetail, Judi Brown of the Gillie Wheesels, and Bob Liepman of Bob & Wendy, and Shadowlands. Willson Young has been a folk singer since childhood and started writing songs as a teenager. A California girl, she grew up in Corona del Mar and sang in church and school choirs, and often escaped the bustle of her busy household to play guitar and sing with friends on street corners, in dark underpasses, in the wild hills, and down on the sandy beach at the end of her street. Her early influences include the who’s who of

blues and folk music — Bob Dylan, Billie Holiday, Peter, Paul and Mary, Buffy St. Marie, Leadbelly, Josh White, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Peggy Seeger, The Clancy Brothers, Ed McCurdy, Oscar Brand, plus American mountain and international folk music, show tunes, pop and rock ‘n’ roll. Other influences include her brother Geoff and mother, Margi. More than 30-years ago, Willson Young and her then husband, Don Young, moved their young family and budding guitar building venture,

National Resophonic Guitars, from Long Beach settling in Los Osos, where she began building a new musical family. Over the years, she has performed with a number of ensembles and continues to write original songs. The body of Willson Young’s original works includes topical songs, love songs and philosophical musings. Her melodies are compelling and her lyrics are heartfelt, whether serious or amusing, and are drawn from her own life. Friends joining in will be Chrisanne Wollett (guitar, mandolin, harmonica, vocals), Jora Landis (flute, recorder, vocals), Gail Brooks (guitar, keyboard, percussion, vocals), and Jack Beardwood (vocals), plus special guests and local favorites, Watt (dobro), Judi Brown (fiddle), Liepman (cello) and Chaffin (bass). Music will consist mainly of original songs of Sidney Willson Young arranged with the assistance of all participants.

Remembering

Rita 11th Annual

Sleep Under

the

S t a r s, C o n n

Swimming Hiking Arts & Crafts Outdoor Cooking Tomahawks

Backpacking Nature Exploration Drama Archery Skits

OVERNIGHT CAMP Boys & Girls 1st-11th grades Located in Paso Robles • Since 1941

ect

with Nature, Be Creative! Songs Games Nightly Campfire Team Building Leadership Development

2017 SESSIONS #1: June 25 - July 1 #2: July 9-15 #3: July 16-22 #4: July 23-29

#5: July 30 - Aug. 5 #6: Aug. 6 - 12 Family Camp: June 17-19

www.CAMPNATOMA.org | 805-709-2569 | info@campnatoma.org

Rita Marie Goehner Memorial Sunday, April 2, 2017 690 Higuera San Luis Obispo 11:30am–2:30pm 4:00pm–closing Celebrate Rita’s legacy and support Rita’s Rainbows Rita’s Rainbows – Dedicated to helping children in need in memory of Rita Marie Goehner September 30, 1989 - April 2, 2006 www.ritasrainbows.org


12

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Community

24-Hour Paddle Fundraiser Set for April 15 By Neil Farrell

44

lp Us Come He ur eO Celebrat Y

st

S AR ANNIVER

Marc 99 h 1-5.......... s) $7 n o ti tu ti Calzone (no subs 99 Marc 1 1 $ h 6-12....L a z arge 1 Topping Piz 99 Marc $8 s l h 13-19....Sp l a aghetti w/Meatb Marc h 20-31...La sagna $899

Professional & Discreet Medicines formulated by our Pharmacist to meet your most discriminating needs. • Consultation services • Pain, sleep & chronic disease support • Hospice & palliative care • Expert formulation & compounding

805.619.7535

SweetGreen APOTHECARY

a “new generation” of medical cannabis cooperative

DAVID SKINNER Cell: 805-459-8798 david@davidandkarenpresent.com CalBRE #00552094

KAREN SKINNER Cell: 805-550-9001 karen@davidandkarenpresent.com CalBRE #01873847

Visit our website for Shell Beach listings & Information! 763 Shell Beach Road, Shell Beach, CA

www.davidandkarenpresent.com

A

local group of dedicated standup paddle boarders is gearing up for their second, “24” an overnight fund-raising event set for Easter Weekend, April 15-16 in Morro Bay Harbor. Morro Bay Paddle Team Captain, Teddy Borja, said their 6-person team’s goal this year is to raise $6,000, which will be donated to help six different families who are dealing with cancer. Team members are Ken Twist, owner of The Paddleboard Co., on the Embarcadero; Nikki Gregg, a women’s paddleboard pioneer; Stanley Craig, a local realtor and reserve firefighter; Trevor Hamblin, a local contractor and reserve firefighter/paramedic; Jeff Weber a local electrician; and Borja a fire engineer/paramedic and small business owner of ESTERO Paddle, (See: www.ESTEROpaddle.com). All are Morro Bay residents but Hamblin, who lives in Cayucos. The team plans to hit the water at 8 a.m. on the 15th and paddle all night, finishing up at 8 a.m. the 16th. Borja said the team hopes to reach their goal and will decide after the event which of the families that has been nominated they will donate to. The more they raise, the more families they can help. “All money stays local on the Central Coast,” he said, “and all funds raised will go to the families in crisis. Last year we were fortunate to have breakfast, lunch, and dinner donated by local businesses Shoreline Calvary Chapel,

Beach Hut Deli, and Pizza Port.” The local event is in conjunction with Monster and Sea, an ocean and paddleboard apparel company (see: Monsterandsea.com) known for its benevolent giving and fundraising. “Troy of M&S is a personal friend and asked last January if I’d be interested in putting together a 2016 Morro Bay ‘24’ team to raise money for Central Coast families. I’m more of a surfer and paddle surfer over a flat-water paddler but without hesitation I said ‘Yes,’ and then asked my wife. Fortunately, I wasn’t in the doghouse too long,” joked Borja. The event started in 2015 near Seattle, Borja explained, and raised money for families dealing with cancer in that area. “Last year, the ‘24’ raised over $48,000 between Morro Bay, Newport, Vancouver B.C., Ontario, Can., Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and North Carolina. That’s $1,000 to 48 families. This year, Monster & Sea has set a goal to raise $100,000.” Taking turns, the team will launch from Coleman Beach and paddle up and down the Bay back to the Natural History Museum and out to Target Rock. Each of the three, 2-person crews will rotate in relay fashion to provide some breaks. Donations can be made on a Go Fund Me account they’ve set up, see: www. gofundme.com/MS24MB2017. Further information about the event and the “24” movement, is available on the website as well.


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

Community

13

TBID Event Grants Available

O

rganizations that put on special events in Morro Bay can now apply for grant funding through the Tourism Business Improvement District or TBID, the City of Morro Bay announced. The grants are for events that will take place between this July 1 and next June 30 (fiscal Year 2017/18). Deadline to fill out the 5-page application form is 5 p.m. Monday, May 15 and it must be turned in to or mailed to the Tourism Department Office, 695 Harbor St., Moro Bay, CA 93442, located in the Visitor’s Center building. They can also be filled out electronically and emailed to: jlittle@ morrobayca.gov. Award notifications will be made in June.

Each grant recipient will get an award letter, including the amount, logo requirements, a post event report form, and other applicable information. Among the requirements is that the City Tourism Department logo be included as a sponsor in all advertisements and event posters. In addition to the timing of the event, is must also be held within the Morro Bay City Limits and the money can’t be used for “infrastructure” to purchase equipment or for transportation. And finally, “First priority for issuing grants is for increasing tourism into Morro Bay during off-season [October through May] and during midweek — Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday — year round.

Celebrating 5 Years

2 Weeks for $20 Unlimited Yoga

Offer applies to new students & regularly scheduled classes only

Frosh Essayists Honored

T

hree Morro Bay High School freshmen were awarded $100 cash prizes by the Morro Bay Chapter of the American Association of University Women for their outstanding essays celebrating “Women’s History Month,” AAUW announced. The winners were Sage Hanft, Maia Burton and Mitchell Neumann. Hanft profiled poet and autobiographer, the late-Maya Angelou, and Burton profiled NASA mathematician, Katherine Johnson, inspired by their mutual interest in geometry, algebra and computer programming. Johnson was portrayed by actor, Taraji P. Henson, in the hit movie, “Hidden Figures.” Neumann shares an interest in track and field with his subject, Jamaican Olympic Gold Medalist, ShellyAnn Fraser-Pryce. The essay contest was open to all Morro Bay High 9th grade English students,

1000 Main St, Morro Bay

805.268.2668

yogacentermb.com

Call Carrie Vickerman for all your Advertising Needs!

Great design makes a great build.

and was coordinated by Mary Jo DiSio for AAUW and MBHS English teacher Danny Fahy. Money for the awards comes out of the proceeds of the Annual AAUW/Morro Bay Garden Tour, which this year is set for April 30. In the photo: AAUW Women’s History Month Essay Contest winners Hanft (left) and Burton (right) with MBHS English teacher and contest co-ordinator Fahy. Not pictured is Neumann. Submitted photo

Jammin’ with Gillie Wheesels “BRAND” YOURSELF! Specializing in… Digital Media Direct Referrals Print Adverstising

GREYWOOD HOME & GARDEN Patricia Marie Nelson, NCIDQ No.5179 B.S. San Diego State University, Interior Design

D

uncan McQueen jams on a “broom bass” with the Gillie Wheesels at the Annual Scot-Irish Night

dinner hosted by People Helping People of Los Osos at the South Bay Community Center. Photo by Judy Salamacha

Cell: 951-537-7891

STUDIO

Off: 805-543-6397 Carrie@simplyclearmarketing.com

158 NORTH OCEAN AVE. CAYUCOS

805.801.6256 RESIDENTIAL CUSTOM BUILDERS General Building Contractor Lic.#679485


14

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Community

Liver Transplant Music to Her Ears By Neil Farrell

V

iolinist and music teacher, Ginette Reitz of Los Osos, has seen her long battle with disease go through its ups and downs, like a fine piece of music. But she’s reached the point where only a transplant will stave off the Coda on her life. “For many years,” Ginette says, while sitting in the living room of her home in Baywood Park, “it was little things I could ignore. But over the past 5 years, it’s been a roller coaster ride. Now, the highs are less and the lows are lower. I don’t seem to be bouncing back like I used to.” Ginette, 57, has been in Los Osos since about 1987 and is a professional violinist and teacher of the violin and viola. “I’ve been doing that since I started college, in 1978 or so.” She was born in Switzerland, coming from a long line of professional musicians. As the youngest of four kids, the question, “Was not whether you wanted to play, but what instrument?” At 4, she started two years of piano lessons and at age 6, took up the violin, because none of her siblings, “was playing the violin.” She grew up in Laguna Hills playing in school ensembles, but “I left as soon as I could,” she laughs. Her childhood coincided with a lot of growth in that area of Southern California. “I had a horse and I loved having open places

to ride. But it got to the point where it took 45 minutes to find a patch of dirt to ride on.” She discovered the Central Coast through a friendship with Michael Nowak, who was the musical director and conductor of the San Luis Symphony. “It was his suggestion to move down from Monterey, where I had been teaching in public schools,” she recalls. When she arrived, she began to help out with the Youth Symphony, leading an after-school strings program through the Symphony’s efforts in music education. She built up a private practice through her work with the

Now Accepting New Patients...

Including Children! SORINA RATCHFORD, DDS

Youth Symphony, she explains. She has taught music to literally thousands of local kids over the past 25 years or so. She played for years with various performance groups including the Pacific Repertory Opera, and “various other groups that have come and gone.” She’s a member or past member of Orchestra Novo, the SLO Master Chorale Orchestra and the SLO Symphony. Now, though, the disease that has destroyed her liver has become too much to continue to play. “I don’t have the energy to do my part,” she says. “I get cramps in my hands and my energy level just doesn’t let me do it.” Her disease is called “Primary Billiary Cholangitis” or PBC, which leads to what used to simply be called, “cirrhosis,” she explains. But cirrhosis became associated with alcoholism and stigmatized its sufferers, when there are actually several causes for what is essentially the clogging of bile ducts and eventual dying off of the liver. It causes a person to fill with “biofluids,” which are poison to the body. “If the ducts get blocked because of disease or injury, the bile backs up into the liver and can cause cirrhosis,” reads an excerpt from webmd. com. “There are two main stages — compensated and decompensated. In compensated cirrhosis, you won’t have

any symptoms. There are still enough healthy liver cells to meet your body’s needs. They compensate, or make up for, the damaged cells and scarred tissue.” But Ginette has passed that stage of the disease and suffers through the build up of fluids to the point she “looks like I’m 7-months pregnant, and it’s difficult to breathe or eat,” she says. And it makes blood vessels in her esophagus bleed. She now goes to the doctor to be drained of these toxic fluids every 10 days. Her liver has deteriorated to the point that her only chance now is a liver transplant. “It’s unknown how you get it,” she explains, “and they don’t know what to do except treat the symptoms, until you can get a transplant.” After most of her life dealing with the disease, everything changed one day in 2010. “That was the first time it happened and I almost didn’t survive that,” she says. When her esophagus started to bleed she fainted and “broke my back. I crawled to the phone [to call for help]. That’s what saved me.” A few weeks ago other veins started leaking and she ended up in the hospital once again. continued, page 35

The Power That Made The Body Can Heal The Body... Accurate chiropractic helps the body to communicate with itself in an integrated way.

General & Cosmetic Dentistry

New Services Crowns & Bridges Extractions Periodontal Surgery Implants Invisalign® Root Canals Dentures

Morro Bay

FAMILY DENTISTRY 747 Bernardo Ave, Morro Bay | (805) 772-8585 | ratchforddds@gmail.com

Mark L. Monnin,

D.C.

CHIROPRACTOR

Los Osos Family Chiropractic (805) 528-3246 2122 Ninth Street Suite 110, Los Osos


• • • •

Inside:

Now and Then Good to be King Community Calendar Adventure Girl

• • • •

Art Talk Modern Senior Good Dogma Sports Shorts

• • • •

Framed Nightwriters Entertainment Dinner and a Movie


Central Coast Life

•

March 23 - April 5, 2017

A Brown Girl Walked into a Tanning Salon, You Won’t Believe What Happened Next! Story and photos by Courtney Haile

I

([FOXGHV 5DFNN 8OWUD 5DFN

45%3 3!4 ! s !- 0 /! /!+ 0! 0!2+ 0!2+ 2+ ", ", ,6$ 6$ 0) 6$ 0)3)33-/ / "% "%!# !#( /3( !#( !# 3( # 633 3H 3HOP OPPI PINGG #ENT #EENT # NTEERR

MICHELLE HAMILTON

ACUPUNCTURE

U

MASSAGE

U

HERBAL MEDICINE

L.Ac. UÊ >VŽÉ

iVÂŽĂŠ*>ˆ˜

UĂŠ/i˜`ÂœÂ˜ÂˆĂŒÂˆĂƒ UĂŠ* UĂŠ i>`>VÂ…iĂƒĂŠEĂŠ

-ĂŒĂ€iĂƒĂƒ

UĂŠ ˜viĂ€ĂŒÂˆÂ?ÂˆĂŒĂž UĂŠ/ÂœL>VVÂœĂŠ

iÂŤi˜`i˜Vi

UĂŠ Â˜ĂƒÂœÂ“Â˜Âˆ> UĂŠ >LÂœĂ€ĂŠ ˜`Ă•VĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ UĂŠ Â?Â?iĂ€}ˆiĂƒ UĂŠĂŠ-Vˆ>ĂŒÂˆV>

>Â?Â?ĂŠĂŒÂœ`>ÞÊvÂœĂ€ĂŠĂŠ >Â˜ĂŠ>ÂŤÂŤÂœÂˆÂ˜ĂŒÂ“iÂ˜ĂŒ

805.543.8688 SLO Wellness CenterĂŠUĂŠ1428 Phillips Lane #300ĂŠUĂŠSan Luis ObispoĂŠUĂŠSLOLAC.com

CAL 2560 04/14

t was a typically d r a b weekday around 11:30 in the morning, and I was ripe for solicitation. A clean-cut young man strolled into my office offering a promotion for new clients on spa services at Planet Beach Tanning and Spa. All I heard was 90% off. Normally short with a salesperson, my interest was piqued and my eye contact established. My office mates became uncharacteristically quiet, typing away at their keyboards as he went in for the kill. I tuned out as he detailed the treatments . . . sauna, facial, calories burned, soft skin for a month . . . “We used to focus only on tanning but now we’re offering spa services,� he said. I responded loudly, expecting a laugh from the room “Well, I definitely I don’t need tanning, so I am glad you’re expanding�. Complete silence enveloped the space, and I had mere seconds to agree and pay. Sold! I grabbed my gold sequined wallet and shelled out the 56 bucks for over $300 worth of self-care. The day came for the first two treatments at Planet Beach Tanning and Spa, located in the Foothill Plaza in SLO, which is currently under construction (I imagine this somewhat inspired the deal). The Infrared Sauna Detox offers “detoxification that is 7 to 10 times greater than a conventional sauna,� while the Lumiere facial uses light therapy to minimize fine lines and wrinkles while killing bacteria (from the brochure). The lovely young gal at the front desk suggested I have the facial first as the sauna is a hard act to follow. She escorted me to a massage chair tricked out with a white, hood like contraption. I had no idea what was in store; but with my safety goggles and $4 vitamin

C serum I was equipped for the 20-minute service. I was assured that I would adjust to the super bright light and once that hood came down, even with my eyes closed I saw bright orange. As the massage chair squeezed my shoulders I grew slightly concerned but tried to relax. The light looked but didn’t feel scorching. I imagined being sun kissed by the warmth at best, although I did visit the scenario of the chair squeezing and trapping me as the light grew hotter and brighter. I was happy when another nice lady helped me out to prepare me for the Infrared Sauna Detox. “Would you like to purchase the $4 sauna-suit? You will really sweat and you will feel it – like puddles�. Sold! I stepped into the large human shaped plastic and forced hand holes for selfie taking before opting for the 30-minute detox program in the small private sauna. Relaxing music and funky lights intensified my trip to sweatville and about ten minutes in, those puddles formed. What can I say? It was hot. I wasn’t sure how to return to the outside world. I stepped out; a wet mess swathed in plastic. The air conditioning felt heavenly and after I toweled off my toxins I truly felt clean and refreshed. On my way out I purchased a diet coke for re-tox, and I am pretty sure the waiting patrons took one look at me and were wowed by the tanning beds. If you have tanning needs, or just want a cleansing sweat without the exercise, then I’ll see you at Planet Beach! Courtney Haile is a writer and fitness instructor living in San Luis Obispo.


March 23 - April 5, 2017

• Central Coast Life

New Book A Love Story With Injured Wildlife Then & Now By Judy Salamacha

F

rom her heart and “For my Dean,� “Life Ashore with Human Parents,� a new book by Morro Bay’s Bertha Tyler, is at heart a love story. On April 9 from 1-3 p.m. Coalesce Book Store and Quota Club of Morro Bay are inviting the public to meet the author, as she shares a few stories about her early days operating the Morro Bay Aquarium and Gift Shop. Dean and Bertha Tyler enjoyed 46 years as partners in marriage and business. They co-owned and operated the rehabilitation center, aquarium and gift shop at 595 Embarcadero since 1965 — some 17 years before the Marine Mammal Protection Act was implemented in 1972. Each year approximately 200,000 visitors from all over the world learned about Central Coast marine life while being entertained by the barks and antics of the rehabbing seals and sea lions — some ultimately becoming permanent residents. In 2015, Bertha turned over the day-to-day operations to their grandson, John Alcorn. She wanted time to write the story about the early days, when she and Dean learned “on-the-job� how they would care for marine mammals in crisis. “They loved me,� she recalled. “Even when I had to use a feeding tube, they would trust me.� With more than 125 pictures, Bertha writes how many became part of the Tyler Family and curious “citizens� along Morro Bay’s waterfront. In the book’s introduction, Bertha explains why at 92 she wanted to tell her story. “It has been a long time coming. At 90, I retired and was inspired to write a book about the good times I had with the animals Dean and I took care of.

“I married into this and I say this as I had my own business feeding customers at the Chat ‘N Chew Restaurant in Morro Bay from 1965-1973. I soon learned about feeding raw fish to seals and otters. “Also, I worked in the gift shop as the manager-owner. When I retired to write this book, Dean’s health declined and I became his caregiver. Dean passed in 2015 and in 2016, I decided to go forth with my plans to write about some of the experiences and good times I enjoyed while rehabilitating sea lions, harbor seals, and sea otters. I also had sad times when the animal would die

Construction Services 805-574-3155 We Do All The “Honey Do’s� All Household Repairs Providing Professional Handyman Services (FOFSBM t 1MVNCJOH t &MFDUSJDBM $POUSBDUPS

Free Estimates Licensed and Fully Insured: Contractors License No. 306732 % MAIL ARNIE NCCN NET s WWW (ANDYMANSERVICES ARNIE COM

Residential and Commercial Services

and mixed feelings when they were released.� Originally from Canada, Dean came to Morro Bay in 1949 to help his brother Phil fish from a boat named Shmoo. When his brother stopped fishing to attend Cal Poly, Dean remained a fisherman. He would bring live specimens to the newly built aquarium, befriending the owner. “The aquarium business was not producing enough money, so the owner offered it to Dean,� explained Bertha. “Dean thought it over and soon decided to buy it as it would be a good job in his senior years.� They met at the Chat ‘N Chew and after a brief courtship, married in 1969. Dean taught Bertha to love the seals and otters they rescued. They accepted all that needed help. Most of the rescues became temporary wards until they were healthy enough to be released back into the bay or ocean. The book tells the tale of Jimbo, a harbor seal rescue that Bertha helped to release and Buddy’s search for the aquarium after his release and subsequent hop-aboard Morro Bay’s harbor cruise paddle wheeler, the Tiger’s Folly II. Occasionally, there were good reasons their rescues became permanent adoptees. Told in her own words, the book recalls Bertha’s gender debate

with Dean about Sammy (Samantha?), the sea lion. Suzy the sea otter had “sticky,� fishfood flippers and loved to wander unannounced into the Hofbrau Restaurant. The book recounts how Bertha forgave Suzy, the sea otter, for biting her finger. One otter came to them in a bucket as a baby and was named “Birdie� after Dean’s mother. The rescues became Dean and Bertha’s first children — forevermore an extension of their family of five human children and ultimately 54 grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. In 2006, the Morro Bay Chamber of Commerce named Dean and Bertha Tyler “Morro Bay Living Treasures.� Always an advocate for the fishing industry and small businesses of Morro Bay, Dean served on the Morro Bay Harbor Advisory Board. Bertha loved to bowl and generated thousands of dollars by creating an Annual Bowl-a-Thon to benefit Quota Club’s support of Camp Hapitok. She continues to “love working with her church family� and Estero Bay Republican Women Federated. Bill Charlesworth of Central Coast Press, designed and published Bertha’s book. Copies can be reserved by calling the Morro Bay Aquarium at (805) 772-7647. The cost is $10. The books will also be available after April 9 at Carla’s Country Kitchen Gift Shop, and Coalesce in Morro Bay and Volumes of Pleasure Book Shoppe in Los Osos. Freelance writer, columnist and author, Judy Salamacha’s Then & Now column is a regular feature of Simply Clear Marketing & Media. Contact her at: judysalamacha@gmail.com or (805) 801-1422 with story ideas.


Central Coast Life

•

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Community Calendar

A free “Information Onlyâ€? seminar on Cochlear Implant Technology will be held Saturday, March 25 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Cuesta College, Building 5400, Room 5401. Lunch included. If you have a hearing loss, come hear two audiologists explain how you may benefit from CI & what the process entails. A Q&A will follow. If you are a CI wearer, come share your success story! More info, email kpimente@cuesta.edu. •••

The Lioness Club of Cayucos’ Second Annual Pulled Pork Dinner, a fundraiser benefiting the Club’s trade scholarships and other Lioness Club of Cayucos projects, is set for 4:30-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 27 at the Cayucos Vet’s Hall. Tickets are $10 for adults, and $6 for children under-10. Get tickets in advance from any Lioness or better yet, by calling Teresa Higdon at (805) 400-4990. Tickets will also be available at the door. Homemade desserts will be for sale too. ••• Morro Bay Art Association will exhibit the artworks of the later-David Jonas (1926-2014) from March 23May 1. An opening reception is set for 2-4 p.m. Sunday, March 26 at the Art Center Morro Bay Gallery, 835 Main St. Free and open to the public. “David Jonas, A Retrospectiveâ€? will display Jonas’ vibrant oil and watercolor paintings that evoke the dazzling glow of sunlight. Jonas was an artist for Disney Studios working on animated and live-action films. He also worked with Steven Spielberg and Francis

Morro Bay Art Association will exhibit the artworks of the later-David Jonas (1926-2014) from March 23-May 1 Phippen Museum in Prescott, Ariz. His film production work hangs in the Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco. ••• The Mid-Coast Veterans Alliance, servicing veterans needs in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties, is holding a benefit barbecue from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, March 25 at the Veterans Memorial Hall, 501 S. Pine St., Santa Maria to raise money for veterans in the community. Cost is $10 a plate for tri-tip plus raffles, a 50/50 raffle, and guest speakers. Tickets can be purchased by calling Fernando Guzman at 925-2372. Make

••• The San Luis Obispo Museum of Art and Central Coast Photographic Society will present, “New Visions: California Juried Photography Exhibition,â€? from April 7 through May 2 at the Museum, 1010 Broad St., in Mission Plaza. This exhibition will pay tribute to “the compelling imaginations and technical

t GARAGES t CLOSETS t )0.& 0''*$&4 t 1"/53*&4 t .631): #&%4

(JWF IFS UIF DMPTFU PG IFS ESFBNT GPS $ISJTUNBT Ford Coppola and in 1989, he retired from film work and started a second career teaching art at the California Art Institute in Thousand Oaks. He retired a second time in 1999 and he and fellow animation artist and wife, Susan, moved to Los Osos. His work hangs in the Carnegie Art Museum of Oxnard, The National History Museum of Los Angeles County, the Frederick R. Weisman Museum in Malibu, and

followed a 1-night member art show. Members are asked to bring one matted or framed painting and a main dish, salad or dessert to share. Paintings will be juried by attendees, and prizes will be awarded. Prospective members are invited to attend.

photographers from across California. Only 49 photographs were chosen for the show. Also, SLOMA’s Film Series will show, “La Quete D’inspiration/ The Quest For Inspirationâ€? at 7 p.m. Monday, April 17. The film was born of numerous solitary wanderings through autumnal forests by landscape photographer, Alexandre Deschaumes. For more information, see: SLOMA. org. •••

The San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden has some upcoming special events. The events will be held at the Botanical Garden, 3450 Dairy Creek Rd., in El Chorro Regional Park, across

'3&& "$&4403*&4 03%&34 0' 03 .03& $BMM PS WJTJU 5BJMPSFE-JWJOH DPN 4BO-VJT0CJTQP

Franchise opportunities available. Call 866-669-8549

checks out to: MCVA, PO Box 5654, Santa Maria CA 93456. ••• The March meeting of the Central Coast Watercolor Society is set for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 28 at the San Luis Obispo United Methodist Church, 1515 Fredericks St. A social hour and potluck supper is at 6:30 p.m.

skills of photographers today,� reads a news release. Ruta Saliklis, SLOMA’s director of exhibitions will give a members-only curator’s talk at 5 p.m. Friday, April 7, followed by a public reception and awards ceremony with the artists from 6–9 p.m. in conjunction with Art After Dark. Exhibit juror and nature photographer extraordinaire, George Lepp, selected the best photos from 164 images submitted by 64

Hwy 1 from Cuesta College, unless otherwise indicated. See: slobg.org for more details and to sign up for the events. • Spring Plant Sale fundraiser is set for 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, March 25. Get expert advice and find great deals on beautiful plants. Prices will vary and all plant sales are free of sales tax.


••• Los Osos Library is hosting several free public events at the library, 2075 Palisades Ave., and sponsored by the Friends of the Library. Events are free unless otherwise noted. Call 528-1862 for more information. The library’s therapy dog, Berkeley, will be on hand to listen to kids read at 3-4 p.m. Wednesdays. Share stories with Berkeley. Free. Family Movie is set for 2 p.m. Saturday, April 1. They supply free popcorn and a G or PG-rated movie.

FO

4

tickets $

20 -$ 40

OM THE H

E

A

G

IN

Cal Poly PAC

FR

2016 -17 SEASON

S

People Helping People of Los Osos is holding its Annual Yard Sale fundraiser Friday-Saturday, April 7-8 at the South Bay Community Center, 2180 Palisades Ave. Hours are noon to 4 p.m. Friday, and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. There will be lots of collectables, household, tools, furniture and more — too much to put it all out on Friday, so be sure to check back Saturday so you don’t miss out on bargains.

One show only!

G

R

Painter, Laurel Sherrie’s artworks will be on display April 3-May 1 at Coldwell Banker Realty, 1234 Monterey St., Ste. 110 in San Luis Obispo. Called, “Petite Plein Air Gems,” Sherrie’s miniature landscapes (6-inches by 8”) are painted on location around SLO County. There’s a free reception to meet Sherrie from 6-9 p.m. Friday, April 7, during Art After Dark with petite snacks served. See: www.laurelsherrie. com for information on the artist.

L I R P A 3:00PM2

R 40 YEA

Signups are being taken now for the 9th Annual Paso Robles Dog Jog, set for 10 a.m. Saturday, April 1 at Vina Robles Winery, a benefit for the Sherwood Dog Park. Early registration is $25 until March 30, and then it goes up to $30. Entry includes a 2K or 4K jog or walk (dogs included), commemorative dog bandana, goody bag, finisher’s medal, a voucher for lunch and Vina Robles wine tasting and event glass for 21-older participants only. Additional lunch or wine tasting will be available for purchase. To register online, see: www.parks4pups. org or call (805) 239-9326. The event will take place rain or shine. •••

y a d n Su

FO

•••

SE M BLE

T

•••

•••

S

EN

“Experience small ensembles and the entire 50-person choir performing lighthearted parodies, silly songs and some timeless favorites, plus a very special appearance by The Bald Spots!”

R

The Gallery at Marina Square and National Estuary Program will host a free public open house during the April Embarcadero Art Walk, set for 5-8 p.m. Friday, April 14 upstairs at Marina Square, 601 Embarcadero, Morro Bay. Meet with many artists and catch a special Art & Science Reception on the state of the bay with the NEP, which has a nature center in Marina Square. There will be refreshments and live music.

The San Luis Obispo Museum of Art will exhibit, “Six Squared,” an exhibition of traditional print media by the Central Coast Printmakers in the McMeen Gallery from April 7 through May 28. There will be an opening reception for the exhibition from 6-9 p.m. Friday, April 7 in conjunction with Art After Dark. Artists produced three, 6-inch by 6-inch hand-pulled prints in cohesive images related by color, printmaking method, and/or subject matter. This is a nice exhibit on the art of printmaking. The San Luis Obispo Museum of Art is at 1010 Broad St., on the west end of Mission Plaza. Free admission; donations are appreciated. For more information, see: SLOMA. org.

ONCERT C S L O

SIN

•••

APRIL

Call 528-1862 for title. During National Library Week, April 10-15, all SLO County Libraries will waive up to $1 of late fines for each nonperishable food item you bring in. All food will be donated to the Food Bank Coalition of SLO County. However, Food For Fines does not apply to fees for lost or damaged library materials.

CAL A RT

• Bay-friendly gardening seminar is set for 1-2 p.m. Saturday, April 8. Master gardeners will share tips for sustainable gardening practices that help protect the health of bays and oceans. Cost is $5 garden members, and $10 non-members. No reservations needed. • Earth Day, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 22. This is the 27th Annual SLO County Earth Day Festival and will feature a fun, outdoor event with live music, an eco-marketplace, good food and great exhibits. Free admission, though there is a day use fee entering the County Park.

• Central Coast Life

VO

March 23 - April 5, 2017

www.pacslo.org • 805-756-4tix (4849) Bette Kulp

ENROLL NOW to shine onstage at the

Performing Arts Center in our annual Studio Showcase! CAN’T STOP THE FEELIN’

••• Get your tickets now! The Avila Beach Civic Association and the San Luis Yacht Club are holding their annual Easter Festival for all of the children in the area on Saturday, April 8, from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at the Avila Beach Community Center, 191 San Miguel Street. There will be snacks for all and the children will be able to color eggs, make an Easter bag at the craft table, and hunt for Easter eggs around the Community Center. There will also be a Bounce House sponsored by Joan Gellert-Sargen. For more info and if you want to get involved, call 805-627-1997 or email avilabeachcc@ gmail.com. Join us for a fun familyoriented free event. ••• Cayucos Art Association is holding a Members-Only Art Sale in “The Tent,” a canvas canopy tent installed behind the Cayucos Vet’s Hall as the temporary home for events that normally take place inside the Vet’s Hall, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, April 2. Admission is free to the public and artworks will be for sale. The Art Association, a staple in the community since its founding in 1989.

Dance, theater, voice, music — all ages, all levels. Performances on June 24, 2017 at 1pm & 6pm

Dance • Music • Theater • Voice coastaldanceandmusicacademy.com

1030 Huston Street, Suite C | Grover Beach | 805.489.5678


Central Coast Life

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Who and What is Philip Carey? By Jayne Behman

O

utsider Art and Outsider Artists are terms that refer to works of art created by artistes that are outside of the mainstream art world or art institutions. In many cases, these artists do not have formal art training. They, in many cases, are people with mental issues and/or physical challenges. The images usually illustrate elaborate fantasy worlds, extreme mental states, and unconventional ideas. There is a large population of art collectors that look to acquire Outsider Art. Frida Kahlo is not considered an Outsider Artist. Yet, her paintings describe her political beliefs, physical battles, and love relationships. She executes her paintings in a naïve style. A self-declared Outsider Artist who utilizes trash to make his art is Morro Bay’s Phillip Carey. A 70 year artveteran, he began his creative passion in kindergarten but grew up wanting to be the world’s greatest opera singer. When he tired of this youthful dream, he enrolled at Long Beach State University in its graphic design department. Because of the praise from his exhibit design class professor, Phillip decided that creating mini environments was his calling. He graduated with dual major degrees in exhibit design and graphic design. This higher education experience allowed Carey to learn how to

use and manipulate countless materials that he would put and work together to form self-contained durable mini environments. During his career as an installation artist he worked for science & industry museums, state parks, and historical societies throughout the United States. He completed more

than 2500 environmental design projects. Enjoying retirement was short lived when Phil was diagnosed with kidney failure with his “life” dependent on dialysis three times a week, three hours per visit. He passed the time making “postal” art. Using one clipboard, nonfading ballpoint black ink pens, archival prima colored pencils, and blank white envelopes, he completed more than 450 different images. In addition, he saved his bandages, cotton swabs, and numerous other items from his medical procedure. Art in My Veins, a piece he exhibited in 2015 at The American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore, was his life sized self portrait. He incorporated his medical trash into the piece to personalize it. It depicts his pain and suffering, literally. Trashing my Art, Arting my Trash is the title for Phillip’s current project. It will be a large multi layer installation that will incorporate trash he collected on his US cross-country road trip. Using stuff that others might throw away to make art may sound uninteresting or contrived. But, under the fingers of this great exhibit design master,

“stuff “ is manipulated to become a masterpiece. In its construction, Phil is using pieces of corrugated packaging, brochures, menus, chocolate wrappers, newspapers, road signs, tires, maps, and so much more. The completed project, which I would guess at completion to be 15 feet long by 8 feet high, will be installed at Kellogg Community College’s DeVries Gallery, Battle Creek, Michigan (September 22 through October 27, 2016). Philip Carey labels himself as an Outsider Artist, and his works Outsider Art. I disagree. To me, he’s simply a master artist without a category. He processes his world, his way. I am lucky that he let me in his front door. See the art of Phillip Carey on his website www.strageartofphilipcarey. com.

Take the first step toward getting the radiant smile you deserve with Invisalign® clear aligners, for adults and teens.

Take the first step toward getting the radiant smile you Call today to learn about Invisalign® & for a free smile assessment. deserve with Invisalign® clear aligners, for adults and teens. $100 Off for First time callers about Invisilign® . Call today to learn about Invisalign® & for a free smile assessment. $100 Off for First time callers about Invisilign® . marvistadental.com 1205 4th Street Los Osos 528-1695

marvistadental.com 1205 4th Street Los Osos 528-1695 marvistadental.com 1205 4th Street / Los Osos / 528-1695


NORTH COAST

GALLERIES

Amphora Gallery 4070 Burton Dr. Cambria 805-927-8273 Arthur Van Rhyn Studio Cambria 805-927-5576 Artists Garden 316 Grove St. Los Osos 805-528-1068 By The Bay Gallery 895 Embarcadero Morro Bay 805-772-5563 bythebaygallery.com Bronze, Silver & Gold Gallery 4044 Burton Dr. Cambria 805-927-5421 bsgcambria.com Cayucos Art Association & Cayucos Art Gallery 10 Cayucos Dr. Cayucos 805-995-2049 cayucosart.org Dexter Smith Art Studio 5945 Ebtrada Ave. Cayucos artistdextersmith.com Focus On Nature Photo Gallery 601 Embarcadero Morro Bay 805-772-4972 gallery.focus-on-nature.com Forever Stoked 1164 Quintana Rd. Morro Bay 805-771-9095 foreverstoked.com Full Moon Pottery StudioGallery 345 Harbor St. Morro Bay 805-772-2890 fullmoonmb.com

Maggie’s Meticulous Mat & Frame Shop 2280 Sunset Dr. Los Osos 805-772-4700 The Frame Shop 2131 10th St. Ste A Los Osos 805-543-1743

46

6DQ /XLV 2ELVSR &$

Harmony Cayucos Atascadero

Morro Bay

Wild Fowl 2415 Juniper Ave. Morro Bay 805-772-5811

SAN LUIS OBISPO A Muse Gallery 845 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-439-3000 amuseslo.com Amnesia 787 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-543-4323 Art After Dark 1123 Mill St. San Luis Obispo 805-544-9251 artobispo.org

Harmony Glassworks 2180 Old Creamery Rd. Harmony 805-927-4248 harmonyglassworks.com

Art Central 1329 Monterey St. San Luis Obispo 805-747-4200 artcentralartsupply.com

John Ramos Gallery 407 Morro Bay Blvd. Morro Bay 805-772-2890 johnramos.com

Arts Coun cil San Luis Obispo County 570 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-544-9251 sloartscouncil.org Arts & Images 1553 La Cita Ct. San Luis Obispo 805-595-9463 Frame Works

Santa Margarita

1 Santa Margarita Lake

Los Osos

:$17(' ),5( 3+2726 ,I \RX ZHUH WKHUH WRRN SKRWRV RU YLGHRV 3/($6( +(/3 285 ),5( 5(6($5&+

,1 &$6+

San Luis Obispo

Lopez Lake

Avila Beach

2YHU LQ *LIW &HUWL¿FDWHV $YDLODEOH

&$6+ 3+2726

Pismo Beach

Seven Sisters Gallery 601 Embarcadero Morro Bay 805-772-2504 stores. sevensistersgalleryca. com

Under The Sea 833 Embarcadero Morro Bay 805-772-4872

58

41

Native Spirit Gallery 333 Bernardo Ave. Morro Bay 805-772-2571 morrobay.org/nativespirit-gallery

Sun Fire Gallery 2991 Ocean Blvd. Cayucos 805-900-5232 sunfirearts.com

41

Templeton

Morro Bay Art Association 835 Main St. Morro Bay 805-771-2504 artcentermorrobay.com

Gallery At Marina Square 601 Embarcadero Morro Bay 805-772-4972 galleryatmarinasquare.com

Lady Spencer 148 N Ocean Ave. Cayucos 805-995-3771 ladyspencer.com

Cambria

Grover Beach Arroyo Grande

1

San Luis Obispo 805-542-9000 sloart.com Gene Francis Gallery 1120 Garden St. San Luis Obispo 805-545-7902 genefrancis.net Hands Gallery 777 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-543-1921 handsgallery.com Hillsborough Galleries of SLO 793 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-544-4670 Just Looking Gallery 746 Higuera St. San Luis Obispo 805-541-6663 justlookinggallery.com Peregrine Art Glass 1330 Southwood Dr Apt 5, San Luis Obispo 805-441-4422 peregrineartglass.com San Luis Obispo Museum of Art 1010 Broad St. San Luis Obispo 805-543-8562 sloma.org Spirits of Africa Gallery 570 Higuera St. Ste 150, San Luis Obispo 877-688-0156 spiritsofafricagallery.com Stampluis Studios Blackbird 1036 Chorro St. San Luis Obispo 805-541-5197 Steynberg Gallery 1531 Monterey St. San Luis Obispo

steynberggallery.com

SOUTH COUNTY 551 Art Gallery 551 W. Grand Ave Grover Beach 805-489-3318

&$6+ 3+2726

5 Cities Gallery 126 E Branch St. Arroyo Grande 805-264-5572 Beltran Art 102 E Branch St. Arroyo Grande 805-264-5572

&$6+ 3+2726

Excellent Center For Art & Culture 1101 W Grand Ave. Grover Beach 805-481-7577 Harbor Lights Gallery 580 Cypress St. Pismo Beach 805-773-8057 iWordArt Pismo Beach 805-574-9197 Seaside Gallery 580 Cypress St. Pismo Beach 805-295-6386 theseasidegallery.com Thomas Kinkade Gallery 500 Cypress St. Pismo Beach 805-773-9424 kinkadecentralcoast.com Under The Sea Gallery 324 Front, Avila Beach 805-627-1488 Village Framing 121 W Branch St. Arroyo Grande 805-489-3587

# :(%6,7( 3/86 025(

6XE)LUH&RQWHVW FRP *,)7 &(57,),&$7(6

3/($6( +(/3 86

6TXDUH 'HDO 5HFRUGLQJV 6XSSOLHV

25 9,6,7

6XE)LUH&RQWHVW FRP

)25 &217(67 '(7$,/6


Central Coast Life

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Spring Is Here Framed Photo and Story by www.PhotoByVivian.com

T

he mule deer is named for its large ears, which are more like those of a mule than of deer. Often mistaken for white tailed deer, the main difference is their ears and the tail of the mule deer has a black tip. The mule deer love our oak forests and with our recent record rains the hills are lush and green with plenty of food for the deer who eat primarily grass, scrub oak, elderberry, ragweed, and several other plants that are now plentiful. They will even eat wild mushrooms. They make their beds in soft grass below the trees and try to stay within a mile of a water source. Males generally forage alone while the fawns usually stay close to the doe. To see more mushroom photos, visit www. PhotoByVivan.com

AMERICA’S Mike & Mike

BEST

SPORTS TALK LINEUP

Coronas

Mexican Restaurant & Seafood Come in and enjoy an ice cold draft beer in our new patio!

DAILY SPECIALS 1.99 ENCHILADA MONDAY

$

All Day, No Limit, No Coupon Necessary

1.79 TACO TUESDAY

$

All Day, No Limit, No Coupon Necessary Now Serving Home Made Carnitas!

2. BURRITO WEDNESDAY

$

99

All Day, No Limit, No Coupon Necessary

Jim Rome $

Purchase a Lunch 8. or99Dinner Receive

2ND HALF OFF! With purchase of 2 beverages.

1 Coupon per table, No other discount applies. Exp 4/5/17

No Reservations Needed To-Go Orders Available

1263 E. Grand Ave. Arroyo Grande 805-473-9999 | Open 11-9 Daily Dan Patrick

Previously Dolly’s Donuts, next to Broadway Bagel

HAPPY HOUR DRINK SPECIALS Mon-Tue-Wed Plus

$1.50 BEER

Th t Thursdays Th d Thirsty

Friendly Bartenders State-of-the-Art Jukebox Pool Table Full Food & Cocktail Catering

108 W. Branch St, Arroyo Grande

(805) 481-2871 RalphandDuanes.com


Morro Bay BEAUTIFUL’S Annual Citywide 2017

Yard Sale Weekend

FRI - SAT - SUN

March 31, April 1st - 2nd Fri 2pm-5pm Sat & Sun 8am-2pm

Schedule

SATURDAY (6:30a.m.-2:00p.m.) Carla’s Country Kitchen: 213 Beach Have a great breakfast

FRIDAY (2:00p.m. - 5:00p.m.) Preview Day! Sellers are encouraged to display items for sale for buyers to preview. Some sellers are open!

FREE CONCERT! 4 Top Bands! Silent • Beer • Food Auction Wine Trucks

6PM FRIDAY, MAR 31 Morro Bay Vets Hall Surf St. • 805-772-1314

View bands at EsteroBayRadio.org Annual fundraiser for The Rock 97.3!

(7:00a.m.) Get your map and FREE COFFEE at our headquarters: Brenda Sue’s Consignment: 248 Morro Bay Blvd. (8:00a.m.-2:00p.m.) Shop til you drop

MORRO

SUNDAY Close out sales....make an offer!!

Morro Bay Appliance

WE SELL HOMES

Serving SLO County for over 35 years!

Serving the Central Coast for over 40 Years www.SLOsale.com

Sales – New & Reconditioned Service & Repairs On All Major Brands Freezers • Refrigerators • Washers • Dryers • Ranges • Microwaves Dishwashers • Cooktops • Wall Ovens • Hoods Serving Los Osos, Morro Bay, Cayucos, Cambria & San Simeon Since 1971

935 Main Street, Morro Bay 93442

~SHOP LOCAL~

AMY JOHNSON

RICK JOHNSON

805-235-3955

805-235-8423

Broker Associate CA DRE # 00897132

Broker Associate CA DRE # 00757689


FRI - SAT - SUN March 31 & April 1st & 2nd 8am–2pm

Yard Sale

Treasure Map Citywide 2017

ATM Rabobank 251 Harbor St

Morro Bay street info: Island streets and Tree streets in N. Morro are alphabetical

Map Includes Featured Sales Only 996 Allesandro St.

vintage, furniture, art, clothing, books

FRI-SAT-SUN

190 Anchor St.

SAT-SUN

tools, dvds, sm furniture

265 Anchor St.

FRI-SAT-SUN

934 Anchor St.

SAT-SUN

furniture, clothes, shoes printer, cloths, sm items

438 Arbutus Ave. SAT-SUN merc outboard, grumman canoe, cobra kayak, cages 345 Arcadia Ave. 500-G8 Atascadero Rd.

FRI-SAT-SUN

FRI-SAT-SUN handcrafted wood crosses & signs, antique jars

660 Avalon St. 248 Barlow Lane

SAT

FRI-SAT-SUN 2 cribs, baby items, furniture, books, décor

2026 Bayview

FRI-SAT-SUN

425 Bonita St. 120 Bradley Ave.

FRI-SAT-SUN

dishes, furniture, tools

antique furniture, tables

226 Bradley Ave. 711 Butte

SAT-SUN

SAT

sport cards, jewelry, books, bar stools, tools

735 Cabrillo Pl. 1020 Carmel St. 2860 Cedar Ave.

FRI-SAT FRI-SAT

FRI-SAT-SUN SAT

PACIFIC COAST PEREGRINE WATCH 765 Center Ct.

FRI-SAT-SUN yarn, camera & lens, household, clothing

459 Chorro Creek Rd.

ranch & household goods, clothing, tools, coins

SAT

1295 Clarabelle Dr. 1304 Clarabelle Dr. 1355 Clarabelle Dr.

A special thanks to the Morro Bay Chamber of Commerce for all their wonderful help and the City of Morro Bay for their financial support…

Ba rro

Mo

nte

rey

or

cifi

c

ne

S

N

$

Mo

rro

s

t

Mo

Pa

rke

rb

$

Yard Sale Headquar ters “Brenda Sue’s Consignment” 248 Morro Bay Blvd.

Ma

Du

Marks the spot for each Yard Sale

E

The Morro Bay Police Dept asks that you PARK LEGALLY: PLEASE DON’T BLOCK MAILBOXES FIRE HYDRANTS OR DRIVEWAYS...

Ha

BOLD Listings = larger sales

yB

lvd

.

Clues:

W

Organizing Committee: Morro Bay BEAUTIFUL President Ann Reisner, Promotion by Brenda Sue Steward, helping with everything person Lorna Buis, sign maker Ron Reisner and emergency helper Juliana Epperly.

shop fan, Wyco concrete vibrator

FRI-SAT-SUN FRI-SAT-SUN FRI-SAT-SUN

1363 Clarabelle Dr. SAT-SUN repurposed lamps and tables & other 537 Dawson St. FRI-SAT-SUN railroad, pottery, stereo, repurpose, no junk 343 Dunes St. SAT 8 family yard sale and bake sale 2432 Elm Ave. FRI-SAT clothes, shoes, toys, furniture

2435 Elm Ave. SAT-SUN 2501 Elm Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN Fishing, tools, nautical, household misc 2226 Emerald Circle FRI-SAT-SUN 2235 Emerald Circle FRI-SAT-SUN tools, auto parts, household, books 2261 Emerald Circle FRI-SAT-SUN bed, kitchen island, desk etc 2264 Emerald Circle FRI-SAT-SUN garden, household, furniture, good stuff 485 Estero Ave. SAT-SUN 340 Fairview Ave. SAT 2468 Greenwood FRI-SAT-SUN 2685 Greenwood FRI-SAT all kinds of collectibles and furniture

ESTERO BAY REPUBLICAN WOMEN FED

2920 Greenwood SAT small furnishings/tools/bake sale 590 Harbor St. SAT eyeware, elecronics, household items, furniture

2255 Hemlock Ave.

SAT

vintage lockers, front counter

2520 Hemlock Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN liberty falls minatures & trains,plants & much more 398 Hill St. SAT-SUN

moving sale EVERYTHING must go

2040 Ironwood desk, ottomen 2930 Ironwood

SAT SAT

stove, cd’s, books,artwork

974 Las Tunas 976 Las Tunas 981 Las Tunas 986 Las Tunas 1001 Las Tunas

Multi family - Lots of good stuff

1175 Las Tunas

guy stuff, girl stuff, vintage everything

SAT-SUN SAT-SUN SAT-SUN FRI-SAT-SUN FRI-SAT SAT-SUN

MONTESSORI PARENTS NETWORK

3081/2 Main St. FRI-SAT-SUN rest equip, 16’ alum canoe, comm meat slicer

kids stuff, household items, books

388 Main St. FRI-SAT-SUN arts, tools, toys, jewelry, books, décor items

360 Island St. SAT 410 Java St. FRI-SAT-SUN air plant and succulent arrangements 2275 Juniper Ave. SAT exercise equipment, electronics 2590 Juniper Ave. SAT vintage fire extinquisher, UFCMMA training ctr 2591 Juniper Ave. SAT-SUN 2730 Juniper SAT-SUN household, kids, antiques, books, cloths, furniture 205 Kern SAT-SUN antiques, tools, interesting collectables 477 Kern SAT-SUN office chairs, truck shell 635 Kern SAT-SUN 740 B Kern FRI-SAT-SUN womens plus, sterling silver, household decor

385 Kings Ave 2636 Koa Ave 411 La Jolla St.

sea glass jewelry, arts & crafts,photo art

SAT-SUN FRI-SAT FRI-SAT

MORRO BAY ART ASSOC. 835 Main St.

original art work and art supplies

SAT

RUSTIC DIAMOND

545 Mimosa St.

verything in the house for sale

FRI-SAT-SUN

550 Mimosa St. SAT-SUN 150 Mindoro St. FRI-SAT-SUN 404 Monterey Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN 425 Monterey Ave. FRI-SAT 480 Monterey Ave. SAT 995 Monterey Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN lighting products, bulbs, toys, clothes, tools 436 Morro Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN furniture, housewares, linens 1165 Morro Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN appliances, jewelry, dishes, baskets, pillows, vacuum 1180 Morro Ave. SAT-SUN estate sale 70 yrs of collectibles & marine

JENNIFER’S UNIQUE BOUTIQUE

1190 Main St. FRI-SAT-SUN repurposed furniture, and lighting, local art on wood 1199 Main St. FRI-SAT furniture

231 Morro Bay Blvd. FRI-SAT-SUN Vintage, store displays, pictures, cloths, books

305 Marina St. FRI-SAT coffee table, antique barber’s chair, male manequin

GRANDMA’S YOGURT & WAFFLE SHOP

MARINA STREET INN

916 Marina St. baby furniture,décor 1164 Market Ave. dining chairs, kitchen goods 907 Mesa St.

BRENDA SUE’S CONSIGNMENT

248 Morro Bay Blvd. FRI-SAT-SUN Headquaters, Free Coffee,Maps & SALE

307 Morro Bay Blvd. FRI-SAT-SUN FRI-SAT-SUN FREE 2oz. topping w/8oz. yogurt or almond milk SAT-SUN

SEASHELLS AND SAWDUST

315 Morro Bay Blvd. FRI-SAT-SUN home décor & furniture SAT BEADS BY THE BAY 333 Morro Bay Blvd. SAT SLO-4-PUPS DOG PARK plants, beads, clothes, household 915 Mesa St. FRI-SAT-SUN all good things from whimsical to practical 404 Napa Ave. SAT-SUN clothes (kids & adults), toys, electronics 953 Mesa St. FRI-SAT-SUN antique cameras, furniture, disney collect

420 Napa Ave. SAT 499 Norwich FRI-SAT-SUN surf gear, toys, vintage, watches, jewelry, furniture 2390 Nutmeg Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN model airplanes, gardening, kitchen, crafts 542 Olive St SAT-SUN outdoor stuff 560 Olive St SAT 385 Orton St SAT 941 Pacific St. SAT-SUN potted plants, furniture, books 963 1/2 Pacific St. FRI-SAT-SUN all proceeds go to “”Helping Veterans In Need 261 Palm Ave. SAT-SUN camp chairs, hula hoop, rawhide lamp shade,refrig 479 Panay St. FRI-SAT-SUN 225 Piney Way FRI-SAT-SUN 3 families, lg sale, love seat, cloths, linens, appliances 474 Piney Way FRI-SAT-SUN refrig, books, clothes, video games, tapes, pots, linens 1320 Prescott Dr. SAT-SUN furniture and sons cleaning out their storage 448 Radcliff St. SAT adult & big kid clothes, housewares, décor 439 Rennell St. SAT-SUN 766 Ridgeway St. FRI-SAT-SUN 3007 Sandalwood Ave. FRI-SAT-SUN furniture, housewares, linens 350 Shasta SAT tools, tools, tools, household goodies, furniture, dishes 524 B Shasta FRI-SAT-SUN collectibles, household, clothes, electrons

art, chairs, household goods

498 Sicily St.

vintage items plus much more

SAT

765 Sierra Ct. FRI-SAT-SUN Joe Montana stuff, antique mahogany desk

INN AT MORRO BAY 60 State Park Rd.

dishware, misc decorations

SAT-SUN

MARITIME MUSEUM OF MB

60 State Park Rd. SAT-SUN Maritime/Boating-related & Beachy Decor

1900 Sunset Ave. FRI-SAT 246 Surf St. SAT 2140 Sunset Ave. SAT-SUN oak table, chairs, kayak, christmas misc 233 #24 Surf St. FRI-SAT-SUN 361 Trinidad St. FRI-SAT 429 Tulare St. FRI-SAT Multi family -Lots of good stuff 190 Verdon FRI-SAT-SUN furniture, new kithen aid, maytag, antiques 1107 West Ave. SAT-SUN clothes, dishes, sm items, books & misc 1172 West Ave. SAT Tools-Honduras Mahogany-baker rack-XX waders 175 Whidbey St. FRI coins, jewelry, LPs, tools, outdoor gear, antiques 498 Yerba Buena FRI-SAT-SUN multi family, succulent and cactus in pots 409 Zanzibar FRI-SAT-SUN 585 Zanzibar SAT

Morro Bay Thrift Stores

M B Blvd: 730 Achievement House 410 Castaways 655 Foxy’s Thrift 231 Jennifers Unique Boutique 257 Revolve 480 St Timothy’s Fabulous Finds 655 Second Treasures 400 Threads Main St: 859 Guerilla Gardening Club 875 Karma Sunshine Qunintana: 335 The Good Flea

After Yard Sale APRIL 10 -14

RECYCLE and reduce landfill Morro Bay Garbage Co.’s Clean Up Week follows each Yard Sale weekend, they will pick up 12 extra bags of trash for FREE and any electronics or large items over 75 pounds or larger than 4 X 4 for only $10 each.

You must call to schedule the pickup of large items

528-7430


Central Coast Life

March 23 - April 5, 2017

A Simple Spring Cleaning Checklist

I

t’s the time of year to roll up your sleeves and do some spring cleaning. Experts point out that it’s helpful to streamline the tools you use to do the job and the tasks you seek to accomplish.

cleanser’s nozzle to spray and generously cover the can. Wipe or brush any areas that have any residue. Rinse thoroughly with clean water.

• Showers, tubs and tile: Use your cleaning agent at full strength and generously spray surfaces directly. Allow it to penetrate the soap scum for up to two minutes. Do not allow to dry. Wipe away with a coarse sponge or cloth. Rinse thoroughly with clean water.

“An all-purpose cleaner and a tough degreasing agent can be used in so many areas of the home,” says Jeff Devlin, a licensed contractor who’s appeared on several home improvement television shows. Devlin’s first tip: look to reduce the number of products in your cleaning arsenal. “Along with high-quality sprays and cloths, I use one all-purpose cleaner that also contains degreasing ingredients.”

• Toilets: Let’s face it. This isn’t anyone’s favorite job but it has to be done. Turn that nozzle to spray and generously spray the outside of the toilet. Wipe clean with a paper towel, then give a quick rinse.

Devlin, along with Mean Green and its line of heavy-duty, all-purpose cleaners offer these different strategies for critical areas of your home. • Stove and range hoods: While you should be cleaning these areas regularly after food preparation, take this opportunity to conduct a more thorough cleaning. Spray cleaner directly on the mess for up to two minutes. Wipe clean with a sponge or cloth. Then rinse thoroughly with clean water. • Sinks and countertops: Sinks and countertops can be a trap for food, grease, grime and soap scum. Generously spray non-porous surfaces with your cleaner then rinse with clean water.

1RZ 6HUYLQJ Gluten-Free Specialty Waffles & Almond Milk Soft Serve!

• Stove exhaust filter: The grease buildup that collects on the stove’s exhaust filter can be a tough nut to crack. In a sink basin, mix 8 ounces of a concentrated multisurface cleaner and 1 gallon of hot water and submerge the filter. Place the filter in a sink or dishpan and pour in concentrated cleaner to cover. Allow the filter to soak for 30 minutes. Drain the dishpan and rinse thoroughly with hot water.

• Floors: Give your floors a mopping. Mix 4 ounces of cleaning solution with 1 gallon of warm water. Apply with mop or sponge. • Garbage cans and diaper pails: Bags often leak nastiness into the bottom of the garbage can, which can easily be missed when quickly replacing the bag. Turn your

• Patio: For patios, outdoor furniture, concrete, vinyl fences and siding, use the same cleaner outdoors: simply spray, then wipe clean with a cloth or sponge and rinse surfaces with clean water. While you’re at it, consider removing grease and grime from tools, engine parts, tires, sports gear and lawn equipment.

For efficiency, consider cleaning solutions that don’t require pre-cleaning, such as Mean Green Super Strength Cleaner & Degreaser, the strongest all-purpose cleaner available. More tips for getting your spring to-dos completed can be found at meangreendegreaser.com.

SAVE $300 on comfort sleepers

FREE FRISBEE!

With the purchase of every waffle the entire month of April! Also recieve complimentary coffee, tea, hot cocoa and a side of frozen yogurt or almond lmo moond milk mi with every waffle!

ITS BEAUTY WELCOMES YOU NIGHT AND DAY. ITS COMFORT ENTICES GUESTS TO STAY. No bars. No springs. No sagging. Simply glorious sleep.

BOARD GAMES & HOOLA HOOPS!

Like us on

SAVE $300 ON COMFORT SLEEPERS AND $100 ON ACCOMPANYING STATIONARY PIECES MARCH 3 THROUGH APRIL 4, 2017

At “The Gathering Place”: 307 Morro M BBay Bl Blvd, d Morro M BBay

(805) 704-YUMM (9866) Frozen Yogurt & Sorbet with Live Culture & Probiotics | Old-Fashioned Waffle Specialties

Market your upscale Home & Garden business to San Luis Obispo County twice a year. Be among the first of local businesses to showcase your products and/ or services in this exclusive magazine! Published each Spring & Fall, giving you the best position to display the seasonal trends! 10,000 distributed countywide. contact us at 543-6397

748 Marsh St. @Garden St. • Downtown SLO 805.541.8500 • SanLuisTraditions.com

Another quality publication from Simply Clear Marketing & Media

livinglavishlymag.com


March 23 - April 5, 2017

• Central Coast Life

Hail Hail to the Father of Rock ‘n’ Roll Good to be King By King Harris

I

met the legendary Chuck Berry three times in my rock ‘n’ roll life. All three occasions were at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco in the mid to late ‘60s after his performances with pick-up bands, which never were anywhere near the caliber of his studio band in Chicago. But I didn’t care. It was worth experiencing his showmanship and reliving his Gibson guitar twang along with his incredible lyrics. I got to thank him in person for all the memories right after his shows when he scooted over to the bar to collect his payments. Chuck was a teenager’s dream but also an astute businessman. He didn’t go for too much monkey business: “Workin’ in the fillin’ station, too many tasks Wipe the windows, check the tires, check the oil, dollar gas Uh-uh, too much monkey business, too much monkey business I don’t want your botheration, go away, leave me be Too much monkey business for me.” No other songwriter could come up with a word like “botheration,” or for that matter, “motivatin:” “Maybelline, why can’t you be true Oh Maybelline, why can’t you be true You’ve started back doin’ the things you used to do As I was motivatin’ over the hill I saw Maybelline in a Coup de Ville A Cadillac a rollin’ on the open road Nothin’ will outrun my V8 Ford The Cadillac doin’ about ninety-five Bumper to bumper, rollin’ side by side Maybelline why can’t you be true Oh Maybelline, why can’t you be true You’ve started back doin’ the things you used to do.” Maybelline was Chuck’s first hit in 1955. It was originally a country western tune called “Ida Red.” But you’d never know it, not after Chuck added his rhythm and blues guitar to the mix. Most of his fans thought he was white. Far from it: “Way back in history three thousand years In fact ever since the world began There’s been a whole lot of good women sheddin’ tears For a brown-eyed handsome man It’s a lot of trouble was brown-eyed handsome man.” Chuck even wrote a song about himself: “Deep down in Louisiana close to New Orleans, Way back up in the woods among the evergreens There stood a log cabin made of earth and wood,

Where lived a country boy named Johnny B. Goode Who never ever learned to read or write so well, But he could play a guitar just like a ringin’ a bell. Go, Go Johnny, go, go, go, Johnny B. Goode… His mother told him, “Someday you will be a man, And you will be the leader of a big ol’ band. Many people coming from miles around To hear you play your music when the sun go down. Maybe someday your name will be in lights Saying ‘Johnny B. Goode tonight’.” Chuck Berry was the pioneer of rock ‘n’ roll. He influenced every band from the Rolling Stones to the Beatles, even the Beach Boys. Need proof? “I’m gonna write a little letter, gonna mail it to my local DJ It’s a rockin’ rhythm record I want my jockey to play Roll Over Beethoven, I gotta hear it again today You know, my temperature’s risin’ and the jukebox blows a fuse My heart’s beatin’ rhythm and my soul keeps on singin’ the blues Roll over Beethoven and tell Tchaikovsky the news.” Or: “Just let me hear some of that Rock And Roll Music, Any old way you choose it; It’s got a back beat, you can’t lose it, Any old time you use it. It’s gotta be Rock And Roll Music, If you want to dance with me, If you want to dance with me. I’ve got no kick against modern jazz, Unless they try to play it too darn fast; And change the beauty of the melody, Until they sounded like a symphony, That’s why I go for that Rock And Roll Music…” Elvis may have been the heartthrob of the ‘50s, but Chuck Berry was the master. No matter what part of the country you came from, it was easy to relate: “They’re really rockin’ in Boston in Pittsburgh, Pa. Deep in the heart of Texas and round the ‘Frisco Bay, all over St. Louis and down in New Orleans. All the cats wanna dance with Sweet Little Sixteen. Sweet Little Sixteen she’s just got to have about half a million famed autographs. Her wallet filled with pictures she gets them one by one. Becomes so excited watch her, look at her run. All the cats wanna dance with Sweet Little Sixteen.” Chuck Berry died at the age of 90 on March 18, 2017. I am thankful for seeing him perform his famous duck walk at the Fillmore, and watching him pick up his well-deserved pay. I told him he should get more. He really was Johnnie B. Goode.

WŝƐŵŽ ĞĂĐŚ ŚĂŵďĞƌ ŽĨ ŽŵŵĞƌĐĞ ƉƌĞƐĞŶƚƐ

Holland & the Heart of Europe Explorer featuring Amsterdam, Bruges & 7 Nights at One Hotel 9 Days

November 1, 2017

Highlights ͻϳ EŝŐŚƚƐ ŝŶ sĂůŬĞŶďƵƌŐ͕ ƚŚĞ EĞƚŚĞƌůĂŶĚƐ ͻtŝŶĚŵŝůůƐ Θ tŽŽĚĞŶ ^ŚŽĞƐ sŝƐŝƚ ͻdŚƌĞĞ ŽƵŶƚƌLJ dŽƵƌ ͲDŽŶƐĐŚĂƵ͕ 'ĞƌŵĂŶLJ Ͳ,ĞŶƌŝ ŚĂƉĞůůĞ h͘^͘ ĞŵĞƚĞƌLJ͕ ĞůŐŝƵŵ -Maastrict, the Netherlands ͻ ůĞƌǀĂƵdž͕ >ƵdžĞŵďŽƵƌŐ ͻ ĂƐƚŽŐŶĞ ,ŝƐƚŽƌŝĐĂů ĞŶƚĞƌ ͻDĂƌĚĂƐƐŽŶ >ŝďĞƌƚLJ DĞŵŽƌŝĂů ͻ ƌƵŐĞƐ ŝƚLJ dŽƵƌ ͻ ƌƵŐĞƐ ĂŶĂů ƌƵŝƐĞ ͻ ŵƐƚĞƌĚĂŵ ŝƚLJ dŽƵƌ ͻ ŵƐƚĞƌĚĂŵ ĂŶĂů ƌƵŝƐĞ

Inclusions ͻZŽƵŶĚƚƌŝƉ ŝƌĨĂƌĞ &ƌŽŵ >ŽƐ ŶŐĞůĞƐ ;> yͿ ͻ/Ŷƚ͛ů ŝƌ ĞƉĂƌƚƵƌĞ dĂdžĞƐͬ&ƵĞů ^ƵƌĐŚĂƌŐĞƐ ͻϭϬ DĞĂůƐ͗ ϳ Ͳ ƌĞĂŬĨĂƐƚƐ Θ ϯ Ͳ ŝŶŶĞƌƐ ͻWƌŽĨĞƐƐŝŽŶĂů dŽƵƌ ŝƌĞĐƚŽƌ ͻDŽƚŽƌĐŽĂĐŚ dƌĂŶƐƉŽƌƚĂƟŽŶ ͻ ĚŵŝƐƐŝŽŶƐ ƉĞƌ /ƟŶĞƌĂƌLJ ͻ ŽŵƉƌĞŚĞŶƐŝǀĞ ^ŝŐŚƚƐĞĞŝŶŐ ͻ ĂŐŐĂŐĞ ,ĂŶĚůŝŶŐ

Tour Rates

Booking Discount - Save $200 per couple!*

ŽŽŬŝŶŐ ŝƐĐŽƵŶƚΎ͗ ΨϮ͕ϵϱϬ ƉƉ ĚŽƵďůĞ ZĞŐƵůĂƌ ZĂƚĞ͗ Ψϯ͕ϬϱϬ ƉƉ ĚŽƵďůĞ ^ŝŶŐůĞ ^ƵƉƉůĞŵĞŶƚ͗ нΨϱϬϬ Ύ^ĞĞ ĨƵůů ƚŽƵƌ ŇLJĞƌ ĨŽƌ ŽŽŬŝŶŐ ŝƐĐŽƵŶƚ ĚĞƚĂŝůƐ

ŽŶƚĂĐƚ /ŶĨŽƌŵĂƟŽŶ WŝƐŵŽ ĞĂĐŚ ŚĂŵďĞƌ ŽĨ ŽŵŵĞƌĐĞ ͻ ƩŶ͗ ZŽĐŚĞůůĞ ĞŶƚŽ ϱϴϭ ŽůůŝǀĞƌ ^ƚƌĞĞƚ ͻ WŝƐŵŽ ĞĂĐŚ͕ ϵϯϰϰϵ ;ϴϬϱͿ ϳϳϯͲϰϯϴϮ ͻ ŵĂŝů͗ ZŽĐŚĞůůĞΛƉŝƐŵŽĐŚĂŵďĞƌ͘ĐŽŵ

Rotary Club of San Luis Obispo presents

FAMILY FUN EVENT! TO RAISE MONEY FOR LOCAL SCHOLARSHIPS!

spaghetti western sATURDAY • maRCH 25th • 5•30 - 8•00pm Vet’s Hall • 801 Grand Ave • San Luis Obispo

$

25 ADULTS

KIDS UNDER 12 EAT FREE!

CAFEROMAPASTA & TOP SIRLOIN BBQ Sweet Shoppe

KIDS CARNIVAL GAMES DOOR PRIZES • CAKE WALK WESTERN MOVIES SILENT AUCTION

Jailhouse Selfie

TICKETS AT : www.slorotary.org


HEAR YOUR SOIL SING AGAIN! Restore Soil Health Increase Water Holding Capacity Have Healthier Plants Reduce Run-off Reduce the need for amendments Real world solutions, for bigger picture challenges.

805.235.0666 Info@soilharmonics.com

www.soilharmonics.com

C A L P O LY E X T E N D E D E D BESTSELLERS & STORYTELLERS WRITER’S PROGRAM

WRITING YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD Saturday, 4/1/17, 9 a.m. - noon

CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK WRITING I Thursdays, 4/13/17–5/11/17, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.

GET PUBLISHED NOW Saturday, 4/29/17, 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.

FEATURE WRITING Tuesdays, 5/2/17–5/23/17, 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

CHILDREN’S PICTURE BOOK WRITING II

Spring Rolls with Nuoc Cham & Spicy Peanut Sauce Yield: 8 rolls

Ingredients

Thursdays, 5/18/17–6/15/17, 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.

ENROLL ONLINE

extended.calpoly.edu

8 jumbo shrimp, peeled and deveined 1 cup white wine 1 bay leaf juice from ½ lime ½ tablespoon kosher salt 2 ounces thin rice vermicelli ½ cup carrots, thin julienne ½ cup red bell pepper, thin julienne ½ cup cucumber (peeled & seeded), thin julienne 4 purple radishes, thin julienne 1 tablespoon rice vinegar 1 teaspoon soy sauce 18-24 mint leaves 1/3 cup cilantro leaves 16 leaves baby red lettuce or romaine 8 large round rice paper wrappers www.delish-dish.com


CELEBRATE

Women In Business APRIL 2017

Recognize local women who make a difference, Notable Women in our Community, or a Valuable Member of your Team in our Annual Women in Business Section!

All Ads will run in the SLO City News, Bay News and Coast News, in full color on April 6th & 20th.

¼ - $350 ½ - $640 Call 543-6397 to reserve space today!

805.543.6397 615 Clarion Court #2 • San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

simplyclearmarketing.com

A smile is the universal welcome. Ò» Ò»

:PVS /FX :FBS T 3FTPMVUJPOT 4UBSU 5PEBZ Find whole body wellness in a full service women’s health club take advantage of our

%BZT GPS New Member Trial Offer

$)*-% $"3& "7"*-"#-& +"/6"3:

NEW PATIENTS WELCOME

•

EVENING HOURS AVAILABLE

2017

Ryan M. Ross, DDS | Michael Roberts, DDS ˆˆŒ‹Œ T T

(805)541-5800

•

RYANROSSDDS.COM

t #SPBE 4U 4-0 t .BSJHPME $FOUFS JOGP!FRDMVCT DPN t FRDMVCT DPN .JMJUBSZ TUVEFOU BOE TFOJPS EJTDPVOUT BWBJMBCMF


NEW LOCATION Oceano Smog Test Center

Just Sold

ARD 277750

Charming 2 bd 2 bath beach cottage in Morrro Bay$ ........................ 695,000 Marketing Your Home For All It’s Worth

$40.00

“Let me provide you the same professional and friendly service I did for your Central Coast Neighbor.”

2000 AND NEWER

CHECK PRICE FOR OLDER VEHICLE Motorhomes & vans call for pricing

All smog tests come with 1 free retest upon failure INCLUDES CERTIFICATE

Bob Bennett, Broker Associate bob@horizoncentralcoast | horizioncentralcoast.com BRE #01875031

(805) 202 6390 Wedding Invitations, Accessories & Gifts

From “Black Tie Affair” to “ Rustic Country Chic”

Custom Invitations | Guest Books | Toasting Goblets | Jewelry | Frames

Jewelry | Women’s & Men’s Accessories | Candles & Spa | Home & Garden Decor Stationery | Books | Greeting Cards | Seasonal Gifts & Decor | Collectibles & More!

FREE! SAVE THE DATE CARDS 805.489.1162

with a qualifying wedding invitation order.

SLO’s Exclusive

Jewelry Dealer

See store for complete details. Expires 6/30/17.

110 1/2 E Branch St, Arroyo Grande | villagepapery.com

March 23 - April 5, 2017

By Ruth Starr

S

1180 PIKE LANE SUITE 3 Oceano, CA 93445

The Train Trip

In 6 Days At Full Price

(805) 481-7070

CHECK US OUT ON

Central Coast Life

itting at the railway station awaiting the next train, I notice there are not many people around. My life is in turmoil, divorced a few months ago, and not knowing what is going to happen next. First time being all alone. I begin to daydream another life for myself… At the next stop, there is a guy waiting for me. He is smartly dressed in cowboy boots, Levis, flannel shirt, gray- streaked hair, and he has a small, neat beard. I know this man is meant for me. I see us on a ranch with a few head of cattle, goats, chickens, milk cow, dogs, and mouser cats. I am in my late thirties, so I still have time for a few children. Our sprawling house will have plenty of room for the kids with a space of my own where I can pursue my writing and other hobbies. His name is Mitch. I am so in love with him. I will do all the things I couldn’t manage in my former marriage. Learn how to cook, manage the money, keep a clean home, and help take care of the animals and, there will be a lot of loving. Glancing at the seat next to me, I notice a piece of paper with some writing on it. What could this be? I look around, but no one is near that seat. I’m compelled to pick up the paper and read the message with a phone number: “Text me at this number; I’ll be waiting for you.” My dream is so enticing, I get back into it. Mitch and I are taking a vacation to Europe. We are ecstatic on the plane, making plans for places to visit. Can’t get the message out of my mind, wondering what would happen if I text that number. My life has to change. I take my phone out of my bag and, knowing it is risky, I send a text to the number. Sweat is dripping down my face. What will I say? “It’s me, Barb. I’m getting off at the next station,” I text. Doesn’t make sense, but I’m doing it. “I’ll be waiting for you,” states the responding message. This is crazy. I made this whole thing up and now I’m going to have to face it. It’s getting weird. Maybe early dementia is in my brain. That’s why Tom left me. No, he said I never cooked one decent meal. But I was going to learn. The train is in the station. I need to get on board. Panic. Hard to breathe. Do I look okay? I don’t remember what

AC L POLY S T A E M Text MEAT to 56955 to join our VIP CLUB!

clothes I put on this morning. Could my Mitch be waiting for me at the next stop? I can just keep riding and go somewhere else. “All aboard, all aboard,” the conductor cries. I force myself onto the train, find an empty seat. What am I doing? Fortunately the train is slow- moving so I have some time before the next stop. I allow myself to work on my dream a little longer. Time is passing when the conductor calls, “Santa Barbara! All off for Santa Barbara.” Looking out the door, I see a man on the platform most likely waiting for someone. I get off the train and walk toward him. He has a big smile, pulls me to him in a hug, and says, “Hi, Barb, I’ve been waiting for you.” “Is your name Mitch?” Ruth Starr has lived in SLO for 20 years near both of her children. She is an ardent storyteller, loves dogs, and has had many stories about people in this area published locally over the years. Ruth is a member of SLO Nightwriters, for writers at all levels in all genres. Find them online at slonightwriters.org.

805-900-6000 435 First St . Avila Beach www.7svr.com

MEAT THE BEGINNING OF THE

PERFECT BBQ STEAKS, CHOPS, SAUSAGE, SMOKED MEATS & MANY OTHER INNOVATIVE CUTS! Carefully aged, Cal Poly processed USDA inspected.

805-756-2114 VISIT OUR ON-CAMPUS MEAT MARKET– Open Th-Fri 12-5pm & Sat 10-2pm Turn on Stenner Creek Rd. Off of Hwy 1 at the end of the road in Bldg 155


March 23 - April 5, 2017

• Central Coast Life

Cal Poly Player Profile Michael Sanderson

M

i c h a e l Sanderson is expected to be Cal Poly’s starting third baseman in his final season as a Mustang. As of March 9, Sanderson has played in all 69 games since coming to Cal Poly and has started all 69 at third base. In 2017, he has started all 12 games and is hitting .262 through March 9 with three doubles, one triple and three RBI. His two sacrifice bunts leads the team. Sanderson started all 57 games in 2016, at third base, as a junior in his first season at Cal Poly. He was a .296 hitter with 12 doubles and one triple en route to second-team All-Big West Conference honors. He knocked in 33 runs, second most on the team. He had 15 multiple-hit games, including four-hit game against San Francisco, and eight multiple-RBI contests, knocking in three in that San Francisco game with a double and triple. Sanderson had an eight-game hitting streak in early April. He walked 29 times for an on-base percentage of .381. He went 7-for-13 with three RBI in UC Riverside series. Sanderson hit .309 against right-handers and .314 in night games. He did not play summer ball. Sanderson attended Feather River Community and was a .337 hitter as a freshman and .344 as a sophomore. In the two seasons combined hit he 24 doubles, three triples, a pair of home runs and knocked in 62 runs, including 38 as a sophomore. Twice, Sanderson earned All-Golden Valley Conference honors and led Golden Eagles to a pair of Golden Valley Conference titles. In High School Sanderson was a .408

Experience Holistic Physical Therapy

“My hand and neck pain has decreased considerably. The exercises in therapy and practiced at home are helping me improve my posture and body mechanics. ‘Hands-on’ therapy and low level lasers are very helpful.� –Barbara, SLO

hitter in three varsity seasons under head coach Ron Souza at Pleasant Valley High School in Chico. He hit .472 as a senior with four doubles, three triples, a pair of home runs and 23 RBI with just four strikeouts in 88 plate appearances. He was first-team AllEastern League and first-team All-CIFNorthern Section honors at third base. Sanderson helped the Vikings to 22-8 record, second-place Eastern League finish and a spot in the semifinal round of the CIF-Northern Section Division I playoffs. Sanderson hit .389 as a junior with nine doubles, two home runs and 22 RBI. Sanderson is the son of Scott Sanderson and Olga Wilkinson. His father is a San Luis Obispo High School graduate and played football at Utah. His grandfather Jim Sanderson was Cal Poly head football coach from 1982-87. He has one brother, James. Sanderson was born December 27, 1994, in Chico, Calif. and is majoring in sociology.

Pavers installed by

Chaparral

FREE CONSULT TUESDAYS Call to make your appointment now

805-543-5100

www.spiritwindstherapy.com 1422 Monterey St. at California San Luis Obispo, 93401 Major Insurance Accepted

TM

Michele i h l S S. JJang

Physical Therapist/Owner 21 Years Experience

Steve J. Murphy with Century 21 Hometown

" ! ! " YOUR HOMETOWN REAL ESTATE EXPERT

FEATURED PROPERTY COMING SOON! 4-Plex, Walk to downtown Morro Bay. Call for details! Steve

J. Murphy Cell: (805) 550-1234 " " ! St. ! Suite 599 Higuera A !

" San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

www.SloHomeExpert.com


Central Coast Life

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Books Make Great Easter Gifts for Kids FISH FRY FRIDAYS Every Friday Night

New England Clam Chowder Cup $4 - Bowl $8 • Mixed Greens -$6 Hazelnuts and Dried Cherries, Cucumber, Tomato, & Balsamic Vinaigrette Soup -$6 Butternut squash bisque with cinnamon-spice cream Buffalo Style or Sweet & Sour Honey Mustard Chicken Wings -$7 (Served with Picked Vegetables and Blue Cheese OR Ranch Dressing) Crispy Artichokes-$7 with Lemon-caper Aioli Beer Battered Fish & Chips -$15 Beer battered Alaskan Cod w/Fries, House Made Cole Slaw & tartar sauce Grilled chicken breast $18 Garlic mashers, vegetables, tomato coulis, garlic bread Carrot cake $6 Homemade Ice Cream Sandwich with Mixed Berry Compote - $6 Additional Menu Items Available Menu & pricing subject to change.

SURVEY OF RELIGIONS

2017 Blacklake Club Card Membership Program Cost of the membership is only $79 per calendar year! Only $59 if you are 62+ years of age.

For more information call 805-343-1214 x400 or go to www.blacklake.com.

Friday, March 24th 6:30PM Morro Bay Objective Overview of 5 Top World Religions; Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Animism, & Christianity. Valuable information and resources for anyone who is curious or searching for a spiritual connection.

1490 GOLF COURSE LN., NIPOMO

805-343-1214 BLACKLAKE.COM

Hosted by North Morro Church 330 Panay Street, Morro Bay 805-286-8440

Northmorro.church/events

F

illing Easter baskets for the kids? Think beyond the typical sweets and treats and consider including books as

well.

“All kids love books, even if they’re too little to read. For babies and toddlers, choose kid-sized books full of bright photos that they will love looking at again and again. There’s so much research showing how important reading is for a child’s development. You can build on it by making the experience fun for parents and their children,” says Rachel Barry, vice president of marketing and publicity at DK, a publisher of adult and children’s books. This Easter, consider seasonal selections.

these

Fun at the Farm Cushioned, bumpy and shiny pages encourage sensory development, language skills and early reading skills. As part of DK’s Touch and Feel Series, “Really Feely: Farm” introduces babies and toddlers to a favorite pre-school subject: farm animals, including fluffy ducklings, woolly sheep, and a bristly pig. Learning Adventure Help build your baby’s identification and language skills. In “100 First Words,” photography and labels introduce primary concepts like shapes, colors and animals, and encourage pointing,

naming, and talking. Favorite Animals A classic board book, “Baby Touch & Feel: Animals,” helps children develop their knowledge of animals while increasing the use of their senses. Babies will meet puppies, kittens, penguins and other animals throughout the pages of this book that features photographs and touch-and-feel textures. Pop-Up Surprises For children who love farm animals, consider an interactive book featuring flaps, touch-andfeel textures and incredible popout surprises. Promoting memory, imagination and parent-and-child interaction, “Pop-Up Peekaboo: Farm” enhances the reading experience. Feel the Love Celebrate love and promote sensory development and early language skills with this USA Today Bestseller, “Baby Touch & Feel: I Love You,” which features soft bunnies, fuzzy teddy bears, sparkly hearts and more. More kids’ books for Easter can be found at PenguinRandomHouse.com. To make sure your Easter baskets include gifts that can be enjoyed beyond the holiday, include books that will become young readers’ alltime favorites. (StatePoint)


Entertainment

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Pianist Mimi Blais returns to the Central Coast for a house concert set for 7-9:30 p.m. Thursday, March 23 in the Los Osos home of Carol and Stanley Stern. Cost is a $20 donation at the door (make checks payable to Mimi Blais). Call the Sterns at 528-6557 or email to: Sstern3126@AOL.com for reservations. Trained as a classical pianist, Blais has performed across the U.S., Europe and Canada playing a mix of Ragtime, jazz, folk, blues and classical. Her performances have been called masterful, energetic, poetic, witty and romantic, eliciting comparisons with the late great Victor Borge.

The Basin Street Regulars present Hot Swingin’ Jazz featuring the Midnight Rose Jazz Band and the Cabrillo High School Jazz Band at the Pismo Vet’s Building from 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 26. Jam session starts at 11 a.m. (bring your instrument and join in). Food, drinks, and dance floor available. Vet’s Building 780 Bello Street, Pismo 93449. For more information call 805-481-7840 or go to www.pismojazz.com, or email pismojazz2015@gmail.com.

Traveling singer-songwriter, Jim Scott, brings his “Gather the Spirit,” inspirational concert to build, mend and heal our community to SLO’s Unitarian Universalist Fellowship at 7 p.m. Friday, March 31. Tickets are $10 general and $5 students and available online at: uuslo.org or at the door. The UUF is located at 2201 Lawton Ave. Call (805) 439-0188.

Folk music artists will gather to celebrate one of their own when local ensembles perform the music of Los Osos’ Sidney Willson Young from 2-4 p.m. Sunday, March 26 at Coalesce Bookstore Chapel, 845 Main St., Morro Bay. The show features members of The Belles, Three Sheets to the Wind, and the Coffee Horze and will be joined by special guests, Steve Watt of the Thunder Canyon String Band, Elita Chaffin of Dovetail, Judi Brown of the Gillie Wheesels, and Bob Liepman of Bob & Wendy, and Shadowlands.

United Way of SLO County has a couple of evening parties featuring Grammy Award winner Louie Ortega and Leslie McKinley and set for March 26 and April 9 in South County. Louie & Leslie will play from 2-5 p.m. Sunday March, 26 at Fin’s Seafood Restaurant, 25 W Grand Ave., in Grover Beach. Tickets are $50 a person with food by Fin’s and wines by Opolo. There will also be a silent auction. From 5-8 p.m. Sunday, April 9 they will perform a “rooftop soiree,” under the stars and a full moon on the roof deck at Sea Crest Ocean Front Hotel, 2241 Price St., Pismo Beach. Fin’s will also cater

this event. Tickets are also $50 and available online at: www.unitedwayslo. org/partieswithapurpose.

The Basin Street Regulars’ next “Hot Swingin’ Jazz Show” is set for 1-4:30 p.m. Sunday, March 26 at the Pismo Beach Vet’s Hall, 780 Bello St. The Midnight Rose Band headlines with special guests the Cabrillo High School Jazz Band and the regular pickers and players of Basin Street Regulars. Cost at the door is $5 kids, and $10 others, or see: www.pismojazz.com. The 19-piece Cabrillo HS Band is making its fifth straight annual performance with BSR in Pismo Beach and will play between sets of Midnight Rose. The Cabrillo kids have been rehearsing every morning before school for the past 3 months and have their big Spring Concert scheduled for May 20. For more information call (805) 481-7840 or see: www.pismojazz.com. Singer-songwriter Amber Cross returns to the Red Barn Community Concert Series, at 6 p.m. Saturday, April 1, at the Red Barn, located in the South Bay Community Park, corner of LOVR and Palisades Avenue. Cost is $20 at the door and there’s a potluck supper starting at 5 p.m. Bring a dish to share, place settings and BYOB. Cross returns for a “soft release” of her newest album, “Savage On The Downhill.” Cross’ music has been described as “raw, powerful, old-time mountain vocal alchemy rarely heard west of the Rockies,” by the San Francisco Folk Music Society. Cross will play selections from her new release and favorites from her first album, “You Can Come In.” She will be accompanied by Gary Arcemont and James Moore, playing fiddle, mandolin, harmonica, guitar, banjo and standup bass. See: www.ambercrossmusic. com for more on Cross’ music. Photo courtesy Barry Goyette

Multi-Grammy Award winner, trumpeter, Chris Botti, will play the Performing Arts Center at Cal Poly at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 5. Tickets range from $45 - $85 and available at the PAC Box Office, Mondays– Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m. Call (805) 756-4849 or order online at: www. calpolyarts.org. For over two decades, Botti has amassed a spectacular variety of honors, and become the nation’s largest-selling instrumental jazz artist. Botti’s mesmerizing performances with a stunning array of legends such as Sting, Barbra Streisand, Tony Bennett, Yo-Yo Ma, Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon and Andrea Bocelli have cemented his place as one of the most brilliant and inspiring forces of the contemporary music scene.

Paso Robles Youth Arts Foundation is hosting a shrimp boil and barbecue fundraiser set for 4-7 p.m. Saturday, April 8, at the historic

• Central Coast Life

Rolling Hills Ranch in San Miguel. Located at 7275 Cross Canyons Rd., the Rolling Hills Ranch is a bucolic setting in a charming 130-year-old barn and vineyard setting. Tickets are $65 per person or $500 for a table of eight, and are available at Brown Paper Tickets, see: http://shrimpboil2017.bpt.me, or call (805) 238-5825 Ext. 15. Reserve tickets before by April 1. Enjoy a New Orleans-style feast of Cajun shrimp boil, sausage, steak, sourdough bread, salad and dessert. One complementary drink, with beer and wine available for purchase. The event includes a live auction, raffle, and student performances, with proceeds benefiting the Arts Foundation’s free Visual & Performing Arts Program, which serves 400 students per quarter in 50 classes a week in art, music, voice, dance, theatre, video production, creative writing, and more. See: www.pryaf.org. for more on the Foundation.

Acclaimed Nashville singersongwriter, Sarah Darling, will perform at 7 p.m. Friday, March 24 at Eberle Winery, 3810 Hwy 46, Paso Robles. Darling recently released a critically-acclaimed third album, Dream Country, available for streaming via Soundcloud or Spotify. Her previous albums garnered a half-million downloads worldwide and her top hit, Home to Me, lead to performances on Conan O’Brien, Fox & Friends, and opening gigs for artists like Carrie Underwood and Kacey Musgraves.

WHERE THE PARTY NEVER ENDS!

THU 3/23

5:00PM -9:00 9:00PM -1:00

FRI 3/24

9PM1:30

DJ CAMOTE JAWZ KARAOKE

THREE FOR ALL

FRI-$5 COVER

SAT 3/25

3:00PM -6:00

SUN 3/26

3:00PM -7:30 9:00PM -1:30

LIVE MUSIC TOMMY LEE

MON 3/27

7:30PM M -11:30

TOMMY LEE

9:00PM -2:00

SOUNDHOUSE THE HITMEN

SAT-$5 COVER

TUE 7:30PM THE 3/28 -11:30 SANTASTICS WED 7:30PM THE 3/29 -11:30 SANTASTICS THU 3/30

5:00PM -9:00 9:00PM -1:00

DJ CAMOTE

FRI 3/31

9PM1:30

RUMBLE

SAT 4/1

3:00PM -7:30 9:00PM -1:30

SUN 4/2

3:00PM -7:30 9:00PM -1:30

LIVE MUSIC LIVE MUSIC

MON 4/3

7:30PM -11:30

LIVE MUSIC

TUE 4/4

7:30PM -11:30

LIVE MUSIC

WED 4/5

7:30PM -11:30 LIVE

JAWZ KARAOKE

FRI-$5 COVER

Cal Poly’s Student Opera Theatre presents Gilbert and Sullivan’s, hilarious operetta, “The Pirates of Penzance,” at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, April 7-8, in the Spanos Theatre at Cal Poly. Tickets are $14 for the public and $9 for students. Pricing includes all fees and parking. Get tickets at the PAC Box Office from noon-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Order by phone at 756-4849. Student Opera Theatre director and music faculty member, Jacalyn Kreitzer, said the operetta was, “a sublime and hilarious marriage of clever verse and beautiful music.” Stars are: Chris Wall as Frederick; Corey Hable as the Major-General; Joshua Mueller and Chris Tusan as the conquering Pirate Kings; Liam Daley as Samuel; Hannah Littier and Samantha Foulk play the coy Mabel; Kelsey Ishimatsu-Jacobson and Lauren Hartog sing the woes of the aging Ruth; and Gabriela Crolla, Jill Gibson, Molly Gooch and Jennifer Jang in the roles of Edith, Isabel and Kate, the Major-General’s confused daughters. The performance is being dedicated to Poly Choral Director, Thomas Davies, who plans to retire at the end of the school year.

LIVE MUSIC LIVE MUSIC

SAT-$5 COVER

THU 4/6

5:00PM -9:00 9:00PM -1:00

MUSIC

DJ CAMOTE

JAWZ KARAOKE

Now Serving

SEXTANT WINES on Tap

(805) 773-1010 690 Cypress St., Pismo Beach www.harryspismobeach.com Open 10am-2am Daily


Central Coast Life

March 23 - April 5, 2017

Apple Farm — A Fine Dining Destination Spot Dinner & A Movie By Teri Bayus

A

n innovative trend by restaurants is having multitalented chefs on board and promoting them and their culinary skills. I witnessed a brilliant execution of this at the hands of those vivid owners of The Apple Farm in San Luis Obispo. The genius lies in two superbly talented chefs who are as diverse as their culinary offerings are wonderful. Chefs Steven Smeets and Willette Vey are creating a gastronomic destination spot at The Apple Farm, with some amazing dining experiences including winemaker dinners and a pastry case so filled with deliciousness, no one can pass by. Ladies first, so let’s start with Executive Pastry Chef, Willete Vey (Willie for short). A member of the staff at The Apple Farm for over 15 years, she is known as the pie princess, the cookie queen, and the maker of “the best darn biscuits in the world.” She has created hundreds of delectable and beautiful wedding cakes, won multiple contests with innovative recipes, and wowed pastry cravers. Her pies, cakes, muffins, cookies, and more are on display and for sale every day at The Apple Farm, but she lends her talents to the winemaker’s dinners. I, (actually, my husband the “Cookie Monster”) first discovered her years ago when she made a stout cake for a culinary competition. The Chocolate Dream Stout Cake is a daring combination of an Oatmeal Stout beer and cocoa, layered with an amazing coco-cream filling. Gary has declared

this the best chocolate in the world, so sweet Chef Willie made it for his birthday last week and he ate the entire cake. The Apple Farm has in its bakery the best morning concoction in the known universe — Willie’s biscuits. These are delicate pastry dough rolled with cinnamon, sugar, cayenne pepper, cheddar cheese and a ribbon of bacon twisted throughout, and then a hint of Rosemary. I dare you to each just one! We also love the coffee cake muffins, key lime pie, cheesecakes, apple tarts, and éclairs. Gary spends most of the month of December stalking her gingerbread cookies. Executive Chef Steven Smeets’ personal style has a strong emphasis on Mediterranean cuisine, with accents on fresh herbs, seafood, pasta, garlic, tomatoes, fresh vegetables, and a variety of fresh seasonal food items that range from the exotic to the everyday good ol’ down-home cooking. We had the fried chicken with a

twist. The chicken was pounded flat and then rolled around prosciutto and Gruyere cheese, dipped in eggs and battered, fried and cut like a log. It was served with mashed potatoes and fresh vegetables and was the table hit. Originally interested in gastronomy, Chef Smeets’ cooking style has evolved into using local, sustainable produce and meats served simply and beautifully, while staying true to their natural flavors — how a farmer would cook if he or she were a chef. This passion and dedication earned him a culinary scholarship to the California Culinary Academy in San Francisco. Chef Smeets has also been conjuring up winemaker dinners. Each month the backyard garden features a local boutique winery and a 7-course “farm-

to-table” dinner, all paired with the winery’s finest vintages. As the dinners focus around the wine, the chefs have the task of not only figuring out what dish would highlight which wine, but how to incorporate this dinner around their local vegetables and seasonal eating philosophy. The winemaker dinner schedule is Friday, May 26, featuring Villa San-Juliette Winery of San Miguel; Friday, June 30 with a special brew master dinner featuring Central Coast Brewing; and Friday, July 28 featuring the spectacular, Daou Vineyards of Paso Robles. Dinner starts at 6 p.m. Seats available for $75 a person plus tax and gratuity. You can call (805) 5442040 to reserve your seat at any of the upcoming dinners. At one pairing they offered up Meyer lemon ricotta raviolis with asparagus, spring peas, cherry tomatoes, California olive oil, and sprouting basil. Another standout dish was the braised short rib, made with the Cabernet, and smoked carrot purée along with other delectable offerings. These fantastic chefs are serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner at The Apple Farm, a diner’s destination paradise. Apple Farm is located at 2015 Monterey St., in San Luis Obispo; they are open daily for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Beauty and the Beast — Dazzling Visually, Musically, and Emotionally By Teri Bayus

T

heaters were made for the movies such as “Beauty and The Beast,” as it must be seen and experienced on the huge screen. With a production price tag of $160 million, this is the most expensive musical ever made. But it is the story telling that is the winner here, even with a known plot. With all the additional background stories, character developments, and new songs, it was perfect for me. Those additions made Belle and Beast’s love story even more believable. Emma Watson was a huge fan of the original, Beauty and The Beast. She released that she would be playing the role of Belle before it even went on record. She told her fans that her “6-year-old self is on the ceiling — heart bursting.” In this film, Belle is the inventor, instead of Maurice. The reason behind this is because Watson wanted Belle to get her own backstory, about why she is treated differently by the villagers. Even still, the movie highlight is the glamor. Belle’s ballroom gown required 3,000 feet of thread and over

12,000 designer hours to complete. It was accentuated with 2,160 Swarovski crystals. This is every girl’s princess dream. As a live-action remake of the much loved, classic, animated film, Beauty and the Beast lives up to the hype. Most of the songs from the animated version

are in the film and sound quite similar to those in the animated film. All this makes viewers nostalgic for the old film. The acting is what one would expect from such a huge cast. — Luke Evans as Gaston and Josh Gad as LeFou, are especially spectacular, as they add humor to their already well-developed characters. The songs and the music are prodigious, and live up to Disney standards. The cinematography is also pronounced, with long sweeping shots during the musical sequences. The shots of the setting and of the castle are amazing. No description can do justice to the

amazing design and the spectacular use of CGI. I was worried about what the Beast and the objects in the castle might look like in a live-action movie, but Disney outdid itself, which is easy to do with amazing imagination and an unlimited budget. The new characters add diversity as well as humor. As a princess movie with a lot of clichés in it, it’s awesome to see some variety. Alan Menken is a living miracle. He does things with a musical score and songs that defy emotions. The new songs are brilliant, especially Beast’s song of pain over losing Belle. This movie dazzled me visually, musically, and emotionally. Go see it on the big screen.


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

News

35

Election Laws Proposed

A

Southern California State Legislator wants to shore up the law with regards to election shenanigans. State Assemblyman, Matthew Harper (R-Huntington Beach), has put up four new laws — Assembly Bills 774777 — collectively called the “Protect our Votes” package, to fix “deficiencies in our state elections code.” Harper, vice-chair of the Elections Committee, said the package would protect California’s election system from foreign influences, increase information on school bonds, and toughen up penalties for voter fraud. “Improving the integrity and transparency of our elections is a priority,” Harper said. “These bills will improve our Democracy for all Californians and ensure that our elections system is fair.”

The package’s four bills are: • Assembly Bill 774 would limit foreign nationals from donating directly to campaigns; • Assembly Bill 775 would require bona fide delivery services to provide proof that completed ballots were given to them on or before Election Day; • Assembly Bill 776 would require school bond ballot descriptions to provide voters with the full costs of the bond; and, • Assembly Bill 777 would increase the penalties against people who fraudulently procure and/or vote with a vote-by-mail ballot.” Assemblyman Harper represents the 74th Assembly District, which includes the cities of Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine, Laguna Woods and Laguna Beach.

Police Warn About Jury Duty Scam

S

an Luis Obispo Police are warning the public of another phone scam going around pouncing on people’s fears of jury duty and besmirching the good name of the police. According to Sgt. Chad Pfarr, “In recent months the Police Department has received several complaints involving a common telephone scam. As part of this scam victims receive a call from a person portraying himself as law enforcement. “The caller typically tells the victim they missed jury duty, received a citation and now have a warrant for their arrest or talk about a family member who has been arrested and needs bail money. Victims are then directed to pay associated fines using Pay Pal or Green Dot cards.” There are several stinky aspects to this scam. Sgt. Pfarr pointed out that police departments and the courts “will never ask citizens to pay fines using this type of payment system nor will they seek payment over the phone.” Anyone who gets a call like is encouraged to call their local police

continued, from page 14

She’s been on the liver transplant “list” through Stanford Medical Center since her late 20s, she explains. The doctors were sure she would need a transplant within a couple of years, but “I took really good care of myself and was able to stretch it out, until now.” But she isn’t ranked high in the “Model for End-Stage Liver Disease” or MELD system. “The MELD score makes it fairer for most liver diseases,” she says, “but diseases have not fit that MELD score. There just aren’t enough organs to go around. I was told that there wasn’t much chance to get a cadaver liver [from someone who has

department or the Sheriff’s Office, “before sending money or providing prepaid credit card numbers to anyone.” Another malaise with this scam is that the police will not normally call if they have a bench warrant for someone’s arrest. If they contact you during a traffic stop or make some other contact, and you have a bench warrant, most times they will simply issue a notice to appear in court, where a judge will hear your story and issue any fines in person (or to a lawyer). In some instances a person will be hauled to the hoosegow until they can see a judge. Either way, they won’t call on the telephone. And raising bail is an arrested person’s burden, police won’t call to raise bail money for anyone incarcerated in County Jail. Finally, the Sheriff’s Department is the court’s law enforcement agency not a City police department. If readers have any information about this crime they are encouraged to call the SLOPD at 781-7312 or Crime Stoppers at (805) 549-STOP.

died] and I need to find a living donor.” Of course there are some criteria, like the donor needs to be 18-55-years old, and have a blood type A or O (O positive or O negative is OK), and they’d have to pass a medical evaluation at Stanford. “They would take the right lobe of a healthy liver and transplant that into me,” she says. “In six to eight weeks, the donor’s liver regrows. The liver is the only organ that does that.” Her friends have put up a website detailing Ginette’s story and formalizing the search for a donor, see: www.ginettereitz.com. “Stanford,” she says, “likes it to be someone I know and make sure the donation is done out of altruism. I’ll breathe a little easier when I hear from Stanford about a live donor.”

www.edwardjones.com

)HHOLQJ OLNH \RX SDLG WRR PXFK LQ WD[HV WKLV \HDU" Markets Change. Are You Prepared? When you stop and look back at what’s happened in the markets, it’s easy to realize how quickly things can change. That’s why we should schedule some time to discuss how the market can impact your financial goals. We can also conduct a portfolio review to help you decide if you should make changes to &RQWDFW \RXU ðQDQFLDO DGYLVRU WRGD\ WR OHDUQ your investments and whether you’re on track to reach your goals.

DERXW LQYHVWLQJ VWUDWHJLHV WKDW FRXOG EHQHðW \RX Stop by or call today to schedule your personal review. Scott McManus, AAMS®, CFP® Financial Advisor 241 S. Ocean Ave. Cayucos, CA 805-995-2110

Jennifer L. Redman Financial Advisor 1085 Kennedy Way Morro Bay, CA 805-772-7938

Sarah Ketchum Financial Advisor 501 Harbor St. Morro Bay, CA 805-772-6188

Carol Furtado, Financial Advisor 1236 LOVR, Suite J Los Osos, CA 805-534-1070

SAT 01

SAT 22

Member SIPC

Clean Water Talk & Wild Ale Launch

Libertine Pub, Morro Bay 4–6 p.m.

SAT 08 FRI 14

Deanna Richards, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1236 LOVR, Suite J Los Osos, CA 805-534-1070

Saturday at the Garden: Bay-Friendly Yards

San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden, 1 p.m.

Art & Science Reception

Gallery at Marina Square, 5–8 p.m.

Earth Day Pickup & Paddle

Tidelands Park, Morro Bay, 8–11 a.m. More events, hikes, walks, and talks all month long.

MBNEP.ORG/STATE-OF-THE-BAY MBNEP.ORG / STATE-OF-THE-BAY #explore our estuar y


36

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

Community

Cuesta Honors Nine at Awards Lunch

A

Los Osos artist was among the nine honorees at Cuesta College’s 2017 Awards Luncheon held March 17, honoring alumni and student, faculty and civilian volunteers. Now in its 29th year, the Honored Alumni Awards were established in 1989 to “recognize outstanding professional achievements and service of former Cuesta College students,” reads a news release from Cuesta. Honored alumni this year were retired SLO County Supervisor, Frank Mecham; retired teacher and author, Jim Gregory; and Los Osos painter-sculptor Ted Emrick. The volunteer awards have four categories and are named in honor of people who have played a large part in Cuesta’s more than 50-year history. Emrick (Cuesta 1981-84, 1987, 1992, 1993) is a well-known contemporary multi-media painter and sculptor who holds three associate degrees from Cuesta — general studies, two-dimensional art, and 3-D art, as well as a bachelor’s from San Francisco’s Art Institute. A Los Osos resident, Emrick runs his own art studio, Emrick Studios and volunteers with Surfing for Hope, AmpSurf, and the Art Legacy Project. An Arroyo Grande native, Gregory (Cuesta, 1971-73) studied journalism and history at Cuesta and earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of MissouriColumbia and a teaching credential from Cal Poly. He taught American literature, U.S. and European history at Mission Prep and Arroyo Grande High for more than 30 years. Since his retirement, he has written two books on local South County history: “World War II Arroyo Grande” and “Patriot Graves: Discovering a California Town’s Civil War Heritage.”

A SLO County native, Mecham (Cuesta 1965, 1990) played on Cuesta’s first football team and attended Cuesta off and on over the years. In 1996, Mecham became a Paso Robles planning commissioner and was elected to the city council in 1998 and mayor in 2000. He was elected Dist. 1 County Supervisor in 2009 and retired from the board in 2016. Dr. Frank Martinez Superintendent/President’s Award was given to Dee Lacey, who is currently a member of the Cuesta College Foundation Board and has a long history of volunteerism, including helping raise the money to start Cuesta’s North County Campus. Lacy, who currently works with Community Action Partnership or CAPSLO, and is active in the SLO County Cattlewomen’s Association, having been named Cattlewoman of the Year in 1992 and was given a Lifetime Achievement Award in Education in 2000. Dr. Martinez was a long-time Cuesta president. The John Schaub Student Volunteer Award went to Mia Alexander and Gabriela Perez for “community volunteer work best exemplifies the high standards established by the college’s first dean

of students whose trailblazing work in creating programs for student success has helped thousands of students achieve their goals.” Perez of Paso Robles is a first generation college student studying sociology with the goal of becoming a social worker. She volunteers with Coats for Kids, Miracle Miles for Kids, Walk for Arthritis, and the Food Bank. Alexander is a second-year student who aspires to open her own residential program in San Luis Obispo County for women who suffer from addiction. An Alpha Gamma Sigma member, Alexander volunteers 50-hours a week as the house manager for the non-profit organization, Gryphon Society Gatehelp, Inc., a sober-living home for men and women. She also volunteers at the Food Bank, for Hunger Awareness Day, and at the Arroyo Grande Strawberry Festival. The Dr. Merlin E. Eisenbise Service in the Classroom Award went to Marcus Ziedses des Plantes, recognizing direct service in the classroom, which extends the college’s ability to help students. The award honors the District’s first Superintendent/President, Dr. Merlin E. Eisenbise.

A self-employed, practicing architect and Cal Poly graduate, Ziedses des Plantes’ passion is coaching sports teams including eight years as head coach for the Associated Students of Cuesta College men’s club soccer team. Ziedses des Plantes will also coach the women’s divisional soccer team next fall. In total, he has been coaching for 30 years, the majority at the high school and college level. The Betty Nielsen Volunteer of the Year Award went to Ken and Darlene Kellett for their years of support with the Cuesta College Athletic Booster’s Club. Ken and Darlene Kellett have been supporting the Cuesta College Athletic Booster Club for many years. Darlene Kellett began serving on the Booster Club’s board in the 1970s and volunteers with the college’s 15 intercollegiate teams and student athletes. Ken joined the Booster Club after the couple retired as owners of D&K Packaging. Begun in 1995, this award is in memory of Cuesta College Trustee, Betty Nielsen, considered “the epitome of volunteerism.”

PARKING?...DON’T NEED IT! GASOLINE?...DON’T NEED IT!

Morro Bay Transit Call-A-Ride Curb to Curb Transit for Everyone Let Morro Bay Transit do the driving so you don’t have to.

Taste Your Imagination 12 rotating flavors available every day Non-fat & non-dairy flavors available every day. Gelato & no sugar added options.

Monday–Friday 6:25am–6:45pm

Saturday 8:25am–4:25pm

Call 772-2744 between 8–10am to schedule a ride morro-bay.ca.us/transit

60+ toppings Customer loyalty program available Outside & inside seating

Endless Possibilities 1240-3 Los Osos Valley Rd, Los Osos

20% OFF

YOUR PURCHASE!

Buy a $20 Gift Card & Get a $5 Gift Card for

Morro Bay Transit Fixed Route TRANSIT

(805) 439-1137

EVERYONE

Let Morro Bay Transit do the driving so you don’t have to.

FREE

Bring ad in to redeem. Offers cannot be combined.

4

D 4

SCHEDULE: Monday-Friday 6:25am - 6:45pm Saturday 8:25am - 4:25pm

more information: morro-bay.ca.us/transit


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

Community

•

37

Sea Glass Fest Brings Lovers of Mermaid Tears

T

he 7th Annual Cayucos Sea Glass Festival brought lovers of the ‘Mermaid Tears’ as the glass is known, from far and wide to the Cayucos Vet’s Hall for the 2-day celebration of all things sea glass and mermaid. Vendors sold their custom-made jewelry and decorative items — from tiaras to picture frames and the festival included live music, local restaurants, and a beer/wine bar. The festival featured a Mermaid’s Ball on March 10 with a costume contest, and the town’s businesses along Ocean Avenue created hand-crafted mermaids for a ‘Mermaid March’ art display. The Mermaid March continues through the end of March. Photos by Neil Farrell

Morro Bay – Rock & Ocean Views D!

E UC

D

RE

2583 Hemlock Ave - Reduced to $674,500 Lovely 3 bed/3 bath home in excellent condition, with abundant natural light and soaring cathedral ceilings. Single level living on ground oor with no steps to entry. Two additional bedrooms upstairs, family room, 2nd gas ďŹ replace and wet bar. Call me today! Visit: MyScenicCoastHome.com for more details!

MyScenicCoastHome.com

SOLAR ON THE NORTH COAST:

843 HOMES AND COUNTING.

MONICA RANDEEN Living in the Now, Preparing for the Future

BROKER ASSOCIATE

815 Morro Bay Blvd. Morro Bay CA 93442 BRE #01860001

(805) 235-2368

(DFK 2IÂźFH ,QGHSHQGHQWO\ 2ZQHG DQG 2SHUDWHG

monicarandeen@kw.com

Learn how you can redeďŹ ne your savings approach toward education and retirement. Call visit a ďŹ nancial advisor today.

1710 Camino Del Oro, Nipomo Open Sunday, March 26, Noon-2PM Wonderful three bedroom, four bathroom home on 1.4 acres in Nipomo. Secluded from your neighbors with its own private, gated driveway. Enjoy the views of the Nipomo foothills. Bring your family members, animals and toys. Move right in! $698,900.

"

! ! #

Cindy Blankenburg, Blankenburg Properties

805-710-3794

www.BlankenburgProperties.Realtor

Local Q Professional Q Reliable

See where all communities rank at www.solarponics.com/blog/. ( 0 4 0 - " 3 ( 0 -0 $ " - ( 0 5 3 6 45 & %

(805) 466-5595 COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL 40-"3 &-&$53*$ r #"55&3: 4503"(& -&% -*()5*/( r 40-"3 100- )&"5*/( 3"%*"/5 )&"5*/( $00-*/( WE FEATURE USA-MADE PANELS SINCE 1975 r CSLB# 391670


38

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

News

Udderly Osos Utterly Paid For Osos Woman Earns Leadership Award

S

he’s stolen the hearts of residents and visitors and now thanks to fundraising efforts by a local beautification group, the Cow Bear a.k.a. “Udderly Osa,” will stay in Baywood Park. Celebrate Los Osos announced that it has reached its goal of $5,500 needed to purchase the one-of-a-kind sculpture from ArtsObispo, the non-profit group that organized the Cow Parade SLO and which had plans to auction the Cow Bear along with all 100 other cow sculptures that are part of the Cow Parade art display. The Cow Bear was paid for by Los Osos’ arm of the County Tourism Business Improvement District, which gets its money from a 2% bed tax. Half of the money raised locally is given to an advisory board to spend, the rest is collectively spent on tourism promotions in the unincorporated areas of SLO County (cities have their own BIDs). The original donation was $7,000 to sponsor a cow. Each of the sculptures is uniquely decorated by different artists but Cow Bear is unique in its species bending.

A

Cow Bear is the creation of fatherson artists Dave and Kyle Doust who transformed her from a plain white fiberglass cow sculpture (weighing about 120 pounds) into the world’s only cow-bear which stands on two hooves and has the upper torso and furry head of a grizzly bear with the rear end of a milk cow. Udderly Osos holds a stand-up paddle in its claws and is painted with monarch butterflies and California poppies. The sculpture is mounted on display next to the Second Street Pier in Baywood Park.

CLC to Discuss 2017 Plans

T

he Cayucos Land Conservancy is hosting a community meeting and strategic plan reception from 6-7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 25 at the Cayucos Visitors Center and Historical Museum, 41 S. Ocean Ave. Building on its successes in 2016, the board of directors has developed ambitious goals for 2017 and they want to share those with the public, and get input. They’ll have hors d’oeuvres and beverages, and the meeting is open to any members of the community interested in CLC’s work establishing a greenbelt around the community.

The focus recently has been negotiating with Chevron on preserving the company’s properties around Toro Creek Road — comprising some 3,000 acres including the Estero Marine Terminal — with an eye at preserving them in open space, preserving the Chevron Dog Beach for public use, building the Morro Bay-Cayucos Class-1 bike path, and preserving the land as a buffer between Cayucos and Morro Bay. In a rendering on the CLC’s website, the properties owned by Chevron are delineated. See: www. CayucosLandConservancy.org.

Los Osos woman has been given a special honor for leadership by the school she attends in Upstate New York. Ithica College of Ithica, New York, announced that Nalani Haueter of Los Osos was the recipient of a “Peggy R. Williams Award for Academic and Community Leadership.” The award recognizes Ithica students “who excel academically, perform service to the college community and nation, and represent an exemplary level of accomplishment.” To be nominated, a student must be a junior or senior. If the nominee is a transfer student, the student must have completed a minimum of 30 academic credits at Ithaca but transfer students may be nominated for contributions at a previous institution on at least two key areas. The grade point average of nominees, however, must be achieved at Ithaca College. A student must have at least a 3.0 cumulative GPA, be in good judicial standing, and have made a minimum of three contributions in at least two areas: • Academic — contributions to a student’s department or school through performance activities; honorary societies; organizations; advisory boards; unpaid teaching assistant; or delivering a paper at a conference. • Involvement and recognition outside school or department — areas include athletics, drama (non-majors),

music (non-majors), involvement in campus student organizations, Ithaca College committees, volunteer work in the Ithaca area; receiving honors from outside the college community, resident assistant, orientation leader, teaching assistant, campus employment manager (Dining Services, Campus Center, Conference and Event Services), and on-campus intern. • Community service — community involvement on or off campus, such as Peer Volunteer Corps, Big Brother/ Big Sister, GIAC or Southside, soup kitchens. The school did not say which areas Haueter excelled in. Ithaca College is located in New York’s Finger Lakes Region, with 6,100 undergraduates and 460 graduate students. In another milestone, Lindsey Morgan of Morro Bay was among more than 3,000 students from Miami University who received degrees during fall commencement exercises in December, the university announced. Morgan graduated with a master’s of arts in teaching degree, majoring in biological science. Miami University in Oxford, Ohio is considered one of eight, original, “Public Ivies” in the U.S. The university “is consistently ranked by U.S. News and World Report for its commitment to undergraduate teaching and is the number one college town according to Forbes.”

Pianist Returns For House Concert

P

ianist, Mimi Blais, returns to the Central Coast for a house concert set for 7-9:30 p.m. Thursday, March 23 in the Los Osos home of Carol and Stanley Stern. Cost is a $20 donation at the door (make checks payable to Mimi Blais). Call the Sterns at 528-6557 or email to: Sstern3126@AOL.com for reservations. Trained as a classical pianist, Blais has performed across the U.S., Europe and Canada playing a mix of Ragtime, jazz, folk, blues and classical. Her performances have been called masterful, energetic, poetic, witty and romantic, eliciting comparisons with the late great Victor Borge.


Bay News • March 23 - April 5, 2017

Opinion

39

Water Independence and the WRF A View From Harbor Street By David Buckingham

T

his week the City completed the “Master Water Reclamation Plan for the Water Reclamation Facility (WRF) Project.” The plan details water reuse opportunities and cost details for the recycled water component of the WRF and confirms the City can reclaim and reuse about 800 acre feet of water a year, allowing the community to achieve water independence, lowering the future cost of water, and redirecting our 1,313 AF, allocation of state water to other communities in the region. This plan was the final component to determine the full recycling potential of the project and detail the total project costs. Consistent with the community’s Council-approved goal to produce and reuse reclaimed water, the plan confirms the city can move the existing 62-year old wastewater treatment plan off its current location, replacing it with a modern reclamation facility in a sustainable location, which will allow the City to achieve water independence for a total project cost of up to about $141 million, before a construction contingency of $26 million. The full, water recycling aspect of the project will allow the City to achieve locally-controlled water independence, no longer dependent on State Water supplies, which are drought-affected and

likely facing substantial cost increases that cannot be controlled locally in the decades ahead. Water independence reduces the risk of losing access to state water due to earthquake, climate change or other natural disasters. The new plan confirms that instead of a 7-year construction timeline, the City can complete both the water treatment and the water recycling aspects of the project simultaneously, reducing the construction timeline for the entire project from 7 to 5 years. The key finding of the study is that the City can achieve “indirect potable reuse or IPR of all the highly-treated effluent from the WRF, and following strict regulating guidelines while relying on the aquifer as an environmental buffer, can reuse this water as a source of drinking water. Here’s the process: • Approximately 1,000 AFY of wastewater will be treated at the primary WRF facility on the City’s preferred South Bay Boulevard site. • Following initial treatment using Membrane Bio Reactor (MBR) technology, the water will be further treated by ultraviolet disinfection, reverse osmosis, and advanced oxidation processes, resulting in one of the highest levels of effluent purity technologically available. • This super-clean recycled water will

EMOTIONS PHOTOGRAPHY by Vivian Krug Cotton

art | event | family | pets | photo gifts commercial | real estate | business photobyvivian@gmail.com facebook.com/Emotions photobyvivian.com 805.458.3321

then be injected into a sub-aquifer that lies at the western end of the Morro Valley, under an area roughly bounded from Miners Hardware to Morro Rock, and from the Cloisters to the Veteran’s Memorial Hall. • The study looked closely at this subaquifer and determined the City can inject up to 800 AF per year of reclaimed water into the aquifer. This aquifer is already the location of the City’s primary potable wellfield and the study confirmed the City can pump up to 1,100 AF a year out of those wells without causing any seawater intrusion or other adverse environmental effects. • The study further confirms that any water introduced into the ground will seep through the “environmental buffer” in the aquifer for at least 2-6 months before being pumped out — thereby adding a further important level of purification and consumer safety. • Water pumped out of the City’s Morro Valley wells would then be further treated at the City’s water treatment plant before being introduced into the City’s water system for public use. When the project is complete, the future costs of producing water are expected to drop significantly. The City currently pays around $2,200 AFY for state water, a number that may increase significantly in the years ahead, as infrastructure projects

such as repair of the Oroville Dam spillway and proposed water tunnels under the Delta are managed in Sacramento. With the WRF project completed, the City will be able to pump and treat water for around $1,000/AF. This will allow for a reduction in water costs of around $1.2M a year, or $36M over 30 years. The Master Reclamation Plan will be presented to the City Council at its regular meeting next Tuesday, March 28. The Reclamation plan and the results of a new sewer rate study will be considered by the project’s citizens’ advisory committee, the Finance Committee and Public Works Advisory Board in April, before coming back to the Council for additional review on April 25. The full plan can be accessed under the “Hot Topics” link on the City’s website at: www.morrobayca.gov. Questions about the plan can be directed to Program Manager, Mike Nunley at: mnunley@ morrobayca.gov, or Public Works Director Rob Livick at: rlivick@morrobayca.gov. And, you can always contact me directly at: dbuckingham@morrobayca.gov. David Buckingham is the city manager of Morro Bay. His “A View From Harbor Street” column is a regular feature of The Bay News. Send Letters to the Editor to: neil@simplyclearmarketing.com.


40

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Bay News

News

Chamber Announces Exciting New Partnership For Spring By Juliana Morse

S

pring is here and after a long winter in Morro Bay it couldn’t come soon enough! Take advantage of renewed energy and longer days to improve and clarify your working life in preparation for busy months ahead. Update your toolbox. Assess and grow the tools and resources you have your disposal. Take stock of your skills, technology, and employees. How can you add or shift these areas to improve efficiency? Attend a FREE “Social Media Bootcamp” workshop, co-hosted in partnership with Mission Community Services Corporation (pictured at its recent Ribbon Cutting). The Morro Bay Chamber is pleased to bring the expert, affordable business consulting and training of MCSC to Morro Bay this spring in two workshops: •

Instagram for Business on Tuesday, from 4-6 p.m. Tuesday, April 18, upstairs at Libertine Pub.

Facebook Lab from 3-5 p.m. Tuesday, May 9 at Windows on the Water.

Dust off your business plan. Revisit,

or define, your organizational goals. You might find that your expectations, needs, and ambitions are different than they once were. It’s okay for goals to change, but are you aware of these changes and planning accordingly? Ensure your mission still matches your company’s strategic goals under current market conditions. Not sure where even to start? Contact an organization like SCORE SLO or the Mission Community Services Corporation, both of which offer free and low-cost business counseling. Sow seeds and bulbs. With Summer

approaching, what foundation can you lay now that will benefit your business in lean months? Is there a new marketing strategy you can implement that will reap new customers? Identify some new risks you can take now that will pay off later. And, watch the Chamber’s social media page for details on an upcoming workshop on e-commerce and mailing

list capture. Consider a new look. What does your brand, website, or décor tell potential customers? Colors, logos, even wall color and furniture patterns communicate directly about what kind of operation you run. Is it saying what you want to say? Are your physical and digital spaces appealing to your customer base? Is there some copy on your website that could be rewritten to sound better or more accurately reflect your services? Now is a good time to freshen and tighten things up. These little details

don’t have to take up a lot of money or effort, but will make a big impact. Clear your space… literally! Because when was the last time you dusted that keyboard? Clear a whole day, recruit staff and volunteers (bribing with pizza is always a good strategy here), and do a deep clean of your desk and spaces. Toss, sell, or donate unused supplies, products, and furniture. Purge those old files (paper and digital). Neatly organize only those items you absolutely need. If you can, hire local professionals! Lastly, don’t forget the emotional clutter, too. There may be some things your employees and colleagues need to deal with for growth to occur. Facilitate a fresh emotional start with a candid conversation. Out with the old, and in with a new distraction-free space for growth. Organizational spring cleaning allows us to reset and reorganize, and of course perform better all year. To reserve your place at the Social Media Bootcamp Series, call (805) 772-4467 or email: juliana@morrochamber.org. Juliana Morse is the operations manager with the Morro Bay Chamber of Commerce

Millions of Americans’ tax refunds may be delayed this year. If you claim the Earned Income Tax Credit or the Additional Child Tax Credit, the IRS must hold your entire refund until Feb. 15 due to the PATH Act, a new law to help combat tax fraud.

Providing All of Your Service & Repair Needs Many Makes & Models Maintenance, Brakes, Tires, A/C

Visit hrblock.com/path for details or to make an appointment.

SUNSET SERVICE CENTER

805-462-8199

8600 El Camino Real • Atascadero • Monday–Friday 8:00am-5:30pm

1075 KENNEDY WAY, MORRO BAY, CA 93442 1066 LOS OSOS VALLEY RD, LOS OSOS, CA 93402 1059 MAIN ST, CAMBRIA , CA 93428

805-772-9550 805-534-9575 805-924-1027


Simply Clear Marketing & Media • March 23 - April 5, 2017

41

How Much Time Are You Spending with Your Team? Bottom Line By Michael Gunther

I

’m always intrigued to hear leaders complain about their team’s lack of functioning, while at the same time the team complains about a lack of guidance or coaching from their manager. This cycle of dissatisfaction creates frustration for everyone and, interestingly enough, could be solved if the leaders stepped back and realized that they should not spend the majority of their time on tasks. Instead, the majority of their time should be spent on coaching, developing and supporting their team. I’m sure you’ve heard these common excuses that leaders give for not spending time with their teams: • “It is hectic and I’m putting out fires because my team isn’t stepping up to the plate.” • “It is easier for me to perform the tasks than to take time to delegate to a team member.” • “I am too busy doing my job that I don’t have time to coach my team.”

Call today for Energy

• “I wish my team would take on more responsibility, because I feel like every decision falls back on me.” I imagine this list could go on and on. Yet, a leader’s job is to focus on developing their team’s growth. It is quite the quandary that seems to be a never-ending cycle. The reality is that the higher your leadership role, the less tasks and technical functions you should perform. I believe this is one of the hardest transitions for leaders to make because most leaders are in their position because they are doers. The connection between the tasks they complete and their success is ingrained in their brains; as they take on more responsibility, they also end up taking on more tasks. However, the definition of a good leader isn’t how well they can get tasks done, but how much can they get done through others. Leaders should evaluate if they are spending enough time with their people to teach, coach, empower and measure them in achieving outcomes. In fact, leaders logically understand this concept. I discovered that implementing

cy Upgrades! n e i c Effi

new behaviors seems to be the more challenging part of the equation. It goes against what they learned on how to be successful as a “doer.” The other area I typically uncover is that leaders don’t know how to effectively delegate or coach individuals. In addition, they have had little training or education on actually being a strong relationship-builder with their team. Without these skills, leaders will frequently revert back to their own behaviors and take back tasks and duties from their team.

Bottom Line Your job as a leader is to accomplish your goals through the assistance of others. Being a strong mentor, coach, trainer and facilitator are basic requirements of a good leader. If you find yourself overwhelmed with a “to do” list but don’t “trust” your team to take on those responsibilities, take a hard look at yourself in the mirror. Assess if you need to adjust your style and behaviors to become more of a delegator and facilitator of success, rather than the keeper of the tasks.

You might be surprised at your team’s willingness to support you and take on additional responsibilities. You’ll find your time and effort will now focus on actually performing the role you should be doing. This is another article in a series on Michael Gunther’s entrepreneurial story and how being raised in a large family and his belief in creating a growth company with a work-to-live mentality has influenced his career. To read the previous articles in this series, visit his blog at: www.Collaborationllc.com. Michael Gunther is Founder and President of Collaboration, LLC, a team of highly-skilled business professionals who are dedicated to assisting proactive business owners to build profitable, sustainable businesses through results-oriented education and consulting services. Learn more at www.Collaboration-llc.com. Bottom Lie is a regular feature of Simply Clear Marketing & Media.

YOU DO HAVE A CHOICE!

reduce your energy use! Improve y our home’s comfort and Winter chill is here! I’m paw-sitive!

Utility incentives up to $6,500* Low interest, unsecured loans FREE home energy site visit

Call emPower meow!

DIGITAL MEDICAL IMAGING 522 East Plaza Dr. Santa Maria 805.928.3673

FIVE CITIES MEDICAL IMAGING 921 Oak Park Blvd. Ste. 102 Pismo Beach 805.779.7900

RADIOLOGY DIAGNOSTIC CENTER 1310 Las Tablas Rd. Ste. 103 Templeton 805.434.0829

Our Services include:

3D Mammography, PET/CT scans, Ultrasound, X-Ray, CT Scans, High-Field MRI, and the most Open High-Field MRI on the Central Coast.

Se habla español

Upgrade your home today!

Contact us: Website: emPowerSBC.org Phone: (805) 781-5625 Email: empower@co.slo.ca.us

This Program is funded by California utility ratepayers and administered by Southern California Gas Company, Pacific Gas and Electric Company and Southern California Edison under the auspices of the California Public Utilities. * Customers may also be eligible for incentives exceeding $6,500 based on their calculated energy savings. Work with your participating contractor or rater to determine your upgrade’s incentive.

Contact us at (805) 242-6950 WWW.RASLOIMAGING.COM


42

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Simply Clear Marketing & Media

Biz Briefs

Taxpayer Hero, Big Donations Made, and SLO Adds a Flight Compiled by Mark Diaz

French Hospital Medical Center (FHMC) received a transformational gift of $5.5 million from Peter and Mary Beth Oppenheime. The Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz) announced this week that it will partner with Cal Poly to host the 2017 California Cyber Innovation Challenge in June. The Central Coast Taxpayers’ Association gave its 2017 Hero of the Taxpayer Award to KPRL 1230 AM’s Kevin Will at a Feb. 26 reception. CCTA President, former Congresswoman Andrea Seastrand said Will was recognized “for providing critical in-depth news on KPRL for the ‘forgotten taxpayer’ re-taxes, fees and regulations.” Seastrand said, “His efforts further highlighted the local hot issues of the day, such as the Paso Robles groundwater basin district proposal and the SLO County Measure J, half-percent transportation sales tax. Will is a proponent of fewer taxes, fees and regulations and a supporter of Proposition 13.” As part of California’s continued leadership in cybersecurity and workforce development, The Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz) announced this week that it will partner with Cal Poly to host the 2017 California Cyber Innovation Challenge on June 24 and 25. The statewide competition will feature 16 teams of high school students competing at the new California Cyber Training Complex (CCTC) in SLO. In the coming months, teams of high school students from across California will compete in timed cybersecurity challenges designed to replicate the various threats that cybersecurity professionals face, including attacks on critical infrastructure and attempted breaches of consumer data on connected devices. The winners of designated regional cybersecurity competitions will earn automatic entry to the statewide tournament in San Luis Obispo. To attend the free California Cyber Innovation Challenge, register: http://bit.ly/2nesKWw. High schools interested in joining the competition can email gobiz.innovation@gov.ca.gov to learn more about the qualifying process. The San Luis Obispo County Community Foundation received a $100,000 donation from Sammy Pineau to support the Foundation’s grant making and educational support of non-profit

organizations across the county. Pineau said, “We are all fortunate to have The Community Foundation in our county to assist so many of us who are interested in making our local giving have an impact.” Last year, The Community Foundation awarded more than $2 million in grants and scholarships with more than 80% of grant funding remaining locally in SLO County. For more information on The Community Foundation’s grants program, see: www.cfsloco.org or contact Len Smolburd at (805) 543-2323. French Hospital Medical Center (FHMC) received a transformational gift of $5.5 million from Peter and Mary Beth Oppenheimer. This donation, which is the largest gift in the history of the hospital, supports the expansion and modernization of emergency services for San Luis Obispo County. With this donation, the FHMC will launch a project to build a new emergency department. As the sole public benefactors and in recognition of their generosity, the new emergency department will be named the Oppenheimer Family Center for Emergency Medicine at French Hospital Medical Center. The total cost of both project phases is estimated to cost $13,000,000. The ground breaking for the first phase is expected to occur in spring 2018. On March 1, SLO Natural Foods Co-op, located at 2494 Victoria Ave., in SLO, announced a repricing strategy. Prices for many groceries, refrigerated items, body care and household items have been permanently reduced and starting April 5, co-op deals, sales flyers are being published every 2 weeks. Purchasing from local food and farm suppliers is a top priority for The Coop and local ownership benefits the local economy. You do not have to be a member to shop at SLO Natural Foods and sale prices are available to everyone. For more information, see: www. SLONaturalFoods.coop

Low-interest federal disaster loans in the San Luis Obispo area are now available “to certain private nonprofit organizations in California” after President Trump’s federal disaster declaration as a result of “the severe winter storms, flooding and mudslides that occurred Jan. 3-12, 2017,” said officials with the Small Business Administration (SBA). These loans may be used to pay fixed debts, payroll, accounts payable and other bills that cannot be paid because of the disaster’s impact, said SBA. Economic injury assistance is available regardless of whether the nonprofit suffered any property damage. SBA can loan up to $2 million (up to 2.5% interest) “to repair or replace damaged or destroyed real estate, machinery and equipment, inventory and other business assets.” The deadline to apply is April 17 for property damages, and Nov. 17 for economic injuries. Contact acting Chief Tamara Scott of the Proclamation and Recovery Planning Division at the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, by calling (916) 845-8245 or emailing to: tamara. scott@caloes.ca.gov for information about applications. Hospice of San Luis Obispo County is starting a new program entitled, “Care Management Services.” The free program is designed to give caretakers a break from their emotional and financial burdens caring for elderly and ailing relatives with dementia. According to a news release from the Arthur N. Rupe Foundation, “The program provides in-home assessments, care planning, and coordination of free and low-cost community resources, and is designed to support elders who have too many assets to qualify for Medicaid but who can’t afford the high cost of assisted living or in-home care.” For information about this and other Hospice programs, see: HospiceSLO.org or call Bayles at (805) 544-2266. The Food Bank Coalition received $3,000 from the Central Coast Funds for Children (CCFC). The Food Bank has expanded a program that provided more than 190,000 meals to children in 2016. The CCFC is a local nonprofit

established to benefit children in need of special assistance. The CCFC has raised and granted over $1.4 million since its founding in 1994.

Mama Ganache of Mama Ganache Artisan Chocolates, located at 1445 Monterey St., SLO, is looking for artists to fill the chocolate shop with cats during April and May. Sculpture, drawings, paintings, photos, cards, jewelry of “anything cat” are welcome. She is also looking for an artist to do line drawings in chalk on the walls, around furniture, doors and windows in exchange for appreciation, exposure, and of course chocolate. Meow.

The San Luis Obispo County Open Studios Art Tour is asking artists to apply now through May 15 for the opportunity to showcase their art and demonstrate their process to visitors. The Art Tour takes place annually over two weekends in October. This year the tour falls on Oct. 14-15 and 21-22, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. New this year, applicants also have the option to participate in a Spring Open Studios Art Tour weekend, set for May 5-6, 2018. A mobile-friendly map is featured for this bonus event. For more information, see: http://artsobispo.org/open-studios-arttour-participants

The SLO Downtown Association awarded honors to over two-dozen businesses at its 28th Annual Beautification Awards held March 1. The awards were given to businesses that made physical or aesthetic improvements toward keeping Downtown beautiful in the 2016 calendar year. New this year, top award winners were also presented with physical awards created by the Cal Poly Alpha Rho Chi professional architecture fraternity, Daedalus Chapter. Students involved were architecture students Regan Dyer, Ben Johnson, Jackson Sheridan, and Zack Moore. Awards were created using reclaimed scrap materials and laser cutting, designed to evoke the materials and process of construction in Downtown SLO. A full list of award winners is posted online at: www.DowntownSLO.com.


SLO Natural Foods Co-op announced a repricing strategy. For more information, email to: brent@ downtownslo.com or call (805) 5410286. Bank of the Sierra announced it has completed the relocation of its Paso Robles branch to 1207 Spring Street. Adjacent to the park downtown, the new location on the corner of 12th and Spring Street is in a building previously occupied by Union Bank. Kevin McPhaill, President and CEO of Bank of the Sierra, expressed his enthusiasm for the relocation. “We’ve been planning this important relocation since our acquisition of Coast National Bank last year. It’s our goal to continue improving Bank of the Sierra’s reach, visibility and convenience in our Coastal markets. We anticipate this new location will make it even easier to bank with us in Paso Robles.” The full service location officially opened its doors for business on March 6, with a grand opening, ribbon cutting and customer appreciation week to be scheduled later this year.

The Udsen Family, owners of Castoro Cellars, have been issued a “cease and desist demand” by the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, claiming trademark infringement against Castoro’s popular Beaverstock Music and Arts Festival. “We have put this festival on for four years, and it gets better and bigger every time, so we were of course disappointed when we received the letter from Woodstock’s attorney,” said Beaverstock guru, Luke Udsen. “But changing the name won’t change what we’re doing — and I’m actually kind of proud that we were making enough noise for Woodstock to notice!” Beaverstock has grown considerably over its first four A years, topping 4,000 attendees in 2016. The Udsen Family will continue to give a portion of event proceeds to a local charitable organization; total donated over the first four years exceeds $50,000. An official new name for the festival will be announced later this month. In the interim, the 2017 event will be referred to as “the event formerly known as Beaverstock.” Cal Poly announced that Scott Dawson, former dean of the Orfalea College of Business, will return to the position effective June 1.“We are pleased that Scott will return as part of our leadership team and that the Orfalea College of Business’ students, faculty and staff will once again benefit from his visionary leadership and commitment to Learn by Doing,” said Cal Poly President Jeffrey D. Armstrong. Dawson led the Orfalea College of Business from August 2014 until November 2016, when he stepped down after the loss of his wife, Bridget, in a bicycling accident in July. He returned to Portland, Ore., to be near

family and friends. Dawson first joined the College of Business after nearly 30 years at Portland State University’s School of Business. He served multiple roles as a marketing professor and associate dean, eventually becoming dean in 2000. Dawson earned his bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the University of Oregon. He holds a master’s degree in business administration and a doctorate from the University of Arizona. In an effort to help local migrant farmworker families, Whole Foods Market on Los Osos Valley Road in San Luis Obispo donated 5% of its net sales on March 8 to the Migrant & Seasonal Head Start Program. The program, recently named a Program of Excellence by the National Head Start Association Quality Initiative, has provided quality childcare, early education and support services to migrant farmworker families since it began in 1981. Operated by Community Action Partnership of San Luis Obispo County (CAPSLO), the program promotes school readiness through educational, emotional, nutritional, social and other services. All families in the program live below or near the federally established poverty line. Port San Luis Harbor Manager Andrea Lueker has hired Matthew A. Ashton as chief of the District’s Harbor Patrol Department, following a highly competitive recruitment, extensive interview process, and contract approval by the Board of Harbor Commissioners at its Feb. 28 meeting. Ashton began his new capacity as Chief Harbor Patrol Officer on March 1. Ashton is passionate about serving the public as the Harbor District’s next Harbor Patrol Chief. “When I was 15 or 16,” he said in a news release, “the City of Costa Mesa presented me with a ‘Meritorious Service Award’ for coming to the aid of my elderly neighbor who was in distress. At that point I knew I wanted to pursue a career in public service.” The San Luis Obispo County Regional Airport announced that United Airlines will begin non-stop service from San Luis Obispo (SBP) to Denver (DEN) on June 8, making the Mile-High City the second destination this year added to the airport’s route map, and marking a major milestone for the community. Denver will be the third, nonstop destination offered locally by United Airlines, along with Los Angeles and San Francisco; and will connect passengers to over 120 domestic locations and nearly a dozen international destinations. Flights to Denver will add a fifth destination by three airlines for a total of 13 flights daily and one additional seasonal flight from San Luis Obispo.

experts in

WATER WISE gardening & living spaces

'(6,*1 &216758&7,21 5(129$7,21 ,55,*$7,21 /,*+7,1* 0$,17(1$1&(

(805)544-5296 $//6($6216/$1'6&$3,1* &20

We Buy GOLD & DIAMONDS Large Selection of Wedding Rings Custom Design & Repair Premium Canes Collection

805.473.1360

857 OAK PARK BLVD PISMO BEACH (located in the Ross shopping center) Tue - Fri 10AM - 6PM, Sat 10AM - 5PM


44

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Simply Clear Marketing & Media

Financial Focus

Women Must Act to Overcome Financial Challenges

I

nternational Women’s Day, observed on March 8, celebrates the social, cultural and political achievements of women. Yet, women continue to face many challenges. For one thing, women still encounter gender-specific obstacles to their important financial goals, such as a comfortable retirement. If you’re a woman, what can you do to get past these barriers? First of all, you need to recognize them. Here are a few to consider: • Longer life spans – A 65-year-old woman is expected to live, on average, another 20.5 years, compared to 17.9 years for a 65-year-old man, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. That’s another 2½ years of life – and 2½ years more of expenses. • Lower incomes – Women working full time in the United States typically are paid 80% of what men earn, according to Census Bureau data. • More time away from the workforce – Men work an average of 38 years, compared to just 29 for women, according to the Pew Research Center and the Social Security Administration.

The gap is largely due to women taking time off to care for young children and elderly parents. Women who work substantially fewer years than men will miss out on hundreds of thousands of dollars in earnings and many years of contributions to 401(k)s or other retirement plans. These statistics certainly are sobering – but they don’t mean you are powerless to improve your financial security. In fact, you can do quite a lot, including the following: • Boost your retirement plan contributions – Put in as much as you can afford to your 401(k) or other employer-sponsored plan, and increase your contributions whenever you get a raise. And even if you have a 401(k), you may still be eligible to contribute to an IRA. • Invest for growth – Some studies have shown that women may invest less aggressively than men. If you invest mostly in conservative vehicles, you may run the risk of falling short of your financial goals. To achieve these goals, you’ll need a reasonable amount of growth potential in your portfolio.

• Extend your working life – If you like your job, you may want to consider sticking with it a couple of years past when you initially thought you’d retire. You’ll be able to add to your retirement accounts, and the extra years of work may help you increase your Social Security benefits. These payments are based on an average of your highest 35 years of earnings, so if you have a zero in some of these years, it will pull the average down. Consequently, your extra years of work may help erase those zeros. But even if you have a long, unbroken work record, your extended career can help you in regard to Social Security, because the extra money may mean you can afford to delay collecting benefits – and the longer you wait past 62, the bigger your checks will be – at least until you turn 70, when they “max out.” You’ll help yourself by becoming familiar with the special issues women face in meeting their long-term goals. As you know, women have met challenges successfully for a long time. After all, Ginger Rogers did everything Fred Astaire did – except backwards,

Prices Are Born Here And Raised Elsewhere

The largest inventory on the Central Coast! Locally owned and operated for over 20 years. The big yellow building across from Smart & Final. 252 Higuera St, San Luis Obispo Call Us: 544-9259 or 541-8473

and in heels.

This article was written by Edward Jones for use by your local Edward Jones Financial Advisor.

Sarah Ketchum is a Central Coast local, she earned her bachelor’s degree in Business from California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. She holds a Series 7, a Series 66 and a Life Insurance License. At the age of 18 she found herself homeless, working 3 jobs and putting herself through college. Her intrinsic desire to learn about investments was a passion from a very young age. Sarah has been serving investors for 17 years and has clients in 12 different states. She is a board member of The Morro Bay Community Foundation and a Morro Bay Rotarian. Sarah currently is a Financial Advisor for Edward Jones Investments in Morro Bay. Her proudest accomplishments though are her 2 children, Noah & Bella.


Simply Clear Marketing & Media • March 23 - April 5, 2017

45

Fresh Food is a Recipe for Success By Mark A. Diaz

I

n a recent Gallup poll, San Luis Obispo County ranked number 7 for “Communities in Overall d Well Being,” this may be due to the d fact that SLO County has a couple of the top rated hamburger shacks in the nation. A February article t by Business Insider, titled “The 50 c Best Burger Joints in America,” recently rated Sylvester’s Burgers d in Atascadero as 48, and Wee f Shack in Morro Bay as 36 for the nation’s 50 best places to grab a juicy national tradition. Granted, it was not an official poll, though the online publication does boast of an average of 70 million views a month. Brian Englund, owner of Sylverster’s located at 6455 El Camino in Atascadero, does not put much stock in the polls. He says it d is still nice to get some recognition, r but it’s nothing new. Englund said, “We’ve had the Food Network and other bigger national type places come in and we almost shooed them off in a way. We don’t really care like most people about that.” What Englund does care about is the SLO community and his employees. “We just won best burger in North County…but we don’t do it for that, we do it for our local community,” Englund said. “The people that come in regularly and think of us as their hometown spot to take their kids to, to hang out with a friend that’s … that’s why we do it all for, not the awards that comes with it.” Englund also said that part of the businesses’ success can be attributed to the dedication to help his employees grow. Englund welcomes locals to contact the business if they are interested in fundraising. And the restaurant does put its money where its mouth is; Englund estimates that the three Sylvester’s in the county

Sylvester’s burger

Wee Shack burger

have raised “at least $100,000” for local charities in the last year. One way the stores raise funds is with their “give to get” cards. The cards are worth any burger on their menu, fries and a drink. A portion of the card’s proceeds is donated to a local participating charity. When Englund opened the Atascadero and Oceano stores he wanted to keep the feel of the

Fleetwood Mac • Norah Jones • James Taylor Harry Connick Jr. • Tony Benett • Michael Buble Van Morrison • Simon and Garfunkel • The Eagles Neil Diamond • Barbara Streisand • And Many More!

original Los Osos burger s h a c k . Sylvester’s uses fresh ingredients such as locally made bread and farm fresh produce and never uses frozen meat, but its most important ingredient is that their food is made with love. Englund said, “We have about 90 some employees and each one I can say that I genuinely like and they kind of spread that love themselves. It’s not a fake greeting at the door, it’s really real.” To help spread the love, the Sylvester’s will gift you a free burger on your birthday. The second burger joint to score in the top 50 was the Wee Shack at 1698 Main St, Morro Bay, coming in at rating 37 out of 50. Owned and operated by the local Ngo family, the Wee Shack’s name is phonetic, named after brother Huy (pronounced Wee). Started in 2011, the Shack was the only burger place at its time to offer all fresh food. They only use

daily made buns and the vegetables are delivered twice a day, every day. Wayne Ngo, the oldest of three brothers, said that there is no reall secret to making a good hamburger. “Burgers are very basic food,” said Wayne, “and I think as long as you stick to the basics and keep everything simple and as fresh as you can, it’s amazing how it comes out.” Wayne conceded that there might be a little secret to their great tasting burgers. Wayne added, “We have our own sauces, so they are recipes that we developed and came up with a lot of trial and error.” The youngest brother Hoai (pronounced Why) was instrumental in developing the Shack Sauce. An investment banker by trade, Hoai decided to enroll in culinary institute during a slow point in the industry. The three brothers Wayne, Huy and Hoai (Huy is the second of three and will happily to tell you about the woes of being the middle child) sat down and tested and experimented until they found a culinary combination worthy of the name Shack Sauce. Like all local places, those ‘in the know’ can get a little more bang for their buck. The Shack once featured the Hondo; a John Wayne styled burger with extra cheese, bacon and bun that customers can still request even though it is not listed on menu. And if someone wants to order their fresh cut french fries with some Shack Sauce and grilled onions, “Sure, no problem,” said Wayne. The Ngo family also strives to give back to their hometown. “Whenever we can, we will help with fundraisers, or gift certificates for door prices and that kind of stuff,” said Wayne. In an effort to help fund the Morro Bay bike park, the Wee Shack held a fundraising dinner.


46

March 23 - April 5, 2017 • Simply Clear Marketing & Media

Featured Folks

Homegrown Candies Prepare for Debut Story and Photos by Camas Frank

F

or three decades the Central Coast has had our own version of Willy Wonka. Although the confections and flavors dreamed up by Larry Peterman for the Hotlix candy store in Pismo Beach are considerably more “down to Earth” than those of his fictional counterparts, his unique products are sold around the world. Until the recent closure of the Pismo Beach Pier for renovations, visitors strolling up Pomeroy Avenue after a walk on the attraction will have had their attention drawn up and to the left by the store’s iconic ruby red lipstick kiss of a logo. It’s what are in the display cases under the street side awning that sometimes prompts shrieks or giggles. Insects and bugs coming in flavors like “Original Cricket” or grubs and scorpions dipped in milk chocolate or confectionery are just a hint of what awaits inside. In the 1980s Peterman started with hard candies, and the creepy crawlies were almost an afterthought. The first was the inclusion of an earthworm in a tequila flavored sucker, others that have become staples in the line include ants, grubs, scorpions and crickets incased in an “amber” of flavored sugar. And, while they’ve never stopped

cooking up new flavors, not all of them insect related, a milestone is coming up. Hotlix is planning a new product launch to return to the roots with a new earthworm candy to be unveiled at the Sweets & Snacks Expo held from May 23 to the May 25 at the McCormick Place in Chicago. “The expo is one of the largest around anywhere,” said Kaleen Hamrick, who’s recently returned to the business after growing up with summer jobs behind the counter. “That’s our main show, we go every year and see all of our customers from all over. It’s great.” Although he’s been thinking about it for years, Peterman was still tinkering with the final formula for the “real life gummy worms” until they were ready to start full-scale production. He even carried some batch samples with him on his way out for a slice of pizza. “Now there are subtle flavors in there... can you taste the earthiness?,” he asked after handing one to a local reporter in a chance meeting. “He’s been doing that as long as I can remember,” said Hamrick, about her great uncle, “Always tinkering and it was always fun.” Indeed the little green string tasted quite a bit like a sour apple candy, sweet

Delivery, Catering, and Lunch Box Orders

but sugar free as it would get sticky in packaging otherwise, and was dyed with food coloring for effect. The candy bore little resemblance to its origin. However the flavors were as complex as his process for creating them. Hotlix plans to have production at full capacity by the Expo, which means there’s a special building in Grover Beach right now full of writhing worms destined to be cleaned, turned into jerky, candied and sold in packages of six all over the world. “Our slogan for the package says

Ultimate Beard Wash & Trim

‘Sweet, Sour and Earthy’ and ‘Not Just for the Birds,’” Hamrick explains, noting that the art style for the package will be similar to the fun cartoonish creatures on their chocolate covered and ant candies, but featuring a little boy in a tug of war with a bird over one of the candies. “No, I’m not an entomologist, but this has certainly turned me into an entomophage,” said Peterman. “That’s what you call someone who eats bugs.” Information on all of their products, and eventually the worms, can be found online at: hotlix.com/candy.

beard trim, wash, condition, massage & style

24

$

10% OFF YOUR NEXT MEAL!

Mention or bring this coupon at the register and receive a 10% discount on your total order!

977 Foothill Blvd, San Luis Obispo — (805) 546-0369

www.clippersbarber.com 805-783-CUTS (2887) 1351 Monterey, SLO


Simply Clear Marketing & Media • March 23 - April 5, 2017

47

Using Ecotourism to Engage Customers By Mark A. Diaz

I

n the age of convenience, customer satisfaction may no longer be enough to ensure return business. Companies are seeing a growing need to engage their clientele in order to produce a deeper emotional connection that, in turn, results in the invaluable commodity of customer loyalty. Highway 1 Discovery Route and the unincorporated San Luis Obispo County Tourism Business Improvement District (TBID) have created and maintained the award winning Stewardship Travel Program (STP) in an attempt to merge sustainability, environmentalism and customer engagement. Established in 2013, STP involves businesses from Ragged Point to as far South as Nipomo and offers 70 activities to engage tourists and locals alike. Activities range from aiding in the restoration of trails in Montaña de Oro, volunteer to work at the Nipomo Native Garden, or pick up debris at the Cayucos or Avila beaches. Not all the activities involve labor, for instance, there are hikes, tours and museums on the list and even a wine tasting event. However, each activity is designed to highlight the beauty and uniqueness of the Central Coast with hopes that visitors will establish that elusive deeper connection.

Katie Sturtevant, co-director of STP, has seen an increase of return customers since the conception of the program. “It’s been working really well for us. It gets them to them to connect, care and gives them a way to give back to the area, which we have found, makes them want to come back,” said Sturtevant. “They are just more deeply connected to the area that they are traveling to.” Not only does customer engagement show an increase in future spending, trends indicate Millennials are more inclined to actively search out destinations that are environmental responsible and offer opportunities in land preservation and rehabilitation. “We’re finding that more and more travelers want to spend more money

Ë[ËSĄƤĒXðƮ Our 2nd Year Anniversary

on an area that they know is being preserved and that they can be a hand in preserving,” Sturtevant said. The Avila Beach Tourism Alliance (ABTA) has recently revamped one of its contributions to ecotourism. The Avila Beach Cleanup Kit and Appreciation Tote Bag has received a new look with signage that will be posted around the beach town to promote the activity. Award winning graphic artist Reilly Newman was employed to create the new look. The ABTA invites “active visitors” to use a kit to pick up 10 pieces of trash and post a picture of their accomplishment on a social website (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.) with #VistiAvilaBeach in order to receive an exclusive T-shirt

and to be entered into a monthly drawing. “You would not believe how many people jump at the opportunity to pick up trash,” said Chris King, general manager of the Avila Beach Inn. “It’s pretty amazing.” The Avila program is unique in that it not has the potential to build engagement, but with the requirement of digital posting, it gives the activity an extra boost to grow organically. ABTA kits contain gloves, a collection bag and a marine debris checklist. The kits are currently available at Central Coast Aquarium, Avila Village Inn, Sycamore Mineral Springs Resort, and San Luis Bay Inn upon request. The Discovery Route recently received the Visit California Poppy Award under the award’s “Commitment to Community” category. For more information, visit; www. Highway1DiscoveryRoute.com or www. visitavilabeach.com

MARCH

EVENTS CALENDAR

Big Brothers Big Sisters Portion of proceeds from these events benefits our agency

MONTH OF MARCH Mother's Tavern "Table 48" 725 Higuera St.

MARCH 24 Sip & Shop at Ambiance SLO 737 Higuera St.

MARCH 25 Sip & Shop at Ambiance Paso Robles 1301 Park St.

MARCH 29 Blaze Pizza on Foothill Blvd. 892 Foothill Blvd. Big Brothers Big Sisters of San Luis Obispo County slobigs.org (805)-781-3226


100 OFF

$

any Flexsteel® purchase of $1300 to $2299 $150 OFF any Flexsteel® purchase of $2300 to $3299 $200 OFF any Flexsteel® purchase of $3300 or more

LIMITED TIME LIMITED TIME ONLY! ONLY! MARCH MARCH13th 13th -- 27th, 17th, 2017 2017

1 0 6 9 E . G r a n d Av e n u e , A r r o y o G r a n d e 805-489-8533 Mon. - Sat. 10am - 6pm • Sunday Noon - 5pm W W W. D O N N A S I N T E R I O R S . C O M Free Financing Available O. A.C.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.