New law makes family planning more affordable for Californians

Family planning will be less expensive for millions of Californians under a new law that took effect Jan. 1.

Women will be able to go to their local pharmacy, pick up over-the-counter birth control and have insurance pay for it—no prescription needed. Meanwhile, more people will be able to access vasectomies with no out-of-pocket costs.

The Contraceptive Equity Act of 2022, authored by former Sen. Connie Leyva, from Chino, requires private health insurance plans to cover birth control products, including condoms and spermicide, without a prescription and with no copays. This portion of the law applies only to women and is allowed only in in-network pharmacies.

Men will have the option of cheaper vasectomies. A vasectomy is a low-risk sterilization procedure that usually takes about 20 minutes. Cost has long been a major determining factor for men seeking the procedure, which can cost up to several hundred dollars, including follow-up visits.

Billing data shows that vasectomies are becoming more popular following the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, according to national studies.

California’s new law will apply to about 14 million people with commercial insurance regulated by the state. This new law does not apply to people whose health insurance plan is regulated by the federal government.

Californians covered by Medi-Cal, the joint state and federal health insurance program for low-income people, already have access to vasectomies at no cost to them. But under federal rules, they’ll still need a prescription to access over-the-counter birth control.

The Biden administration this fall announced it is seeking public input regarding easing access for over-the-counter preventive care supplies, including contraceptives.

Reproductive health advocacy groups Essential Access Health, NARAL Pro-Choice California and the National Health Law Program pushed for the new California law. They have been working to expand access to reproductive care since the Supreme Court struck down the constitutional right to an abortion. In 2022, California also passed a law that eliminated out-of-pocket costs for abortions.

Lobbying groups that represent health insurers, including the California Association of Health Plans, lobbied against the law. They argued state mandates increase the cost of coverage for all Californians, as well as to taxpayers.

The California Catholic Conference and the Right to Life League also opposed the law, with the Catholic group seeking clear exceptions for religious employers.

PQ

A vasectomy is a low-risk sterilization procedure that usually takes about 20 minutes.

Join Sonoma County Library’s Book Club Hub and Read All Year Long

Nicasio

Pantheon of Rock

Catch dinner and a show with Wreckless Strangers. Playing music from their new EP, Orange Sky Dream, as well as their three previous releases, this six-piece band features players who have worked with an astounding lineup of industry greats like Journey, Aretha Franklin, Elvis Costello, The Fabulous Thunderbirds and more. Which is to say, expect rock of the highest order. Dinner menu options include fresh oysters, Polish dog with kraut and grilled Akaushi wagyu ribeye steak. Dinner reservations from 6-8pm, music at 8pm, Saturday, Jan. 13 at Rancho Nicasio, 1 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio. For dinner reservations and $20 tickets, visit ranchonicasio.com.

Santa Rosa

Peace Rising

Along the west coast of India, the arrival of the harvest season is celebrated as a festival of kite flying. So pervasive is the enthusiastic participation of locals that the festival spawned International Kite Day, celebrated annually on Jan. 14. So fitting then that an action of global solidarity for peace in Israel and Palestine—a country of over 50% children—offers the joy of kite flying. Bring kites or borrow there. Say organizers, “Our gathering is a peaceful act of remembrance, raising awareness of the challenges faced by Gazan children.” Expect music, a children’s booth and making, decorating and flying kites. In conjunction with Sonoma County for Palestine. 1:30 to 3:30pm, Sunday, Jan. 14 at Old Courthouse Square in Santa Rosa.

St. Helena

Lucian Freud Paints Himself

For those whose idea of an enriching night on the town is a barrage of disquieting visuals, the Jarvis Conservatory screening of Exhibition On Screen’s documentary of the work of iconoclast painter Lucian Freud will not disappoint. Tortured self-portraits etched in grueling detail with revolting color are the artist’s specialty. What’s not to love? The film directed by David Bickerstaff depicts the exhibition at London’s Royal Academy of Arts and runs 90 minutes.

‘Lucien Freud: Self-Portrait.’ Screenings at 4 and 7pm, Saturday, Jan. 13. Jarvis Conservatory, 1711 Main St., Napa. Tickets are $15.

Sonoma County

Book Club Hub

From memoir to mystery, Sonoma County Library has book clubs at every branch and virtual clubs too. “Sonoma County Library is ready for all your New Year’s resolutions. Join one of our 22-plus book clubs to keep you reading throughout the year. We have something for everyone!” said community engagement division manager Jessica Romero. The library also offers a Spanish language book club, the Tortilla Literaria Spanish Book Club, which takes place entirely in Spanish. Learn more about book clubs at sonomalibrary.org/bookclubs.

‘The Zone of Interest’ is a Docudrama of Pure Malignance

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The household of Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel) and his wife Hedwig (Sandra Hüller), as depicted in the intensely compressed docudrama The Zone of Interest, is more or less typical of similar management-class European families during the stressful wartime years of the 1940s—with some significant irregularities. 

First and foremost, Höss wears the uniform of the SS-Totenkopfverbände, the military/political force that administered the Third Reich’s concentration camps and conducted Adolf Hitler’s “Final Solution to the Jewish Question,” which among myriad other atrocities oversaw the murder of some 6 million “subhuman undesirables” during World War II. Höss (1901-1945), commandant of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp complex for four years, was responsible for a large percentage of the suffering.

In that context even the smallest details of daily life in the Höss home take on a sinister, vaguely nauseating new importance, in a grim parody of “typical” family sagas. For instance, after the children swim in the nearby river their mother vigorously scrubs their bodies, as if to remove any “Jewish impurities.”

Inside the hushed rooms of the house, located just outside a barbed-wire-topped wall, nervous servants anxiously fuss over the family, as if it were a matter of life and death. Occasional echoes of screams and gunshots come from over the wall. Höss hosts meetings with his ghoulish black-uniformed staff officers. The master also indulges in late-night extramarital sex—really an act of rape—in the basement with his frightened housemaid.

The sense of dread hanging over this fastidious German family is central to the adaptation of the late Martin Amis’ 2014 novel of the same name. However, in director/co-scenarist Jonathan (Under the Skin) Glazer’s choice to use Rudolf Höss’ actual name for the novel’s fictionalized commandant “Paul Doll,” the film tries to have its cake and eat it too. It tries a criminal by metaphor without showing his crimes.

Perhaps the filmmaker doesn’t trust Amis’ eerie distanciation effect, and is now seeking to shorthand the terror by taking the audience one cautious step closer to the awful truth. But never going all the way to the edge of the pit.

That’s a mistake. Amis’ book succeeds as an artful, interiorized portrait of pure malignance in the guise of business as usual—unannounced apologies to philosopher Hannah Arendt’s “banality of evil.” Glazer’s version, however, is a motion picture, and different rules apply. Glazer’s film assumes every member of the audience is familiar with the ghastly documentary footage of the camps, so only the slightest implied reference is necessary.

But the director has an obligation to inform the viewer that he understands the horrors of Auschwitz even while offering only fleeting, oblique glimpses of it. Metaphors alone don’t tell the whole story.

No declarative information—scenes of brutality or piles of corpses—is offered. The horror is mostly implied. The viewer is forced to read between the lines of the Höss family’s “happy” life in the midst of the great European slaughterhouse. Thus the settings have an odd flavor, as if we’ve entered into a nightmarish restaging of one of Jacques Tati’s whimsical comedies, with Monsieur Hulot suddenly replaced by a Nazi with a skull insignia on his cap.

Simply put, the weight of the Holocaust is too heavy for Glazer’s The Zone of Interest. It has trouble standing alone. With that in mind, here’s a concise list of films dealing with the Shoah and the Hitler regime’s crimes by means of stark reportorial imagery, without the aid of artfully implied violence or sanitizing. In the best of all possible worlds audiences would experience Glazer’s film only after grounding themselves in a few of these documentaries: 

Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah (1985); Alain Resnais’ Night and Fog (1956); Sidney Bernstein and Alfred Hitchcock’s Memory of the Camps (2014); Yael Hersonski’s A Film Unfinished (2010); Claude Chabrol’s Eye of Vichy (1993); Andre Singer’s Night Will Fall (2014); Stuart Shulberg’s Nuremberg: Its Lesson for Today (1948); Rick Steves’ The Story of Fascism in Europe (2018); Marcel Ophuls’ The Sorrow and the Pity (1969); Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will (1935); Frank Capra and Anatole Litvak’s The Nazis Strike (from the U.S. War Department’s Why We Fight series, 1943); and The World at War series, by Thames Television and the Imperial War Museum, UK (1973). 

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‘The Zone of Interest’ is in theaters.

Free Will Astrology: Week of January 10

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Why do birds sing? They must be expressing their joy at being alive, right? And in some cases, they are trying to impress and attract potential mates. Ornithologists tell us that birds are also staking out their turf by chirping their melodies. Flaunting their vigor is a sign to other birds of how strong and commanding they are. In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you Aries humans to sing more than ever before in 2024. Like birds, you have a mandate to boost your joie de vivre and wield more authority. Here are 10 reasons why singing is good for your health: tinyurl.com/HealthySinging.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Which zodiac sign is most likely to have a green thumb? Who would most astrologers regard as the best gardener? Who would I call on if I wanted advice on when to harvest peaches, how to love and care for roses as they grow or how to discern which weeds might be helpful and useful? The answer, according to my survey, is Taurus. And I believe you Bulls will be even more fecund than usual around plants in 2024. Even further, I expect you to be extra fertile and creative in every area of your life. I hereby dub you Maestro of the Magic of Germination and Growth.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Research I’ve found suggests that 70% of us have experienced at least one traumatic event in our lives. But I suspect the percentage is higher. For starters, everyone has experienced the dicey expulsion from the warm, nurturing womb. That’s usually not a low-stress event. The good news, Gemini, is that now and then there come phases when we have more power than usual to heal from our traumas. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the coming months will be one of those curative times for you.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): At their best, Libras foster vibrant harmony that energizes social situations. At their best, Scorpios stimulate the talents and beauty of those they engage with. Generous Leos and Sagittarians inspire enthusiasm in others by expressing their innate radiance. Many of us may get contact highs from visionary, deep-feeling Pisceans. In 2024, Cancerian, I believe you can call on all these modes as you brighten and nurture the people in your sphere—even if you have no Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Leo or Pisces influences in your astrological chart.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Here are my wishes for you in 2024. 1. I hope you will rigorously study historical patterns in your life story. I hope you will gather robust insights into the rhythms and themes of your amazing journey. 2. You will see clearly what parts of your past are worth keeping and which are better outgrown and left behind. 3. You will come to a new appreciation of the heroic quest you have been on. You will feel excited about how much further your quest can go. 4. You will feel gratitude for the deep inner sources that have been guiding you all these years. 5. You will be pleased to realize how much you have grown and ripened.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo author Eduardo Galeano mourned how our institutions condition us to divorce our minds from our hearts and our bodies from our souls. Even sadder, many of us deal with these daunting schisms by becoming numb to them. The good news, Virgo, is that I expect 2024 to be one of the best times ever for you to foster reconciliation between the split-off parts of yourself. Let’s call this the Year of Unification. May you be inspired to create both subtle and spectacular fusions of your fragmented parts. Visualize your thoughts and feelings weaving together in elegant harmony. Imagine your material and spiritual needs finding common sources of nourishment.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): According to ancient Greek myth, the half-divine hero Heracles consulted the Oracle of Delphi for guidance. He was assigned to perform 12 daunting feats, most of which modern people would regard as unethical, like killing and stealing. There was one labor that encouraged integrity, though. Heracles had to clean the stables where over a thousand divine cattle lived. The place hadn’t been scrubbed in 30 years! As I meditated on your hero’s journey in the coming months, Libra, I concluded that you’d be wise to begin with a less grandiose version of Heracles’ work in the stables. Have fun as you cheerfully tidy up everything in your life! By doing so, you will earn the power to experience many deep and colorful adventures in the coming months.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I will name two taboos I think you should break in 2024. The first is the theory that you must hurt or suppress yourself to help others. The second is that you must hurt or suppress others to benefit yourself. Please scour away any delusion you might have that those two strategies could genuinely serve you. In their place, substitute these hypotheses: 1. Being good to yourself is the best way to prepare for helping others. 2. Being good to others is the best way to benefit yourself.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Doubt has killed more dreams than failure ever will,” says Sagittarian author Suzy Kassem. Many of us have had the experience of avoiding a quest for success because we are too afraid of being defeated or demoralized. “Loss aversion” is a well-known psychological concept that applies when we are so anxious about potential loss that we don’t pursue the possible gain. In my astrological estimation, you Centaurs should be especially on guard against this inhibiting factor in 2024. I am confident you can rise above it, but to do so, you must be alert for its temptation—and eager to summon new reserves of courage.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 2024, I predict you will be blessed with elegant and educational expansion—but also challenged by the possibility of excessive, messy expansion. Soulful magnificence could vie for your attention with exorbitant extravagance. Even as you are offered valuable novelties that enhance your sacred and practical quests, you may be tempted with lesser inducements you don’t really need. For optimal results, Capricorn, I urge you to avoid getting distracted by irrelevant goodies. Usher your fate away from pretty baubles and towards felicitous beauty.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Some people feel that “wealth” refers primarily to financial resources. If you’re wealthy, it means you have a lot of money, luxurious possessions and lavish opportunities to travel. But wealth can also be measured in other ways. Do you have an abundance of love in your life? Have you enjoyed many soulful adventures? Does your emotional intelligence provide rich support for your heady intelligence? I bring this up, Aquarius, because I believe 2024 will be a time when your wealth will increase. The question for you to ruminate on: How do you define wealth?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “No one can build you the bridge on which you, and only you, must cross the river of life,” said philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Here’s my response to that bold declaration: It’s utterly WRONG! No one in the history of the world has ever built anything solely by their own efforts, let alone a bridge to cross the river of life. Even if you are holed up in your studio working on a novel, painting or invention, you are absolutely dependent on the efforts of many people to provide you with food, water, electricity, clothes, furniture and all the other goodies that keep you functioning. It’s also unlikely that anyone could create anything of value without having received a whole lot of love and support from other humans. Sorry for the rant, Pisces. It’s a preface for my very positive prediction: In 2024, you will have substantial help in building your bridge across the river of life.

Homework: I invite you to redefine what it would look and feel like to be your best self. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Trump’s Nazi-like rhetoric: A threat to democracy

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In his Claremont, New Hampshire speech, last November, Donald Trump crossed the line when he said: “We pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country that lie and steal and cheat on elections.”

With this shocking statement, Trump exposed to the American public a clear view into his fundamental Nazi beliefs. While it required a few years into Trump’s presidency before the national media coalesced around the term “unprecedented” to describe his actions, eventually this description took hold.

But there is precedent. Adolph Hitler.

Of late, Trump is ratcheting up his Hitlerian rants, now calling some immigrants and refugees the subhumans who are “poisoning the blood of the country.”

Ten years from now, when historians look backward, they will see Trump’s rise to power along a Nazi trajectory.

It seems likely that many of his supporters may be convinced—even before any ballot is cast in 2024—that the election is stolen if Trump does not win, in part, because of his relentless lies about the “stolen” 2020 election. His newest campaign calling his opponents vermin is not merely unprecedented language; it is about dehumanizing his opponents to the degree that violence against them would be personally justifiable.

If Trump’s opponents are vermin, why not exterminate them? Germans were capable of that behavior. Are Americans really that different?

In Trump’s world, losing cannot be tolerated. He said that he intends to eliminate all those who oppose him, those who obstruct him and those who claimed he lost the 2020 election. If Trump were to be elected in 2024, American democracy as we have known it to be in America would no longer exist.

Now is the time for Americans and the media to join together to stop this man. History will not look kindly on Americans if we do not.

Alan Kanner, Ph.D. is a psychologist.

California fast-food workers to receive $20 minimum wage in April

Californians in two industries are set to get new minimum wages just for them this year, and that could lead to pay bumps for other workers, too.

Gov. Gavin Newsom last year signed two union-backed bills that will boost fast-food and health care workers’ minimum wages.

California-based fast-food workers for chains with 60 or more locations around the nation will earn at least $20 an hour beginning in April, $4 higher than the overall state minimum wage of $16 that became effective Jan. 1.

In June, health care workers will earn a minimum of $18, $21 or $23 an hour, depending on what type of facility employs them and where they work.

The industry-specific wage increases reflect a shift in unions’ strategies at the Capitol. After the Great Recession, labor groups led campaigns that resulted in then-Gov. Jerry Brown signing a law in 2016 that put California on a path to a $15 minimum wage. That law included inflation adjustments, which is why the minimum wage is higher today.

The two new laws are expected to trigger pay increases for about 900,000 Californians, some of whom are earning more than minimum wage today.

They are going into effect in a competitive labor market that has seen employers, especially small businesses, struggling to hire and retain workers. California’s unemployment rate is at 4.8%, which is higher compared with the federal unemployment rate of 3.7% but is near a historic low.

The new fast-food minimum wage could push up pay for other restaurant and food workers, experts say.

In a tight labor market, “other food-services companies will likely have to increase wages in order to retain workers in a sector in which chronic understaffing, and the stress and burnout that causes among remaining staff, is already a problem,” said John Logan, professor of labor studies at San Francisco State University.

Others say the industry-specific minimum wage could have ripple effects in other industries.

Keith Miller owns three Subway sandwich shops in Northern California and is spokesperson for the American Association of Franchisees & Dealers, which opposed the fast-food worker legislation. The law passed with support from major fast-food chains, which gained assurances that unions would drop an initiative that would have made the chains liable for their franchises’ labor violations.

Under the law, Miller said, franchisors like McDonald’s or Subway avoid responsibility, but franchisees like him will bear the costs of paying higher wages.

Miller questioned why fast-food workers were singled out as needing a minimum-wage increase, and added that it could affect industries such as retail. He said retail workers might switch over to fast food if they can make more money there, or retailers might need to raise their workers’ wages.

“It’s kind of a fallacy that this impacts only fast-food workers,” Miller said. “It kind of creates a market rate. In effect, the minimum wage for a lot of people will be $20.”

Upcoming Minimum Wage Measures

California voters in November will see a ballot initiative that would raise the state minimum wage to $18 an hour. It’s backed by billionaire Joe Sanberg.

Workers in other industries, meanwhile, are fighting for higher minimum wages, too. In Los Angeles, a proposed ordinance would institute a $25 minimum wage for workers in the tourism industry before the 2026 World Cup and the 2028 Olympics, which would rise to $30 an hour by 2028.

Jovan Houston, an airport security worker at Los Angeles International Airport, said she has been working there for six years and makes $19.78 an hour. She said a boost in wages would be “extremely” helpful for her and her 13-year-old son. They live with her niece and her four kids because rent is so expensive, Houston said.

“It’s cramped, but I can’t afford to move,” she said, adding that she has coworkers “who work two or three days to survive. They’re sleeping in the back on their breaks because they’re tired.”

Even as she fights for the Los Angeles ordinance that would raise her wages, Houston thinks it’s possible that her company would cut workers if forced to pay them more.

“They might eliminate workers,” Houston said. “I’m definitely worried about that.”

The Effects of Higher Minimum Wages

The costs and potential consequences of the higher minimum wages worry some people, including economists and the governor, while others see upsides.

Economist Christopher Thornberg, one of the founding partners of Beacon Economics, said that in a competitive market, increasing minimum wages for the lowest-paid workers will lead to higher prices for consumers. For example, McDonald’s and Chipotle executives have said they plan to raise prices next year to offset increased labor costs.

But Michael Reich, an economics professor at UC Berkeley, said the effect of increased wages on product costs is relatively low and is usually seen in labor-intensive industries like dining and fast food. Reich said that when wages rise 10%, costs in the restaurant industry go up by about 2% to 3% and usually just on a one-time basis instead of a yearly increase.

Reich said raising wages for workers can lead to their upward mobility. Any negative effects, such as higher costs for consumers or contribution to inflation, are negligible, he and other economists say.

By increasing minimum wages for the lowest-paid workers, “you raise the standard of living,” Reich said. “That is quite significant.”

In addition, securing minimum wages for certain groups could eventually be used as a model to benefit other types of workers, such as gig workers who don’t currently have employee status, said Nelson Lichtenstein, a professor at UC Santa Barbara who has written books about labor history.

“One could see a wage commission… for the Uber world that can establish certain kinds of criteria, which would have the effect of a minimum wage,” Lichtenstein said.

Meanwhile, the new minimum wage for health care workers is expected to cost $4 billion in the first year—half from California’s general fund and half from federal funds—during a time when it is facing a gaping budget deficit. So the governor reportedly is seeking changes, though it is unclear what form they will take.

San Anselmo’s Carlina Bjork

I met Carlina Bjork and her husband, Jeff, after they opened OCN Culture, bringing the spirit of “aloha” to downtown San Anselmo, and a great way to begin this new year!

What do you do?  

I’m the co-owner of OCN Culture. I work alongside my two partners who are my husband, Jeff, and my best friend, Shashona (aka “Sho”). OCN Culture is a beach lifestyle brand. We are especially inspired by our collaborations with artists and creatives who embody aloha.

Where do you live? San Geronimo Valley.

How long have you lived in Marin? Since 1996. 

Where can we find you when you’re not at work? 

At home cooking, with friends or at Fitlab in Fairfax. Or, in Hawaii as much as we can. We especially love the Gold Coast area of Oahu.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them? 

Definitely lunch at Hog Island Oyster Co. in Marshall! 

What’s one thing Marin is missing?  A Korean BBQ restaurant.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites? 

Help where and when we can. There are so many volunteer opportunities here, and the impact often goes beyond what we could imagine.

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be? 

Duke Kahanamoku. Or, my husband’s grandfather who he never met, as he was killed in action in Okinawa, Japan during WWII.

What is some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago? 

You can do whatever you want. Start it as a side hustle. Lead with your intuition always. It’s OK if it doesn’t turn out like you thought. Keep learning and go with it. 

What is something that in 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy? 

Hopefully fast food?! At least the way it’s made currently.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world? 

For all humans to have aloha towards each other. I’ll leave you with a quote by Duke Kahanamoku:

“In Hawai’i we greet friends, loved ones and strangers with Aloha, which means with love. Aloha is the key word to the universal spirit of real hospitality… Try meeting or leaving people with Aloha. You’ll be surprised by their reaction.”

Keep up with Bjork at @ocnculture on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

The Pretense of Rationality

The Way

I have some thoughts regarding “Cease and Desist” from the Open Mic of Dec. 20 and would begin by saying I’m saddened and depressed by the endless, meaningless strife worldwide.

One may search for meaning through war and peace, violence and morality, yet history sadly rhymes or repeats. Witness today’s long line of nightmarish self-ordained characters whose imperious rhetoric speaks to ending suffering through more suffering and sacrifice of the many for the few.

There is a perversity with which modern society pontificates its pretense of rationality. The vast enculturation of our mythological and metaphysical past, that imaginative pantheon of capricious and vengeful gods still nourish us but at once confound reason.

The current historical transition of nations to this “New World Order” already demonstrates that it will be facilitated through fear, violent struggle, brutality and repression. Systems of law and morality wouldn’t exist without violence. They are two sides of the same coin. The law supports our Promethean prison industrial complex, and law begets violence through violence.

Cormac McCarthy wrote an American masterpiece, the historical fiction novel entitled Blood Meridian. I believe this quote is both a central theme and germane: “It makes no difference what men think of war… War endures… Ask what they think of stone. War was always here. Before man was, war waited for him. The ultimate trade awaiting its ultimate practitioner. That is the way it was and will be. That way and not some other way.”

Leland Dennick

Sebastopol

West Marin Culture Shop: Where tradition and fermentation meet

What do wine, cheese, miso and oh so many more food items along the same vein have in common?

Well, they’re all delicious, all fermented and, most importantly, all sold at the West Marin Culture Shop, conveniently located in Point Reyes Station—in the same building where Cowgirl Creamery once wowed the world with its iconic cheese wheels.

Now, the selfsame structure plays host to what can only be described as a sort of fermented micro food hall, a purveyor of picnic supplies and supplier of pickles and soda pop—the real kind that’s made with fresh fruit and is so authentic it’s only available on tap onsite.

Married couple, Maggie Levinger and Luke Regalbuto, are the masterminds behind the brews, brines and all-around good times to be had browsing this relatively new yet entirely ancient concept of a culture shop. They also own and operate their own line of fermented goods, Wild West Ferments, and have a sauerkraut so good, it can be eaten with a fork straight from the jar…with the eater in question just standing in front of the ajar fridge door, drinking down the brine in secret at 3am.

But before delving too far into all the details of how Point Reyes became a place of such cultural significance, one should first take a moment to ask the experts…what exactly is fermentation?

“Basically, fermentation is—from a human perspective—the practice of enhancing food by working with microbial populations,” explained Levinger. “It’s changing ingredients through a sort of dance with a microbial population.”

“Often for preservation purposes,” noted Regalbuto. “And I like to think there’s a little bit of magic in there as well.”

“There’s definitely an element of magic and mystery to fermentation,” Levinger said. “It’s almost better to not try to understand it completely.”

The magic and mystery of fermentation are indeed in the intangible, invisible, uncontrollable (or at least unpredictable) and entirely naturally occurring microorganisms such as bacteria, yeast or mold, all of which can be harnessed to turn something as humble as a head of cabbage into an absolutely enchanting, peerless elixir—it’s an impressive enough transformation to make anyone wonder if the fermentation experts are at least a little bit magic as well.

“Maggie is a little bit modest, but she really is the origin of all of this,” Regalbuto said. “She studied nutrition and worked in restaurants in the North Bay and was already a food professional by the time she was in her early 20s. Her mom was diagnosed with colon cancer at a young age, which is what got her interested in probiotics and fermented foods before it became this big industry.”

Levinger actually grew up in Inverness and has lived in West Marin for most of her life. And she did in fact leave, first to live in Humboldt, where she met her now-husband, and soon after to travel extensively, exploring the world for its best ferments. But eventually, Levinger returned to Point Reyes with her husband and a whole lot of passion for fermentation in tow.

“[West Marin] is a pretty potent place to have as a homeland,” Levinger said. “And I still have a lot of family out here, my siblings and my dad…and this place just has a strong pull, especially since we felt like we were interested in living as much of land-based life as we could, plus we love to forage wild foods, have a garden and life rich in community involvement.”

As a result of the couple’s extensive travels, the West Marin Culture Shop is well-equipped to provide shoppers with far more than just the classic fare of fermented American foods. In fact, customers can expect to find some truly unique items from across the globe, including imported fermented chocolate, a living juniper berry beverage, umeboshi and even feta that’s been shipped from Greece and packed into a wildly delicious Wild West Ferments brine.

“It would take a lot of hubris, even after 15 years, to say that what we ferment is always good, or that we always get what we’re looking to get,” said Levinger. “But as far as our recipes and ingredients go, we know that those are good.”

What began as a couple’s passion project developed from selling fermented goods from the back of their pickup truck, which then led to a farmers’ market stall and, after a dozen years, has become a storefront and a line of fermented products that is sold in around 200 stores across California.

Wild West Ferments is proudly an all-organic company and can guarantee all of the fermented goods they create are entirely untouched by plastic, from start to finish.

“Our vision was to create a sort of food hall to show off the bounty of West Marin’s food bounty,” explained Regalbuto.

The West Marin Culture Shop itself is open and inviting, and its spacious interior leaves enough elbow room for customers to feel at ease as they browse the specially curated selection of items lining the walls and stalls inside.

“The vision of West Marin Culture Shop is really just to show and display all the amazing things fermentation can create,” Regalbuto said. “We have an incredible cheese selection, wine selection, chocolates, vinegars, misos and other little things that kind of fit in there like cured meats…”

And this fermented goods store doesn’t just offer already-made fermented food products; they also provide a plethora of ferment-it-yourself resources, including an array of books all about how to ferment one’s own food, as well as locally-made items like ceramic fermentation crocks.

“The concept of West Main Culture Shop is a pantry and picnic emporium dedicated to traditional fermented foods,” said Levinger. “And within those categories, we’re really seeking out products and partnering with people who are just as dedicated as we are.”

Those interested in experiencing some fermented magic for themselves may visit the West Marin Culture Shop by stopping by 80 4th St. along Point Reyes Station—where the iconic Cowgirl Creamery once sold its world-class fermented dairy to the Marin-dwelling masses.

“The fact that [West Marin Culture Shop] was formerly a shrine to cheese is amazing,” concluded Regalbuto. “Especially since cheese is an incredible fermented food that our region specializes in, so we still love showcasing what the local farms have to offer.”

To learn more, visit the Wild West Ferments and West Marin Culture Shop website at wildwestferments.com, or stop by the shop Friday through Monday from 11am to 5pm for a briny bite of microbiome-balancing magic.

Discover the intricate roots of bonsai at Sonoma Botanical Garden

Yountville

Disney Stay-cation

The less remembered but beloved Disney film Pollyanna featured the vistas of the Napa and Sonoma valleys as well as Santa Rosa and Petaluma. And the Napa Valley Museum exhibition “Pollyanna Valley” is a reflection on the film starring Hayley Mills. The area was used by Walt Disney to “represent an idyllic turn-of-the-century town,” according to organizers. In collaboration with the Walt Disney Family Museum, the show displays behind-the-scenes photographs from the making of the film along with promo material. Attendees get to play Pollyanna’s “Glad Game” for themselves. Wednesdays through Sundays from 10am to 4pm through Feb. 25 in the Spotlight Gallery of the Napa Valley Museum, 55 Presidents Cir., Yountville. Members free, others $5-$15.

Woodacre

Women With King

Video and musical clips as well as images will be used in an online event hosted by Spirit Rock Meditation Center of Woodacre to highlight four Black women activists “who assisted, guided and, at times, challenged Dr. [Martin Luther] King during the civil rights campaigns in Atlanta, Montgomery and beyond.” Say the event hosts, “These remarkable women exemplified the bodhisattva principles of courage, resilience, compassion and wisdom.” Celebrate the spiritual implications of the work of Alberta Williams King, Rosa Parks, Fannie Lou Hamer and Ella Baker. This program is being offered online only via Zoom for participants to join remotely at 10am, Saturday, Jan. 13. Sliding scale, with one’s generosity supporting the teachers as well as Spirit Rock staff and fellow practitioners. Register at bit.ly/mlk-spirit-rock.

Occidental

A Quick Word

A full day of flash fiction is on at Occidental Center for the Arts. Guy Biederman, author of six collections of very short work, has been leading short fiction workshops for years. As Bohemian writers can attest from last year’s flash fiction “Spring Lit” issue, the approach is terrifying and liberating. And as Biederman says, “We’ll practice using writing seeds, time limits and story samples [to] pursue the creativity of limitation, the pleasure of discovery, and the earnest work of craft.” 10am-1pm, Writing Workshop. 1-2pm, lunch break. 2-4pm, time for revisions and optional sharing. Sunday, Jan. 14, at the center, 3850 Doris Murphy Ct., Occidental. Pre-registration for this workshop is required at bit.ly/flash-oca. Cost: $60 general, $50 OCA members.

 
Santa Rosa

Wee Trees

Say hello to my little (tree) friend. The Sonoma Botanical Garden has partnered with the Redwood Empire Bonsai Society to present “Living Sculptures: The Art and Science of Bonsai.” Each miniature tree is an embodiment of serenity and care. Fifteen such master works of local bonsai artisans are on display in this divine exhibition. According to organizers, the informational plaques “illuminate the intricate roots of this timeless practice and dig into the science that is critical to the survival of these tiny trees.” Open 9am-4pm daily, closed Tuesdays and some holidays. Garden admission is $12 for adults; $10 for seniors; $8 for teens, students and active military. Children under 12 are free. Sonoma Botanical Garden, 12841 Hwy. 12, Glen Ellen.

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West Marin Culture Shop: Where tradition and fermentation meet

West Marin Culture Shop, located in Point Reyes Station, is a fermented micro food hall offering a variety of fermented goods, including cheese, wine, miso, and pickles, as well as ferment-it-yourself resources and locally-made items.

Discover the intricate roots of bonsai at Sonoma Botanical Garden

The Napa Valley Museum is hosting an exhibition "Pollyanna Valley" featuring behind-the-scenes photographs from the film, while the Spirit Rock Meditation Center is hosting an online event to highlight four Black women activists, and the Sonoma Botanical Garden is presenting "Living Sculptures: The Art and Science of Bonsai" to showcase the intricate roots of this timeless practice.
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