Culture Crush, Sept. 10

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Point Reyes Station

Fab Four

From Sept. 20 to Oct. 26, Gallery Route One presents four exhibitions that respond to today’s world through diverse voices and materials. Sherrie Lovler’s Distant Voices offers elegant calligraphic paintings as messages of change and hope; Renée Owen’s Adrift: A Landscape of Loss uses fiber and book art to reflect on human displacement and fragile connections with nature; Fedra Yazdi’s The Weight of What Was explores belonging through paintings inspired by Persian and Suzani textiles; and Will Thoms’ 21 9x9s presents small, playful experiments in color and texture. Opening reception with artist talks: 3–5 pm, Saturday, Sept. 20. Gallery Route One, 11101 Highway 1, Point Reyes Station. Open Thurs–Mon, 11 am–5 pm. More at galleryrouteone.org.

Sebastopol

Climate Confab

Two Acre Wood Cohousing throws open its doors Sept. 27 for an afternoon of tours and a community potluck focused on sustainability and climate solutions. Visitors can explore solar systems, EV charging setups, heat pump water heaters, induction stoves and thriving gardens while learning about zero-waste practices. The 14-home community recently hit a climate-positive milestone, producing 25% more energy than it uses. Tours at 1, 2:30 and 4pm by RSVP (TA********@***ic.net or ma****@***ic.net). Happy Hour Potluck at 5:30pm—bring finger foods and one’s own plate and utensils. Free. Two Acre Wood Cohousing, Robinson Road, Sebastopol (park at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 500 Robinson Rd., and follow signs).

San Geronimo

Day of Peace

The San Geronimo Valley Community Center hosts the 11th annual International Day of Peace Festival Sept. 16–21, weaving together art, music and community practices for peace. Highlights include a new mural and Peace Box Art Show created by Lagunitas School students, teachers and families; gallery exhibitions featuring San Quentin’s Prison Arts Project alongside Teamworks Art Mentoring Program; workshops in sound healing, meditation and nonviolent communication; and film screenings on personal peace journeys. The week closes with a Peace Concert headlined by Bay Area music legend Barry “the Fish” Melton. Sept. 16–21 at San Geronimo Valley Community Center, 6350 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. Details at sgvcc.org.

Sonoma Valley

Plein Air Fest

Art meets advocacy as the Sonoma Plein Air Festival continues through Sept. 13, bringing 29 master painters to capture Sonoma’s landscapes while raising funds for art education. Since 2002, the festival has invested more than $2.4 million in local classrooms and nonprofits, ensuring kids have the supplies and support to create. Highlights include the outdoor Art Show & Sale on the Plaza (Sept. 13, 10am–4pm) with live music, demos and free kids’ activities. Forty percent of art sales go directly to grants for K–12 art programs and supplies. Now through Sept. 13 at various Sonoma Valley locations. Full schedule at sonomapleinair.org.

Cannabis Lounge: Brandon Levine of Mercy Wellness

Even sitting at his “ease” in the house he built (Mercy Wellness), Brandon Levine is taut and nervy. His brain is a policy brain, restless, seeking, spinning and flashing. He is a leader, and he is a human vector, held in self-restraint.

Whether his journey through the ever shifting cannabis industry made him, or whether his inborn character suited him, Brandon Levine is a rare survivor. And he thrives, even amid the current industry conditions of mis-regulation, over-taxation, piratical rents, glutted supply, dropping prices, corporate-buyouts and fierce do-or-die competition. 

This spring, surrounded by friends and work family, Levine celebrated the 15th anniversary of Mercy Wellness (whose branding evokes its medical-era founding). The occasion was marked to celebrate all they had achieved over a long journey—and to point to the future, for the event was held in Mercy Wellness Lounge, Sonoma County’s first ever cannabis “consumption lounge.”

That, friends, is the event I celebrate, for the idea of a “consumption lounge” is both new and old. My memory stretches back. Before the efficiency-geared high style dispensary, before the bullet-proof glass dispensary, there was the home-y homely cannabis club of the medical era. I remember clubs, mostly in San Francisco, that were true community smoke-out hangouts—anti-bars where bouncers were nice and the bartenders goofy. They were chill because the cultural tone is set by weed, not liquor. Inasmuch the struggling industry needs this, the North Bay needs this, a new set of venues and low-pressure hangouts. 

As I entered, I passed a calendar of events and a small cabaret stage, then joined Levine in a cushy booth. Aromasoma played handpan.

Cincinnatus Hibbard: Congratulations, Brandon. Tell us about the new space. It’s big and open.

Brandon Levine: It’s a little under 3,500 square feet inside and like 6,000 square feet outside—about a third of which is unfinished—that will be a private party area. There are 160 lineal feet of windows, and it all opens to the outside. You can sit at “the bar” and be inside or outside. I’m building a second, much bigger stage on the outside, out of redwood. We have a scullery kitchen here we’re working on. We’re going to be building a wood fired BBQ and pizza ovens.

On the patio, fenced in by young redwoods and aspen, I see a hitch for a food truck around picnic tables. At our table, there are two menus, one for non-infused munchie snacks, and one for bud—flower, “flower flights,” pre-rolls, edibles, infused beverages, etc. At the bar, your “bud tenders” advise us on safe consumption advice?

Yes. And you can order from the dispensary at the bar and have it delivered to you. We have free papers and fresh glass for you to use and all kinds of devices. For a small fee, you can have unlimited day use of cartas, puffcos, gravity bongs and volcanos. Another thing we are hyper focused on is entertainment and experience. If you look at our calendar, you see a wide range of options—comedy nights, DJs, live bands, magic, a puff ’n’ paint, Bingo—surprisingly, Bingo was a big hit. There’re prizes.

How were you able to open the first consumption lounge in Sonoma County?

First, California State had to approve consumption lounges, but then your local jurisdiction—in our case, the city of Cotati has to pass a local ordinance approving it. They also need a guinea pig business.

Learn more. Follow the link, mercywellness.com, for a full event calendar. And if one can’t make it to the dispensary or lounge, Mercy Wellness delivers to large parts of Sonoma and Marin.

Support Local Arts, Save a Nation

There’s a reason authoritarian types go after the arts first. Fragile, underfunded, subjective as hell—it’s easier to remove the arts rather than reckon with culture.

Sure, we won’t miss the silenced songs, shuttered theaters or unshelved books that we never liked anyway. But we’ll also never know the ones we were denied—the voices throttled before they reached us, or the ones we forsook while yoked to an algorithm that insists resistance is futile and bingeing sophomoric TV is self-care. That’s not culture; that’s hospice.

What we’re really watching is culture atrophy in real time. Perspectives narrow, appetites for resistance wither and before long even dissent goes out of print.

Which is why producing and supporting new, original local art isn’t a pastime—it’s a civic necessity. Freedom of expression is a 236-year-old covenant, radical in its insistence on the new, conservative in its insistence that free speech, press and assembly remain intact. And that’s all one needs to put on a show.

Art keeps the contract current. Stop making new art and one surrenders the very premise of freedom.

I’ve entered the “best defense is a good offense” period of my creative life. And in culture, that means making more art, not less—even if it offends. Especially if it offends authoritarians. Local art is harder to censor because it’s everywhere and nowhere: the mural on the café wall, the band at the bar, the poem at the open mic. It’s guerrilla defense—decentralized, abundant, unpredictable and impossible to silence. Whac-A-Mole meets Moleskine.

With libraries under siege, curricula gutted and funding stripped, it’s on us to buy the ticket, go to the show, toss a few bucks in the guitar case—or make something. Capture an imagination, free a heart. Every act of original creation is a line held against cultural amnesia and political erasure.

In this moment of suppression, local art is both shield and sword.

Sharpen up. The nation depends on it.

Daedalus Howell is editor of this paper, a filmmaker and host of ‘The Drive’ on 95.5 FM.

Sparkling Darling: Arnaud Weyrich of Roederer Estate

Following his 1993 graduation from Montpellier’s esteemed Ecole Supérieure d’Oenologie with a master of science in viticulture and enology, Arnaud Weyrich launched his professional journey as an intern at the lovely Roederer Estate in Anderson Valley. 

During this internship, he applied his solid foundation in viticulture and enology principles, marking the beginning of an enduring partnership with Maison Louis Roederer that had him crossing back and forth over the Atlantic five times in one decade.

After completing his internship, Weyrich returned to France to join his then fiancée, now wife Floriane, accepting a position with a major retail corporation where he managed quality control for all beverages produced under the company’s private label brands.

Driven by his passion for the wine industry and preference for smaller company environments, Weyrich enthusiastically rejoined Roederer Estate in 2000 as assistant winemaker. However, when the opportunity arose for him to serve as chief technical officer responsible for development at Champagne Louis Roederer in Reims, he left the U.S. once again for more than a year.

In 2002, Weyrich relocated his family back to Roederer Estate, where he has since managed comprehensive winery operations from vineyard to daily business affairs, currently holding the position of winemaker and vice president of production.

Amber Turpin: How did you get into this work?

Arnaud Weyrich: I was born in Alsace, France, and wine was part of life there. My parents always had good wine on their table. Growing up, I knew I wanted to do a job that involved the outdoors. Farming, growing grapes and making wine seemed to cover that option.

Did you ever have an ‘aha’ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

There wasn’t one specific moment. I do remember one wine very vividly. It was Champagne Philipponnat, Clos des Goisses. I was on a date with my wife, Floriane, at a very good restaurant, 2-star Michelin. Maybe it wasn’t the perfect bottle, but it was the perfect person, the perfect time, the perfect place. The wine felt extraordinary.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

When I imbibe at home, my drink of choice is either Champagne or Roederer Estate Sparkling wine. Either one goes perfectly with food and friends.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

We don’t really go out for drinks. We like to invite friends and family over for drinks at home to enjoy the peacefulness of the vineyards where we live.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

Roederer Estate 2019 L’Ermitage Brut.

Roederer Estate, 4501 Highway 128, Philo, 707.895.2288. roedererestate.com.

Free Will Astrology, Sept. 10-16

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I can’t speak the Quechua language, which is Indigenous to the Andes Mountains. But I have lifted one of their words to use for our purposes here. The word is munay. It refers to an intensely practical and visionary love that includes far more than sweet feelings and affection. When we practice munay, we offer discerning respect and detailed appreciation to those we adore. We are generously eager to help our allies live their best lives. It takes discipline. And focus. And ingenuity. To be a rigorous and vigorous source of munay, we must cultivate it as a daily practice. In the coming weeks, Aries, I hope you will go a bit wild in your expression of this tender force of nature. Imagine yourself as a gentle whirlwind of love that spreads interesting beauty and bestows useful blessings. Be a relentless dispenser of catalytic gifts.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The medieval Persian polymath Avicenna believed the soul entered the fetus not with the first heartbeat, but with the first dream. I offer this idea for your poetic consideration, dear Taurus. Let’s imagine that the next beautiful thing you create will not arise from your forceful intention. Rather, it will emerge because you give yourself permission to fantasize, to wander freely in wonder and to meander with curiosity on the frontiers. Your assignment is not to hustle, but to incubate; not to push forward, but to dwell expectantly in the mystery.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The bowerbird constructs elaborate ground-based shrines not as nests but as seduction lures. The enticer might gather blue bottle caps, yellow flowers and shiny stones so as to create a scene that piques the attention of a potential mate. These objets d’art are not merely decorative. They are displays that demonstrate discernment, skill and aesthetic intelligence. I authorize you to be like a bowerbird, Gemini. What collection of symbols, words, gestures and curiosities will magnetize the people or opportunities you long to engage with? It’s not about flashiness; it’s about alignment. What you draw into your sphere will reflect the vibes you emanate.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): The pearl doesn’t begin as treasure. In its earliest form, it’s an irritation: a grain of sand that’s really a wound inside the oyster. Over time, the creature coats it with layers of nacre, turning discomfort into luminescence. Let’s use that as a metaphor for you, Cancerian. In my view, your task right now is not to escape or shed what’s bugging you, but to expedite the coating process. What is that gritty thing? A memory, injustice or unmet yearning? It’s crucial you don’t reject it and don’t let it fester. I think it’s best to turn it, layer by layer, into a luminous asset, even a treasure. Prediction: The pearl you form will long outlast the wound.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Olive trees can thrive in rugged environments, including rocky and nutrient-poor soils. Their root systems are wide, deep and resilient. They are well-adapted to full sun, high temperatures and low water availability. In comparing you to an olive tree, Leo, I’m not implying you will always have to be as hardy as they are. But in the coming weeks, you will be wise to be equally plucky and persevering. Here’s another fact about the olive tree you can and should emulate: Its fruit is valuable and in demand.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The Basenji is a dog breed that doesn’t bark. Instead, it produces an eerie, melodic yodel called a baroo. This oddity isn’t a flaw or drawback; it’s an interesting uniqueness. In the coming weeks, Virgo, I invite you to express your personal versions of the baroo—your idiosyncratic offerings and singular gifts. Playfully resist the pressure to be more conventional or “on brand.” Be faithful to what yearns to come out of you, which may be raw, radiant and a little weird. Let your authenticity be exactly what it is: a beacon, not a liability.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Scientists discovered that some caterpillars, while dissolving inside their cocoons, retain memories of their caterpillar lives even after becoming butterflies. In my view, that’s equivalent to us humans remembering details of our previous incarnations: having an all-new body but being able to draw on what our past body learned. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you will be able to draw on this amazing capacity in the coming weeks. The person you used to be will have key revelations and inspirations for the future you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): According to Celtic mythology, Cerridwen is the goddess of inspiration. In her cauldron, she brews magical elixirs that bestow the powers of wisdom, creativity and transformation. The humans most likely to earn her blessings are those who are patient and willing to be changed. Of all the signs in the zodiac, you Scorpios are now at the top of the eligibility list for gifts like these. And the next three weeks will be the most favorable time for you to ask for and receive such blessings. Here’s a clue that will help you get all you deserve: Believe in magic.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In ancient Chinese philosophy, ziran means naturalness, spontaneity. It might refer to the way a mountain is purely a mountain, and a wave is a wave without trying to be a wave. I think you Sagittarians are due for an extended engagement with this wild ease and elegant freedom. After weeks of inner labor, your soul wants to breathe in ziran. Your assignment is to let yourself be as natural and unconstrained as you dare—not correct or careful or “optimized.” So I advise you to head in the direction of what’s simple and real and good. Emphasize smoothness over effort. Choose your rhythm, not theirs. You aren’t required to prove your healing. You just have to live it.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Serendipity” is an English term that refers to beautiful accidents, fortunate interruptions, unexpected opportunities and surprisingly wonderful discoveries (The French equivalent is sérendipité; Italian: serendipità; Japanese: serendipiti.) The word didn’t exist until 1754, when author Horace Walpole coined it. Lovely outbreaks of good luck and uncanny blessings had been happening from time immemorial, of course, even though there wasn’t this precise word for them. Here’s a key point: They are more likely to occur if you believe they’re possible and make yourself alert for their arrival. That’s good advice for you right now.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The placenta is the only organ that the human body creates from scratch and then discards. Let’s pause for a moment to register how remarkable this is: to grow a temporary life-support system and then jettison it once its purpose is fulfilled. Inspired by this miracle, I speculate that you may soon undertake a metaphorical version of it. A situation or experience that has nurtured you is reaching the end of its mission. Though it has served you well, the wise move might be to outgrow it and move on to a new phase of your evolution. At the very least, it’s time to embark on a search for new forms of nourishment.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In Balinese gamelan music, there’s a technique called kotekan. Two instrumentalists play distinct musical parts that together create a seamless, intricately melodic and rhythmic texture. Let’s make this your metaphor to live by in the coming weeks, Pisces. In my astrological opinion, you are not meant to work solo. Your greatest success and most fun will come by generating harmony through collaborative improvisation and shared timing. A small warning: Someone else’s input may at first feel like interference, but it’s actually the missing part of the song. Let yourself blend, bounce, echo and respond. Genius will be born in the spaces between.

Your Letters, Sept. 10

Mapmaker

Politicians have long abused district maps to cling to power. In Texas, lines were redrawn, not through a fair election process, but through manipulation. That’s gerrymandering, and it silences voters.

Here in California, we led the way with an independent redistricting commission. I’m proud of that achievement, but now Republicans in Washington are taking this fight to a new low. Prop 50 is our way to fight back. It is a temporary change (2026 to 2030) in how maps are drawn, and, unlike in other states, we the people get to vote on the change.

Congress had a chance to make fair maps the law of the land. In 2019 and 2021, the House passed H.R. 1, the For the People Act, to require independent commissions in every state. The Republican Senate blocked it.

Our democracy depends on fair elections and fair maps. This isn’t the California we want long-term—we already chose an independent commission. But right now, with so much at stake, Prop 50 is the tool we need to protect voters until national reform can finally take hold. And 2026 elections could be our last chance before new barriers are locked in place. Learn more and vote YES on Prop 50.

Kathleen Meadows
Santa Rosa

Long Live KWMR: Federal Cutbacks Won’t Stop West Marin’s Public Radio Station

Even President Donald Trump can’t keep down KWMR, the treasured community radio station serving West Marin.

Although the federal Rescissions Act of 2025 just slashed more than 25% of KWMR’s annual budget, an emergency community fundraising campaign has staunched the financial bleeding. At least for now.

The station expected $160,000 of its $600,000 budget for the 2025-2026 fiscal year to come from federal funding distributed by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Instead, KWMR—and more than 1,500 public broadcasting stations across the country—will get the big goose egg.

Ditto for 2027 and beyond, courtesy of Trump, who proposed “ending taxpayer subsidization of biased media.” Congress, with its Republican majority, passed the Recissions Act last month, eliminating about $1.1 billion of funding appropriated for public radio and television stations.

Rural stations, like KWMR based in Point Reyes Station, are among the hardest hit.

“So, we have to fundraise forever,” KWMR station manager Amanda Eichstaedt said. “We’re going to have to bring in more money, or we’re going to have to shrink at some point. That’s the reality of it.”

Diminishing the programming or services provided by KWMR could have a devastating effect on the 13,000 people in the immediate listening area, especially in emergencies. The remote area dotted with hills doesn’t always have reliable cell phone service, making the radio station a vital news source for residents. Not a small feat for the two full-time and five part-time staff members.

During the 2020 Woodward Fire, a swift-growing 5,000-acre wildfire caused by lightning, the Los Angeles Times took note of the station’s essential coverage about the fire’s movement and evacuations. Eichstaedt, who lives in Olema, described it as a scary time for residents who watched trees exploding on the hill and smoke filling West Marin.

“We couldn’t even have staff come to the station then because of the [Covid] pandemic,” she said. “But we got creative with our emergency announcements. We recorded the message, put it in rotation every 30 minutes and updated it when the situation changed. I could do it from home.”

Emergency reporting fills a crucial need in the community, yet it’s KWMR’s 24/7 programming potpourri that keeps listeners tuning in every day—either on their radios, online or through the station’s app. Local news and music represent the tip of the iceberg.

“KWMR currently regularly broadcasts 90 different locally produced programs and 26 syndicated shows over the course of a two-week rotation,” KWMR program director Jeff Manson said.

Syndicated shows run the gamut, from independent global news, Democracy Now!, to the Grateful Dead Hour and Philosophy Talk. The station also runs Spanish language programs. Homegrown shows, some presented by staff, but most hosted by enthusiastic community volunteers, are particularly diverse.

Epicenter tackles West Marin issues with news and interviews. Bolinas’ Howard Dillon reads his favorite books on TeaTime Books. Actor and poet Gene Ptak, an Inverness resident, hosts Poetry Now.

Volunteer programmers Bianka Alloyn and Sabreen Naimah co-anchor the Cute Radio show, playing funk, disco and soul from their extensive vinyl collection, throwing in some rock and electronic music for good measure. 

“We try to choose a collection of songs that makes people either want to get up and dance or really take a moment to think about some of the lyrics that are in these songs,” Alloyn said.

Between tunes, Naimah and Alloyn engage in cheerful banter, often discussing what the music means to them. Listeners provide feedback too.

“During the show, we’ll get text messages or calls from people who say, ‘This is the song I used to play when I had my first crush,’” Naimah said. “We unlock memories for people playing these oldies.”

KWMR encourages anyone who wants to express themselves to pitch their show idea, no experience necessary. Manson trains folks on how to produce a program and run the studio equipment.

Meanwhile, the recent federal funding cut poses a risk to business as usual at the community station, even as donations have increased in the last few weeks. Lee Giammona, who has lived in Point Reyes Station for 50 years, began a fundraising effort called “25 to Stay Alive” and starred in a video promoting the campaign.

“I’m just a person who listens to the radio,” Giammona said. “I was in my kitchen putzing around and thought if people up their donation by 25%, we’ll be good.”

She contacted Eichstaedt, who did the math, and figured it could work. Most of the $160,000 cut was for operating expenses, according to Eichstaedt. Line by line, the station manager went through the budget and axed as many expenses as possible without laying off staff. 

The station is in the hole about $70,000 to $80,000 for the upcoming fiscal year. Despite donations flowing in, Eichstaedt still worries. Will people contribute again during KWMR’s annual pledge drive at the end of the year? It’s a legitimate concern, especially for a rural station with only 13,000 people in the listening area. 

In the wake of the Recissions Act of 2025, Public Media Company, a nonprofit that consults with local nonprofit media organizations, launched a fundraising effort for 115 public radio and television stations projected to close. These stations relied on the federal funds for 30% or more of their budget.

Public Media Company’s CEO, Tim Isgitt, said the campaign aims to raise $100 million for 78 radio stations and 37 television stations that serve 43 million people. As of last week, it has received $40 million in donations.

While Isgitt, a Marin resident, is a contributing member of KWMR, the station is not currently on Public Media Company’s recipient list because it falls short of the 30% threshold. Acknowledging the station is in need, Isgitt is hopeful that West Marin residents with financial means will come to the rescue.

“KWMR’s area covers people with resources, right?” Isgitt said. “There are far less resources available in Alexandria, Louisiana or Elko, Nevada. I hope this is a moment where people who care about the health of their local communities are stepping up.”

Interestingly, since the federal funding cut, the Marin GOP, a local Republican political organization, has asked its members to support KWMR. Their website states the station gives “a fair shake to conservatives in interviews” and notes its role in public safety.

Eichstaedt confirmed that KWMR presents perspectives from all sides of the political spectrum. 

Unbiased, I believe, is the term.

KWMR has three FM frequencies: 90.5 FM in Point Reyes Station, 89.9 FM in Bolinas and 92.3 FM in the San Geronimo Valley. To donate or listen online, visit kwmr.org

Liquid Gold in Marin, Amphora Nueva’s Olive Oil Offerings

Of the delightful shops that line San Anselmo’s charming downtown strip, family-owned Amphora Nueva stands out for its specialty: a dazzling selection of on-tap olive oils and balsamic vinegars. 

The shop’s shelves gleam with bottles ready to be filled, inviting visitors to explore flavors that range from bright and peppery to smooth, fruity and mouthwateringly complex. In Spanish, “Amphora Nueva” literally means “new amphora,” combining the name of the ancient vessel for storing oil with the Spanish word “nueva” for “new.” And though olive oil is a staple in local cooking, customers will undoubtedly always discover something new at the shop.

In the culinary world, good olive oil and vinegar are nothing short of liquid gold. The depth of flavor they bring can transform even the simplest meal, turning a humble seasonal, late summer tomato salad or loaf of crusty bread into a truly memorable experience. 

Learning to appreciate the nuances, whether it’s the grassy bite of an excellent extra virgin olive oil or the syrupy richness of a barrel-aged balsamic, is enough to turn any person into a foodie convert. After all, the experience of delving into olive oil and vinegar can quite honestly feel akin to entering the world of fine wines or oysters, where subtle differences open up whole new dimensions of taste.

Considering the delicious complexities hidden in olive oil and vinegar, the best way to begin discovering their nuances is in person at specialty shops like Amphora Nueva. Online descriptions and feature articles don’t taste like anything. But sampling the products side by side, guided by staff who know the origins, pressing methods and flavor profiles, brings the whole world of olive oil and vinegar to life. 

With each pour, customers are invited to let their taste buds travel, tracing the dynamic twists and turns of oils that range from grassy and herbaceous to bold and peppery, or vinegars that slide from tart brightness to deep, velvety sweetness.

Stepping into Amphora Nueva feels like entering an adult gourmand’s version of a candy shop. Instead of gumdrops and lollipops, the walls are lined with treasures that spark both curiosity and culinary imagination. Rows of artisan pastas, hand-crafted sauces, risotto kits, dried mushrooms and tins of anchovies lure the eye before one even reaches the star attractions. The store’s atmosphere is warm and inviting, with the quiet hum of discovery as customers wander from shelf to shelf, often pausing to swap tasting notes or recommendations with one another.

At the center of the room lies the heart of Amphora Nueva: the olive oils themselves. Sleek steel containers, designed to preserve the freshness of the olive oils, line the tables. Each container is filled with an oil sourced from locations all around the world. Customers are encouraged to taste at their leisure, comparing varieties, savoring the subtle distinctions and often returning for “just one more sample.” 

The rotating selection at Amphora Nueva means there is always something new to explore, whether it’s a robust harvest from Spain, a delicate floral oil from California, or a citrus or herb-infused specialty blend. The sampling ritual is part indulgence, part education and wholly celebratory of the art of good food.

When it comes to choosing a truly good olive oil, freshness is everything. Unlike wine, olive oil doesn’t improve with age; in fact, it begins to lose its vibrancy the moment it is pressed. Knowing the harvest date is essential, since oils are at their peak when they’re fresh and brimming with the bold, rolling notes that signal quality. 

Specialty shops like Amphora Nueva make this transparent, labeling each oil by region and harvest so customers can taste the difference between a just-pressed bottle and one that’s past its prime. That kind of knowledge transforms shopping from guesswork into a deliciously informed choice. Plus, after sampling and selecting the olive oil one wants, the product they take home is poured straight from the tap they just sampled and bottled on the spot. What customers taste is, quite literally, what customers get.

Some examples of Amphora Nueva’s stock include Chilean Frantoio, Chilean Picual and Chilean Arbequina, all harvested in May of 2025; Tunisian Chetoui and Spanish Hojiblanca, harvested in November of 2024; Peruvian Coratina, harvested in April of 2025; Peruvian Barnea, harvested in March of 2025; and, of course, the Amphora House Blend is available as well.

Since olive oil is best consumed fresh, adding a visit to Amphora Nueva as part of the household’s regular grocery routine is the way to go. That way, there’s always a reason to taste more delicious olive oils, choose the best, bring it home, use it often and simply enjoy the dynamic flavors while they’re fresh. Then, one may do it all over again when the bottle dwindles down enough to warrant another, and another, and maybe just another after that…

But wait—there’s more. A whole lot more in the form of Amphora Nueva’s other specialty: aged balsamic vinegars, naturally. These vinegars are downright exciting, and the store has a special trick up its sleeve when it comes to getting its customers to voluntarily taste a vinegar sample. Unlikely though it may sound, the vinegar tasting at Amphora Nueva has hacked the system and can now draw more fly-bys with vinegar than they could with honey.

The trick is simple: Combine high-quality sparkling water with any one of the syrupy sweet, barrel-aged balsamic vinegars that line the walls and enjoy. The result? A taste so much like the best, most light and refreshing soda one can remember tasting. Bubbles combine and burst across the palate with fruit-forward freshness, subtly underscored by the rich aged quality, all of which alchemizes into an intoxicating non-alcoholic Champagne experience. Flavors of these vinegars (aka alchemical non-alcoholic cocktail magic) include varieties like Cascadian Wild Raspberry White Balsamic, Elderflower White Balsamic and many, many more.

Descriptions of food are an excellent way to intrigue the senses. But one can only truly know a flavor once it has crossed the threshold of their own mouth. Language, no matter how vivid, ultimately falls flat when compared to the simple pleasure of taste. A silky olive oil or a tart, aged balsamic reveals its character not through adjectives on a page, but through the way it coats the palate, lingers and leaves its imprint. Sampling in person allows ingredients to speak for themselves, translating across the tongue in a way words never will.

And that is precisely the joy of stepping into a shop like Amphora Nueva, where tasting is not only encouraged but celebrated. Luckily, one doesn’t have to travel far to experience this—not when Marin’s own Amphora Nueva offers locals a chance to taste, learn and bring home flavors that can transform everyday cooking into something truly special.

Amphora Nueva is located at 429 San Anselmo Ave., San Anselmo. Visit amphoranueva.com/marin for more information.

Your Letters, Sept. 3

Furry Fire Safety 

The Pickett Fire and Sky Fire are active in or near Napa County, making it important to prepare an emergency plan. Please include animals in your plans.  

Start by packing a “go bag” containing at least one week’s supply of food, water and medications, along with medical records, bowls, comfort items and litter box supplies for cats.

It is equally important to create an evacuation plan. Research places that accept animals ahead of time—identify animal-friendly hotels, shelters, campgrounds or friends willing to help. Keep a printed list of addresses and contacts in your bag.

In case of accidental separation, all animals should be microchipped and wear ID tags with current contact information. Take animals with you in an evacuation. Transport dogs on a harness and leash and cats and other small animals in secure carriers, as frightened animals may bolt. If authorities force you to evacuate without your animals, never leave them tied up or confined.

We can’t control when and where wildfires and other natural disasters happen, but we can control how prepared we are.

Melissa Rae Sanger
The PETA Foundation  

Prop 50 is Nifty

Our governmental system, our vital checks and balances, our human rights, our economic freedom, and most important to me, our beloved, hard-earned democracy, are eroding in front of our eyes. We have to do more than observe, hope, pray and just believe it will get better. I write to appeal to you:

This Nov. 4, we Californians will be asked to vote on what may be the most important election of our time. California’s Prop 50 is a vote for democracy.

Vote yes for temporary redistricting; it is our only hope of retaining our democracy. The Texas legislature and governor started this; we the people of California will stop it. This is not about Gov. Gavin Newsom’s political record or red or blue; this is about us. Vote yes on Prop 50.

Brigette Mansell
Healdsburg

Free Will Astrology: Sept. 3-9

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Austin Curtis was a prominent Black scientist whose work had spectacularly practical applications. Among his successes: He developed many new uses for peanut byproducts, including rubbing oils for pain relief. His work exploited the untapped potential of materials that others neglected or discarded. I urge you to adopt a similar strategy in the coming weeks, Aries: Be imaginative as you repurpose scraps and leftovers. Convert afterthoughts into useful assets. Breakthroughs could come from compost heaps, forgotten files or half-forgotten ideas. You have the power to find value where others see junk.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In Polynesian navigation, sailors read the subtle rise and fall of ocean swells to find islands and chart their course. They also observe birds, winds, stars and cloud formations. The technique is called wayfinding. I invite you to adopt your own version of that strategy, Taurus. Trust waves and weather rather than maps. Authorize your body to sense the future in ways that your brain can’t. Rely more fully on what you see and sense rather than what you think. Are you willing to dwell in the not-knowingness? Maybe go even further: Be excited about dwelling in the not-knowingness. Don’t get fixated on plotting the whole journey. Instead, assume that each day’s signs will bring you the information you need. 

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The umbrella thorn acacia is an African tree whose roots grow up to 115 feet deep to tap hidden water beneath the desert floor. Above ground, it may look like a scraggly cluster of green, but underground it is a masterpiece of reach and survival. I see you as having resemblances to this tree these days, Gemini. Others may only see your surface gestures and your visible productivity. But you know how deep your roots run and how far you are reaching to nourish yourself. Don’t underestimate the power of your attunement to your core. Draw all you need from that primal reservoir.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): To make a tabla drum sing, the artisan adds a black patch of iron filings and starch at the center of the drumhead. Called a syahi, it creates complex overtones and allows the musician to summon both pitch and rhythm from the same surface. Let’s imagine, Cancerian, that you will be like that drum in the coming weeks. A spot that superficially looks out of place may actually be what gives your life its music. Your unique resonance will come not in spite of your idiosyncratic pressure points, but because of them. So don’t aim for sterile perfection. Embrace the irregularity that sings.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): There’s a Zen motto: “Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water.” I hope you apply that wisdom in the coming weeks, Leo. Your breakthrough moments of insight have come or will come soon. But your next move should not consist of being self-satisfied or inert. Instead, I hope you seek integration. Translate your innovations into your daily rhythm. Turn the happy accidents into enduring improvements. The progress that comes next won’t be as flashy or visible, but it’ll be just as crucial.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The Gross National Product (GNP) is a standard of economic success by which countries gauge their health. It reflects the world’s obsession with material wealth. But the Buddhist nation of Bhutan has a different accounting system: Gross National Happiness (GNH). It includes factors like the preservation of the environment, enrichment of the culture and quality of governance. Here’s an example of how Bhutan has raised its GNH. Its scenic beauty could generate a huge tourist industry. But strict limits have been placed on the number of foreign visitors, ensuring the land won’t be trampled and despoiled. I would love to see you take a similar GNH inventory, Virgo. Tally how well you have loved and been loved. Acknowledge your victories and awakenings. Celebrate the beauty of your life.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In Japanese haiku, poets may reference the lingering scent of flowers as a metaphor for a trace of something vivid that continues to be evocative after the event has passed. I suspect you understand this quite well right now. You are living in such an after-scent. A situation, encounter or vision seems to have ended, but its echo is inviting you to remain attentive. Here’s my advice: Keep basking in the reverberations. Let your understandings and feelings continue to evolve. Your assignment is to allow the original experience to complete its transmission. The full blossoming needs more time to unfold.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In the Australian desert, there’s a phenomenon called desert varnish. It’s a thin, dark coating of clay, iron and manganese oxides. It forms over rocks due to microbial activity and prolonged exposure to wind and sun. Over time, these surfaces become canvases for Indigenous artists to create images. I like to think of their work as storytelling etched into endurance. In the coming weeks, Scorpio, consider using this marvel as a metaphor. Be alert for the markings of your own epic myth as they appear on the surfaces of your life. Summon an intention to express the motifs of your heroic story in creative ways. Show the world the wisdom you have gathered during your long, strange wanderings.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In Indigenous Australian lore, the Dreamtime is a parallel dimension overlapping the material world, always present and accessible through ritual and listening. Virtually all Indigenous cultures throughout history have conceived of and interacted with comparable realms. If you are open to the possibility, you now have an enhanced capacity to draw sustenance from this otherworld. I encourage you to go in quest of help and healing that may only be available there. Pay close attention to your dreams. Ask your meditations to give you long glimpses of the hidden magic.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Saturn is your ruling planet and archetype. In the old myth of the god Saturn, he rules time, which is not an enemy but a harvester. He gathers what has ripened. I believe the coming weeks will feature his metaphorical presence, Capricorn. You are primed to benefit from ripening. You are due to collect the fruits of your labors. This process may not happen in loud or dramatic ways. A relationship may deepen. A skill may get fully integrated. A long-running effort may coalesce. I say it’s time to celebrate. Congratulate yourself for having built with patience and worked through the shadows. Fully register the fact that your labor is love in slow motion.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In Greek mythology, the constellation Aquarius was linked to a heroic character named Ganymede. The great god Zeus made this beautiful man the cupbearer to the gods. And what drink did Ganymede serve? Ambrosia, the divine drink of immortality. In accordance with astrological omens, I’m inviting you to enjoy a Ganymede-like phase in the coming weeks. Please feel emboldened to dole out your gorgeous uniqueness and weirdness to all who would benefit from it. Let your singular authenticity pour out freely. Be an overflowing source of joie de vivre and the lust for life. 

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In 1932, trailblazing aviator Amelia Earhart made a nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic, steering through icy winds and mechanical trouble. When she landed, she said she had been “too busy” to be scared. This is an excellent motto for you now, Pisces: “too busy to be scared.” Not because you should ignore your feelings, but because immersion in your good work, mission and devotion will carry you through any momentary turbulence. You now have the power to throw yourself so completely into your purpose that fear becomes a background hum.

Culture Crush, Sept. 10

North Bay arts and cultural events
Point Reyes Station Fab Four From Sept. 20 to Oct. 26, Gallery Route One presents four exhibitions that respond to today’s world through diverse voices and materials. Sherrie Lovler’s Distant Voices offers elegant calligraphic paintings as messages of change and hope; Renée Owen’s Adrift: A Landscape of Loss uses fiber and book art to reflect on human displacement and fragile connections...

Cannabis Lounge: Brandon Levine of Mercy Wellness

Brandon Levine, founder and owner pf Mercy Wellness, a cannabis company
Even sitting at his “ease” in the house he built (Mercy Wellness), Brandon Levine is taut and nervy. His brain is a policy brain, restless, seeking, spinning and flashing. He is a leader, and he is a human vector, held in self-restraint. Whether his journey through the ever shifting cannabis industry made him, or whether his inborn character suited him,...

Support Local Arts, Save a Nation

Open Mic writers express their perspectives on a variety of topics.
There’s a reason authoritarian types go after the arts first. Fragile, underfunded, subjective as hell—it’s easier to remove the arts rather than reckon with culture. Sure, we won’t miss the silenced songs, shuttered theaters or unshelved books that we never liked anyway. But we’ll also never know the ones we were denied—the voices throttled before they reached us, or the...

Sparkling Darling: Arnaud Weyrich of Roederer Estate

Winemaker Arnaud Weyrich manages the Roederer Estate, a winery in Philo, California.Roederer Estate, a winery in Philo
Following his 1993 graduation from Montpellier’s esteemed Ecole Supérieure d’Oenologie with a master of science in viticulture and enology, Arnaud Weyrich launched his professional journey as an intern at the lovely Roederer Estate in Anderson Valley.  During this internship, he applied his solid foundation in viticulture and enology principles, marking the beginning of an enduring partnership with Maison Louis Roederer...

Free Will Astrology, Sept. 10-16

Weekly astrological readings
ARIES (March 21-April 19): I can’t speak the Quechua language, which is Indigenous to the Andes Mountains. But I have lifted one of their words to use for our purposes here. The word is munay. It refers to an intensely practical and visionary love that includes far more than sweet feelings and affection. When we practice munay, we offer...

Your Letters, Sept. 10

Mapmaker Politicians have long abused district maps to cling to power. In Texas, lines were redrawn, not through a fair election process, but through manipulation. That’s gerrymandering, and it silences voters. Here in California, we led the way with an independent redistricting commission. I’m proud of that achievement, but now Republicans in Washington are taking this fight to a new low....

Long Live KWMR: Federal Cutbacks Won’t Stop West Marin’s Public Radio Station

KWMR program director, Jeff Manson, on the air in the West Marin studio.
Even President Donald Trump can’t keep down KWMR, the treasured community radio station serving West Marin. Although the federal Rescissions Act of 2025 just slashed more than 25% of KWMR’s annual budget, an emergency community fundraising campaign has staunched the financial bleeding. At least for now. The station expected $160,000 of its $600,000 budget for the 2025-2026 fiscal year to come...

Liquid Gold in Marin, Amphora Nueva’s Olive Oil Offerings

Olive Oil from Amphora Nueva
Of the delightful shops that line San Anselmo’s charming downtown strip, family-owned Amphora Nueva stands out for its specialty: a dazzling selection of on-tap olive oils and balsamic vinegars.  The shop’s shelves gleam with bottles ready to be filled, inviting visitors to explore flavors that range from bright and peppery to smooth, fruity and mouthwateringly complex. In Spanish, “Amphora Nueva”...

Your Letters, Sept. 3

Furry Fire Safety  The Pickett Fire and Sky Fire are active in or near Napa County, making it important to prepare an emergency plan. Please include animals in your plans.   Start by packing a “go bag” containing at least one week’s supply of food, water and medications, along with medical records, bowls, comfort items and litter box supplies for cats. It is...

Free Will Astrology: Sept. 3-9

Astrologer Rob Brezsny provides horoscopes for each of the 12 zodiac signs
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Austin Curtis was a prominent Black scientist whose work had spectacularly practical applications. Among his successes: He developed many new uses for peanut byproducts, including rubbing oils for pain relief. His work exploited the untapped potential of materials that others neglected or discarded. I urge you to adopt a similar strategy in the coming weeks,...
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