Lovin - Moonshine Ink
Transcription
Lovin - Moonshine Ink
10 May – 13 June 2013 Vintage 11, Nip 6 The Saga of the Quagga ...18 ummer S Truckee/North Lake Tahoe • Priceless Independent Newspaper • Publicación Bilingúe Lovin’ f Your Complete Summer estival Guide ...10 Get Your Local Eggs Here Compra tus Huevos Locales Aquí ...42 .4 • 9 c o .4 u po pons p nes u p CAL FIRE Returns to Tahoe ...22 9 • C Is your investment portfolio generating the income you need? ¡Cuéntalo! Entrevistas y Fotos por Emily Dettling Todos Avivados Con menos nieve que lo normal en las montañas, la temporada de incendios se está acercando demasiado para nuestra tranquilidad. Pensamos en medir el grado de concientización de la comunidad respecto de la amenaza de incendios de este año. Preguntamos: “¿Crees que será una gran temporada de incendios este año? 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Performance does reflect the reinvestment of dividends and other account earnings. Performance returns are net of advisory fees and brokerage expenses associated with management of a client’s account. All Fired Up With less snow on the mountains than normal for this time of year, the fire season is creeping a little too close for comfort, so we thought we would gauge the community’s awareness of the fire threat. We asked, “Do you think it will be a big fire season, and what are you doing to prepare for it?” Do Tell! Interviews and photos By Emily Dettling Tina Bassatt, Russell Valley Madre • Mom Tuvimos dos inviernos secos, y el año pasado no tuvimos una gran temporada (de incendios). Creo que todos nos preparamos para tenerla este año. We’ve had two dry winters, and last year wasn’t a big one [fire season]. I think everyone is bracing for it this year. Otis Karitz, Truckee Albañil • Stone Mason I hope not! I keep it tidy around the house, and pray a lot. ¡Espero que no! Mantengo el área alrededor de mi casa prolija, y rezo mucho. Tony Alttieri, Truckee Contratista de Tile/Instructor de Karate • Tile Contractor/Karate Instructor ¡Ya comenzó la temporada de incendios! No deberíamos preocuparnos sólo por la temporada alta. Nos preparamos rastrillando y limpiando el área en torno a nuestro hogar. It already is a big fire season! High season shouldn’t be the only time to be aware. We prepare by raking and cleaning up around the home. Jordon Tollison, Truckee Gerente de Tienda • Store Manager Mis compañeros de habitación siempre cortan los arbustos secos. Definitivamente agradezco cuando llueve. My roommates always cut down the dry shrubs. I’m definitely thankful for the rain. Cane Schaller, Truckee Sector Bienes Raíces • Realtor Hay muchísimo riesgo todos los años. ¿Acaso el riesgo es mayor este año? Me temo que sí. Para prepararnos, tenemos un espacio de defensa estándar. 2 10 may – 13 june 2013 MoonshineInk.com There’s plenty of risk in any year. Is there more this year? I’m afraid so. We do standard defensible space to prepare. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper 29TH ANNUAL SUMMER ART WORKSHOPS SIERRA NEVADA COLLEGE | LAKE TAHOE | JUNE 8TH – AUGUST 2ND, 2013 DISCOUNTED PRICE FOR 2013: $499.50 FOR WEEK-LONG WORKSHOPS (1.5 CREDITS) $225 FOR WEEKEND WORKSHOPS (.5 CREDIT) www.sierranevada.edu/workshops | 775.881.7588 Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 3 Go Online Elizabeth Carmel Appointed to TRPA Board Truckee landscape photographer and former land use planner Elizabeth Carmel was appointed to the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Governing Board in April. Carmel owns two fine art photography galleries, one in Truckee and another in Calistoga. Elizabeth Carmel is one of the newest TRPA board members. Photo by Martin Gisborne View online in the news Section Squaw’s New Community Advisory Council Squaw Valley has formed a community advisory council to provide feedback on the planned village expansion project. Comprised of about 30 Squaw homeowners, business owners, and homeowner association representatives, the council is intended to be an informal forum. The question many have is, Will Squaw listen? Will the new Advisory Council make an impact on the resort’s development plans? Photo by Emily Dettling/Moonshine Ink view online in the news Section Are You Signed Up Yet? VIEW ONLINE IN THE mountain life SECTION REPAIR SERVICE AND INSTALLATION OF ALL HEATING SYSTEMS SERVING LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE SPRING SPECIAL THROUGH JUNE 13 Does not include: Any necessary corrections to meet current building codes or any necessary repairs to pass title 24 duct test. Sub floor furnaces are slightly higher. Higher efficiency furnace specials available. Offer good in Truckee, Incline Village and North Lake Tahoe. UT FURNACE CHANGE-O $ 00 0 0 30 530.582.0934 www.Southwest-Heating.com NV Lic 73484-85 | CA Lic 734716 4 10 may – 13 june 2013 MoonshineInk.com Randy Mertl of Truckee is April’s winner of the Brew contest. Next month your photo could be here. Courtesy photo Win Two Tickets to the Bounce Festival You and a friend could be dancing to the sounds of Beats Antiques, Boombox, Griz, and many others for free this June at the Bounce Festival in Plumas County if you enter our Facebook contest. Be sure to get your friends to vote! view online on the moonshine ink facebook page GNITAEH SEIDDEZ Includes: • 80% efficient Bryant furnace. • Necessary permit & duct test. • Materials & labor and disposal of your old furnace. ZEDDIES HEATING GNITAEH TSEWHTUOS SOUTHWEST HEATING April’s winner, Randy Mertl of Truckee, won a $140 gift certificate to Studio Tahoe just for signing up for Moonshine Ink’s e-newsletter, the Brew. Two weeks after we publish you can receive more news from your favorite local news source. Sign up today and be entered into our next raffle. The prize for May’s winner is a $50 gift card to Moody’s Bistro Bar & Beats in Truckee. Enter Moonshine’s Facebook contest to win two tickets to the Bounce Festival. Image by Lauren Sheer/Moonshine Ink West Shore Roadwork Resumes Roadwork on Highway 89 between Tahoma and Tahoe City is part of a $34 million project to help protect lake water quality. Motorists can expect delays. VIEW ONLINE IN THE News SECTION Motorists should prepare for delays on the West Shore due to roadwork. Photo by Michael Malak Tahoe After Hours: Earth Day Celebration Check out a photo collage from Squaw Valley’s Earth Day Celebration. Participants were educated on recycling, bear proofing, alternative energy, and more from all earth-friendly vendors. View online in the arts & culture Section Tahoe Truckee High’s Envirolution Club put on its famous Trashion Show showing off stylish clothes made with all recycled material. Photo by Andrew Browning/Moonshine Ink Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper MEALS THAT DELIGHT YOUR TASTE BUDS CLASSES THAT TAP YOUR INNER CHEF Stellar dining. Blissful sleep. Authentic thrills. ADVENTURE TOURS IN LAKE TAHOE AND BEYOND EXCEPTIONAL GUIDES Three adventures: One Base Camp ECO-FRIENDLY AND EUROPEAN BEDDING AWARD-WINNING ACCOMMODATIONS WITH EXCEPTIONAL ATTENTION TO COMFORT Read. Discuss. Contribute. CEDARHOUSESPORTHOTEL.COM STELLACULINARY.COM TAHOETRIPS.COM MoonshineInk.com 10918 BROCKWAY RD. TRUCKEE CA 866.582.5655 BOOK ONLINE 10 may – 13 june 2013 5 Temporada de Festivales y Sombras en Verano A medida que escribo esto, la lluvia empapa el área; el ruido de las gotas está puntuado por relámpagos y truenos ocasionales. El terreno mojado se ve ciber-brilloso con sombras exquisitanota de la mente definidas de directora verdes y suciedad en Por Mayumi Elegado lo alto del desierto que parece saciado, por lo menos por ahora. La lluvia es una bendición, realmente, desde que comenzó la temporada de incendios en una fecha tan temprana; esta primavera es la más seca desde que se comenzaron a tomar registros en 1910. En un tono positivo, las manos colaboradoras de CAL FIRE están volviendo a ingresar a la región (ver artículo en la pág.22). Tras esta humedad para todos, las cosas volverán a encauzarse para tener una primavera y un verano muy seco. Es crucial para todos nosotros estar alertas respecto de la prevención de incendios. De acuerdo con el National Park Service, aproximadamente el 90 por ciento de los incendios forestales en Estados Unidos son causados por humanos. Dediquen tiempo significativo al espacio de defensa este año. Consulten con expertos. Sean inteligentes respecto de los incendios, es decir: no enciendan nada. Y no teman hablar cuando la actividad de un amigo, vecino, pariente o extraño amenace la seguridad de incendios de todos. bosques han dependido del fuego durante años para que estuvieran sanos. Las personas tienen una misión combinada: por un lado, es indispensable estar seguros de los incendios para salvaguardar nuestros recursos humanos. Por otro lado, como ciudadanos y residentes, debemos investigar, considerar, y respaldar los esfuerzos a fin de ayudar a que los bosques vuelvan a sus ciclos naturales. Los incendios forestales de California no son notorios por su fuerza o duración. Muchos científicos dicen que se debe a 1) el cambio climático, 2) las políticas que se proponen ocultar incendios, y 3) la escasa gestión forestal. Antes de que tanta gente viviera en el área de Tahoe, el fuego ardía hasta que se apagaba naturalmente, pero una aversión al peligro al que las personas y estructuras están expuestas condujo a políticas que reducen o extinguen los incendios en el menor tiempo posible. Mientras tanto, hemos talado gran parte del bosque. El resultado — una densa superficie de árboles de la misma edad — es la receta para el desastre de los incendios forestales. En un tono menos sombrío, esta edición marca una de nuestras presentaciones especiales favoritas: La Summer Lovin’ Festival Guide (Guía de Festivales de Verano), pág 10. Todos los festivales de verano, de toda la región, en un solo lugar. Este exhaustivo resumen tiene algo para todos: desde los hippies hasta los que les gusta Shakepeare, desde los niños boquiabiertos hasta aquellas personas que tienen condimento en la vida. Guarda esta edición que te ayudará a planificar tu verano. Los festivales son solo unas de nuestras pasiones en Moonshine Ink. Sigue adelante, Tahoe. En nuestro estado, si bien vivimos ante la constante amenaza de incendios, nuestros m o o n s h i n e s ta f f Favorite spring hikes... Publisher & Sales/Marketing Mayumi “Sagehen Creek” Elegado ([email protected]) Associate Editors David “Behind my Neighborhood” Bunker ([email protected]) Jackie “Judah Loop” Ginley ([email protected]) Melissa “Shirley Canyon” Siig ([email protected]) Copy Editor Laura “Tunnel Creek Trail” Read ([email protected]) Graphic Design Lauren “Skunk Harbor” Shearer ([email protected]) Photographer Emily “Point Reyes” Dettling ([email protected]) Office administrator Karin “Donner Camp” Carrasco ([email protected]) translator Fiorella “Patagonia” Felici (ponstranslations.com.ar) Circulation Glenn “Boca Hill” Polochko Summertime Somber and Festival Season Contributing writers Robert Ayres Seth Lightcap Eve Quesnel Ryan Salm Contributing photographers/ artists Publisher’s Note By Mayumi Elegado Dave Hatchett Grant Kaye As I write this, rain douses the area, the beat of drops punctuated by occasional thunder and lightning. The wet landscape looks cyber-brilliant with exquisitely defined shades of greens and high-desert dirt that seems satiated, at least for now. On the Michael Okimoto Scott Thompson Cover Poolside Contortion Photo by Ryan Salm The rain is a blessing, really, since fire season is already upon us at this early date; this spring is the driest since record keeping began in 1910. On a positive note, helping hands in the form of CAL FIRE are re-entering the region (see story p. 22). After this moisture free-for-all, we will be back on track for a blisteringly dry spring and summer. It is crucial for all of us to be vigilant in fire prevention. According to the National Park Service, approximately 90 percent of wildland fires in the United States are caused by humans. Dedicate significant time to defensible space this year. Consult with the experts. Be firesmart, i.e., don’t ignite anything. And don’t be afraid to speak out when an activity by your friend, neighbor, family, or a stranger threatens the fire safety of all. California wildfires are notorious in strength and longevity. Many scientists say this is due to 1) climate change, 2) fire suppression policies, and 3) poor forest management. Before so many people lived in the Tahoe area, fires burned until they went out naturally, but an aversion to the danger to people and structures led to 6 10 may – 13 june 2013 Un incendio que tuvo lugar una mañana en 2011 arrolló algunos condominios de Dollar Hill. El personal de emergencia de incendios contuvo el fuego. An early morning fire in 2011 engulfed some Dollar Hill condominiums. Fire emergency personnel contained the fire. Photo courtesy of North Tahoe Fire Protection District policies that reduce or extinguish fires as soon as possible. Meanwhile, we chopped down much of the forest. The result — a dense woodland of trees all the same age — is a recipe for wildfire disaster. On a less somber note, this edition marks one of our favorite special features: the Summer Lovin’ Festival Guide, p. 10. All the summer festivals, from all over the region, all in one place. This comprehensive roundup has something for everyone, from the hippie to the Shakespearean, from the wide-eyed kid to those people seasoned in life. Keep this edition to help plan your summer. In our state, we live with the unswerving threat of fire, yet our forests have depended upon fire for their health for ages. The people have a mixed mission: On one hand, it’s imperative to be fire safe to safeguard our human resources. On the other hand, as citizens and residents, we must research, consider, and support efforts to help forests return to their natural cycles. MoonshineInk.com Festivals are just one of our passions at Moonshine Ink. Keep on keepin’ on, Tahoe. About the photo | Haley Viloria, an acrobat/contortionist from the San Francisco-based performance art troupe, Quixotic, gets inverted among a bikini-laden crowd at a High Camp pool party during Wanderlust last year. about the Artist | Ryan Salm’s artwork seeks to capture the essence of the person and place. His imagery spans the globe and can be seen on the pages of magazines worldwide. Salm currently has an exhibit at Dragonfly Restaurant and is available for hire for any occasion, portrait shoot, or commission. Info: (530) 412-0294, ryansalmphotography. photoshelter.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper T he Spout | El descarg o Community Calendar | El calendario 2 | Do Tell 36 | The Tap Do you think it will be a big fire season? ¡Cuéntalo! “¿Crees que será una gran temporada de incendios este año? SPORTS wRap V intage 1 1 | nip At Outside Lands in San Francisco. Photo by Cameron Neilson 8 | My Shot | EL wRap DEL DEPORTE 39 | Dave Hatchett: A Real Tahoe Rockstar 6 40 | Paddleboarding Outside the Box 9 | In the Past, Letters S o u l k itchen | L a c o cina del alma On the Spot | A ll í 42 | Quick Bites Give local eggs a break Bocaditos Rápidos Darle un respiro a los huevos locales M ism o 6 | Publisher’s Note Summertime somber and festival season Nota de la Directora Temporada de festivales y sombras en verano 44 | What’s In Season 22 | CAL FIRE Returns to the Basin Rocking Stone | La Música, La Cultura 23 | True Grit Chance encounters at the end of the world 45 | The xx at the Knitting Factory British indie pop band comes to Reno 24 | News Briefs 46 | Book It! “Get Out of My Crotch!” 26 | Business Profile Taking therapy in stride 10 CREATIVE BREW mountain Life | La Vida de Las Montañas | la m ú sica , la c u lt u ra c nes u 11 | The Bounce Festival: Party all night at the Feather River. 14 | WorldFest: Camping festival at the Nevada County Fairground. 16 | Trails & Vistas: Popular art & music festival celebrates 10 years. • 9 .4 po Your guide to the season of festivals in Tahoe and beyond. p 10 | Summer Lovin’ C 18 | The Saga of the Quagga 50 | The Feel Good Story The couple who never fight For the past five years, the campaign against local invasive species has been headlined by two mussels that national scientific studies say are likely no threat at all. C o n t r i b u t o r s Articles de Español / Spanish articles Deadlines for upcoming issues: Los plazos de entrega para las próximas publicaciones: Laughter and adrenaline fuel Seth Lightcap’s adventures and inspire his media work for publications around the globe. Check out his Moonshine Ink sports column, Sports Spotlight, p.39, and SUP story, p. 40. See his work in Kronicle Snowboarding Magazine and Backcountry Magazine. Osha Root Elegado, a spry 15-yearold, has been supporting the local newspaper industry her entire life. She can curl quietly under a desk for long deadline hours and rarely insists on anything except fresh water. She’s a Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe alumni who was well known for her Houdini-like escapes. She lives for treats and belly rubs. Home Slice columnist Maura Mack has been in the Tahoe/Truckee area since 1995 and in real estate since 2000. She works for Coldwell Banker in Truckee. She is a mother, mountain biker, and snowboarder. Mack writes about real estate success stories in a down market on p. 34. Moonshine contributor Ryan Salm recently returned from a trip to India’s Kumbh Mela, a Hindu pilgrimage where 100 million people gather at the Ganges River. He is giving a slideshow July 10 at Jason’s in Kings Beach. See his stories on music, p. 45, and festivals, p. 11. Read. Discuss. Contribute. • On the sp o t | A ll í M ism o 9 34 | Home Slice Roses and thorns pons p 33 | Nature’s Corner Smells like watermelon snow r o c k ing st o ne P r i n c i pa l s u 32 | Savvy Trainer Teach your puppy to speak dog | F e at u r e s 47 | Lega-sea Cindy Wahtola (Chaney) o 30 | Practical Wellness Do sports drinks really help you perform and recover? Bienestas Práctico ¿Acaso las bebidas deportivas realmente nos ayudan durante el entrenamiento y la recuperación? .4 28 | Business Briefs 48 | Astrological Alchemy® I am, therefore I think MoonshineInk.com 14 June – 11 July: 4 June 12 July – 8 August: 2 July 9 Aug – 12 Sept: 30 July 14 junio – 11 julio: 4 junio 12 julio – 8 aug: 2 julio 9 aug – 12 sept: 30 julio These are the drop-dead deadlines. However, if you want your submission considered, please try to send it in as early as possible and contact us for submission guidelines at [email protected]. Moonshine Ink is published monthly and hits the streets on the second Friday of each month. Opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed are those of authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Moonshine Ink staff or advertisers. Please contact us for advertising information at [email protected]. Subscriptions are available for $15/year. Printed with soy inks on recycled paper. Estas son las fechas límite de entrega. Sin embargo, si desea que su contribución sea considerada, por favor intente enviarla tan pronto sea posible y contactarnos para los lineamientos de contribución [email protected]. Moonshine Ink se publica mensualmente y sale a las calles el segundo viernes de cada mes. Las opiniones, hallazgos y conclusiones expresadas pertenecen a los autores y no reflejan necesariamente aquellas del personal de Moonshine Ink o sus anunciantes. Por favor contáctenos para obtener información de anuncios a [email protected]. Las suscripciones están disponibles por $15/año. Se imprimen con tintas de soja en papel reciclado. 10 may – 13 june 2013 7 The Spout | Opinion Page Harvest Corbicula, the Not So “Golden” Clam Expanded Happy Hour Daily 4:30 – 6pm Locals’ Lakefront Menu 3-Course $24.50 Sunday – Thursday Excluding Holidays commercial harvest of Tahoe’s I would concur, however, with A recent Moonshine Ink opinion Corbicula to keep their populaMr. Urie’s disdain for the piece regarding the invasive tions under control. I can “Keep Tahoe Blue by putclam Corbicula fluminea makes easily imagine a large, rake-like ting big blue tarps all over the some assertions that should device that could remove these bottom and killing be viewed with a voracious little filter-feeders everything” approach large dose of caufrom the soft, sandy lake floor that has been used tion (Steve Urie, they prefer, without stirring up these last few years. In Opinion, April 12, too much sediment or altering addition to the initial 2013). Mr. Urie the benthos nearly as much shock of suffocating tells us that if we as suffocating everything with whatever native benthic were somehow big blue tarps. Shiny little tins organisms there are “lucky” enough to of clean-water Tahoe clams in in these locations, have “even seen sauce could bring some cash the anoxic conditions an Asian clamshell My Shot into the Basin, and maybe give under these tarps will … wouldn’t the By Chris Rosamond a handful of people a living. alter nutrient dynamics tiny shell be prized Regulatory agencies could (and in the benthic suband slipped into a would) insist that the dead strates, particularly phosphorus pocket?” This makes me wonshells be removed from the lake and nitrogen cycling. Recall der if he has ever even been along with the live specimens. that nitrogen and phosphorus out on the water in the south are our two greatest pollution end of Tahoe. Steve, if you concerns in the Basin. In short, want to kayak the south half of I can personally sterilizing the floor of Tahoe’s the lake with me this summer, shallow habitats through sufI can personally show you tens show you tens focation is probably not a very of thousands of pounds of Corof thousands of viable long-term solution. I bicula shells lying on the sandy would also agree with Mr. Urie bottom of the southern end pounds of that it is impossible to remove of the lake. But if you want to every Corbicula from the lake. bring these “treasures” home, Corbicula shells These clams have been here pal, you’d better bring several lying on the since people started illegally pairs of shorts with pockets the using them as fish bait when I size of a tugboat. The sheer sandy bottom of was a kid back in the ’60s, and biomass of this invasive clam the lake. they will probably be with us in population, as well as nutrient perpetuity, as will the invasive studies, warrant Dr. Schladow’s and highly destructive crawfish concern that Corbicula will The shells could be ground up Pacifastacus. have major effects on the and sold to various markets system as a whole. There is Speaking of crawdads, probably such as the poultry feed indusalso the very real concern that the best news I’ve heard from try as a calcium supplement, increased calcium concentrathe highly ecologically altered thus eliminating the possibiltions in the microhabitat of ecosystem of Tahoe in the last ity of zebra mussels getting a areas thick with dead Corbicula 40 years or so was the issubyssal thread hold in our basin. shells in the benthos may open ance of commercial permits to Hmmm. Who would imagine the door to much more harmcapture and sell those ecosysthat there could be a marful invasives, such as the zebra tem-mangling little crustaceans ket solution to this problem, mussel, which cause enormous to gumbo lovers everywhere. simultaneously having a net costs to human society by clogTahoe’s waters are much cleanpositive cash flow to the region ging water pipes, encrusting er than the pesticide-laden and eliminating the threat of piers, etc. ad nauseum. In his lower elevations where comzebra mussel infestation, while enthusiasm for the supposed mercial crayfish operations are, reducing costs to our cash non-effects of invasive species, and, consequently our locally strapped regulatory agencies? Mr. Urie somehow neglected harvested crawdads should Besides, them clams make for to discuss this not-so-fine command a premium price, good eatin’. point. if only we could keep certain ~ Chris Rosamond is a freshwater unnamed but suspect persons invertebrate biologist in Truckee/ from stealing the traps. I would Reno. recommend that we consider a In the article entitled “Plowing Profits Back into the Planet” published Moonshine Ink’s Opinion Pages are the in the April edition, the community’s place to Spout Off. The views name of one local busiexpressed do not necessarily reflect those ness was stated incorof Moonshine Ink. Letters are limited to 300 rectly. The correct name The words. My Shots are limited to 600 words is Tahoe Oral Surgery and and must be reserved ahead of time. Email Implant Center. Moonshine [email protected] to submit your Ink regrets the error. Correction SPOUT letter or My Shot. 8 10 may – 13 june 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper The Spout | Opinion Page Dear Editor Submit your own to [email protected]. Amazing Generosity In the Past | T.C. Wohlbruck: Prolific Photographer, Donner Museum Proprietor We would like to express our heartfelt gratitude to our many friends and community members for their generous donations to both the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe and the Sierra Avalanche Center in Bill Foster’s honor. A special thank you to Alpine Meadows/Squaw Valley for their additional contribution to the humane society, which enabled the dedication of a new adoption room in Bill’s name. The Sierra Avalanche Center also received many generous donations and will continue to honor Bill through such programs as the Bill Foster Professional Development Avalanche Workshop. We sincerely thank you for all the love, support, and generosity you have shown. ~ Lisa Foster and family Truckee Rotary Supports Snapshot Day Thank you to the Rotary Club of Truckee for its generous contribution to the Truckee River Watershed Council’s Snapshot Day. This volunteer-based event could not happen without strong community support like that of the Rotary Club. Now in its 13th year, Snapshot Day is the one day each year when the water quality of the entire Tahoe/Truckee watershed from Lake Tahoe to Pyramid Lake is measured simultaneously, providing a “snapshot” of the water quality of the region. Volunteer monitoring teams will go out to various monitoring sites to perform a stream walk (visual assessment), collect field data, grab samples, and take photos. Join the Rotary Club of Truckee and hundreds of regional volunteers on May 11 and help us take a snapshot of the water quality for the Tahoe-Truckee watershed. Register at SnapshotDay.org. ~ Kathy Whitlow, Truckee River Watershed Council During the early 1920s, if you drove past Donner Lake’s east end, chances are you stopped at T.C. Wohlbruck’s canteen service station for a tank of gas, a soft drink, and maybe even a souvenir, like a $1 vial containing a splinter of wood from the Donner Party’s Murphy Cabin. Wohlbruck’s Pioneer Donner Park was the precursor to today’s Donner Memorial State Park, the brainchild of a prolific photographer and world-class collector who came west to get divorced in Nevada and ended up leaving an indelible mark on the Truckee area. Wohlbruck spent many of his summers in the Sierra Nevada, toting his camera from Donner Summit to Echo Summit to Yosemite, capturing stunning panoramas of the landscape. (above) Wohlbruck’s Pioneer Donner Park was the precursor to today’s state park and museum at the east end of Donner Lake. Photo courtesy of the Norm Sayler Collection of the Donner Summit Historical Society (inset) T.C. Wohlbruck was a photographer, gas station owner, and prodigious collector. Photo courtesy of the Norm Sayler Collection of the Donner Summit Historical Society His photographs, some collected by Norm Sayler at the Donner Summit Historical Society at Soda Springs, are a testament to Wohlbruck’s genius with a camera. By 1928, Wohlbruck helped negotiate a sale of the east end of Donner Lake, then owned by Southern Pacific Railroad and Pacific Fruit Express, to the historical preservation organization Native Sons of the Golden West, 2013 BLACK ROCK RENDEZVOUS paving the way for today’s public park. In between all these endeavors, Wohlbruck had time to amass an astoundingly large collection of historical artifacts at a former golf ball factory in Redwood City. Wohlbruck eventually sold his collection, which filled 32 railcars, to the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Mich. for $50,000. ~ David Bunker/Moonshine Ink Spend Memorial Day weekend exploring the Black Rock Desert with family and friends. May 24-27 • Conservation Projects • LNT Camping • Guided Tours • Educational Speakers • Free Kids Camp • Giant Raffle • Campfire Music • Dutch Oven Cookoff • FREE ADMISSION BlackRockRendezvous.com 775.557.2900 Calico Mountains - Black Rock Desert - Photo by Pete Slingland Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 9 ummer S Lovin’ f Your Complete Summer estival Guide by Karin Carrasco We’ve searched everywhere high and low to bring you our complete summer festival guide. These festivals will take you near and far with a wide variety of events for all ages. Please feel free to rip these pages out and save them, or to enter the dates into your iPhone. Enjoy a great summer filled with sun, music, dancing, and yoga. Ongoing Festivals Concerts at Commons Beach Sundays, June 23 to Sept. 8 Free community concerts at Lake Tahoe. Headliners include Mumbo Gumbo, Joe Craven, The Monophonics, and Trey Stone. Info: most shows starting at 4 p.m., Commons Beach, Tahoe City, visittahoecity.org Bluesdays at Squaw Tuesdays in July and August Enjoy the summertime blues at these ongoing concerts. Info: 6 p.m., free, the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Music in the Park Wednesdays, June 19 to Aug. 28 Live music from Montaña, Jelly Bread, Deckheads, The Blues Monsters, Downbeat, Moonalice, Drop Theory, Jo Mama, One Track Mind, and more. Info: 6:30 p.m., free, donations welcomed, Truckee Regional Park, Truckee, tdrpd.com Movies at Commons Beach Wednesdays, July 3 to Aug. 28 10 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 Cuddle up and watch a flick on the big screen under the stars. Movies include “Hotel Transylvania,” Dr. Seuss’ “The Lorax,” “Sandlot,” and “Austin Powers.” Info: movies start at dusk, Commons Beach, Tahoe City, visittahoecity.org your horizons while enjoying life in the West Coast bass culture. Info: tickets start at $125, cabin and RV packages available, Belden Town, emissionsfestival.com Outdoor Summer Movie Series at Squaw May 17 to 19 Thursdays, June 27 to Aug. 29 Families and friends can snuggle up while enjoying new releases and family classics on the big screen. Info: 8:30 p.m., The Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Truckee Thursdays June 13 to Aug. 29 Farmer’s market, artists, crafts vendors, music, beer garden, and food. Info: downtown Truckee, Donner Pass Road, Truckee, historictruckee.com Music on the Beach Fridays, July 5 to Aug. 30 Dance to live tunes in the sand. Info: 6:30 p.m., Kings Beach State Recreation Area, Kings Beach, northtahoebusiness.org May Emissions May 17 to 19 Gather together outdoors and expand MoonshineInk.com Joshua Tree Music Festival “The desert is freedom, music is power, and community is crucial,” so says the logo for this gathering, where headliners include Papadosio, Ganga Girl, Bang Data, Dogon Lights. Info: tickets $100/three day, $40/Friday or Sunday, $60/Saturday, $15/camping per person, per night, Joshua Tree Lake Campground, joshuatreemusicfestival.com Bay to Breakers Sunday, May 19 A 12K race from the Embarcadero to Golden Gate Park. Opt to run it seriously or wander in costume. Info: 7 a.m. to noon, tickets $58/ basic registration, San Francisco, baytobreakers.com Strawberry Music Festival May 23 to 27 “Mountains, magic, music” near Yosemite National Park. Headliners include Trampled by Turtles, Joan Osborne, Alison Krauss, and Robert Earl Keen. Info: tickets $200/four day, $190/three day, $65/one day, Camp Mather (outside Yosemite’s west gate), strawberrymusic.com Black Rock Rendezvous May 25 and 27 Join the Friends of Black Rock, the Nevada Outdoor School, and the Friends of Nevada Wilderness in the Black Rock Desert to celebrate diversity and stewardship. Events include kids camp, workshops, potlucks, a Dutch oven, cook-off, burnbarrel talks, and more. Info: free, Black Rock Desert, blackrockdesert.org June Valhalla Renaissance Faire June 1 and 2, 8 and 9 The magic and merriment of the Renaissance, featuring four stages of music, dancing, jesters, costumed actors, Shakespearean vignettes, staged battles, storytelling, archery tournaments, plus merchants selling jewelry, woodcrafts, artwork, ceramics, clothing, historical weapons, and leather goods. Info: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, tickets $18/adults, $13/seniors, military, ages 13 to 17, $8/children 6 to 12, Camp Richardson Historic Resort and Marina, South Lake Tahoe, valhallafaire.com San Francisco Free Folk Festival June 8 and 9 Two days of formal and informal music making and dancing. Workshops include Appalachian clogging, jamming the blues, “hardly strictly” folk songs, songwriting basics, and more. Info: free, Presidio Middle School, San Francisco, sffolkfest.org Fathers Day Weekend Bluegrass Festival June 13 to June 16 Celebrate Dad with some bluegrass. Headliners include Blue Highway, Oak Grove, Little Black Train, and Della Mae. Info: tickets $160/four day, $130/ three day, $35/Thursday or Sunday, $50/Friday, $55/Saturday, special prices for teens available, Nevada County Fairgrounds, Grass Valley, fathersdayfestival.com Heart and Solstice Festival June 20 to June 23 Celebrate the summer solstice. Headline events include the Bridgetender Fireworks Street Dance, a Commons Beach concert featuring Mumbo Gumbo, the Tahoe City Classic Car Stroll and a wine walk. Info: times vary, Tahoe City, visittahoecity.org Susanville Bluegrass Festival June 17 to June 23 Listen to tunes while you sew a quilt. Headliners include Bluegrass Etc., Frank Solivan and Dirty Kitchen, The Jeanette Williams Band, and more. Info: tickets $40/four day advance, $20/Friday or >>> Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper ROCKING STONE | Summer Lovin’ Festival Guide >>> Saturday, $15/Sunday, Lassen County fairgrounds, Susanville, susanvillebluegrass.com July The Bounce Festival July 1 to July 31 June 20 to June 24 Premier electronic music, progressive art, vibrant community, and natural surroundings. Headliners include MartyParty, PantyRaid, and more. Info: tickets $160/ advance, $180/door, Twain, thebouncefestival.com Reno Rodeo June 20 to June 29 “The wildest, richest rodeo in the West,” complete with carnival, music, and food. Events include bareback riding, steer wrestling, saddle bronc, team roping, tie-down roping, mutton bustin’, barrel racing, and bull riding. Info: tickets start at $17, Reno Livestock Events Center, Reno, renorodeo.com Electric Daisy Carnival June 21 to June 23 Hundreds of DJs, artists, and performers in the City of Sin, along with more than 320,000 fans. Info: tickets $289/three day, $500/VIP, Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, electricdaisycarnival.com The Great Eldorado BBQ, Brews, and Blues Festival June 21 to 22 For Reno’s summer kickoff party, events include live blues, food, and more than 40 microbrews. Info: noon to 8 p.m. on Friday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday, the El Dorado Hotel and Casino and Virginia Street, Reno, eldoradoreno.com Artown Bringing it back to 1973, this year’s Artown kicks off with a celebration of the 40th anniversary of Pink Floyd’s classic, “Dark Side of the Moon.” Headliners include Rickie Lee Jones, a children’s series, Fourth of July Celebration, free Monday night music, and more. Info: tickets, times, and locations vary, Reno, renoisartown.com Red, White, and Tahoe Blue July 3 to July 6 Incline Village and Crystal Bay celebrate the country’s independence. Events include parades, tributes to veterans, fireworks, concerts, chalk drawings, rubber ducky races, food, and more. Info: times and locations vary, Incline Village, redwhitetahoeblue.org High Sierra Music Festival July 4 to July 7 Blues to bluegrass, rock to folk in the Sierra Nevada. Headliners include Robert Plant, Primus, Jelly Bread, Steel Pulse, Leftover Salmon, Emancipator, and more. Info: tickets $187/four-day advance, PlumasSierra County Fairgrounds, Quincy, highsierramusic.com Truckee Tahoe AirFair & Family Festival Saturday, July 6 This year, planes will be performing aerobatic performances in the sky. Info: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., free, Truckee Tahoe Airport, truckeetahoeairfair.com Sierra Nevada World Music Festival Beerfest and Bluegrass Festival June 21 to June 23 Saturday, July 6 Three days of roots reggae and world music. Headliners include Damian Marley, K’Naan, Marcia Griffiths, Max Romeo, and more. Info: tickets $170/three day advance, camping not included, Mendocino County Fairgrounds, Boonville, snwmf.com Live music and 30 local and regional breweries on tap. Info: 3 to 7 p.m., tickets $30/advance, $38/door, proceeds go to Truckee Trails Foundation, the Village at Northstar, northstarcalifornia.com Adventure Sports Week July 6 and 7 June 21 to June 30 Fillmore Jazz Festival Races, clinics, music, film, and family activities in North Tahoe. Compete in trail running, mountain biking, triathlon, stand-up paddle boarding, and swimming. Info: registration varies, Tahoe City, aswtahoe.com The largest free jazz festival on the West Coast. Events include three stages of back-to-back music. Info: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. rain or shine, on Fillmore Street between Jackson and Eddy Street, San Francisco, fillmorejazzfestival.com Truckee Chili Cookoff California WorldFest Sunday, June 22 July 11 to 14 Contestants compete for the best chili in town and raise funds for the Truckee Sunrise Rotary’s efforts locally and internationally. Info: 2 to 6 p.m., tickets $15/adults, $3/children under 12, Truckee Regional Park, Truckee, truckeechilicookoff.org Music and dancing from around the world plus workshops, international food, fine crafts, and a children’s program. Headliners include Pink Martini, Vieux Farka Toure, Delhi 2 Dublin, Tibetan Monks, Yemen Blues, and more. Info: tickets $185/ four day with camping, $175/three day with camping, $145/two day with camping, $75/one day with camping, fairgrounds, Grass Valley, worldfest.net Enchanted Forest June 28 to July 1 Celebrating tribal culture through dance, art, environmental nature, and human nature in the Redwoods. Info: tickets $165, Camp Navarro, enchantedforestmendo.com The Bounce Festival Jumps to a New Venue Lightning in a Bottle July 11 to 15 Celebrating art, music, performance, sustainability, and life. Info: tickets $240/weekend in advance, $175/ two day in advance, $90/one day in advance, $275/weekend at the door, The Bounce Festival lit up the night sky on the Feather River one Saturday night last year. This year, the festival is moving to a pristine campsite on the river about 10 miles away from last year’s site. Photo courtesy of Grant Kaye S Just like in the 1860s, you ituated beautifully on never know what the store will the Feather River in have in stock.” California’s Plumas County, The Bounce Festival A new concept at the festival is back for its fifth straight is the introduction of the season. The fourwellness area called By Ryan Salm day pass includes a Chakra Village, the Moonshine Ink wide array of music, gathering spot for yoga art, camping, and workshops and lectures, flow good times. Alongside a lineup arts classes, and shows. Being of electronic music that people a grassroots company, it’s very have come to know and love, important for the Fresh Bakin’ there are some great changes crew to create a vibe based that are sure to freshen up an around Reno/Tahoe, where already bumping party. they live. “It’s more than just spending money on a lineup,” The Bounce has moved from its said Emmerich. “You need to former location in Belden to a connect with and involve the gorgeous new venue in another community. We are bringing in Plumas County town, Twain, and showcasing people from right in the heart of California’s Reno/Tahoe as acts, vendors, gold country. “All the parking builders, sound techs, and and ticket access is now on designers.” site. We still have beautiful river access and the beach The previous venue restricted stage. There’s no concrete on vending, but this year the the entire property. There are festival has a green light to trees, grass, and tons of flat party all night long. “This land, which allows for endless year ... we are on 100 percent car camping possibilities,” said private land,” Emmerich said. event sponsor Steve Emmerich “We can bring in community of Fresh Bakin’. food trucks. We have more space, meaning bigger camps. As in the previous years, the It has the feel of a big family stages themselves will be pieces reunion. All of your friends will of art. “There will be a Gold be there. We have a river to Rush era general store in the swim in, and we never have to vending village which will be an shut our music off. There are interactive piece of art,” said no extra late night tickets. We Emmerich. “The people who can be as loud as we want, as work there will be in character. long as we want.” The music ranges from household names like the world fusion/electronic group Beats Antique, Thievery Corporation producer Rob Garza, and DJ Mark Farina to newcomers like electro-soul DJ GRiZ, the infectious melodies of the Polish Ambassador, and the global bass and pop sounds of NGUZUNGUZU. Also on the bill is Reno’s improv comedy troupe, the Utility Players, an R-rated version of “Whose Line Is It Anyway.” The idea behind the festival is to melt genre lines and bring people together. Combine this smorgasbord of beats and bands with a new venue, fresh concepts, and a river, and you will find The Bounce to be up there as one of 2013’s most laidback, one-of-a-kind festivals in the country. Info: $160 to $180 (car camping $60/RVs $300), 18 or older, Thursday, June 20 to Monday, June 24, 130 Twain Store Rd., Twain, Calif., tickets on sale at New Moon Natural Foods (Truckee and Tahoe City), Melting Pot World Emporium (Reno), Mad About Music (South Lake Tahoe) or at thebouncefestival.com See Festivals p. 13 Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 11 Reno's Coolest Counter Culture Store Since 1996 women & men's clothing West Coast Tribal Couture steampunk indie designers fair trade accessories footwear hats bags goggles jewelry belly dance apparel yoga wear theatrical makeup unique art home decor world imports Textiles & Tapestries incense & candles pipe room T H E M ELTING P OT World Emp orium Voted Best Clothing Boutique 1049 South Virginia Street ★ 775-322-9445 meltingpotworldemporium.com PL ANE S T UNT S sat, july 6 at the 8th Annual Saturday, June 22nd • Noon - 4pm Tickets $35 in advance $45 day of event – cash only, rain or shine! Stroll downtown Tahoe City to 30 tasting locations Includes commemorative wine glass, gift bag, live music For online tickets and more information visit: www.TahoeCityWineWalk.com to benefit the Tahoe City Downtown Association FAMILY FUN · 10 am– 4 pm SAVE THE DATE - FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2013 5TH ANNUAL SIERRA FORAGE DINNER DON’T MISS THE PRE - EVENT ON JULY 5 Dinner with Triple Ace and WWII Veteran Clarence “Bud” Anderson – Open to the public · $50 tickets · 18 and over – FREE MAIN E VENT FE AT URE S: Planes soaring & swirling in the air · Stunt jumpers flying in wing suits · Grand Marshal "Bud" Anderson WWII Triple Ace · Free flights for kids ages 8 to 17 (Sunday, July 7) · Live music, kids’ activities, food court, beer garden & Vendor Village – TRUCKEE TAHOE AIRPORT – 10356 Airport Rd · Truckee, CA 96161 www.truckeetahoeairfair.com 12 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com BUY YOUR TICKETS TODAY & SUPPORT MAP'S ANNUAL FUNDRAISING EVENT STELLA RESTAURANT 5:30 PM-9:30 PM TICKETS: $125 EACH Each tax-deductible ticket includes an elegant evening complete with live music, a silent & live auction & a superbly prepared, locally-sourced, multi-course meal with carefully paired wines For tickets and more information go to www.mountainareapreservation.org or call Alexis at 530-582-6751 Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper ROCKING STONE | Summer Lovin’ Festival Guide Festivals from p. 11 $200/two day at the door, $110/one day at the door, Temecula, lightninginabottle.org Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival July 12 to Aug. 25 Pack a picnic, watch the sun set on the East Shore, and listen to Shakespeare come alive on the stage, featuring “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Info: tickets start at $20, Sand Harbor State Park, Incline Village, laketahoeshakespeare.com Music at the Mine Saturday, July 13 Mumbo Gumbo takes the stage with its blend of rock to soul to country. Info: 7:30 p.m., $25, sierracountyhistory.org Art, Wine, and Music Festival July 13 and 14 Browse booths by fine artists and craft makers, live music performances, and sip wine from featured wineries. Info: 11 a.m., tasting from 2 to 5 p.m., $25 donation, the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Mendocino Music Festival July 13 to 27 Summer festival featuring orchestral and chamber music, opera, jazz, and big band, featuring Alison Brown Quartet, James D’Leon, The House Jacks and more. Info: times and tickets vary, Mendocino, mendocinomusic.com Broadway on the Beach Monday, July 15 The Reno Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Laura Jackson performs on the beach for this one-of-a-kind experience. Info: 7:30 p.m., tickets start at $39, Sand Harbor State Park, Incline Village, laketahoeshakespeare.com Wanderlust Peter Joseph Burtt, a lifelong drummer, makes an appearance at this year’s GuitarFish Music Festival in Cisco Grove. He draws from many sources to inform his music and chronicles the years he spent living and studying with master musicians of Africa. Much of his music is played on traditional instruments: the lute like Kora and the Mbira or thumb piano. Courtesy photo July 18 to 21 Bringing the world’s leading yoga teachers, top musical acts and DJs, renowned speakers, top chefs, and winemakers together in a setting of breathtaking natural beauty. Music headliners include Moby, DJ Alia, Caravan Palace, DJ Dragonfly, and more. Info: tickets $475/Sage four day, $395/Seeker three day, $108/Thursday, $160/ Friday or Saturday, $99/Sunday, $24.50/Thursday music only, $29.50/Friday music only, $34.50/ Saturday music only, $20/Sunday music only, Squaw Valley, wanderlustfestival.com Mystic Garden: Gathering of the Tribes July 18 to 23 Music, yoga, theme camps, and the visionary arts. Info: Tickets $140/five day pass, $125/three day pass, all ages are welcomed, Lake Selmac, Selma, Ore., mysticgardengathering.com Sierra Storytelling Festival July 19 to 21 In an outdoor theater under the stars, hear stories from different traditions, as well as heartwarming folk tales from storytellers around the world. Featured tellers include, Baba Jamal Koram, Laura Simms, Tim Tingle, Charlie Chin, Andy Offutt Irwin, MaryGay Ducey, and Caroline Paul. Info: Tickets $90/all events, $22.75/Friday evening, $33.00/Saturday day, $24.75/Saturday evening, $13.50/Sunday, $7.50/childrens concert, the North Columbia Schoolhouse Cultural Center, San Juan Ridge, sierrastorytellingfestival.org Americana Music Festival July 19 to 21 Bluegrass and country music throughout Virginia City, featuring country star James Otto. Info: $10 mugs for the “Beer Crawl,” $30/all access, $20/ weekend pass, $100/VIP pass, americanafest.org, (775) 847-7500 Mrs. Robinson GuitarFish Music Festival Sunday, July 21 July 26 to 28 A 2012 hit brought back by popular demand. Enjoy of the best bands on the land as they groove like it’s 1960. Info: 7:30 p.m., tickets start at $25, Sand Harbor, laketahoeshakespeare.com Classical Music Under the Stars Monday, July 22 Reno Chamber Orchestra performs an unforgettable evening under the stars. Info: 7:30 p.m., tickets start at $25, Sand Harbor State Park, Incline Village, laketahoeshakespeare.com A three-day family, community, and arts festival to raise awareness of over-fishing and pollution of the ocean, and to help preserve watersheds, rivers, and streams. Headliners include The Pimps of Joytime, Eddie Robert’s West Coast Sounds, Joe Craven, New Monsoon, SambaDá, and more. On-site camping (bring your headlamps) with yoga and Pilates classes, arts & crafts, and food vendors. Info: tickets $129/three days, Cisco Grove Campground, Cisco Grove, guitarfishfestival.com Tour de Nez Living History Day Schedule of locations this year include Virginia City, Carson City, and South Lake Tahoe. Visit website for detailed list of events, tourdenez.com The California State Parks turns back the clock to the ‘30s where guests can browse vintage Saturday, July 27 July 25 to 28 See Festivals p. 14 NOW OPEN across the street from Open Daily 10am-6pm 955 S. Virginia St. 775-329-2110 sippees.com Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 13 ROCKING STONE | Summer lovin’ Festival Guide When All the World’s a Stage: Grass Valley’s WorldFest Bring out the whole family for Living History Day, July 27, at Sugar Pine Point. Children will enjoy crafts and games from the 30s’. Courtesy photo Festivals from p. 13 The Meadow stage, one of eight stages at Grass Valley’s WorldFest, draws and early evening crowd at the 2012 festival. Photo by Alan Sheckter F can be full of surprises, as I rom the chanting of the discovered one morning in Tibetan Monks to the 2009 when I chanced upon a Afro-American beats of songwriting workshop. Mamajowali, the 17th annual California WorldFest offers It was Morley, a woman I’d a little something never heard of, By Jackie GinleY for everyone. This telling people Moonshine Ink four-day camping that the polar festival beneath bears were dying and the above the tall pines of the Nevada was the same as below. She County Fairgrounds in Grass repeated it. A lot. Sometimes Valley is hot. Literally. you have to repeat words to hear them. A singer/songwriter With eight different stages from New York, Morley cycling performers and sings her social activism into workshops throughout the existence, and that bright July day, it’s sometimes tough to morning she was going to choose where you want to be. teach us how to do it. And the popular picks during the heat of mid-day might well She began with a question — be whoever is setting up in did anyone in the audience the air-conditioned comfort of have someone to whom they the Discovery Stage. (One of would like to dedicate a song? my faves when the mercury is We would start our lyrics with climbing is the Sierra Stage, a name. One man raised his a shaded alcove next to the hand and said through tears beer deck with overhead hoses that his daughter had died in spraying partygoers with a cool a car crash on her way to the mist of water.) festival the day before. One of the coolest things about Over the next half hour a WorldFest (water misting few dozen of us composed aside) is that you can literally a song for her, part tribute, wander the fairgrounds day part eulogy. There wasn’t one and night with no set plan for dry eye in the house when we the day and stumble on some were done, and many of us of the most amazing musicians embraced the stranger and and shows as if by sheer shared his loss in some small accident. WorldFest prides way. itself on discovering new talent, Word spread quickly, and it and the wandering approach 14 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com wasn’t long before WorldFest Co-Director Dan DeWayne was hearing about the transformational experience at the Oak Grove stage. “The thing I love the most about the arts is the ability to allow someone to share a story like that and have it become cathartic,” he said. This year’s workshops include yoga and tai chi, and a host of dance classes ranging from salsa to samba to AfroBrazilian. For the kids, there will be hula hooping, juggling instruction, the annual parade, and more. The music lineup includes multi-Grammy-winner Bruce Hornsby appearing with The Noisemakers (Friday); Dehli 2 Dublin, a mix of Bhangra, Celtic, and dub reggae that promises to get the audience grooving (Friday and Saturday); and Jeffery Broussard and the Creole Cowboys, who bring the sounds of the Bayou to life with accordion-infused Zydeco (Saturday & Sunday). Info: Thursday, July 11 to Sunday, July 14, ticket prices range from $75 for an adult day ticket to $185 for a fourday camping ticket. A $5 to $15 discount applies to tickets purchased before Wednesday, July 10, worldfest.net Bluesapalooza cars and boats, and swim on the beach. Events include concerts, historical talks, movies, painting with artists-in-residence, guided tours. Info: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., $10/ parking, Sugar Pine Point State Park, laketahoelivinghistory.com Fourth of July Arts and Crafts Festival July 27 and 28 A gathering of artisans and craftsmen. Info: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, the Village at Squaw Valley, pacificfinearts.com Wa She Shu It Deh Native American Arts Festival July 27 and 28 The Washoe reunite on the last weekend of July at the Tallac Historic Site to honor their culture and heritage. Events include traditional American Indian dancers and drum performers, basket weaving displays, art, and food. Info: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., donations requested, Valhalla Grand Lawn, South Lake Tahoe, valhallatahoe.com Aug. 1 to 4 Outdoors among the pines and showcasing the best craft breweries in the country and top blues performers, headliners include Joan Osborne. Mavis Staples, John Hammond, Diego’s Umbrella, and more. Info: tickets $140/ultimate blues and brews three-day pass, $105/two day pass, Sam’s Wood Site, Mammoth Lakes, mammothbluesbrewsfest.com SummerFest Concert Series Aug. 2 to 18 Featuring artists from the world’s most prestigious stages, including Federica von Stade, Jennifer Koh, and more. Info: 7 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, 4 p.m. on Sundays, tickets start at $25, Sierra Nevada College, Incline Village, tahoesummerfest.org Hot August Nights Aug. 6 to 11 Cars and music to celebrate rock ’n’ roll and the ’50s, entertainment. Info: schedule to be announced, Reno, hotaugustnights.net Lake Tahoe Concours d’Elegance Coppelia Monday, July 29 The Sierra Nevada Ballet, featuring top professional dancers, presents a comic love story taking place in both fantasy and reality. Info: 7:30 p.m., tickets start at $22, Sand Harbor State Park, Incline Village, laketahoeshakespeare.com August Aug. 9 and 10 One of the premier events showcasing wooden boats. Events include boat exhibits, dinners, awards ceremony, and more. Info: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., awards ceremony at 6 p.m. on Friday, tickets $25/advance, $30/door, $35/ two day advance, $40/two day door, Sierra Boat Company, Carnelian Bay, laketahoeconcours.com Outside Lands Reggae on the River Aug. 9 to 11 Aug. 1 to 4 An internationally renowned celebration of the best in reggae and world music featuring Julian Marley & The Uprising Band, Morgan Heritage, Rootz Underground, J Boog & Hot Rain and more. Info: tickets start at $190, French’s Camp, reggaeontheriver.com Music and art at Golden Gate Park. Headliners include Nine Inch Nails, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Paul McCartney, and more. Info: tickets $249.50, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, sfoutsidelands.com See Festivals p. 16 Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper S AV E T H E DAT E ! REGIONAL GREEN BUILDING SYMPOSIUM Memorial Day Weekend Moonshine Saturday & Sunday, May 25 & 26, 2013 (530) 587-3477 www.truckeehomeshow.com Exhibits open 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. $6 Admission includes ALL THREE EVENTS! At the Truckee High School - FREE PARKING 11725 Donner Pass Rd. Truckee One of America’s Top 100 Critical Access Hospitals ADMIT 2 FOR 1 Admit two persons for the price of one with this ad. Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 15 ROCKING STONE | Summer lovin’ Festival Guide The Cello in the Trees Trails & Vistas brings live art to Donner Summit for its tenth anniversary Festivals from p. 14 Pacific Fine Arts Festival Aug. 10 and 11 18th Annual Fine Arts & Crafts on the Shore. Info: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Kings Beach State Park, pacificfinearts.com Brews, Jazz, and Funk Fest Aug. 10 and 11 Chief Blackhawk (left) told a wonderful story while overlooking Donner Lake on the 2012 hike. Photos by Scott Thompson / scottshotsphoto. com Kansas Carradine, (right) while atop a rock, entertained with her lasso tricks. I what to expect. As the guide, I got magine hiking on a trail, the sounds to experience the tour the same of life have vanished. It’s only you way as the rest of my group. Every and your nomadic tribe of fellow performance touched my soul. hikers and the sounds of nature. You come upon a ravine and By Karin Carrasco I led my group up a steep hear the sweet sound of Moonshine Ink hill of rocks to the beat of a cello echoing around a drum coming from up you. This sound does not above us. As we walked toward the belong on this journey, but you embrace beat, we stopped at a pond with an it as the music warms your heart. artist in an extravagant avant–garde costume reciting a monologue. Her This is the Trails and Vistas art hike, words spoke to me directly. She was where you will experience art tucked reminding me to not let go of who I away in nature. In the middle of want to be and where I want to go. trees you might chance upon a poet reciting aloud as the wind howls with This year is Trails and Vistas’ 10-year his words. On the edge of a cliff you anniversary. To celebrate, there will be might stumble upon dancers who are a concert at the Truckee River Regional doing pirouettes on the earth’s dirt. In Park at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 7 the trees could be an artist painting featuring Native American flutist the sights around her, completed works Ann Licater, a Japanese drum group hanging from the trees. InnerRhythms from Reno, and the San Jose State dancers could be dancing on the edge Symphony Orchestra. of a cliff overlooking Donner Lake. The most exciting part of this year’s Last year, as a volunteer, I led a event will be the 40-piece orchestra group on a hike. Having never been and the Tsurunokaie Taiko drummers on an art hike myself, I had no idea playing among the trees and wildlife on the Saturday art hike. I have a busy life balancing two toddlers and a job, but making time to volunteer at this event has become a must for me. I get to be involved in something great and exciting. As I lead my group along the hike, I am giving them each an experience that they will carry with them for years to come. Artists this year include Angelika, who chants in ancient Sanskrit, and Ian Ethan Case, who plays the double neck guitar and the African Kalimba. Whether you buy tickets and enjoy your hike as a guest, or you wish to volunteer, this is a performance you won’t want to miss. Art Hikes Info: Saturday & Sunday, Sept. 7 to 8, groups leave every 15 minutes, $30/ adults, $10/children, Pacific Crest Trail on Donner Summit, trailsandvistas.org 10th Anniversary Concert Info: Saturday, Sept. 7, 6 p.m., $20/advance, $30/door, 50 percent discount for art hike attendees, Truckee Amphitheatre, trailsandvistas.org Taste beers from representing microbreweries and listen to an incredible lineup of music. Bring your dog, as this is fundraiser for the Humane Society of Truckee-Tahoe. Info: 2 to 8 p.m., $5 entry donation, $4 beer tickets, the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Living History Monday, Aug. 12 Historical characters come to life, featuring First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and Ernie Pyle, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter. Info: 7:30 p.m., tickets start at $22, Sand Harbor State Park, Incline Village, laketahoeshakespeare.com Bowers Mansion Bluegrass Festival Aug. 16 to 18 An outdoor festival hosted by the Northern Nevada Bluegrass Association, which is dedicated to promoting and preserving bluegrass, old-time, traditional, and related folk music in Northern Nevada, featuring Michael Martin Murphy and more. Info: tickets $15, children under 12 free, Bowers Mansion, New Washoe City, bowersbluegrassfestival.org Gatekeeper’s Cabin Basket Weavers Gathering Saturday, Aug. 17 Native American basket weavers come together for demonstration of weaving and other indigenous crafts, and to sell basket and other works. Info: North Lake Tahoe Historical Society Gatekeeper’s Cabin, Tahoe City, northtahoemuseums.org Mountain Vibe Music Gathering Aug. 23 to 25 Music, camping, and off-roading. Headliners to be announced. Info: tickets $75 early bird, $100 closer to show and day of event, Little Bear Lake, Dutch Flat, mountainvibemusic.com Truckee Championship Rodeo Aug. 24 and 25 Back for its 39th year. Come out and get down and dirty with the cowboys, kids day Aug. 23. Info: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., $12/advance, $15/gate, McIver Arena, Truckee, truckeerodeo.org >>> EIGHTH ANNUAL TRUCKEE BREW FEST Saturday, June 8, 2013 Truckee Regional Park · 1 to 5pm Over 20 Breweries Music by DROP THEORY Advanced tickets will be $25, at the gate $30 Tickets available at Coffeebar, Dickson Realty, Autoglass Express Truckee and Tahoe Mt. Brewing Bottle Shop. BEER, MUSIC, FOOD, SILENT AUCTION (Must be 21; please no kids or dogs). Fifty-Fifty Brewing Company Boulder Beer / Session Brewing Lagunitas Brewing Co. Woodchuck Cider The Brewers Lair Full Sail Brewing Crispin Cider Co. / High Sierra Tahoe Mt. Brewing Co. Great Basin Brewing Co. Mendocino Brewing Co. Drakes / Hoppy Brewing Anderson Valley Brewing Co. Knee Deep Brewing Co. Auburn Ale House Sierra Nevada New Belgium Brewing Co. Deschutes Brewing Co. Lost Coast Brewing and more… Call (530) 587-8720 or go to www.truckeeoptimist.com for more info. 16 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper ROCKING STONE | Summer Lovin’ Festival Guide >>> Peaks and Paws Festival see more than 100 balloons take flight. Info: 6:45 a.m., Rancho San Rafael Regional Park, Reno, renoballoon.com Treat your dog to a weekend at Squaw. Events include live music, art booths, wine and beer tasting, and doggy vendors. Info: noon to 6 p.m., $5 entry donation, the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Virginia City International Camel Races Aug. 24 and 25 Burning Man Aug. 26 to Sept. 2 Come home to Black Rock City and immerse yourself in art, music, and community. This year’s theme is Cargo Cult. Info: Black Rock City, burningman.com Strawberry Fall Music Festival Aug. 29 to Sept. 2 “Mountains, magic, music” near Yosemite National Park. Headliners include The Del McCoury Band, Ray Bonneville, The California Honeydrops, Hot Buttered Rum, and many more. Info: tickets $200/four day, $190/three day, $65/one day, Jamestown, strawberrymusic.com Pacific Fine Arts Festival Aug. 30 to Sept. 1 Homewood Arts & Crafts Festival, Info: Friday/Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Homewood Mountain Resort, pacificfinearts.com Foam Fest Saturday, Aug. 31 Sample more than 50 beers while rocking out to Tommy Castro and The Painkillers. Proceeds benefit Disabled Sports USA Far West. Info: 2 to 6 p.m., $25/beer tasting, free designated drivers, KT Base Bar Sundeck, Squaw Valley, (530) 5814161, squaw.com Sept. 6 to 8 Featuring competitors of every unlikely species, from camels to ostriches to emus. Info: 10 a.m., Silverland Inn and Suites, Virginia City, visitvirginiacitynv.com Pacific Fine Arts Festival Sept. 7 and 8 Historic Downtown Truckee Arts & Crafts Festival. Info: Friday/Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Truckee, pacificfinearts.com Historic Downtown Truckee Arts and Crafts Festival Sept. 7 and 8 Handcrafted arts. Info: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, Bridge Street at Donner Pass Rd., Truckee, pacificfinearts.com Trails and Vistas Sept. 7 and 8 Experience live performances and art installations along a guided three-hour hike that blends art and nature. A concert on Saturday night celebrates the 10th Anniversary. Info: tickets $30 or $40/advance, $10 or $20/kids ages 5 to 12, Pacific Crest Trail, Donner Summit, trailsandvistas.org American River Music Festival Sept. 13 to 15 September Music on the banks of the south fork of the American River. Headliners include Hot Buttered Rum, New Monsoon, Dead Winter Carpenters, and more. Info: tickets $50/two days, $35/one day, ticket packages also available, Henningsen-Lotus Park, Coloma, americanrivermusic.org Sample the Sierra Fat Tire Festival Sunday, Sept. 1 Sept. 13 to 15 El Dorado County local farmers and chefs pair up to produce tasting samples. Live music, storytellers, and cooking demonstrations. Info: 1 to 5 p.m., $30 tickets, available at door, Ski Run Blvd., South Lake Tahoe, samplethesierra.com Mountain bike races, movies, MTB clinics, and of course plenty of beer from New Belgium Brewing. Info: schedule to come, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Alpen Wine Festival Sunday, Sept. 1 Listen to live music and taste wine. Events also include a silent auction and raffle to benefit Can Do MS. Info: 2 to 5 p.m., tickets $40, the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com Lake Tahoe Autumn Food and Wine Festival Sept. 6 to 8 Three days of cooking seminars and demonstrations, culinary competitions, wine tastings, grape stomp, and more. Info: events and tickets to be announced, the Village at Northstar, Truckee, northstarcalifornia.com The Great Reno Balloon Race Sept. 6 to 8 The largest free hot air ballooning event in the nation. Arrive at dawn to Read. Discuss. Contribute. Celtic Festival Sept. 27 and 29 Celebrate Celtic heritage with live music, dancing, and family fun. Info: Nevada County Fairgrounds, Grass Valley, kvmr.org Oktoberfest Saturday, Sept. 28 Traditional Bavarian music and folk dancers, benefit beer garden, brats and kraut, and games. Fundraiser for the Tahoe Truckee Lacrosse Association. Info: 2 to 6 p.m., the Village, Squaw Valley, squaw.com October Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival Oct. 4 to 6 Three days of free music in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. Lineup to be announced, hardlystrictlybluegrass.com MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 17 On the Spot | News The Saga of the Quagga Separating the invasive species science from the hyperbole By David Bunker F or nearly five years, the campaign against invasive species in the Lake Tahoe area has been spurred by the specter of the environmental devastation created by two mollusks — small, aggressively invasive bivalves called quagga and zebra mussels. But an in-depth review of national scientific studies reveals that the poster child for local invasive species programs has almost no chance of surviving long-term in local waters. Millions of dollars have been spent trying to keep mussels out of Lake Tahoe, Donner Lake, and surrounding reservoirs, despite the fact that scientific studies suggest the prolific little bivalve can’t colonize these calciumpoor bodies of water. A new examination of this science has derailed a mandatory boat inspection program that was scheduled to take effect this summer at Donner Lake. After passing an ordinance mandating fee-based inspections last August, Town of Truckee officials have backtracked and are now recommending that the mandatory inspections be put on hold as they investigate the scientific underpinnings of the program. Voluntary boat inspections are still scheduled to take place this summer at Donner Lake and Boca, Prosser, and Stampede reservoirs as they have in years past. But the science also raises larger questions — questions about how limited and poorly funded local scientific research was able to trump national scientific studies on mussel invasion risks; and questions about how invasive species program advocates have taken limited and conflicting scientific information and, according to one critic, generated a distorted picture of a lake under imminent threat of mussel invasion. A torpedo-shaped submersible named Gavia surfaces at Lake Tahoe. The highly equipped, unmanned vehicle circumnavigated the lake at a depth of 18 feet in 2008, collecting data about Lake Tahoe’s invasive species and water chemistry. Photo courtesy of the U.C. Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center The Science The most critical factor for zebra and quagga mussel survival — and the reason Lake Tahoe and Donner Lake are among the nation’s most inhospitable lakes for mussel invasion — is the calcium content of the water. Mussels thrive in calcium-rich waters, filtering out the element and using it to build their shells and support their basic metabolic function. Lake Mead, the southern Nevada water body where some of the dire, worstcase-scenario examples of mussel infestations have occurred, has calcium levels of 80 parts per million (ppm) and water hardness levels of 288 ppm. In these conditions, quagga mussels grow large, reproduce rapidly, and colonize aggressively. But Lake Tahoe has calcium levels that are merely one eighth those of Lake Mead, and Donner Lake’s calcium levels are even lower — less than half of the nationally recognized minimum calcium threshold for mussel survival. An average of three calcium readings last fall put Donner Lake’s calcium levels at 5.2 ppm, or about 15 times lower than Lake Mead’s concentrations. Despite those average calcium readings, the concentrations do fluctuate through>>> 18 10 may – 13 june 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper On the Spot | News >>> out the season and any (non-toxic) environment for the 51-day duration of the experiment.” vary in different parts of the lakes. Some small areas of Tahoe’s shoreline have registered higher concentrations, including readings of 12.4 ppm at the Tahoe Keys Marina and localized elevated calcium readings of 24.1 ppm taken from the sediment of Asian clam beds in the Ski Run Marina. Spooner Lake is the lone local lake with lake-wide calcium levels high enough to support mussel invasion. The fact that adult quagga mussels could survive in Lake Tahoe water for 51 days should not have been surprising. Tahoe’s own invasive species education material says that the mussels can survive for up to a month completely out of water. “In Tahoe, adult quagga mussel can survive out of water for as long as 30 days!” says the website of Tahoe Keepers, a kayak and nonmotorized watercraft inspection group affiliated with the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency. Numerous scientific studies say that zebra and quagga mussels cannot survive at Does this photo look familiar? Despite science showing that a large-scale mussel calcium levels below 12 ppm. infestation of Lake Tahoe and Donner Lake is virtually impossible, photos like these from Lake Mead have been repeatedly used in education material about Lake Tahoe’s risks of And even at 12 ppm calcium mussel invasion. Courtesy photo levels, test cases across the them in water taken from the Tahoe Keys nation show that mussels do The study even theorized that the mussels in South Lake Tahoe. Tahoe Keys water is not flourish. In places like Lake George were possibly cannibalizing their own among the warmest, most calcium-rich and and Lake Superior, where borderline shells to generate enough calcium for nutrient-laden water you can find anycalcium levels of 12 and 13 ppm exist, survival. where in Lake Tahoe. Despite the fact that mussels have been introduced, but have one mussel died and the rest were losing not colonized either lake. But those messages did not make it into body weight by the end of the experiment, the mainstream. Following the 2008 rethe study reported that, “The possibility But for years, Tahoe residents heard little search and 2009 publication of the report, exists for at least adult quagga to survive, about the science that showed Lake Tahoe media and press release material portrayed grow, and reproduce in the Lake Tahoe and Donner Lake were at very low risk Lake Tahoe as susceptible to widespread environment … the diligent monitoring of mussel invasion. Instead, they heard mussel invasion. of recreation vehicles (the major pathway stories about Lake Mead, with photos of for transfer of invasive mussels to inland quagga-encrusted boat propellers from the Statements like this one, posted on the lakes) putting into western lakes-of-interest southern Nevada reservoir that is a starkly University of Nevada, Reno website under is prudent. The assumption that western different habitat than the Sierra Nevada, the headline “Researcher Finds Quagga oligotrophic waterbodies low in calcium and stories about the tens of millions of Mussel Can Survive In Tahoe” were comare at very low to low risk of quagga mussel dollars of damage the creatures create. mon: “If established, the mussels could invasion is not necessarily supported.” And when the public did hear about scienforever alter the lake’s sensitive ecology; tific studies, they heard mostly about one they could clog water intakes, encrust The report did not research the full life 51-day, low-budget study that for the last boats and docks, and cover now-pristine cycle of quagga mussels, including the four years has heavily influenced invasive beaches with sharp and reeking shells.” ability of vulnerable mussel offspring species policy in the Lake Tahoe region. (called veligers) to survive in Tahoe. StudyBy the time the message made it to the ing the ability of mussels to reproduce in The Mussel Risk media, the picture of Lake Tahoe’s mussel an environment is the true measure of risk, Assessment threat became even more distorted. An since the threat of mollusks is directly tied In 2008, with the science pointing to Lake August 2009 San Jose Mercury News article to their rapid colonization of an environTahoe as being at “very low risk” of mussel led off: Scientists say a new study shows invament. A non-reproducing “sink populainvasion, according to the Environmental sive quagga mussels can survive and possibly tion” of mussels would only survive for the Protection Agency-commissioned “A Calreproduce in Lake Tahoe. animal’s three- to five-year lifespan. cium-Based Invasion Risk Assessment for Zebra and Quagga Mussels” (see sidebar), a team of scientists received $20,000 to do a local experiment on the mussel’s ability to survive in Lake Tahoe water. Led by Dr. Sudeep Chandra, an associate professor of limnology and conservation ecology at the University of Nevada, Reno, the team transported eight mussels from the waters of Lake Mead to the UNR lab, and placed Scientific Studies Moonshine Ink has compiled a list of links to relevant studies and reports on invasive species risk, specifically quagga and zebra mussels. Go online to moonshineink. com to read the science behind the invasive species issue. Read. Discuss. Contribute. Steve Urie, a long-time Donner Lake homeowner who has extensively researched the quagga mussel issue, studied the scientific process of Chandra’s laboratory experiment and found flaws in the process. “The ‘study’ and its conclusion is equivalent to raising tomatoes in a Sacramento greenhouse, transplanting them in a Meyers’ garden in July, and noting that because the tomatoes were still alive on Labor Day that the Tahoe Basin would be a fine area for tomato farming,” wrote Urie in an article submitted to Moonshine Ink. The report did recognize some of its own shortcomings. The risk assessment said: “It is possible that the individuals collected from Lake Mead had sufficient reserves for survival, and even moderate growth, in “This could potentially be catastrophic for the lake,” said Ted Thayer, natural resource and science team leader for the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency. Despite the ambiguous results, limited scope, and short timeframe of the study, Chandra’s 2009 risk assessment has been the lone, local science on the quagga mussel survival matter for the last four years. “It is scientifically unconscionable that an inconclusive, four-year-old laboratory study that did not meet minimum comparative or scalability standards should justify spending millions to prevent an extremely unlikely problem from occurring,” wrote Urie. 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USAR LTC (Ret.) 20 YEARS EXP. IN ESTATES & TRUSTS 530-550-8736 www.theandrewslawfirm.net “You are in command, when your estate is planned.” “Thank you so much, Carmen, for all of your hard work with the listing and successful sale of our home. We were amazed at the level of service you provided through the entire process. I know of few professionals with the level of integrity you possess.” ~ Kurt and Lauren Reinkens Experience Truckee and Lake Tahoe Real Estate at a Higher Level. Contact Carmen Carr at 530-550-5192 or Carmen@ CarmenCarr.com www.CarmenCarr.com DRE #01399136 See saga p. 20 MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 19 On the Spot | News sagA from p.19 And that is not the only limited, short-term report that Chandra had published on local invasive species threats. Chandra was one of the authors of a 2011 report on the ability of the New Zealand mudsnail to survive in the Truckee River watershed and Lake Tahoe. That experiment only lasted two weeks, even though the study’s own introduction stated, “The ability of [New Zealand mudsnails] to survive for up to three weeks out of water contribute to the species’ ability to expand its range.” Later on the report said: “Ideally, the experiment would have occurred over more than 14 days, but the need for immediate information to assist with ongoing management decisions as well as funding limitations necessitated the short duration of the experiments. In fact, results from this, as well as other studies in the region, led to the establishment of new guidelines for boat permitting and inspection at Lake Tahoe to proactively reduce the likelihood of nuisance aquatic species introductions.” When questioned about why further study of the mussel risk was not completed, Chandra said that until now funding was not available to complete studies on the mussel’s full life cycle in Lake Tahoe, or to conduct an experiment that included more than one site, or lasted more than 51 days. 20 10 may – 13 june 2013 After the equivalent of more than two months of full-time research, he delivered a seven-page, sourced position paper to the Town of Truckee. Urie’s stance was summed up in one of the last sentences of the paper: “No legitimate AIS [aquatic invasive species] threats to Donner Lake have been identified, and until one is, it is illogical and impractical to implement a needless fee-based program that inconveniences residents and visitors alike.” That has now changed. Chandra and a team of researchers were recently funded to complete a more in-depth study this summer, and results should be released this fall. The study will last between 120 and 160 days, Chandra said. It will use water from the Cave Rock area as well as the Tahoe Keys. And it will study the entire life cycle of the animals. Donner Lake: Mandatory Inspections on Hold If it were not for the more than 500 hours of intense scientific research that Truckee resident Steve Urie has conducted over the past several months, all watercraft entering Donner Lake would likely have to undergo mandatory inspections, and each boat would have been charged a boat inspection fee this summer. Urie, a retired businessman with a degree in civil engineering, was intimately familiar with Donner Lake, having lived on the lake for 30 of the 40 years he has been a local resident. His interest in invasive species was first sparked when he heard California Sen. Dianne Feinstein say in a speech at the 2010 Lake Tahoe Summit: “If you organized all the Asian clams currently in the lake end to end, it would stretch 3.5 miles long.” Being an engineer, Urie began calculating how many clams it would take to organize a single-file line of clams 3.5 miles long, and MoonshineInk.com Mandatory boat inspections have been in effect at Tahoe since 2009. More than 10,000 voluntary boat inspections have been conducted at Donner Lake and Prosser, Boca and Stampede reservoirs between 2010 and 2012. Photo courtesy of the Tahoe Resource Conservation District concluded that quantity of clams would likely fit into the back of a pickup truck. “It just did not make sense to me. The reports that came out were so exaggerated,” said Urie. The more Urie investigated the issue, the more intrigued he became. He read dozens of studies and reports on the calcium requirements of mussels, conversed with experts across the state, and researched years of Tahoe and Donner Lake water studies. After an April Town of Truckee invasive species working group meeting where Urie and Chandra had a spirited debate over the topic, the Town of Truckee decided to recommend that the mandatory boat inspection ordinance not be enforced this summer, and that voluntary inspections continue. “It was the right result. It is exactly what they should have done,” said Urie. “If they had taken off with this, we would have had a boat inspection program at Donner Lake forever. It is one of those government programs that once it gets going, you can never pry it away from them.” One of the issues the Town of Truckee faced was that the ordinance they passed specifically identified mussels as the invasive species that was being targeted, and declared that the mussels were an “imminent” threat. “There is obviously not a significant or imminent threat,” said Dan Olsen, >>> Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper On the Spot | News >>> the Town of Truckee’s animal services and code compliance manager, following the decision by the town to not recommend mandatory inspections this summer. Chandra’s Response Chandra emphasizes that while zebra and quagga mussels have made all the headlines, “it is not all about the mussel. If we make this just about mussels, we are in very deep trouble.” Chandra lists a number of invasive threats to the region, including curlyleaf pondweed, Brazilian elodea and hydrilla. Curlyleaf pondweed is already growing in Lake Tahoe. But Urie says that Donner Lake and the reservoirs in the area would be unlikely targets for an invasion of these plants. The annual fluctuations of the water bodies’ levels exposes bare ground along a significant portion of the shoreline to freezing temperatures, greatly reducing the risk of large-scale exotic plant invasions. And many of the invasive species that can impact an ecosystem — creatures like Asian clams and crawdads — have already established in Donner Lake. But Chandra is essentially erring on the side of caution. With inconclusive and incomplete science on invasive species, he said his approach has been to “be protective first, and back away from protection later.” “We actually don’t have a handle on these species and the plasticity of them,” said Chandra, noting that more research is needed for the science to be able to more accurately pinpoint invasive species threats. “That is unfortunately how the science has not caught up,” he said. “We have not caught up to tell you, plant-by-plant, what might invade an area.” Are Inspections an Effective Barrier? Donner Lake and other local lakes have long been exposed to invasive species. And even today, the voluntary inspections are SEARCH BY MAP a patchwork that leaves hundreds of boats to launch uninspected in local waters each year. At Donner Lake, boat inspections have only occurred at Donner Lake’s public boat ramp. The other two heavily used ramp facilities — Tahoe Donner’s marina and a homeowners’ launch on the west end — have had no boat inspections. “You are asking the Town of Truckee to put in place pretty invasive procedures, and you are basing it on a risk assessment that has not been published?” he asked. “I think there is some real dereliction to ask to put in place a program that there are no facts to support.” The Town of Truckee and the Tahoe Resource Conservation District say they are willing to re-examine the science behind the program. Even at local reservoirs, boaters can simply drive to the edge of the lake off of a dirt road and back an uninspected boat into the water. “There is no way to control that unless you shut off access to the lake,” said Truckee Animal Control Manager Olsen. steve urie has been a very outspoken, and educated, critic of enacting mandatory Donner Lake inspections without adequate scientific justification. Courtesy photo So far, the costs of the voluntary inspections have been borne by the Truckee River Fund, a group supported by the Truckee Meadows Water Authority, which has given the Tahoe Resource Conservation District nearly $1 million over the last four years to conduct boat inspections. That funding is dwindling, and the Tahoe Resource Conservation District was expecting inspection fee revenue to begin to pay for some of the costs beginning this summer. “I am not opposed to this discussion happening right now,” said Kim Boyd, the assistant district manager with the Tahoe Resource Conservation District. “I think this is a great time to have this discussion and really evaluate the risks.” But Brian Hanley, a local boater, said he thinks that if Urie had not spent 500 hours investigating the science behind invasive species, the outcome of the boat inspection program process would have been much different. “I think if Steve [Urie] had not been there, the science may have been ignored,” said Hanley. ~ Comment on this story online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe pays nearly $1.5 million a year to run its boat inspection program. Only about half the program is funded by fees; the other half comes from public money. In Truckee, Urie believes that putting the mandatory inspection on hold as the science and risk is evaluated is the proper procedure. At the final invasive species working group meeting, Urie asked about a Donner Lake risk assessment noted by one presenter. When he was told the risk assessment was not published, and later told that the risk assessment was simply notes from meetings and presentations that had not even been compiled into a complete document, he wondered how a program could be put in place. Search ALL Tahoe-Truckee properties for sale by map: www.TahoeTruckeeBrokers.com/13267 Dump that dish and we’ll give you $300 in savings to help cover satellite cancellation fees. Nancy Costello Broker-Owner | EcoBroker® CRS - Certified Residential Specialist [email protected] 530 582-5005 OFFICE 530 426-5005 CELL Call and switch today. 530-550-3900 | suddenlink.com For new residential TV customers only & expires 5-31-2013. 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MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 21 On the Spot | News CAL FIRE Returns to Tahoe Amid High Fire Danger and Controversies By melissa siig Moonshine Ink After a one-year absence, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, better known as CAL FIRE, is moving back into the Tahoe Basin. The move, which was designed to better meet the department’s mission, comes at a fortuitous time when fire danger is at an all-time high due to a record low snowfall. It also comes as CAL FIRE is taking heat for the controversial fire prevention fee passed by the state legislature last year, which many rural homeowners and local fire districts argue is a redundant tax. Critics were also outraged earlier this year to learn of the existence of a $3.6 million fund that CAL FIRE failed to turn over to the state. CAL FIRE is charged with protecting the 31 million acres in the State Responsibility Areas (SRA), the wildland areas where the state has financial responsibility for preventing and suppressing fires. Of that, 34,000 acres is in the Tahoe Basin. In the past, the U.S. Forest Service has managed CAL FIRE’s protection area in Tahoe as part of an agreement between the two agencies as a way to increase efficiency. But after a review this year, CAL FIRE decided to reassume direct responsibility for 70,000 acres statewide that it had “swapped” with the Forest Service — Tahoe, Lake Arrowhead, and San Jacinto near Riverside. “It was a realignment of our fire suppression mission,” said CAL FIRE spokesman Daniel Berlant. CAL FIRE is redirecting seven fire engines to the 70,000 acres, two of which will be headed to the Tahoe Basin. One will be located in Carnelian Bay and the other in South Lake Tahoe. Each engine comes with three firefighters. This marks a return to the Basin for CAL FIRE, which had engines in the same two locations from 2008 to 2011, but was forced to remove them after budget cuts. In 2012 the department was able to keep an engine in Truckee, which it would move to the North Shore on high fire days. While the Nevada County Board of Supervisors is angry over the loss of its Nevada City-based CAL FIRE engine to the North Shore, Tahoe fire districts couldn’t be happier, especially in light of the earlier-than-normal fire season. After the driest January, February, and March on record since 1910, the area’s fire season has started a month ahead of normal. 22 10 may – 13 june 2013 CAL FIRE has already responded to 45 percent more fires this year than in average years, according to Berlant. “I think it’s great timing,” said North Tahoe Fire Protection District’s new fire chief, Mike Schwartz, who came on in October. “CAL FIRE is coming up when we are very vulnerable. We are really on high alert. It’s a really good year to have CAL FIRE coming back into the Basin, and we will try to do everything we can to keep them here.” While CAL FIRE is tasked with fighting fires in wildland areas, they will work hand-in-hand with North Tahoe Fire on all calls, a “huge give-back to taxpayers,” Schwartz said. The department also does defensible space inspections, augmenting local fire districts’ abilities. “It’s not CAL FIRE and locals,” Schwartz said, “but locals supported by CAL FIRE.” CAL FIRE’s location in Carnelian Bay also fills in a gap in North Tahoe Fire’s service. Located between fire stations in Kings Beach and Tahoe City, Carnelian Bay can take more than 10 minutes to reach, a huge amount of time since a fire can double in size every minute. On a red flag day in 2011, an arson fire broke out in Carnelian Bay. CAL FIRE was the first to respond, something that NTFPD Public Information Officer Dave Zaski said prevented a major catastrophe in the Kingswood Village neighborhood. “If they hadn’t jumped on it, we definitely would have had a big fire,” he said. CAL FIRE’s presence on the North Shore not only means extra hands to fight fires and respond to medical emergencies, but also more resources sooner, such as immediate access to the CAL FIRE Nevada Yuba unit’s 20 engines and an aircraft based in Grass Valley. CAL FIRE’s return to the Tahoe Basin might make some homeowners feel better about paying the $150 fire prevention fee, which was passed by the state legislature in 2011 as a way to cover the MoonshineInk.com (clockwise from above) A CAL FIRE engine is moving to North Tahoe for the fire season as part of the department’s realignment of its mission. Courtesy photos A map of Tahoe shows the State Responsibility Area, light gray, where CAL FIRE is responsible for fire prevention and fire suppression. Dark gray is federal responsibility. cost of fire prevention for people living in SRA zones. The fee, which hit homeowners last year, ignited a storm of protests, with opponents calling it a tax, which requires a two-thirds vote by the state senate, and a redundant cost, since many people who received the bill already pay local fire districts for the same service. (Those people receive a $35 discount.) Out of the more than 800,000 homeowners who were billed last year, about 11 percent filed appeals with the state. Because of that and a lawsuit by the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, CAL FIRE is currently holding off on sending bills this year. Although the fire fee is specifically for fire prevention and not suppression, Schwartz said, “From a simple perspective, if you have to pay the fee, even if it’s not directly related, it makes you feel good [that CAL FIRE is back in Tahoe].” The North Tahoe Fire Protection District does not support the fire fee, he said. North Tahoe Fire Protection District Chief Mike Schwartz, who started on the job in October, was at the North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District in Incline Village for 29 years. CAL FIRE has also come under fire this year for the discovery that the department hid $3.6 million rather than depositing it into the state’s cash-strapped general fund. The money, which came from legal settlements for people found liable for starting wildland fires, was placed with the nonprofit California District Attorneys Association, and over the past eight years was used for training and equipment for fire investigations. Around $800,000 of the $3.6 million remains. Berlant said the existence of the money, which pales in comparison to the $90 million generated by the fire prevention fee, was never a secret. “We had no intent to hide the fund,” he said. To stay up to date with North Tahoe Fire Protection District, visit its Facebook page. CAL FIRE provides information on major incidents at fire.ca.gov. ~ Comment on this story online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper On the Spot | News Lake Malawi is a 360-mile-long Rift Valley lake, home to some of the most diverse and colorful fish life in the world. It is also home to a world-renowned example of true eco-tourism. Photo courtesy of Manda Wilderness Nkwichi Lodge The T-Shirt: A resident of Ngofi village sports a Truckee Tahoe Lumber Company T-shirt. Photo by Lily Bunker sunset envelopes lake malawi. Photo courtesy of Manda Wilderness Nkwichi Lodge Chance Encounters at the End of the World Last year, my sister, Lily Bunker, moved to a tiny village on the eastern edge of Lake Malawi in the northern reaches of Mozambique, Africa. For her job, she travels by boat True Grit to small villages By David Bunker scattered along the edge of the majestic, 360-mile-long Rift Valley lake, teaching agricultural techniques and launching education programs for the Manda Wilderness Community Trust. Because of limited phone and Internet access in her village, I rarely hear from her these days. But this spring, she flew back to the United States for a family event and had a strange story to tell me. One day, after a boat trip to a small lakeshore village named Ngofi near the border with Tanzania, Lily walked around a corner and saw a villager dressed in an oddly familiar T-shirt. Over the shirt’s faded blue background, gold letters spelled out “Truckee Tahoe Lumber Company.” This chance encounter got me thinking about two of the world’s most majestic lakes, now linked in my mind by a used T-shirt. Both are international tourist destinations. And both struggle with vexing environmental challenges. Lake Malawi faces a third-world version of Lake Tahoe’s first-world environmental problems. While we fight over whether our lakeside buildings should be two stories or four stories high, Lake Malawi worries about the pollution of intentional burns lit to increase the poor soil’s crop yields. While we inspect motorboats to prevent the spread of invasive species, Lake Malawi is banning fishing by mosquito net, a Read. Discuss. Contribute. damaging fine-mesh fishing technique that strips all aquatic life from the areas where it is used intensively. In many ways, Lake Malawi’s problems are much simpler. They represent a clear question of how to balance human survival and ecological protection. In a region where people are simply trying to feed themselves, the solutions can be much more elegant — instead of Tahoe’s seemingly impossible challenges like the pipe dream of vaporizing the Tahoe Keys and restoring the entire Upper Truckee River wetlands, Lake Malawi can teach new fishing techniques, improve agricultural practices, and focus on saving a world-renowned ecosystem before first-world problems like casinos and millions of commuting SUVs overrun the lake. Despite those differences, I have to say that one of Lake Malawi’s responses to its environmental challenges could be very instructive for Lake Tahoe. My sister works out of Nkwichi Lodge, a model of true eco-tourism. As one news article put it, “With so much hot air in the world of responsible tourism, it is a huge relief to be genuinely impressed by Nkwichi Lodge.” The lodge is a luxurious outpost in the Manda Wilderness, but it has mixed luxury tourism, environmental responsibility, and local community building in truly comprehensive ways. The lodge runs off of solar power and wood-fired hot water. Much of the lodge’s food is grown on site. But it is what is done off-site that is truly remarkable. The programs run from the lodge protect wilderness, prevent poaching, build schools, start new agricultural programs, and support local cultural events at villages scattered across the region. All of this is financed, in part, by the luxury tourism revenue generated at the lodge. I’ve been thinking a lot the last several years about our human responsibility to the land. It’s a complex problem that is perhaps the root question of human existence. It is also a challenge that, no matter how we respond, exposes our own hypocrisy and the deep imperfections of our solutions. It’s a paradox that Barry Lopez reflected on with incredible eloquence in “Artic Dreams” after a day of walrus hunting on the polar icecap. “How is one to live a moral and compassionate existence when one is fully aware of the blood, the horror inherent in life…? If there is a stage at which an individual life becomes truly adult, it must be when one grasps the irony in its unfolding and accepts responsibility for a life lived in the midst of such paradox. One must live in the middle of contradiction, because if all contradiction were eliminated at once life would collapse. There are simply no answers to some of the great pressing questions. You continue to live them out, making your life a worthy expression of leaning into the light.” At Tahoe, these imperfections are magnified by the complexities of our first-world economy. The mechanisms of tourism — the roads and airports and large hotels — can’t be washed away by opting for a day of fashionable eco-tourism, like paddleboarding over powerboating. Even at Lake Malawi, where visitors travel to Manda Wilderness by jet-fuel-guzzling airplanes and motorboats, eco-tourism is simultaneously a sin and a penance. We now live in what scientists are calling the anthropocene. Our impact on the earth is undeniable and unavoidable. We are connected to the rest of the world by our used T-shirts, our tourism, our life’s undeniable impact not just on our backyard, but on the entire globe. At Lake Malawi, the impacts of tourism are being turned around into, arguably, a net positive environmental, cultural, and economic gain. In Tahoe — a land of wealth, innovation, and environmentalism — can we embrace the challenge of turning the tide of tourism’s deep environmental impacts? Can we lean into the light? Life is a contract. Be sure you define its terms. SERVICES Business Law Estate Planning Trust Administration Probate Asset Protection Susanna Truax Kintz ATTORNEY AT LAW Shadek Reese, LLC | 936 Southwood Blvd Suite 301 | Incline Village | NV 89451 Licensed in NV, CA & IL | LLM International Tax MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 23 On the Spot | News NEWS Briefs Submit your own to [email protected]. Nevada County 1 Washoe County 7 2 9 Placer County 8 4 3 6 5 Truckee High School Principal Resigns Truckee 1 Truckee High School Principal Greg Dettinger has announced he will resign at the end of the year. Dettinger shared with staff and students that he has made this difficult decision based on the needs of his family and for personal reasons, according to the Truckee Tahoe Unified School District. Dettinger has accepted a position as principal of a high school in the Midwest for the 2013-14 school year. He was appointed principal after an extensive search last spring and started work in July. Dr. Leri has prepared a new recruitment process, which began after Dettinger’s announcement. In addition to Dettinger’s departure, Truckee High’s Assistant Principal Grant Steunenberg had previously announced his resignation to take a position elsewhere. The new principal, in collaboration with staff, will conduct the selection process for a new assistant principal. 2 Truckee Springs Planning Begins Truckee Preliminary planning for a Truckee River property called Truckee Springs has begun. The 26-acre parcel at the end of South River Street has a master plan designation that would allow for a maximum of five single-family homes, and either 80 multi-family units or 120 lodging units. The development could be part of large changes for South River Street and the adjoining area. Hotel Avery, on the corner of Brockway Road and South River Street, has already been approved by the Truckee Town Council, but has yet to begin construction. The town has also envisioned a pedestrian bridge connecting the Truckee Springs property with the townowned property across the Truckee River on West River Street. The West River Street property has been planned 24 10 may – 13 june 2013 as a park, with possibly a restaurant on the west end of the parcel, said Jaime LaChance, Town of Truckee senior planner. But the state-mandated dissolution of the town’s redevelopment agency has put those plans in limbo. The Truckee Springs plan will begin with a summary plan, where the public will be welcomed to provide general feedback on the site. A June 4 meeting with both the Truckee Planning Commission and the Truckee Town Council is planned to collect public comment on the summary plan, which would be used by developers to generate a master plan for the parcel. One site visit to the property has already been held and was attended by approximately 50 people, said LaChance. Neighbors have already expressed concerns about traffic and whether the development will fit in with the community character of the neighborhood, she said. ~ David Bunker/Moonshine Ink 3 Efforts Continue on Tahoe Basin Community Plan Update Tahoe Basin Placer County Planning Services Department has made progress toward updating the Tahoe Basin Community plans. Primary efforts include consolidating the nine current Tahoe Basin plans with one overarching community plan and four local area plans. The next steps includes preparation of the actual documents that will be used in the updated community plan. Staff will conduct a three-day public workshop called a charrette in late June in Kings Beach. The charrette will focus on the beach and commercial core area behind it and information gathered will be integrated into the policy document. Meetings for the North Tahoe West and North Tahoe East planning area teams will be held on Tuesday, May 14. Both meetings will be held at the same location and time, from 4 to 8 p.m. at the North Tahoe Event Center, 8318 North Lake Blvd., in Kings Beach. The West Shore plan area team will MoonshineInk.com (clockwise from top) 4 The Cal Neva Resort will undergo a much-need remodel under its new owner, Criswell-Radovan. Courtesy photo 8 Steve Buelna is Placer County’s new Tahoe ombudsman. The position was created to help customers navigate Tahoe’s complex building process. Courtesy photo 1 Greg Dettinger is resigning as principal of Truckee High School after one year. Photo courtesy of Truckee Tahoe Unified School District meet on Thurs., May 16, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Placer County Tahoe City Offices, 775 North Lake Blvd. in Tahoe City. The public is invited to attend all team meetings. Info: Supervising Planner Crystal Jacobsen, (530) 745-3000 Cal Neva Has New Owners Crystal Bay 4 As of April 26, real-estate development and management firm Criswell-Radovan became the controlling partner of the Cal Neva Resort in Crystal Bay. The St. Helena- based Criswell-Radovan owns prestigious properties such as the Calistoga Ranch, the Ritz-Carlton in San Francisco, and the Four Seasons in Dublin, Ireland. According to Cal Neva spokesperson Lee Koch, the development firm plans on remodeling the aging and financially beleaguered resort, “working within the existing footprint and repurposing the existing resort property.” The Cal Neva, built in 1926 and owned for a period by Frank Sinatra, went into foreclosure in 2008. Koch said that the preliminary vision is to retain the resort’s historic character and Tahoe feel. “They don’t have plans to turn it into an overstated Bellagio,” she said. ~ Melissa Siig/Moonshine Ink 5 TRPA Moves River Restoration Project Forward South Lake Tahoe Restoring the Upper Truckee River received the green light from the governing board of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency last month. The approval for the Upper Truckee Reach Five Restoration Project, part of the TRPA’s Environmental Improvement Program, marks the continuation of one of the largest ecosystem restoration initiatives in the Sierra Nevada. This project is a high priority for meeting environmental thresholds in the Tahoe Basin. Of all 63 streams that flow into Lake Tahoe, the Upper Truckee River deposits the largest amount of fine sediment. Located on both U.S. Forest >>> Service and California Tahoe Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper On the Spot | News Conservancy land, the Upper Truckee Reach Five Project will restore 7,400 feet of river channel and 120 acres of stream zone to their natural states. Construction is scheduled to begin this summer. Info: Kristi Boosman, kboosman@ trpa.org, (775) 589-5230 >>> 6 League to Save Lake Tahoe Receives $60,000 Grant Tahoe Basin The League to Save Lake Tahoe in April received a $60,000 grant from Wells Fargo & Company as part of a 7 Washoe County Manager Katy Simon is retiring $3 million Wells Fargo in July after 15 years. Courtesy photo Environmental Solutions for Communities grant wishing to start, expand, or change a program, which helps business. support land and water conservation, Steve Buelna, a 13-year county energy efficiency, infrastructure, and employee and a supervising planner in educational outreach. the Tahoe office, has been named the “We’ll be using the grant to enhance ombudsman/facilitator for all Tahoe volunteer programs that engage projects. He acts as the county’s single communities in reducing the impact point of contact and communication, of storm water runoff and erosion, and has the authority to work with, and including storm drain marking, riparian provide direction to, all agency division habitat restoration along the Upper staff. Truckee River, and our new storm drain In his ombudsman role, Buelna is monitoring program, Pipe Keepers,” tasked with working with applicants for said Darcie Goodman-Collins, League all agency disciplines (planning, building, executive director. engineering, and surveying) to identify The league was named among 64 temporary or interim solutions that recipients of the Wells Fargo grant, part can help facilitate new development of the bank’s commitment to provide opportunities. $100 million to environmentally focused nonprofits and universities by 2020. 9 New Cottage Food Law Will Info: blog.wellsfargo. Allow Home-Based Businesses to com/environment, nfwf.org/ Sell Food environmentalsolutions Washoe County Manager Retiring After 15 Years Washoe County 7 Washoe County Manager Katy Simon will retire from the position she has held for 15 years on July 1. The Board of County Commissioners will begin a national search as quickly as possible to replace Simon and will appoint an interim manager as needed until a permanent manager is in place. 8 New Ombudsman Position in Tahoe to Help Expedite BasinArea Projects North Tahoe Placer County has created an ombudsman position in its Community Development Resource Agency’s Tahoe Office to help businesses and builders navigate a complex process. The ombudsman idea arose from discussion between North Tahoe business leaders and county staff that addressed concerns on how to improve customer service and business development in the Tahoe Basin. The numerous overlapping layers of regulatory authority, at Lake Tahoe, can be difficult to follow for those Read. Discuss. Contribute. Conserving Energy Just Got A Whole Lot Easier! Placer County Are you looking for ways to save money? We can help. The Placer County Board of Supervisors reviewed plans last month for enforcing a new state law that allows home-based businesses to sell some types of food to the public, restaurants, and stores. Known as the California Homemade Food Act, the state law seeks to encourage community-based food production commonly known as cottage food operations. The law, Assembly Bill 1616, took effect on Jan. 1, 2013. “I think it’s a great benefit to our community,” said Environmental Health Director Wesley Nicks. On its website, the California Department of Public Health will maintain a list of types of food approved for preparation, handling, and packaging at cottage food operations. In the past, state law generally required all food sold to the public to be prepared at permitted commercial facilities. All cottage food operations in Placer County must go through a review process. Info: Diane Gereke, (530) 745-2311, placer.ca.gov/departments/ hhs/env_health. 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For more information, please visit www.swgasliving.com/caassist or call Project Go Inc. at 1-866-655-7705, se habla español. MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 Scan this with your mobile device. 25 On the Spot | News Taking Therapy in Stride Horses have a long and complicated history of evolution and domestication. But at their core, like their cousin the African zebra, they have evolved to detect and flee from predators. Horses have the largest eyes of any land mammal, possess 350-degree vision, and have ears that can register sounds that humans cannot detect. By david bunker Moonshine Ink Snookie, a reddish-brown Shetland pony, pokes her head from a stall at Piping Rock Equestrian Center and looks at me quizzically. After what Tina Peek has told me about the preternatural perceptiveness of her team of eight therapy horses, I silently wonder which of my secret insecurities or emotional faults Snookie has already figured out. Peek is the founder and equine specialist with Changing Strides, the only equine therapy outfit in Tahoe/Truckee. The therapy and learning company started last September at Piping Rock Equestrian Center under the simple premise that horses’ highly tuned senses can tell us a lot about ourselves. “Horses are prey animals. They pick up on things because it is essential for their survival. They are always reading people’s intentions,” said Peek. “The way the horse reacts to a person gives us feedback on what is going on with that person,” said Peek. “They do a body scan in a moment and see body language.” Changing Strides has two different offerings — equine assisted psychotherapy and equine assisted learning. Psychotherapy sessions can help with marriage problems, family issues, addiction, post- traumatic stress disorder, and mental health issues. Learning sessions are currently being held with an enrichment class from Glenshire Elementary School, but can also be used for leadership courses and team-building workshops. Christopher Old, a licensed marriage and family therapist, works at Changing Strides as the mental health specialist during many of the sessions. Old said one of the main differences between a therapy session in an office and a therapy session with a large horse in an outdoor setting is how much faster the therapy moves. “Things tend to come to light more quickly,” he said. The beautiful grounds of Piping Rock Equestrian Center, set on rolling sagebrush and deep green pines near the agricultural inspection station off of Interstate 80, also holds an allure, especially for children, said Old. The Changing Strides team relies on their experience, both in therapy and with horses. Peek spent 6,000 hours getting certified by EAGALA (the leading international equine therapy association) as an equine specialist. She has worked with horses nearly all her life. Old has been a therapist for 10 years, and also runs Mountain Mental Health on High Street in Truckee. Captivating Tahoe/Truckee imagery by Incline Village J•W•L•Y•••• photographer · GIFTS · HOME DECOR www.whitebuffalotruckee.com ••U•K•• 530.587.4446 | Historic Downtown Truckee | www.whitebuffalotruckee.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 “I realized that if I wanted to do this work, I was going to have to start it myself,” said Peek. “Kids are excited to come here, where I can tell you before, some kids were not excited to come to therapy,” said Old. •••••••• ••WN••WN ••U•K•• 26 (left) Can you lead a horse to water? Some Changing Strides sessions include exercises like getting a horse to walk to a certain part of the arena through non-verbal communication. How a horse reacts to a person, and how a person reacts to the horse’s actions, can reveal a lot about a person’s communication style, leadership, and emotional makeup. At Changing Strides the horses are not ridden; they are used to signal the effects of non-verbal behavior, call attention to patterns and habits, or reveal the impact of communication styles. •••• BU•••L• •••••••••••••••• STEVE BROWN J•E•30••••••••• W E L•R•WN••WN Y · ART ••••••• (above) Changing Strides founder Tina Peek and Mental Health Specialist Christopher Old (both right) work with a group at Piping Rock Equestrian Center. Photos courtesy of Changing Strides MoonshineInk.com After Peek was certified as an equine specialist, she at first wanted to work for someone else, but realized no one else offered the service in the area. Peek said she deeply enjoys running a company that is enriching the lives of community members. “I feel like our customers are going to walk away as better people,” said Peek. Back at the Shetland pony stall, Snookie seems to be acting normal, and I am mildly relieved that I have not yet been identified as neurotic by a four-legged mind-reader. But then I remember a story that Peek had told me earlier in the day. One day, a girl with severe behavioral issues and an abusive past had come to therapy. Instead of engaging in the therapy sessions, she simply stood close to the horse’s head. She remained like that for the entire session, motionless and silent. The therapists thought the session had failed. But she came back for a second session, and when she walked into therapy, she was holding an intensely detailed picture of the horse’s head, and on each delicately drawn strand of the horse’s mane she had written the name of one of her abusers. “Even if you don’t see a lot of stuff going on, it doesn’t mean the person is not taking something deep and emotional away from the experience,” said Peek. Learn more about Changing Strides at changingstrides.com. ~ Comment on this story online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 27 GET YOUR SUMMER BEACH READS HERE! Now in our NEW LOCATION in the WESTGATE CENTER (3 doors down from Wild Cherries) Great Selection of New Books Plus Used Books Special Orders Welcome Prepaid Orders Delivered to Tahoe City 11429 Donner Pass Rd., Suite 2 (530) 582-0515 · bookshelfstores.com Who’s helping you build your financial future? On the Spot | News After Ryan Williams Financial Representative CA# 0G74604 10344 Donner Pass Rd Truckee, CA (530) 448-6452 ryanwilliams-nm.com 05-3035 © 2013 The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI (Northwestern Mutual). FOR SALE: PRIME 1 ACRE in downtown Truckee 2 Before and After: An old dirt road is restored and revegetated at Homewood Mountain Resort, reducing the amount of sediment-laden runoff that reaches Lake Tahoe. Courtesy photo • DMU Zoning • High Visibility • 3 Existing Buildings • 70+ Parking Spaces Before 530.414.4744 DRE# 01095063 · [email protected] business Briefs Tahoe Expedition Academy Launches High School Program 1 Tahoe Expedition Academy is launching a high school program that will start with a 9th grade class for the 2013-2014 school year. Each subsequent year, the school will add another grade level to eventually provide a complete high school curriculum. Professors from top universities around the country will teach the program. Boat insurance without a hitch. State Farm® boat insurance doesn’t cost much, but covers a lot – like your boat, motor, and trailer. It also protects you and your passengers. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.® CALL ME TODAY. Roxanne Duffield, Agent Insurance Lic#: 0753700 [email protected] www.insuranceroxanne.com Bus: 530-583-2886 0907515.1 28 State Farm Fire and Casualty Company State Farm General Insurance Company, Bloomington, IL 10 may – 13 june 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe Expedition Academy, a private school headquartered in Kings Beach, currently offers pre-kindergarten classes, elementary, and middle school academic programs (kindergarten through 8th grade). The school has an emphasis on experiential learning in the outdoors. For its new high school program, Tahoe Expedition Academy has identified three areas of focus: high-level academics and inspiring art programs; adventure, athletics, and nutrition; and character, citizenship, and service. Info: tahoeexpeditionacademy.org. 2 Homewood Selected as Finalist for National Environmental Award Homewood Mountain Resort has been selected as a finalist for the National Ski Areas Association’s (NSAA) prestigious Golden Eagle award. The annual award is NSAA’s highest environmental honor and recognizes exemplary environmental performance in the ski resort industry. The winners will be announced at NSAA’s annual convention on May 1 in Palm Springs. Homewood has been selected as one of three resorts in the Small Ski Area category — resorts with fewer than 200,000 skier visits annually. The other Submit your own to [email protected]. two finalists are Beaver Valley Ski Club in Canada and Mt. Abram Resort in Maine. Homewood is being recognized for its commitment to innovative watershed management and the water-quality monitoring work performed resortwide over several years. Working with Integrated Environmental Restoration Services Inc., Homewood has removed and restored nearly 300,000 square feet (nearly 4 miles) of unpaved, onmountain roads. In addition, through the development of a new, peer-reviewed stream-monitoring method developed by the project team for small alpine watersheds, a watershed-scale sediment reduction of 41 percent was measured between 2010 and 2011. The tools and methods developed at Homewood have been incorporated in a 300-page Watershed Management Guidebook that was recently published by Integrated Environmental Restorative Services. The guidebook serves as a valuable resource for other ski resorts seeking to improve their watershed management results. Info: SkiHomewood.com Tahoe Music Professionals Opens its Doors 3 A group of Tahoe musicians, DJs, and entertainers has launched Tahoe Music Professionals, specializing in weddings, corporate events, and private parties. Tahoe Music Professionals works with all styles of live music, DJs, and performers, both locally and nationally. It offers complete sound, staging, lighting, and décor for all special occasions. “We are providing a service that >>> Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper On the Spot | News >>> allows our clients to take the guess work out of hiring entertainment. A planner can go to them to hire a classical guitarist, a jazz trio, an ’80s cover band, and a children’s entertainer, all for one event, all with one phone call,” says cofounder Ben Martin. Tahoe Music Professionals is a proud partner and supporter of the Tahoe School of Music, a nonprofit organization. Ten percent of every booking with Tahoe Music Professionals goes directly to programs and scholarships at the school. Info: TahoeMusicPros.com 4 PRELUDE TO SUMMER CELEBRATIION! InnerRhythms Expands InnerRhythms Dance Centre plans to open its third studio in September in the space adjoining its current studios in the Truckee outlet center. The nonprofit dance group will launch a capital improvement campaign to raise funds for the expansion. Info: innerrhythms.org Friday, June 7, 5–8p.m. Join , & for an extra Special Night. Freshen up with Summer Sips and Sweet Treats, while listening to Live Music. Plumas Bancorp Reports 175% Increase in Quarterly Earnings 5 Stop by & enter to win one of three great prizes! Plumas Bancorp, the parent company of Plumas Bank, announced first quarter 2013 earnings of $616,000, an increase of 175 percent from $224,000 during the first quarter of 2012. In April, Plumas Bancorp also repurchased at auction 60 percent of the preferred shares that were issued to the U.S. Department of Treasury during the low point of the economic recession. “The repayment to the Treasury and the exit from this government program are indicators of the bank’s progress in successfully navigating through the global financial crisis while at the same time protecting our common shareholders’ best interests,” said Andrew Ryback, president and CEO of Plumas Bancorp. 6 La Galleria , Raffle Prizes Find us on Facebook Drawing to be held June 12th Grand Prize: $225 ($75 gift certificates from each store) Second Prize: $150 ($50 gift certificates from each store) Third Prize: $75 ($25 gift certificates from each store) Schaller Joins MOBO Jennifer Schaller has joined Molsby and Bordner, LLP (MOBO Law) as the newest tmember of its legal team. Schaller has been a practicing attorney in Truckee for the past three years. Schaller will add her knowledge of family law to MOBO’s growing expertise, which includes business, estate planning, construction, family, and real estate law. MOBO assists clients from all over the Tahoe/Truckee area and northern California, as well as select clients from southern California and Nevada. Info: 10280 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee, mobolaw.com Historic Hilltop Overlooking Downtown Truckee Voted North Tahoe’s Best Fine Dining Restaurant Reservations Appreciated 6 Jennifer Schaller has joined MOBO Law as a family law attorney. Courtesy photo Read. Discuss. Contribute. www.cottonwoodrestaurant.com (530) 587-5711 MoonshineInk.com 10 may – 13 june 2013 29 La Vida de las Montañas Rendimiento en una Botella ¿Acaso las bebidas deportivas son realmente necesarias? En la década del 60, el equipo tendrías si bebieras sorbos de agua carbohidratos y electrolitos sin aditivos te protegerán de fútbol de la University of común. Esto se debe a que durante artificiales. necesariamente; Florida inventó una bebida la primera hora de ejercicio, tu los investigadores Como alternativa no bebible, las bananas para ayudar a los jugadores a cuerpo tiene suficientes reservas de revelaron que y las pasas de uva son una genial elección; sobrellevar los entrenamientos glucógeno y electrolitos que te alla hiponatremia se ha comprobado que las dos aumentan con la humedad y el intenso canzarán durante el entrenamiento. tenía las mismas la resistencia en los ciclistas al igual que lo calor de Florida. El equipo se Llena tu botella de agua y entrena. posibilidades de hacen las bebidas deportivas. llamaba Gators, y la bebida Si la temperatura es fresca y no esdetectarse en se hizo famosa con el nombre tás transpirando demasiado, puedes Ten en cuenta que algunas bebidas corredores de Bienestar Gatorade. Esta bebida fue entrenar durante más de una hora deportivas contienen hasta 10 cucharadas maratones que Práctico Por Linda Lindsay diseñada para reemplazar las con agua común. de azúcar y 125 calorías por botella, tanto bebían bebidas tres cosas que se pierden al como una lata de gaseosa. Si haces ejercicio deportivas al igual Pero si durante por lo menos 60 a hacer ejercicio físico (fluidos, carbohidratos, para perder peso, no tiene sentido ingerir que en aquellos 90 minutos haces ejercicios fuerte, sosteniy electrolitos). Gatorade contiene agua, azúcalorías extra. que tomaban agua. do, en especial bajo temperaturas altas, será car, sal, y un poco de saborizante de limón. posible que transpires suficientes electrolitos Muchos expertos están de acuerdo en que Y, ¿qué sucede con la locura más reciente a Hoy, el mercado está repleto de bebidas y utilices suficiente glucógeno en tus músculos niños no necesitan de las calorías y el nivel salud: el agua de coco? Comercializada deportivas producidas por Pepsi, Coca, y la los para garantizar el reemplazo de ambos. azúcar extra, en especial si su actividad como la “forma natural” para rehidratarse, inmensa compañía farmacéutica GlaxoSPuedes hacer esto consumiendo cualquier consiste de un partido de fútbol por la este líquido claro del centro de los cocos mithKlein. Las bebidas vienen en diferentes combinación de alimentos o bebidas que mañana o un paseo en bicicleta en familia. jóvenes tiene naturalmente más potasio, colores de neón y, según se dice, mejoran el suministren los ingredientes necesarios. Pero en el caso de que tus hijos participen pero es más bajo en sodio, el electrolito que rendimiento, la recuperación, y mantienen Las bebidas deportivas proporcionan un de un campamento deportivo serio, quizá más perdemos cuando transpiramos. Pero si a la persona hidratada. El público cree todo suministro conveniente, y tienen la ventaja cambie la historia. Los investigadores de te gusta el sabor, el agua de coco puede ser esto que se dice, por un valor de $1,500 miladicional de ser un poco más fáciles de University of Connecticut estudiaron los una bebida refrescante. Ten en mente que lones al año. consumir y digerir que la comida sólida, en hábitos de la ingesta de bebidas en niños contiene unas 90 calorías cada 17 onzas (no especial si continuas con tu entrenamiento. que participaban de campamentos deportite dejes engañar por la porción pequeña), y Pero, ¿necesitamos realmente una bebida Sin algún tipo de suministro de carbohidravos en la Costa Este. Los niños, de 9 a 16 que algunas variedades son mezcladas con deportiva para mantenernos hidratados? tos, tu cuerpo pasará de quemar carbohidraaños, entrenaban tres veces por día durante jugo de fruta. ¿Acaso Powerade mejorará nuestro rentos a quemar grasas, que hará que cuatro días. Los investigadores notaron dimiento cuando andemos en bicicleOtras bebidas, tales como Vitaminwater, tu rendimiento baje. que los niños llegaban deshidratados y se ta, o nos ayudará a recuperarnos tras aguas “fitness”, y las bebidas energizantes deshidrataban cada vez más a medida que un partido de tenis? ¿Acaso los niños Sin embargo, las bebidas deporticomo el Red Bull, por lo general no son el campamento transcurría, a pesar de que de 8 años necesitan Gatorade para vas comerciales ya no contienen buenas bebidas deportivas porque carecen había agua disponible y a su alcance. Los poder rendir bien en un partido de sólo los ingredientes simples de las cantidades adecuadas de los dos niños pensaban que estaban hidratados, fútbol? de cocina. Algunos contienen elementos básicos que necesitas: electrolitos a pesar de que muchos admitieron que se endulzantes, y a la mayoría y carbohidratos. A pesar de que un poco de De acuerdo con los expertos, habían olvidado de beber. ¿Acaso una bede los productos se los tiñe cafeína puede mejorar el rendimiento atléla respuesta es afirmativa en bida deportiva fomentaría que bebieran más con colorantes artificiales detico, demasiado puede dejarte agitado, y las ambos casos. Obviamente, líquido? Probablemente. Los investigadores rivados del petróleo como el dosis realmente elevadas están prohibidas en podemos vivir sin bebidas canadienses revelaron que saborizar el agua Rojo #40, Azul #1, y Amarillo algunas competiciones. deportivas. Durante mucho fomentaba la ingesta de bebidas por parte tiempo, los atletas y todas las ¿Cuáles son las mejores bebidas personas obtuvieron sus fluidos, para cuando hayas terminado de Receta para hacer una bebida deportiva casera carbohidratos y electrolitos, entrenar y necesites carbohidra¼ taza de azúcar ¼ t aza de agua caliente 2 cdtas. de jugo de limón tos y proteínas para recuperarte? como el sodio y potasio, bebiendo agua o ingiriendo alimentos El American College of Sports ¼ cdta. de sal (para disolver el 3½ tazas de agua fría reales. Medicine dice que una buena ¼ taza de jugo de naranja azúcar y la sal) elección es una chocolatada de En una jarra, disolver el azúcar y la sal en el agua caliente. Agregar el resto de los Pero eso no significa que las bajas calorías. Un estudio demingredientes y el agua fría. La bebida contiene unas 50 calorías y 110 mg de sodio bebidas deportivas no sean útiles. ostró menos indicadores de daño por cada porción de 8 onzas, aproximadamente la misma cantidad que la mayoría La mayoría de los nutricionistas muscular en aquellos jugadores de las bebidas deportivas. Receta de “Nancy Clark’s Sports Nutrition Guidebook especializados en deporte, sin de fútbol que tomaban leche (Guía de Nutrición Deportiva de Nancy Clark).” embargo, sugieren que antes de chocolatada que en aquellos que que gastes dinero en bebidas, coningerían una bebida deportiva sideres factores importantes como de los niños. Durante el estudio, los niños con las mismas calorías. En otro estudio, la duración e intensidad de tu entre#5 y #6. Se ha demostrado que que anduvieron en bicicleta a temperaturas cuando se bebió leche después de hacer namiento, la bebida deportiva en cuestión los colorantes artificiales causan reacciones elevadas tomaron 44 por ciento más de ejercicio, se comprobó un mejor equilibrio (no son todas iguales), cuán alta será la alérgicas e hiperactividad en algunos niños, líquido cuando la bebida tenía sabor a uva de fluidos en comparación con el agua o las temperatura bajo la cual realices ejercicio, y particularmente en los niños que han sido que cuando se trataba de agua. bebidas deportivas tus preferencias y hábitos personales. diagnosticados con TDAH. Los estudios en animales han vinculado algunos colorantes Si bien la deshidratación puede ser grave, Si bien las bebidas deportivas podrían De todos estos factores, los más imporcon los tumores suprarrenales y renales. toda la publicidad sobre mantenerse hidrataayudar a algunos atletas, no cabe duda de tantes son la duración y la intensidad de do ha llevado a que incluso los atletas serios que puedes ingerir lo que necesitas si comes tu entrenamiento. La American College of Para evitar los colorantes y endulzantes tomen tanta agua que se vuelven propensos alimentos reales y bebes agua. Pero si las Sports Medicine dice que en aquellos casos artificiales, sin mencionar las botellas a la hiponatremia, un estado en el que el bebidas deportivas te dan buen resultado, en los que el ejercicio dure menos de una plásticas que son hechas para ser utilizadas sodio disminuye a niveles peligrosamente entonces consúmelas. Sólo recuerda que no hora, no se necesita una bebida deportiva. una sola vez, intenta hacer tu propia receta bajos, que pueden conducir a un coma o a son mucho más que agua con azúcar y un Las investigaciones han demostrado que no (ver receta en el recuadro) o compra una la muerte. Pero las bebidas deportivas no poquito de sal. ayudará a tener un rendimiento mejor al que de las mezclas en polvo que proporcionan 30 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper MOUNTAIN LIFE Performance in a Bottle Are sports drinks really necessary? Practical Wellness By Linda Lindsay Back in the ’60s, the University of Florida football team concocted a drink to help the players survive workouts in Florida’s intense heat and humidity. The team was the Gators, and the drink became known as Gatorade. Designed to replace the three things lost during exercise — fluids, carbohydrates, and electrolytes — Gatorade consisted of water, sugar, salt, and some lemon flavoring. a sports drink. Research shows that it won’t help you perform any better than if you swig regular water. This is because for the first hour of exercise, your body has enough glycogen and electrolyte reserves to last you through your workout. Just fill your water bottle and go. If temperatures are cool and you’re not sweating much, you can go longer than an hour on plain water. But if you’re engaged in at least 60 to 90 minutes of hard, sustained exercise, especially in the heat, you’ll likely sweat out enough electrolytes and use up Today the market is flooded with sports enough glycogen in your muscles to wardrinks owned by companies like Pepsi, rant replacement of both. You can do Coke, and drug giant GlaxoSmithKlein. this by consuming any combination of The drinks come in an array of neon food or drink that supplies the necessary colors and claim to improve perforingredients. Sports drinks supply them mance, enhance recovery, and keep conveniently, and have the added advanyou hydrated. And the public buys into tages of being a little easier to consume these claims, to the tune of $1.5 billion and digest than solid food, especially if a year. you’re continuing your workout. WithBut do you really need a sports drink to out some kind of carbohydrate supply, stay hydrated? Will Powerade improve your body will shift from burning carbs your mountain bike to burning fats, ride, or help you which will slow recover after a tennis Homemade Sports your performatch? Do 8-year-old mance. Drink Recipe kids need Gatorade Commercial to make it through a ¼ cup sugar sports drinks no soccer game? ¼ tsp salt longer contain According to experts, just simple kitch¼ cup orange juice the answer is both yes en ingredients, ¼ cup hot water and no. Obviously, we however. Some (to dissolve sugar and salt) can live without sports contain artificial 2 tbsp lemon juice drinks. For eons, sweeteners, and athletes and everyone most products 3½ cups cold water else got their fluid, are colored with carbs, and electroIn a pitcher, dissolve the sugar petroleum-based and salt in the hot water. Add the lytes like sodium and artificial dyes like remaining ingredients and the cold potassium by drinking Red #40, Blue water. The drink contains about 50 water and eating real #1, and Yellow #5 calories and 110 mg of sodium per food. and #6. Artificial 8 ounce serving, approximately dyes have been the same as many sports drinks. But that doesn’t mean shown to cause Recipe from “Nancy Clark’s Sports sports drinks can’t be allergic reactions Nutrition Guidebook.” useful. Most sports and hyperactivity nutritionists, however, in some children, suggest that before you spend money on particularly kids who have been diagthe drinks, you should consider impornosed with ADHD. Animal studies have tant factors such as the length and inlinked some dyes to adrenal and kidney tensity of your workout, the sports drink tumors. in question (not all are equal), how hot the temperature is, and your individual To avoid artificial dyes and sweeteners, habits and preferences. not to mention the single-use plastic bottles these drinks come in, try making Of all these factors, the most imporyour own (see recipe in sidebar) or buy tant is the length and intensity of your one of the many powdered mixes that workout. The American College of provide carbs and electrolytes without Sports Medicine says that for exercise artificial additives. lasting less than an hour, you don’t need Read. Discuss. Contribute. For a non-drink alternative, bananas or raisins are a great choice; both have been shown to boost endurance in cyclists as much as a sports drink. Keep in mind that some sports drinks contain up to 10 teaspoons of sugar and 125 calories a bottle, as much as a can of soda. If you’re exercising to lose weight, the extra calories might not be worth it. Many experts agree that kids don’t need the extra sugar and calories, either, especially if their activities consists of a morning soccer game or a family bike ride. But if your kids are participating in a serious sports camp, it might be a different story. Researchers from University of Connecticut studied the drinking habits of kids attending soccer and football camps on the East Coast. The kids, aged 9 to 16, practiced three times a day for four days. Researchers found that the kids arrived dehydrated and got progressively more dehydrated as the camp progressed, even though water was readily available. The kids thought they were staying hydrated, though many admitted they simply forgot to drink. Would a sports drink encourage them to guzzle more fluids? Probably. Canadian researchers found that flavoring the water encouraged kids to drink. During one study, kids riding exercise bikes in the heat drank 44 percent more liquid when the drink was grape-flavored than when it was plain water. Though dehydration can be serious, all the hype about staying hydrated has led even serious athletes to drink so much water that they get hyponatremia, a condition in which sodium drops to dangerously low levels, which can lead to coma and death. But sports drink won’t necessarily protect you; researchers found that hyponatremia was just as likely to occur in marathon runners who drank sports drinks as those who drank plain water. What about the newest health craze — coconut water? Marketed as the “natural way” to rehydrate, this clear liquid from the center of young coconuts is naturally high in potassium, but low in MoonshineInk.com sodium, the electrolyte we lose the most when sweating. But if you like the flavor, coconut water can be a refreshing drink. Be aware that it contains about 90 calories per 17 ounces (don’t be tricked by the small serving size), and that some varieties are mixed with fruit juice. Other drinks, such as Vitaminwater, “fitness” waters, and energy drinks like Red Bull, generally don’t make good sports drinks because they lack adequate amounts of the two basic things you need – electrolytes and carbs. Though some caffeine can improve athletic performance, too much can leave you jittery, and really large doses are banned in certain competitions. Once you’ve finished your workout and need carbohydrates and protein for recovery, which drinks are the best? The American College of Sports Medicine says that a good choice is low fat chocolate milk. In one study, soccer players showed lower indications of muscle damage when they drank chocolate milk versus a recovery sports drink containing similar calories. In another, milk restored fluid balance better than water or sports drinks after exercise. Though sports drinks may help some athletes, it’s certainly possible to get what you need by eating real food and drinking water. But if sports drinks work for you, go ahead and use them. Just remember they’re not much more than fancy sugar water with a bit of salt. ~ Comment on this column online, visit moonshineink.com. 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 31 Secure Your Energy Independence! Install a Renewable Energy System and Take Advantage of A Limited Number of Solar Rebates Still Available! $6,000 to $25,000 Rebates Take advantage of the 30% federal tax credit on complete project price, after rebate Solar Wind Works Working together for our children’s future Local: 530-582-4503 [email protected] PO Box 2511, Truckee, CA, 96160 www.solarwindworks.com Sales, Installation & Service Contractor Lic. CA 796322, NV 59288 Serving Placer, Nevada, Sierra, Plumas & Washoe Counties since 1999 MOUNTAIN LIFE Teach Your Puppy to Speak Dog Owners whose dogs have behavior problems keep trainers (and shelters) busy. Many of the problems are a result of people not understanding how dogs think, learn, and communicate. The Savvy Trainer Some of the more By Carla Brown challenging behavior problems stem from root causes that could be avoided or minimized if humans knew more about the canine species. Here is the countdown of my top five causes of avoidable behavior problems in dogs: Tues thru Sat 10-5 10099 Jibboom St Downtown Truckee 530-587-1409 LAKE TAHOE COMMUNITY COLLEGE Intensive Spanish Summer Institute AUGUST 12 – 16, 2013 ISSI is a week-long award-winning Spanish Immersion program. • 500 to 600 students from all over the U.S. • Spanish grammar for all levels • 90 different cultural breakout sessions including Argentine, Cuban, Spanish & Mexican Cooking; Music & Dance; Religion & Saints; Street Spanish & Slang Registration Begins May 29, 2013 Info: 530-541-4660 x363 | www.ltcc.edu th 20 Annual Pass It On Thrift OPEN 7 DAYS Gently used gear, books and clothing. Come See our New Store 599 N. Lake Blvd. Ste. A, Tahoe City, CA 530-581-3117 (Next to Fat Cat Café) 32 Coming home to chewed-up shoes may not be a sign that your dog has behavioral issues, but rather that he is bored or anxious, issues that can be resolved. AnnekaS/ bigstockphoto.com #5: Diet and GALLERY Since 1991 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com There are so many dog foods on the market; how can you possibly know what to choose? High protein, low carb, hypoallergenic, raw....the list could fill this entire article! The Whole Dog Journal publishes a wellresearched list of recommended dry and wet foods each year. That’s one good place to start, but each dog has unique needs and may be allergic or intolerant to some foods. Intolerances and allergies can cause severe distress and pain, which can affect a dog’s behavior. Also, diets that contain too much or too little of any nutritional component can cause imbalances that will manifest as behavior changes. Your veterinarian is the best resource for diet-related questions. #4: Puppies need to learn how to speak dog If puppies don’t spend time with other dogs, they never learn how to speak dog. Dogs speak with their bodies. Yes, they bark, but most of the information they transmit to other dogs is nonverbal. How a dog holds its head, ears, tail, and body speaks volumes, but only if the dog knows the language. Puppies who are isolated from other pups or wellbehaved adult dogs often grow up fearful of other dogs and send conflicting messages. The best solution to this problem is to take young pups to puppy socialization and manners classes where well-managed play with other young dogs is encouraged. #3: Boredom Dogs need mental stimulation and physical exercise to be happy and healthy. If they get too little of either, they will find ways to entertain themselves. Chewing up your favorite shoes or the sofa is often a sign of anxiety, but can also just be entertainment. There are many ways to provide mental stimulation. Feeding some of your dog’s daily kibble out of a Kong Wobbler dispenser or puzzle feeder makes him work for his food. Positive-based training is a great way to give your dog’s brain a workout, and it helps build your relationship with the dog. #2: Pain Dogs (and cats) are very good at hiding pain. In the wild, an animal that shows weakness is likely to be hunted and killed. Sudden changes in a dog’s behavior can indicate pain or discomfort. Just like us, being in pain can cause a dog to be short-tempered or grumpy. Don’t ever discount sudden changes in your dog’s behavior or routine; consult your veterinarian immediately. And the drum roll, please… #1: Never being taught to be alone Dogs are pack animals and they depend on the pack for survival. We are our dog’s pack. When we are away, they instinctually think something is wrong. For them to be happy and confident in a human world, it is our responsibility to teach them that being alone is okay and you will come back. If you are raising a young pup, crating him and leaving for varying amounts of time will do the trick. Older pups and adult dogs can be more of a challenge because they often come with unknown backgrounds from shelters. Many of these dogs have some form of separation anxiety, but most calm down after a few weeks in a new home when the owner offers a structured and predictable routine. There are homeopathic remedies that can be helpful with more severe cases. Simply being observant and noting small changes in your dog’s behavior will help you to identify problems that be addressed before they become major issues. Trust your instincts; your dog will thank you. ~ Comment on this column online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper MOUNTAIN LIFE Smells Like Watermelon Nature’s Corner 38% By Eve Quesnel OF ENVISION® PLAN HOLDERS SAY THEY WILL RETIRE ON THEIR OWN TERMS* The loss of aenough loved one is devastating Adventurous individuals who like to do a little backcountry spring skiing or hiking on Tahoe’s tallest peaks — Freel, Mt. Rose, Jobs — will be treated to a spectacular late spring, early summer phenomena that occurs above 10,000 feet elevation: pink snow. I remember the first time I crossed a patch of it in the Sierra near Bridgeport, Calif. I was working in the Hoover Wilderness as a backcountry ranger that summer and witnessed all sorts of wonders of nature. The large snowfields with pink-dyed patches and vertical streaks were certainly one of the most marvelous, although I can’t believe I never bothered to figure out why they were pink. I did learn from a passing hiker that the colorful sheets of ice were called watermelon snow. “Get right up to it, down on your knees, and smell it,” he suggested, which I did. The snow smelled just like watermelon! So, what causes snow to bear a resemblance to the mouthwatering Fourth of July fruit? Read. Discuss. Contribute. 93 % OF INVESTORS WITHOUT A PLAN THINK THEY HAVE ENOUGH MONEY TO LIVE COMFORTABLY IN RETIREMENT.** Moonshine Ink “A Sierra Club Naturalist’s Guide to The Sierra Nevada” explains that the pink hue is a color that comes from algae that is actually green but secretes a pink, gelatinous coating. But how does the algae get into the snow in the first place? In a June, 2005 National Geographic article, the writer John Roach paraphrases the biologist Ron Hoham with a colorful description of how the algae moves through the snow: “When the first snowmelt trickles through the snowpack to reach rock and soil below — where snow algae pass the winter in a dormant stage — the algae ‘wake up,’ germinate, and squirm up through the ice crystals toward the sunlight. This colors the snow. The red and orange Which circle would you rather run in? their income as well. Talk to us. We’ll help you determine Wells Fargo Advisors’ unique Envision planning process the amount of life insurance you’ll need – and the most helps us get to know your specific needs and goals in order appropriate type of policy for your circumstances. For a to create your tailored investment plan. Moniforing your complimentary consultation, please call or visit today. progress is easy. You’ll always know if you’re on track to reach your financial goals. Find out how having an Envision plan can help you live the life you planned. Call today. *RESULTS ARE BASED ON A SURVEY CONDUCTED BY HARRIS INTERACTIVE FROM JUNE-JULY 2011 AMONG1004 INVESTORS WITH FINANCIAL ADVISOR RELATIONSHIPS. **THESE FINDINGS ARE PART OF THE WELLS FARGO-GALLUP INVESTOR AND RETIREMENT OPTIMISM INDEX CONDUCTED FEBRUARY 3-12, 2012 FROM A SAMPLING OF 1,022 RANDOMLY SELECTED INVESTORS. NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE OR SUCCESS. NOT REPRESENTATIVE OF THE EXPERIENCE OF OTHER CLIENTS. Leisa Peterson, MBA Financial Advisor 925 Tahoe Boulevard, Suite 202 Incline Village, NV 89451 775-831-6107 [email protected] CA Insurance Lic. #0H55417 Investment and Insurance Products: u NOT FDIC Insured u NO Bank Guarantee u MAY Lose Value Envision ® is a brokerage service provided by Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC.©2012 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC. Member SIPC. Wells Fargo Advisors is the trade name used by two separate registered broker-dealers: Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC and Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, LLC, Members SIPC, non bank affiliates of Wells Fargo & Company. All rights reserved. Envision® is a registered service mark of Wells Fargo & Company and used under license. 0312-1323 [88511-v1] Precision Flooring “Precise, local and personable.” Contractors and Designers Welcome Watermelon snow in the high Sierra, which occurs in the spring or early summer, is really a bloom of pink algae. Courtesy photos colors … come from secondary pigments that screen out ultraviolet light, which can be damaging in open, high alpine snowfields.” The way I see it, the green algae lies dormant in the winter. Then in the spring and summer, the little cells release smaller, green flagellate cells (with whip-like organelles) during germination, which travel like swimming sperm toward the surface of the snow. Once on top, the algae put on their pink “sunglasses” to prevent the bright glare. Very hip! Chlamydomonas nivalis, you are one amazing little alga! Another interesting tidbit I found from summitpost. org is that in some locations higher than 10,000 feet in the California Sierra, blooms of snow algae have been known to be 10 inches deep in the snow. One word of caution: While watermelon snow might look enticing to slurp on, especially after a long ski, board, or hike, it has been known in some cases to cause diarrhea. So, unless you want to deal with that issue in the backcountry, simply take a whiff of the pink stuff. It really does smell like watermelon. Do you have a question about our region’s natural world? Email [email protected]. FREE Estimate s Sales, Installation and Repairs Carpet/Area Rugs Hardwood · Laminate · Vinyl · Cork Window Coverings Green Products · Competitive Prices 530-587-0102 www.precisionflooringtruckee.com 11357 Donner Pass Rd. Ste. E · Truckee (next to DMV) CA Lic #978756 MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 33 MOUNTAIN LIFE Roses and Thorns Jesse Bushey and Emily Turner are one of the success stories from the down real estate market. The adventurous couple purchased their perfect home, a rustic cabin with an outhouse and water tower, along the Truckee River. Courtesy photo Home Slice By Maura Mack Some friends I know have a nightly ritual that I love. At dinner with their kids they play “Roses and Thorns” to discuss the day. Each family member takes a turn talking about the best part of the day (the roses) and the worst part of the day (the thorns). I began thinking about the past seven years of real estate in terms of roses and thorns. We all know the real estate market just finished a very thorny seven years when the market tanked. Perhaps you lost your home, your credit, your savings, or all three. Maybe it happened to a family member, a neighbor, or a friend. Working in the real estate market from 2007 to 2010 was challenging, with roughly 40 percent of local sales being distressed, mortgage companies tightening their reins, and banks entering the real estate market as sellers. Nevertheless, as the Tahoe/Truckee real estate market gains some distance off the bottom, I find myself reflecting on the roses in the rubble, the bright spots in a dark real estate history. There are success stories that happened in our community despite the bleak fallout — folks who waited, saved, and were able to take advantage of low prices and interest rates, or people who saw for the first time since the late 1980s that it was more affordable to buy a home than rent. These savvy buyers exercised patience in navigating a short sale, or stayed the course as one of many offers on a foreclosure, or moved up into a home that would’ve previously been unaffordable a few years prior. In the end, they managed to buy in one of the worst markets in history, yet one of the best markets for buyers. And I’m not talking about investors or “flippers” from out of the area, but locals who are now full-time home owners. The Short Sale Jeff Dostie and fiancée Sarah Kunnen are newer homeowners in the Prosser neighborhood of Truckee. They started home shopping when their Realtor told them of a great short sale under $300,000. While the process took six months and many hoops to jump through, Jeff and Sarah recalled the process as being “pretty stress free.” By staying the course and being in constant communication with their Realtor and lender, Dostie and Kunnen successfully navigated the short sale process, a path that can be frustrat- REAL ESTATE WITH INTEGRITY “Maura Mack made the entire process from finding, negotiating, to closing ridiculously easy.” Specializing in Truckee, Lake Tahoe Sierra [email protected] (530) 582-2415 DRE# 01296899 34 www.MauraMack.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MAURAMACK Author of Moonshine Ink’s real estate column, Home Slice MoonshineInk.com ing for buyers due to the long wait for the bank’s response. Although their offer was higher than they initially planned, in the end they purchased a newer home for a very good price; their mortgage is now cheaper than their former rent. Hanging in there on a long escrow for a short sale allowed the couple to become homeowners for an affordable price. “I remember in 1998 to 1999 when friends were buying homes. It didn’t seem possible for us,” Dostie said. “When Sarah got a full-time job, we realized that together we could do it. We wanted to be able to afford to buy a house but not compromise our life as we live it.” Kunnen enjoys the freedom that ownership provides. “I love coming home and spending time there,” she said. “You can input your own style in your house.” A Perfect Match While not a distressed sale, Jesse Bushey and Emily Turner’s new home had been in the previous owner’s family for many generations and moving them out was no small feat. Still, both Bushey and Turner felt they had found a home that expresses exactly who they are and how they wish to live in the community. Their rustic cabin, located along the Truckee River between Alpine Meadows and Tahoe City, gets clean water from an old redwood water tower that is serviced from a local spring. They have to walk outside to the outhouse to use the bathroom and shower. While giving off the feeling of being at a fun summer mountain camp, this property is certainly not for the lighthearted. Yet it is perfect for Bushey and Turner. “I feel responsible for this area and connected to this place — the creek, the erosion, what we have around,” Bushey said. Having grown up in small-town Vermont comes in handy for Bushey, who together with Turner enjoys the long list of improvements required to maintain their property. “I think it’s the coolest,” Turner said. “I love to walk across the bridge and call this my home. Friends come over and I’m so psyched to have it and to share it. It feels like it’s the right place for us, and I’m confident in that.” Moving On Up James “Woody” and Amanda Woodruff are longtime local homeowners who saw last summer as the right time to move into a bigger home that suited their family’s growing need for more space. When I asked Woody how his family of four was able to move up in the down economy, his answer was simple: “Fiscal responsibility is the only reason that we were able to upgrade. In a time when a lot of people were overextending themselves, we just didn’t do that…The interest rates allowed us to move up into a bigger house that we can afford.” The Woodruffs made the move up last summer, having gotten a good price for their smaller home in Truckee and a great price for their new home in the Pannonia Ranchos neighborhood, situated on five sunny acres. When asked about his family’s favorite part of their new home, Woody said, “Location and neighbors. Now we have Prosser Reservoir and acreage, horses in the neighborhood, and it’s really close to town.” Though the thorns of the depressed real estate market scratched many, it’s nice to know that some came out smelling like roses. ~ Comment on this column online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper ALWAYS A LOCALS DISCOUNT • We are the One Stop Hydro & Organic Supply Shop for the hobbyist to the commercial grower • Come see our large selection of organic soil and additives • Exclusive Canna products dealer 1000 Watt Switchable MH/HPS 20% OFF $190.98 All Complete Light Systems Includes ba bulb, and refllast, lector 10% OFF everything else LOW PRICE GUARANTEE: We will meet or beat any local price. Truckee Store 10607 West River Street Building 3-C (530) 582-0479 Mon-Sat: 11am - 6pm Reno Store 190 West Moana Lane (775) 828-1460 Mon-Sat: 10am - 6pm Sun: Noon - 4pm anythinggrowshydro.com www. Friendly, knowledgable staff with over 30 years experience in hydroponic and organic gardening Decks/Roofs Sidewalks Driveways Maintenance Yard Clean-Up Roofs Landscaping P.O. Box 3519, Truckee CA, 96160 530.582.0338 fax 530.582.6921 Housecleaning for PEACE OF MIND Your Business Total Tech Support All your devices... covered. All your problems... solved. All your employees... productive. Visit TahoeTechGroup.com or call (530) 580-TECH FOR DETAILS Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com Ask About Our Business Support Plans 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 35 Community Calendar | The Tap Community Calendar Visit moonshineink.com/calendar for the complete Tap calendar — your source for events across the region for every interest. April 12 & April 13 MUSIC | Loves It An indie folk duo from Tennessee visits with banjos, guitars, and fiddles. Info: 8 p.m., Moody’s Bistro Bar & Beats, Truckee, (530) 5878688, moodysbistro.com WIN 50 $ BREW E-NEW SLETTE R Sign up for THE BREW, Moonshine Ink’s E-Newsletter by May 31st FOR A CHANCE TO WIN A $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE TO MOODY’S BISTRO Register at MoonshineInk.com + click the “Sign Up for Brew Email” link. LEGAL SERVICES BIG FIRM SOPHISTICATION AT SMALL FIRM PRICES · CORPORATE TRANSACTIONS and COUNSELING · SKI INDUSTRY · HI-TECH MARK L. LASSER · MINOR CRIMINAL, including DUI defense Lasser Law Office | Mark L. Lasser | San Francisco and Lake Tahoe, California l a w @ m l a s s e r. c o m | w w w. m l a s s e r. c o m | ( 4 1 5 ) 2 6 1 - 8 5 1 9 36 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 Throughout May DINING | Half-price Locals Menu May 10 to 12 & May 16 to 18 ARTS & CULTURE | Best of Broadway · FRANCHISING · INSURANCE Buy seven rounds of golf for $295 to support the Excellence in Education Foundation. The transferable cards are valid for 18 holes of play at premiere North Tahoe and Truckee golf courses including: Coyote Moon, Northstar, Old Greenwood, Resort at Squaw Creek, Tahoe City, Tahoe Donner, and Gray’s Crossing. Cards may be purchased at Porters Sports in Truckee and online at ExinEd.org. Some restrictions apply, (530) 550-7984 During the month of May, Dragonfly Restaurant and Sushi Bar will honor locals with half-priced dinner menu items and sushi. Info: Dinner is served from 5 to 9:30 p.m. Reservations recommended, (530) 587-0557 L asser L aw Office · BUSINESS LITIGATION May 10 (while supplies last) SPORTS | Golfing for Schools MoonshineInk.com Truckee High School Drama Club presents the Best of Broadway. Enjoy a performance by future A-list actors. Info: 7 p.m., $15/adults, $10/ students and seniors, Truckee High School, (530) 386-1929 Through July 26 ARTS & CULTURE | Art at the Truckee Airport From Tom Beebe’s fine woodworking to Sue Gross’ printmaking and the surprises of Carol Sesko, swing by the airport to check out the latest creations of local artists. Info: 10356 Truckee Airport Rd., (530) 412-0639 Beginning in May COMMUNITY | Wood-Cutting Permits The Tahoe National Forest is offering woodcutting permits for select areas at $15/cord with a twocord minimum per household (10 cord maximum). Info: Applications for mail-in permits can be found at fs.usda.gov/tahoe under “Passes and Permits,” (530) 587-2158 Ongoing Workshops COMMUNITY | Life After High School High school students are invited to participate in the Life After High School career and collegeplanning program offered by Learning Bridge of the Sierra, a nonprofit that offers affordable and personalized educational services for Tahoe Truckee teens and adults. Services in Truckee, Kings Beach, and North Tahoe include workshops and consultations to assist adults and teens with GED completion, educational choices after high school, and life/ work skills enhancement. Info: learningbridgesierra.org, or email: emily@plazatruckeetahoe May 11 and 12 ARTS & CULTURE | Chili on the Comstock Virginia City’s old downtown comes to life with live music and family friendly activities at the annual “Fireball Crawl,” a two-day event with 40 of the best chili cookers in the West. Info: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., tasting kits start at $7 ($10 complete with a free shot of Fireball Whiskey), (775) 847-7500, chilionthecomstockvc.eventbrite.com Tuesday, May 14 COMMUNITY | Yoga Workshop Tahoe yoga instructor Shari Beard is offering a 75-minute yoga workshop to benefit the Friends of the Kings Beach Library, which is trying to raise $25,000 to help remodel the facility. A fashion show and raffle will follow the class with prizes from popular clothing brands including Prana, Horny Toad, and Kuhl. Participants are encouraged to bring books to swap or donate to the library. Info: 5:45 to 8 p.m., $10 suggested donation, North Tahoe Event Center, Kings Beach, (530) 546-7001, tahoemountainsports. com/product/donation-product Thursday, May 16 COMMUNITY | Deadline Tahoe City Wine Walk Contest In an effort to promote this popular event on June 22, sponsors are offering a vacation package getaway that includes two complimentary tickets to the Tahoe City Wine Walk, a free, three-night stay at a vacation rental property (sleeps 8), dinner for two (up to $75) at Wolfdale’s Cuisine Unique in Tahoe City, and a complimentary two-hour, sunset sailing cruise for two with Tahoe Sailing Charters. Participants enter by sharing a photo from the Tahoe City Wine Walk Facebook fan page to their personal Facebook wall. Wine Walk Info: $35 before June 22/$45 day of the event, noon to 4 p.m., June 22, tahoecitywinewalk.com >>> Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper >>> Thursday, May 16 SPORTS | 3rd Annual High Fives Foundation Charity Golf Tournament All proceeds from this golf game will go to the High Fives Foundation to help in the recovery process of injured athletes. Info: Shotgun start, 1 p.m., $150/ individuals, $500/team, The Golf Club at Gray’s Crossing, Truckee, highfivesfoundation.org Learn Real Horsemanship in a Welcoming Place Summer Camp O ur camps are packed with non-stop fun while every child receives personalized instruction and the fundamentals of horsemanship. Friday, May 17 COMMUNITY | Spring Fever, a Night at the Barn Pony Camp (Ages 6-8) Critter Care (Ages 4-8) Horse Camp (Ages 9-16) Glenshire and Truckee Elementary fundraiser with raffles, auctions, and appetizers. Info: 8 p.m., $40/ advance, $50/door, The Family Barn at Martis Camp, Truckee, truckeespringfever.eventbrite.com Trail riding B ring the whole family out to enjoy our Scenic Trail Rides. Every trail ride starts out with a short lesson, where you have a chance to learn the basics of riding and get familiar with your horse. Then sit back and enjoy the ride as you take in the beautiful mountain views. Thursday, May 23 MUSIC | Ben Taylor An artist who effortlessly combines the sounds of reggae, pop, soul, urban, and country. Info: 9 p.m., $17/advance, $20/door, Crystal Bay Casino, crystalbaycasino.com (530) 582-6780 pipingrockhorses.com Friday, May 24 SPORTS | Paddle Board Fun The Start Haus is hosting a Stand Up Paddle Board Race at the West End Beach on Donner Lake with free boards to use for those who don’t have their own. Info: free beach entry for participants, and prizes, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., starthaus.com engliSh & WeSTern horSebaCk leSSonS | open Year round | boarding 12318 union millS road, TruCkee, Ca Breakthrough ARTS & CULTURE | Marcia Ball PIANO METHOD The Queen of Southern boogie, roadhouse blues and heartfelt ballads, visits Grass Valley for a one-night show, 8 p.m., $25 members, $28 non-members, The Center for the Arts, 314 W. Main Street, Grass Valley, thecenterforthearts.org, (530) 2748384, ext 14 WELLNESS | Power Animal Workshop Native American culture says that we have a Power Animal; learn to connect with your inner animal. Info: 10:30 a.m., $15 (must preregister), Center for Spiritual Living Tahoe-Truckee, (530) 581-5117, tahoecsl.org ARTS & CULTURE | Acoustic Guitar at Valhalla Guitar virtuoso Alex de Grassi in a concert to benefit the Sierra Nevada Alliance and The Sierra Fund, nonprofits working to protect the Sierra, 6:30 p.m. Info: VIP reception with “Up Close and Personal” music and chat session with de Grassi, a signed CD, and preferred seating ($100), 7:30 general admission ($25), Valhalla Grand Hall, Tallac Historic Site, Hwy 89, (530) 542-4546 ext. 305, sierranevadaalliance.com/events See The Tap p. 38 Read. Discuss. Contribute. has students PLAYING IMMEDIATELY “Since I was a child I have wanted to play the piano. I took lessons as a child and tried again as an adult; all to no avail, it just didn’t work. Piano still called. I signed up for lessons with Page Stegner at Simply Music and drove 100 miles every week for over a year. For the first time, even as a senior citizen, I enjoyed the piano and was actually learning to play. I then started lessons close to home and found to my amazement that traditional lessons were now okay: I was completely comfortable with the keyboard and could read the score. Thanks to Simply Music.” ADULTS & SENIORS, KEEP A YOUNG, SHARP & ACTIVE MIND PAGE STEGNER (530) 414-4464 • TahoePianoLessons.com MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 37 PRIVATE LESSONS FOR ADULTS AND KIDS GROUP LESSONS FOR ADULTS Guitar Piano Voice Ukulele Violin & more! tahoemusic.net [email protected] 530.584.1234 A California non-profit 501(c)(3) serving the Truckee/Tahoe area. Truckee Artists Creating Images of the Sierra, Tahoe & Europe • 2,600 s.f. gallery • Prints up to 10 ft • Custom Framing • Community Calendar | The Tap The Tap from p. 37 May 25 and May 26 WELLNESS | Truckee Home & Building Show Find everything you need to remodel, landscape, or decorate your home. Info: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., $6, free parking, Truckee High School, (530) 587-3477, truckeehomeshow.com Saturday, May 25 ARTS & CULTURE | Carson City Walking Ghost Tour Experience the stories and possibly see the ghosts that roam the old streets of Carson City. (Other dates available.) Info: $15/advance, $20/ door. Carson City, 800-NEVADA-1, brownpapertickets.com Friday, May 31 MUSIC | The Kandinsky Effect Jazz power trio searching for new ways to play jazz with rock, electronica, and hip-hop. Info: 8:30 p.m., Moody’s Bistro Bar & Beats, (530) 587-8688, moodysbistro.com Also sculpture, antiques, woodwork Sunday, June 2 COMMUNITY | Fishing Derby s i e r r a s u n 9940 Donner Pass Rd., east of Truckee Hotel Open Daily 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ph.530-582-0557 www.TheCarmelGallery.com • • You rtable Winter? Were o f m Co This Jake’s on the Lake hosts its annual charity fishing competition with prizes of $1,000 going to the largest mackinaw, $500 for the biggest German brown, and $250 to the prized rainbow trout. Info: Register by 5 p.m. the day before, 780 North Lake Blvd., Boatworks Mall, Tahoe City, (530) 583-0188, jakestahoe.com June 4 to July 1 ARTS & CULTURE | Watercolor Exhibit Upgrade to a high efficiency heating system. 530-582-8304 SALES / SERVICE / INSTALLATIONS / RADIANT FLOOR HEAT / FORCED AIR HEAT / SNOW & ICE MELT SYSTEMS / INTERNET & PHONE-UP THERMOSTATS Don Leslie CA License #549948 Town & Country FLOORING North Tahoe Arts showcases the work of Joel Popadics. Art exhibit info: runs through July 1, reception 5 to 7 p.m. on Friday, June 7, 380 North Lake Blvd., Tahoe City, info@ northtahoearts.com. Popadics is also conducting a plein air painting workshop on Saturday & Sunday, June 8 & 9. Info: 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., $200, (530) 581-2787 Wednesday, June 5 COMMUNITY | Ideas for Veggies powerhouse. Info: The show runs through Oct. 13, $25.00 ($35/VIP), call for dinner and show packages (775) 788-2900, harrahsreno.com Not sure what to do with the more exotic vegetables in the grocery aisle or in your weekly organic CSA box? (CSA is Community Supported Agriculture, a vegetable subscription program for which consumers pay a farmer in advance to receive a weekly box of produce, sharing in the risk and celebration of that season’s harvest.) Slow Food Lake Tahoe is pairing up with Dragonfly owner and chef Billy McCullough for “Cooking Outside the Box,” a fun evening full of ideas to benefit good, clean food. Info: 6 to 8 p.m., $35 for Slow Food members, $40 for non-members, Wednesday, June 5, Dragonfly Restaurant, 10118 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee, (530) 587-0557, slowfoodlaketahoe.org Thursday, June 6 ARTS & CULTURE | “Why I Farm” Book Signing Gary Romano, a third-generation California farmer discusses the release of his new book, “Why I Farm: Risking It All for a Life on the Land,” at a book signing reception in Reno. Published by South Lake Tahoe’s independent press, Bona Fide Books, the book documents a disappearing way of life and issues a wake-up call, describing Romano’s metamorphosis from a small boy growing up on a farm to an adult, white-collar worker, and finally to his ultimate return to the land. Info: 6 to 7 p.m., Campo Restaurant, 50 N. Sierra St., Reno, (530) 573-1513, bonafidebooks.com Friday, June 7 ARTS & CULTURE | Vaudeville Revisited Harrah’s Reno brings vaudeville back to life with the Biggest Little Sideshow, a lively evening of song and dance, seductive burlesque, and off-the-wall comedy in the casino’s legendary Sammy’s Showroom. The impressive cast includes Leah Kahn, a fire-eating contortionist who has performed in Las Vegas with Cirque du Soleil’s “KA.” Strange meets sexy with Viola LaLa Mia, a sword-swallowing, glass-walking, and fire-eating Hardwood Carpet Laminate Saturday, June 8 SPORTS | Truckee Running Festival Enjoy a morning run to celebrate health with a 5k, 10k or half marathon. Proceeds benefit Girls on the Run. Info: 9 a.m., fees vary, Riverview Sports Park, tahoerunningtrail.com COMMUNITY | Truckee Brew Fest Beer, brats, and Drop Theory all make for a fun Saturday while you taste all the beer you can drink. Info: $25/advance, $30/door, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Truckee River Regional Park, (530) 587-8720, truckeeoptimist.com MUSIC | Scott Weiland Artist from the rock group Stone Temple Pilots is playing a one-night solo show. He is known for his flamboyant onstage persona; who knows what he will do tonight? Info: 8 p.m., $49.50-$65.50, Silver Legacy, (775) 325-7401, silverlegacy.com Tuesday, June 11 WELLNESS | Thunderbird Lodge Kayak Tour Experience a tour of the East Shore of Lake Tahoe and the Thunderbird Lodge like you have never before. Once arriving at Thunderbird Lodge, walk the 600 feet of underground tunnels. Info: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., $124 per person, 2-person minimum, (530) 9139212, tahoeadventurecompany. com Saturday, June 15 SPORTS | Tour de Manure Cycle through the Sierra Valley on a 62-, 42- or 30-mile loop, and then party afterward in downtown Sierraville with incredible food and live music from Michael Hogan and the Simpletones. Info: 8 to 9 a.m. start, $50/$60 starting June 8, Sierraville, active.com • • • Commercial · Residential FREE ES AT ESTIM day! s to Call u Full Service Payroll with Direct Deposit Credit Card Processing Loyalty Marketing Programs Driveways · Patching New Construction Additions · Parking Lots 587-1125 530-582-4380 | Hours 9-5 M-F, Sat 10-2 12030 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee (Next to Smokey’s Kitchen) 38 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com CA Lic. #979353 email: [email protected] website: ShafferPaving.com Bonded & Fully Insured Sara Dube · (207) 890-8787 [email protected] · Truckee Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper The Sports wRap A Real Tahoe Rockstar Dave Hatchett debuts new Tahoe bouldering guidebook Noah Kaufman dangles from Osama, a boulder problem in D.L. Bliss State Park. The forests around Lake Tahoe are littered with amazing boulders, perfect for the rock climbing discipline of bouldering. Photo by Dave Hatchett “Bouldering Lake Tahoe: North/West Edition” (below) is a new rock climbing guidebook by Dave Hatchett. More than 3,200 of Tahoe’s best boulder problems are featured in the book. Courtesy image F Edition.” Boulderor a guy whose ing is a sub-sport of resumé includes rock climbing that pro snowfocuses on climbing boarder, filmmaker, the faces of large pro rock climber, boulders without a heavy metal guitarrope. Each specific ist, and now author, bouldering route is Dave Hatchett is one Sports called a “problem,” down-to-earth dude. Spotlight and one boulder may Sure, he’s quick to By Seth Lightcap hold a dozen or more tell you how rad his problems of varying day was, but over difficulties. Hatchett’s guidehalf the words out of this West book is a treasure map to more Shore local’s mouth will be than 3,200 problems hidden directed at inspiring you to disamong the bulbous boulders of cover an epic new adventure of 25 different areas on the North your own. The guy simply loves and West shores of Lake Tahoe to share his motivation for havstretching from D.L. Bliss ing as much fun as possible in State Park to Donner Summit the coolest places possible. and Dollar Point. Hatchett’s knack for sharThe hefty 540-page book is ing the stoke was born in the packed cover-to-cover with loearly ‘90s when he founded gistical information, including the snowboard film producdriving directions to the zones, tion company Standard Films GPS locations of the boulders, with his twin brother, Mike. and descriptions of the nature Now, 20 years later, Dave has and difficulty of each problem. returned to the spotlight with The efficiently laid-out text is a new media project that’s anchored by impressive images equally inspiring as Standard’s of the boulders and people many movies, only for a differclimbing them that make the ent action sport. book as visually stunning as it Hatchett recently wrote, is informative. designed, and self-published a “Dave’s guidebook looks so substantial new rock climbing nice you almost don’t want to guidebook called “Bouldertake it off the coffee table and ing Lake Tahoe: North/West Read. Discuss. Contribute. throw it in your backpack,” said Brendan Madigan, owner of Alpenglow Sports. But leaving the book behind is not an option. Without the info in its glossy pages you’d never find the boulders, let alone clue into the intricacies of the world-class problems that inspired Hatchett to produce the book. A massive new bouldering zone that Hatchett and friends developed at Sugar Pine State Park is one area the guidebook proudly unlocks for the public. “I couldn’t believe the amount of insane boulders we found at Sugar Pine,” said Hatchett. “We’ve spent the last four years developing one after the other of totally rad problems out there. I’m really excited to finally share all our work with other climbers.” Hatchett’s penchant for finding undiscovered places to climb is nothing new. Before he was so passionate about bouldering he spent two decades rock climbing with ropes, and established nearly 200 routes in the Tahoe region, including most of the routes at the Big Chief climbing area in Truckee. Searching for a new challenge, Hatchett put away the ropes and trained his intense focus on bouldering about five years ago. “After 20 years of climbing, I felt like I had done most of the routes in Tahoe that I could do,” said Hatchett. “When I started bouldering, all of a sudden there was this whole new world of climbing to be explored that was right in my backyard.” Bouldering’s worldwide popularity has exploded along the same timeline as Hatchett’s interest. He believes the minimal investment and the social qualities of bouldering have drawn a lot of fans to the climbing discipline. “I think bouldering is attractive to people because it’s cheap to get started and there is a great community aspect,” said Hatchett, “All you need is climbing shoes and a chalk bag to start having fun, and there can be eight people at one boulder, all trying the problems, feeding off each other’s energy, and it’s not a big deal.” The thought of drawing more climbers to his favorite boulders worried Hatchett when he first debated producing the book, but the consensus among the core local bouldering crew was that there are too many boulders in Tahoe, spread out over too wide of an area, for the added traffic to have much of an impact. Hatchett was also apt to share his local knowledge because if there is one thing he’s not humble about, it’s his feelings about the bouldering potential of Lake Tahoe. “When you consider the number of problems, the variety of rock types, and the beauty of the area, Lake Tahoe should be considered one of the best bouldering destinations in the United States,” said Hatchett. See BOULDERING p. 40 MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 39 The Sports wRap Paddleboarding Outside the Box SUP races and backcountry adventures By Seth Lightcap Moonshine Ink Over the past five years, stand-up paddleboarding has been embraced by the Tahoe community like a bear hug from a best friend. No doubt the unrivaled enthusiasm for the new watersport has been contagious for good reason. Stand-up paddleboarding (SUP) blends exercise and adventure with the offer of serene access to the region’s stunning lakes and waterways. Now firmly rooted as a favorite Tahoe pastime, the latest local opportunities to push the boundaries of paddleboarding are following a similar path to skiing. Avid paddlers are seeking excitement beyond simply navigating the quiet coves of Sand Harbor or Emerald Bay and are pushing their SUP skills onto the racecourse and into the backcountry. The Tahoe/Truckee area will host six major SUP races this summer. The fifth annual O’Neill Tahoe Cup race series includes three of the premiere local races and is expected to draw 400-plus participants from all over the world. The series begins on Saturday, May 25 with the Donner Cup. The Donner Cup is a 5-mile SUP race that circumnavigates Donner Lake from a start/finish line at the West End Beach. The Tahoe Cup series moves to Big Blue for the next two races, the Jam From The Dam at Commons Beach on July 13 and the BOULDERING from p. 39 Under the umbrella of his new company, Tahoe Bouldering Guides, Hatchett is already hard at work on two more bouldering guidebooks. The next book will highlight boulders on the South and East th 4 ANNIVERSAR Y Tahoe Fall Classic at Kings Beach on Sept. 15. For those new to racing, the Start Haus in Truckee will host a weekly SUP race every Friday night at the West End Beach on Donner Lake this summer. The races are free to enter, include free entry to the beach and even free board rentals! Start Haus’ Friday Fun SUP races are from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and begin May 24. Paddlers will be sprinting out and around Lake Tahoe buoys in six major paddleboard races this summer Opposite the comincluding the O’Neill Tahoe Cup series. Photo by Seth Lightcap petitive vibe, another increasingly popular getting in. There are a lot more ways to the Desolation Wilderness. local SUP pursuit is the exploration get in trouble stand-up paddleboarding The durability of the inflatable paddleof backcountry lakes and rivers using on a river than on the lake.” boards also opens up the potential to inflatable paddleboards. An inflatable Both race boards and inflatables are run rivers on a SUP. You’ll need solid paddleboard is constructed with ultraavailable at most paddleboard shops in river skills to SUP whitewater safely, but tough rubber similar to a whitewater Tahoe/Truckee. Neither are cheap — you’ll only have to worry about damagriver raft and is significantly more $1,200 to $3,000 — but you’ll be sure ing your body, not your board, when durable and easy to transport than a to “play” off the investment in a summer you fall off. fiberglass SUP. When deflated, inflator two. Unlike the costs of skiing and able SUPs can be rolled into a backpack “Inflatable SUP boards bring a whole waiting for the snow to fly, you’ll never that weighs less than 30 pounds. The new challenge to running rivers. Even have to postpone a paddle adventure blow-up boards can be inflated with an mellow whitewater is a thrill on an because the water is not wet. electric pump that plugs into your car SUP,” said Jared Licht, a local former or a portable hand pump for when you ~ Comment on this story online, visit pro kayaker. “But it’s important to hike in to paddle your favorite lake in moonshineink.com. understand the dangers of a river before shores of Lake Tahoe, and the third book will feature areas just outside the Tahoe Basin, including the Sierra Buttes, Reno, and Carson City. He hopes to self-publish both of these books in 2014. With deadlines on the mind and hundreds more boulders to document, you can see why this Tahoe sports legend has no time to parade around his accomplishments. Dave Hatchett is still 110 percent focused on leaving an adventure legacy for us all to enjoy. Pick up a copy of “Bouldering Lake Tahoe” at your favorite local climbing shop or online at laketahoebouldering.com. ~ Comment on this column online, visit moonshineink.com. “Whatever your cycling needs may be, Olympic Bike Shop can get you riding!” 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR DINNER 1 973 – 2 01 3 OPEN FOR LAKE TAHOE’S MOST EXPERIENCED REPAIR SHOP HAPPY HOUR NEXT DAY SERVICE ON MOST REPAIRS! 620 N. Lake Blvd., Tahoe City, CA 96145 | Open everyday 9am–6pm www.OlympicBikeShop.com | 530-581-2500 40 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 LUNCH 6 DAYS A WEEK (TUES-SUN) MoonshineInk.com Tues-Sun from 3-6pm *$4, $6 and $8 Tapas Specials *$3 Hot Sake and Beer Specials 11253 Brockway Rd Truckee · (530) 582-9755 WWW.DRUNKENMONKEYSUSHI.COM Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper Pure as the Lke Tahoe Naturals is an earth-friendly company that locally hand crafts Tahoe’s favorite soaps and body care products using the best organic and natural vegetable oils, pure essential oils, and natural botanicals for your skin. Visit us online to find out where you can get some for yourself! FULL SERVICE TREE CARE Truckee, North Lake Tahoe & Donner Summit Defensible Space Structural Pruning Hazardous Removals Arborist Consulting Insurance Work Yard Cleanup and now… Stump Grinding! “We grind ‘em so you can‘t find ‘em” 530.320.8061 www.halltreecompany.com Licensed & Insured CCL #924032 ISA Certfied Arborist #WE-8756A ’ tahoesoap.com Reach 23,000 TO JOIN US AT THE LAKE THIS SUMMER Readers Get this space for just $100/month! (530) 587-3607 [email protected] Shop, dine and play in one of the world’s most beautiful locales. Go to visittahoecity.com Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 41 La Cocina del Alma | Del campo a la mesa BOCADO rápido Darle un Respiro a los Huevos Locales Sweeting Ranch Edyta Mayer ofrece algunos de los huevos de sus gallinas en Yummy Yaiko en Prosser. Edyta Mayer holds out some of the eggs laid by her hens at Yummy Yaiko in Prosser. Photo by Emily Dettling/ Moonshine Ink Por MElissa Siig Moonshine Ink L as etiquetas de los huevos que compramos no siempre dicen todo lo que deberían decir. Los términos como “de granja,” “100% naturales,” y “de gallinas no enjauladas” no sólo confunden a los consumidores sino que a menudo carecen de sentido. Libres, por ejemplo, simplemente implica que las gallinas tienen “acceso” al exterior, independientemente de que realmente salgan o no. Al seleccionar el mejor sabor y los huevos más nutritivos, en realidad sólo tienes que recordar lo siguiente: comprar huevos de gallinas de pastoreo y locales ya que tienen más vitaminas D, A, E, ácidos grasos omega 3, y menos colesterol que los huevos producidos a nivel industrial. La región Truckee/ Tahoe tiene la suerte de contar con cinco pequeños productores de huevos dentro de un radio de 70 millas, incluyendo uno en nuestro patio trasero. Moonshine Ink le da el área menos favorecida a los emprendimientos familiares locales que proporcionan huevos, que incluyen a New Moon Natural Foods en Truckee, donde se pueden comprar todos estos. Yummy Yaiko 4,6 millas E s el negocio más pequeño del grupo, no puedes consumir nada más local que Yummy Yaiko, donde se vende de inmediato todo lo que viene de la granja de Edyta y Derek Mayer en Prosser. Edyta, quien es oriunda de Polonia (yaiko significa huevo en polaco), comenzó a recolectar 42 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 40 millas E l verano pasado, Sweeting Ranch en Loyalton comenzó a vender huevos de boca en boca, y luego también en una tienda de alquiler de películas en Portola. Ahora, los huevos orgánicos de granja están disponibles en Graeagle Store y New Moon. Además de vacas y ovejas, la granja de 60 acres tiene 27 gallinas que se pasean por el terreno que cuenta con cerco electrificado. Los dueños de Sweeting Ranch, Bronwyn Olsen y Solomon Sweeting, escogieron especialmente sus razas de gallinas porque las aves son buenos forrajeros y comen mucho pasto y bichos. La dieta de las gallinas, que también incluye alimento orgánico, producen huevos con yema color amarillo neón. Info: $6,99/docena, sweetingranch.wordpress.com hormonas. Las gallinas actualmente producen un total de 500 huevos por día, que disminuye a la mitad en invierno cuando hay menos luz solar. (De acuerdo con Dawn, para poner huevos, las gallinas necesitan 14 horas de luz por día, ya sea natural o artificial). A diferencia de los huevos industriales, que pueden permanecer en las tiendas tanto como un año, Spinolas no vende huevos que tengan entre 7 y 10 días. Los huevos se lavan mayormente con agua caliente, nunca se utiliza cloro. Además de New Moon en Truckee y Tahoe City, también se puede encontrar Reno Egg en Whole Foods en Reno, y son utilizados por el GourMelt Grilled Cheese Truck. Dawn dijo que muchos consumidores se convierten en “completamente adictos” una vez que prueban los huevos de Reno Egg, y le recomienda a las personas que hagan la comparación probándolos ellos mismos. Info: $5,49/docena, renoegg.com gallinas hace tres años como un proyecto para sus tres hijos. A medida que crecía la demanda de huevos por parte de los vecinos, dos meses atrás Edyta comenzó a vender sus huevos a New Moon. Sus varias decenas de gallinas y sus seis gallos se pasean libremente por el patio trasero de 2 acres, comen pasto y lombrices y hacen ejercicio. Todo esto hace que los huevos de Yummy Yaiko tengan una cáscara más gruesa y una yema más amarilla si se las compara con los huevos comerciales. Cuando no se pasean por los terrenos, las gallinas viven en un granero calefaccionado (incluso hay una guardería rosa Fowler Family para los pollitos) o Farm se mezclan con los 63 millas caballos Mayers, las ebe de ser el alpacas, los patos, destino que una y el perro guardián, familia cuyo apelCharen, un perro lido es Fowler (cuyo de montaña de los Dawn y Alan Spinola de Dawn and Alan Spinola of significado literal Pirineos. Como Reno Egg tienen más de 1.000 Reno Egg have more than 1,000 en inglés es: aves de Edyta tiene una gallinas en su granja de Phoenix chickens on their Phoenix Ranch near cerca de Stead. Stead. Photos by Michael Okimoto corral) se dedique variedad de razas de a criar gallinas. La gallinas, cada maple Reno Egg Fowler Family Farm (Granja de contiene los huevos que estén 45 millas la Familia Fowler) con base en disponibles en el momento, por on 1.150 gallinas, Reno Egg Grass Valley, que además tiene lo que variará su tamaño y color. cerca de Stead es el producvacas, cabras y cerdos, comenzó Si los huevos de Yummy Yaiko te tor más grande de las cinco activia vender huevos en 2008. La parecen sabrosos, no dejes de ir dades agrícolas locales. A pesar familia en la actualidad tiene a New Moon los miércoles que de que las gallinas no pastan, ya 100 gallinas ponedoras Cornish es el día en el que Edyta hace sus que la granja Dawn and Alan Cross que producen entre cuatro repartos. Para los jueves, por lo Spinola’s Phoenix Ranch no tiene y ocho docenas de huevos por general, ya se vendieron los 14 pasto, sí se pasean libremente por día, dependiendo de la época del maples. Info: $6,99/docena, yumsus 1,5 acres. Su alimentación no año. Las gallinas tienen acceso myyaiko.com contiene químicos, pesticidas, ni al pasto las 24 horas al día, y se D C MoonshineInk.com las mueve todos los días alrededor de la granja de 35 acres en gallineros móviles, que les permiten comer nuevas larvas y pasto rico en proteínas, creando un huevo más sano. También se las alimenta con una mezcla de granos, maíz, leche, y cebada. Además de estar disponibles en New Moon, los huevos son parte del programa de cajas CSA (Agricultura con Apoyo Comunitario, según sus siglas en inglés) de Fowler Family Farm que el cliente puede pasar a retirar por las tiendas de alimentos naturales. “Grass aumenta el omega-3 y los nutrientes, por lo que tienen una yema más oscura, que significa un mayor contenido nutritivo”, dijo Alana Fowler. Info: $8,99/ docena, fowlerfamilyfarm.com Natural Trading Company 70 millas T he Natural Trading Company, una granja de 40 acres en Newcastle, tiene 800 gallinas de granja certificadas como orgánicas que son movidas de un lugar a otro en gallineros portátiles. Además de producir huevos, las gallinas tienen un papel importante respecto del ciclo de la granja. Comen residuos de cosechas y bichos y producen un gran fertilizante para las frutas y verduras de la granja. “Realmente ayudan a la granja”, dijo Bryan Kaminsky, dueño de Natural Trading Company. Los huevos de Natural Trading Company están disponibles como complemento de sus cajas CSA por un valor de $6, que se dejan en New Moon en Truckee y en varios puntos en la Costa Norte. También puedes encontrar huevos de Natural Trading en los mercados de granja en Tahoe City (a partir del 23 de mayo), Truckee (11 de junio), y Sierra Valley Farms (7 de junio). Kaminsky trabaja con Tahoe Food Hub con el fin de crear un programa en el que aquellas personas que vayan a los restaurantes que participen puedan pedir específicamente sus huevos con un costo extra. Info: $6,25$7,75/docena de tamaño medio a gigante, naturaltradingco.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper SOUL KITCHEN | from field to fork QUICK BITES Give Local Eggs a Break By MElissa Siig Moonshine Ink W hen it comes to buying eggs, labels are not all they’re cracked up to be. Terms like “free-range,” “all natural,” and “cage-free” not only confuse consumers, but also are often meaningless. Free-range, for example, simply implies that chickens have “access” to the outdoors, whether they actually go outside or not. In selecting the best tasting and most nutritious eggs, you really only have to remember one thing — buy local and pastured, which gives eggs more vitamin D, A, E, and omega-3 fatty acids, and less cholesterol than industrially produced more local than Yummy Yaiko, run out of Edyta and Derek Mayer’s ranch in Prosser. Edyta, who is originally from Poland (yaiko means egg in Polish), started off getting chickens three years ago as a fun project for her three children. As demand for the eggs grew from neighbors, two months ago Edyta began selling her eggs to New Moon. Her few dozen chickens New Moon Natural Foods en Truckee vende huevos de cinco emprendimientos diferentes que se encuentran dentro del radio de 70 millas de Truckee. eggs. The Tahoe/Truckee region is fortunate to have five small egg producers within 70 miles, including one in our own backyard. Moonshine Ink gives the rundown on our local mom-and-pop egg suppliers, including distances from New Moon Natural Foods in Truckee, where all of these can be purchased or picked up as part of a CSA. Yummy Yaiko 4.6 miles T he smallest operation of the bunch, you can’t get any Read. Discuss. Contribute. La dueña de Yummy Yaiko, Edyta Mayer, cuida a una de sus gallinas en la granja Prosser. Yummy Yaiko owner Edyta Mayer pets one of her hens at her Prosser ranch. Photo by Emily Dettling/ Moonshine Ink New Moon Natural Foods in Truckee stocks five different egg companies that are within 70 miles of Truckee. Photo by Emily Dettling/Moonshine Ink and six roosters roam her 2-acre backyard freely, eating grass and worms and getting exercise, all of which gives Yummy Yaiko eggs a thicker shell and yellower yolks than commercial eggs. When not wandering around the grounds, the chickens live in a heated barn (there is even a pink nursery for baby chicks) or comingle with the Mayers’ horses, alpacas, ducks, and guard dog, Charen, a Great Pyrenees. Since Edyta has a variety of chicken breeds, each carton S contains whatever eggs are available, so they will vary in size and color. If Yummy Yaiko eggs sound yummy to you, be sure to show up to New Moon on Wednesdays, when Edyta makes her deliveries. By Thursdays, the 14 cartons are usually gone. Info: $6.99/dozen, yummyyaiko.com Sweeting Ranch 40 miles weeting Ranch in Loyalton started out selling its eggs last summer by word of mouth, then dropping them off at a movie rental store in Portola. Now the pastured, organic eggs are available at the Graeagle Store and New Moon. In addition to cows and sheep, the 60-acre ranch has 27 chickens that are moved around with electric fencing. Sweeting Ranch owners Bronwyn Olsen and Solomon Sweeting chose their chicken breeds specifically because the birds are good foragers and eat lots of grass and bugs. The hens’ diet, which also includes organic feed, produces an egg with a neon yellow yolk. Info: $6.99/dozen, sweetingranch. wordpress.com Reno Egg 45 miles W ith 1,150 chickens, Reno Egg near Stead is the biggest producer among the five local operations. Although the chickens aren’t pastured, since Dawn and Alan Spinola’s Phoenix Ranch has no grass, they roam freely around 1.5 acres, and their feed contains no chemicals, pesticides, or hormones. The chickens currently produce a total of around 500 eggs a day, which drops in half in the winter when there’s less daylight. (According to Dawn, in order to lay eggs, the chickens need 14 hours daily of light, either natural or artificial.) Unlike industrial eggs, which can be as much as a year old in stores, the Spinolas don’t sell eggs that are more than a week to 10 days old. The eggs are washed mostly with hot water, never See Eggs p. 44 MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 43 SOUL KITCHEN | from field to fork MAY 24 & 25 Steven Roth Los Angeles, CA What’s in Season? Brought To You By Mountain Bounty Farm MAY 31 & JUNE 1 Kandinsky Effect Paris, France JUNE 7 & 8 Jessica Fichot Paris, France & Mountain Bounty Farm’s hard-working crew takes a break from farming. Photo by Maia Lipkin NEOPOLITAN STYLE THIN CRUST PIZZA WINE ON TAP ALL NATURAL MEATS ROTISSERIE CHICKEN BLACK AND WHITE SILENT MOVIES ALL KINDS OF GREAT BANDS What’s Ripe Now: the best lettuces of the year plus peas and zucchini What’s Sprouting Next: cherry tomatoes Favorite Bloom: “Everything!” said John Tecklin, owner of Mountain Bounty. “It’s so exciting to start our summer CSA season and see all the new sprouts every day.” Moody’s Bistro, Bar & Beats 530-587-8688 www.moodysbistro.com Mountain Bounty Farm’s summer CSA season starts at the end of May, but you can sign up all season long at mountainbountyfarm.com. Eggs from p. 43 chlorine. In addition to New Moon in Truckee and Tahoe City, Reno Egg can be found at Whole Foods in Reno, and are used by the GourMelt Grilled Cheese Truck. Dawn said many consumers become “absolute addicts” once they try Reno Egg, and she recommends people do a comparison to see for themselves. “You take store eggs, put them in a frying pan, the yolk will be pale and flat,” she said, “while mine will be a firm globe of deep, rich yellow.” Info: $5.49/dozen, renoegg.com Fowler Family Farm 63 miles I t must be fate that a family whose name is Fowler got into the chicken business. The Grass Valley-based Fowler Family Farm, which also raises cows, goats, and pigs, started selling eggs in 2008. The family currently has 100 Cornish Cross layers that produce four to eight dozen eggs a 44 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com day, depending on the time of year. The hens have access 24 hours a day to pasture, and are moved daily around the 35-acre farm in mobile coops, which allows them to eat new larvae and protein-rich grass, creating a healthier egg. The chickens are also fed a mixture of grain, corn, milk, and barley. In addition to being available at New Moon, the eggs are part of the Fowler Family Farm’s CSA (Community Supported Agriculture program) boxes, which are dropped off for customer pickup at the natural foods store. “Grass increases the omega-3s and nutrients, so they have a darker yolk, which means a higher nutrient content,” said Alana Fowler. Info: $8.99/dozen, fowlerfamilyfarm.com Natural Trading Company 70 miles T he Natural Trading Company, a 40-acre farm in Newcastle, has 800 certifiedorganic, pastured chickens that are moved around in portable hen houses. In addition to producing eggs, the hens play an important role in the cycle of the farm. They eat crop residue and bugs and produce great fertilizer for the farm’s fruits and vegetables. “It really helps the farm out,” said Bryan Kaminsky, Natural Trading Company owner. Natural Trading Company eggs are available as a $6 add-on to its CSA boxes, which are dropped off at New Moon in Truckee and at various locations on the North Shore. You can also find Natural Trading eggs at farmers markets in Tahoe City (starts May 23), Truckee (June 11), and Sierra Valley Farms (June 7). Kaminsky is working with the Tahoe Food Hub to create a program where diners at participating restaurants can specifically order his eggs for an extra charge. Info: $6.25$7.75/dozen from medium to jumbo size, naturaltradingco. com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper ROCKING STONE | arts & culture & The xx Wednesday, May 29, Knitting Factory E recorded, first record, a collage of shared verses, the new album is a clean slate. The band entered the studio with nothing, locked the doors, and wrote together. The main idea was to create an album that could be played live. On the heels of this record, The xx is touring the world and playing at the biggest music festivals and the most coveted venues in Europe, the U.S., Asia, and Australia. very so often a piece of music emerges that grabs you and pulls you in on the first note. With music both haunting and nostalgic, it’s no wonder that the British, indie pop band The xx made just about every “best of” list for 2009 and has won acclaim with music critics worldwide. The music made by Romy Madley Croft (vocals & guitar), Oliver Sim (vocals & bass), and Jamie Smith (mixing & production) hovers on the fine line between emo, pop, beauty, and a touch of heartbreak. With influences that range from Aaliyah to CocoRosie, Rihanna to The Cure, and the Pixies to Mariah Carey and Justin Timberlake, it’s no wonder that they are topping charts and collecting fans globally. The three have been best friends since their school days and feel that this plays a big part in their surprising success. Their shockingly soft-spoken attitudes produce lovely duets as well as a precision production that has captured the headphones of just about every hipster from Portland to London. The music The xx makes is simple. It is guitars, bass, an occasional drumbeat, and strikingly heartfelt lyrics. It’s pretty clear with even a quick listen to either of the band’s albums that the music is sincere and powerful. In a word, its music can be described as intimate. It’s pretty rare to see a band that is so shy and simple capture the ears of so many. Everything in its music is at the right place and the right time. The xx will be joined by the Floridabased indie band Hundred Waters. Its music is harmony-based and said to be influenced by ’60s British art-rock and the Norwegian band Jaga Jazzist, and has been compared to groups like the Dirty Projectors and Bjork. It’s not going to be a full-fledged, boogie-down party, but it will be a night of beautiful, unique sounds not normally showcased in Reno. It’s a rare treat to have this shy British group play at the Knitting Factory in Reno on May 29, one stop on a world tour in support of its second record, “Coexist.” Unlike the band’s self- Info: $30–$50, 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 29, Knitting Factory, 211 N. Virginia St., Reno, re.knittingfactory.com, (775) 323-5648 ART BY Romy Madley Croft (left), Oliver Sim, and Jamie Smith of the British indie band, The xx, bring their fine-tuned, melodic music to the Knitting Factory in Reno on May 29. Courtesy photo ~Ryan Salm/Moonshine Ink OPEN RECEPTION FIRST FRIDAY JUNE 7TH 4 TO 8PM happy hour • NANCY HOLIDAY GET OUT GO made by hand Donner Pass Rd 10060 www.riversideartstudios.com TRUCKEE monday - friday open daily • 5 to 6:30 pm Appetizers, Homemade Pasta & Regional Dishes Served Nightly Full Bar, Great Wine List Read. Discuss. Contribute. MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 45 ROCKING STONE | arts & culture Get Out of My Crotch! Twenty-One Writers Respond to America’s War on Women’s Rights and Reproductive Health “With the drumbeat of bill after bill being put forth in legislation about women and their bodies, and male legislators redefining rape and making decisions Book it! about birth control By Eve Quesnel and stalling on the Violence Against Women Act due to provisions for Native women and LBGT, I’d finally had enough. Up to my neck in stories about transvaginal ultrasounds and personhood and the evils of contraception – with little regard for the people these discussions would most affect – I yelled from my desk one day, “Get out of my crotch!” ~ Kim Wyatt, publisher of Bona Fide Books and Cherry Bomb Books, South Lake Tahoe, and co-editor of “Get Out of My Crotch!” KVMR XVII Bona Fide Books is the convergence of Kim Wyatt’s lifelong love of literature and commitment to community, and Cherry Bomb Books, its imprint, was founded in 2012 to right wrongs. While the title may be shocking and the subject controversial, the book “Get Out of My Crotch!” wasn’t intended to offend nor be onesided, but instead to present from a variety of viewpoints one stalwart opinion: Women! Your body is your body and no one else’s! As Roxane Gay writes in her essay “The Alienable Rights of Women, “I struggle to accept that my body is a legislative matter.” CelticFestival & Marketplace A BENEFIT FUNDRAISER FOR KVMR Fri-Sun, September 27-29 Friday Free Youth Arts Program Nevada County Fairgrounds, Grass Valley World Class Musicians • Celtic Marketplace • Jam Sessions & Workshops • Parades Dance • Kid’s Area • Living History • Scottish Athletic Games • Celtic Spirits Animals of the Celtic Lands • Beautiful Park-like Camping Camp Sessions & more NEW thisyear! Ceilidh Friday Evening with Music & Dance featuring Reel of Seven featuring Mànran Cathie Ryan Paddy Keenan• Colleen Raney and much more! Get Info, Buy & Print Tickets online at kvmr.org/celticfestival or call 530-265-9073 WITH SUPPORT FROM Sacramento Valley Scottish Games &Festival 46 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com This wouldn’t necessarily be a book I’d pick up on my own, but to my surprise, I couldn’t put it down, reading it in a few sittings, gobbling up the history, politics, and genuine, heartfelt stories concerning reproductive health. Most impressive are the voices from a diverse group of writers: a Catholic woman, a nurse practitioner, a transgender adult heterosexuals, gays, grandmas, wives, and single women. Wealthy and poor, young and old, all the contributors are skilled in slinging words with professionalism and eloquence. What better way to get a point across than with language. As one author states in her essay, As with most essay collections, personal accounts are the central gravity, the means to reach us viscerally. In this collection, I think of the doctor who was required to wear a bullet proof vest underneath his physician’s lab coat. I think of the woman whose uterus held a deformed baby and the decision she had to make whether to terminate the pregnancy immediately, abort further into the pregnancy, or do nothing and possibly miscarry. I think of another woman who was molested by her father, and Book Cover: “Get Out of My Crotch: Twenty-One Writers Respond to America’s War on Women’s Rights and Reproductive Health” published by Cherry Bomb Books, South Lake Tahoe. Edited by Kim Wyatt and Sari Botton; cover by Truckee designer April Marriner and original art by South Lake Tahoe painter Shelley Zentner. when a young woman in the back stood up during the Q&A and said: ‘What can we do?’ Moments later, a sheet of paper was passed and a reproductive rights speaker series was born. A close second was at a book signing in Boston, when a serious-looking man, after looking at the book and turning it over in his hands, looked at me intently and said: “We need this book in Oklahoma. Can you get this book to Oklahoma?” A “I assumed that since nobody was organizing to repeal a woman’s right to vote, eventually the topic of abortion would be removed from the political arena and fall squarely within the realm of health care. That we as a society would someday look back on the dark days of illegal, back-alley abortions as shameful, much like we do with slavery.” ~ Kari O’Driscoll in “A Mile in Their Shoes” “…writing is a tether of words when the world isn’t safe like it [is] supposed to be.” This book was born out of frustration with the politics of 2011-12, politics that confronted Roe vs. Wade (1973) and introduced a variety of proposals concerning reproductive health. “By the end of 2011, more than 1,100 reproductive health and rights-related provisions were introduced and 135 provisions were adopted. Ninety-two of these provisions explicitly restricted abortions,” a contributor writes. Yes, abortion is a chief subject in the book, and yes, all of the writers are pro-choice. Their expertise on the matter? Some authors had abortions, one performed abortions, and most have fought for the right for a woman’s right to choose whether to have an abortion or not. then molested again by a boy five years older than her, and then raped by several men years later. I think of the woman who was told that her rape was really an almost rape, although she didn’t see the meaning in the changed language. And the illegal, unregulated abortion clinic where sanitation was grim, a back-alley type of establishment that was responsible for injuring or even killing women, like those of the accused Philadelphia Dr. Kermit Gosnell. For the authors in “Get Out of My Crotch” and for editors Wyatt and Sari Botton, the Gosnell case shows why abortion must remain legal, regulated, and safe. Wyatt continues to travel the country on her book tour. When asked what has been the best and worst outcome of the tour, she responded: “So far, the best moment was close to home in Sacramento negative response was a woman at our event in Portland who said she wouldn’t buy the book because a percentage of the proceeds go to Planned Parenthood.” Wyatt and Botton have dealt out some fighting words and taken a risk to publish a book on a touchy subject. But, whether readers covet the book or argue against it, relate, reconsider, or refute, there’s passion in this subject and a lot to learn. “Get Out of My Crotch!” is available online at cherrybombbooks.com, Amazon, and local bookstores. For more information, write [email protected] or visit cherrybombbooks.com. Find “Get Out of My Crotch!” on Facebook. ~ Comment on this story online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper Lorien Powers Studio Jewelry Lega-sea By Cindy Wahtola (Chaney) Custom Wedding Rings Local Artists Unique Gifts Handmade In the Truckee Hotel 10007 Bridge Street, Suite C Truckee, CA 530-550-9610 Photo by Corey Ford/bigstockphoto.com T he sun is just rising. I am still asleep with my infant son in the pack ’n play at the foot of the bed. She comes in to wake me. It is my idea. We leave the sleeping household behind and drive down the Kohala coastline excited with anticipation as we look for them. The Pacific Ocean is flat this morning, like blown glass that has not yet set. My mother sits in front in the sea kayak. I follow behind. She dips her paddle in the blue water, a silent scoop. I follow her lead, each paddle stroke right then left as the water below us changes from aqua to azure to indigo. I see a tension in her shoulders, perhaps a lingering tightness from years of parenting and hard work. I check my own shoulders. I too have tightness, an earned honor of becoming a parent myself. The tightness begins to loosen with each stroke. Whooshaaa! They are here! We stop silently awaiting their presence. It is a mother and a baby humpback swimming together in perfect rhythm, mother leading and baby following. They surface and then dive with deep, ojai breaths. We came to see them, the magic and wonderment of them. They came to see us, circling in curiosity. I am her baby. I tell her I love her from the back of the kayak. T POTS POTTERY WE DO... • Wheel Classes Adult & Kids • Open Studio No other publication in the region offers a better advertising value or venue. ~ Lee Weber-Koch, Weber & Associates 11012 Donner Pass Rd., Truckee • 530-550-7822 www.tpotspottery.com Read. Discuss. Contribute. Looking for A HEALTHY LUNCH in Truckee? The Crescent Café at Namaste Cindy spent most of her childhood in Squaw Valley, and attended local schools, graduating from North Tahoe High School in 1987. She skied on the high school Nordic team, and received a ski scholarship to the College of Idaho, where she graduated with a degree in psychology. Cindy has a master’s degree in counseling from the University of Nevada, Reno. She lives in Chicago with her husband, Cully, and two boys, ages 4 and 1. . GOT.. ? CLAY [email protected] LorienPowers.com Open Daily 10am – 6pm • Organic Salad Bar • Organic Homemade Soups • Healthy Gourmet Sandwiches • Gluten-Free & Raw Food • Natural Cold Cuts & Cheese Sliced by the Pound DMV Plaza • 11357 Donner Pass Rd • (530) 587-7426 Don’t forget Locals’ Day at New Moon! Sat. June 8! MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 47 Thrill of the Find Thrift ROCKING STONE | arts & culture Eco Friendly and Affordable I Am, Therefore I Think Gently Used Winter Clothing, Sweaters, Boots, Skis, Poles Snowboards and Holiday Decorations … for Women, Men, and Children 11429 Donner Pass Rd. #3 . Westgate Shopping Center . Truckee Mon-Sat 10am - 5pm, Sun 11am - 4pm . (530) 587-3145 Astrological Alchemy® By Robert Ayres The Sun enters into Gemini on May 20. This initiates a significant period of mental stimulation. It is a good time to re-examine our basic beliefs and assumptions about life. New winds are blowing, and new perspectives and ways of thinking can be considered and embraced. When Conventional Medicine Just Isn’t Enough We provide hope for chronic or unresolved health problems ... even if other therapies have failed to help Cache Creek HOlistiC is a time of intense emotional conflict where personal relationship situations are coming to a head. It is the reappearance of a conflict that has been going on for some time. It needs to be dealt with. There is support for you to experience a shift in your thinking and feelings that can open up a new vision of possibilities. 50% off Our initial analytical testing ($50 savings - includes free no-obligation email information and case consultation) Taurus (April 20-May 20) You are Our Patients Say: trying to find balance in your life. The polarities and extremes are tugging at you, and it is uncomfortable. We need to balance these opposites and bring them into harmony. You are somewhat confused and wondering what direction you should take. The middle path between the extremes is the best answer. “I can’t get over the change in him so quickly.” “You are our angels.” (Response Times May Vary) Office/Appointments: (530) 666-7322 Email Consultations: [email protected] w w w. c c h v s . c o m 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 With four planets in Gemini on May 20 and a fifth joining them several days later, there is a great stimulus for new creative thinking. In addition, there are two eclipses during May that will intensify this need for changed thinking. This time is about discovering the truth. Aries (March 21-April 19) This Veterinary Service 48 The word “man” comes from the Sanskrit manas, which means “to think.” The mystery of the human being is contained within the mystery of human thinking. As a person thinks, so they are. Change a person’s thinking and you change the person’s life. We are now at such a time. The fundamental keyword for Gemini is “I think.” We have reversed René Descartes’s famous statement, “I think, therefore I am,” to a more correct statement of this metaphysical truth. MoonshineInk.com Gemini (May 21-June 21) This is your month to shine, so get out there and radiate your light. You have a good sense of wellbeing, and you are at the top of your game. Your higher wisdom mind and your lower concrete practical mind are functioning coherently together. You see and understand the big picture, and also how to apply these principles in detail. With this clarity you can make important decisions. Cancer (June 22-July 22) This is an important time to think of yourself and your wants and needs first. So much of your life you are there for everyone else, and as a result your life tends to get out of balance. It is a good time for nurturing and healing. Do some special things for yourself that make you feel good. There is a reward in this for you. Leo (July 23Aug. 22) Now is a good time for you to review your life and see where you could make some changes and improve things. There is a new plan for the future that wants to unfold greater possibilities for you, but you need to change your thinking and see your life through new eyes. Virgo (Aug. 23Sept. 22) Your work situation is somewhat confusing for you. There are distractions, which tend to make you lose your focus. Some activities there are not quite right and not based in integrity. It is important that you become aware of what is going on and stand up for that which is right. It is time to clarify your principles. Libra (Sept. 23Oct. 23) Financial planning is needed now. A review of your income and expenses would be timely to see where you stand. Are you satisfied with your current situation or do you feel that there is room for improvement? If so, it is a good time to make some changes. Your financial plan will help you in achieving your goal. Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) There is some fear surrounding your financial situation. You work hard, but you don’t feel that you are progressing or moving ahead. It is a feeling that does not seem to leave. Patience is necessary. Things are on track for improvement, but they are not ready to change yet. Your inner strength, drive, and resourcefulness are the keys to your success. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Your focus should be on your career now. You are balanced in heart and mind, and you have a clear vision of your future. A positive, optimistic attitude pervades your being. There can be significant success, so you should aim high. This is a very good time for you. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Family and love relationships are a source of conflict for you. You are being pulled in varying directions, and it is quite unsettling. Try to stay centered and grounded. You will be that source of stability, which will ultimately be the basis of resolving the situation. Try to represent the ideal result. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You are trying to improve and enlighten your primary relationship, but there is some intense emotional conflict there. A new approach is needed based upon new thinking. People continue to grow and change. What was appropriate in the past may not be what works in the present and the future. Look at the big picture. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Your health is front and center. You don’t feel quite right, but it’s difficult to tell what is going on. Get a checkup, but expect confusion surrounding the result. Get a second opinion if you feel it is necessary. It’s not a major health issue. It will pass. ~ Robert Ayres is a Truckee resident and internationally known astrologer with more than 40 years of experience. This month’s horoscope is cast specifically for the Tahoe/Truckee area. Contact him for personal consultations at astrologicalalchemy.com. Comment on this column online, visit moonshineink.com. Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper Steals, Deals & Affordable Meals GET READY FOR SUMMER — WE CLEAN RV’S AND BOATS TOO! UGE FOR LOCALS & FREQUENT RIDERS HDISCOUNTS High Sierra Local rates available • Frequent rider discounts • Package deliveries • Cheapest Reno Airport transportation in the area TAXI $20 OFF PRIVATE RESIDENCE · OFFICES VACATION RENTALS · RELIABLE PROFESSIONAL · EXPERIENCED FIRST CLEANING (530) 550-7218 · alpenglowcleaning.com 530-412-1927 All the Essentials for a Healthy Happy Pet Keep Truckee Clean and Beautiful We love chickens. Ask about organic chicken feed & supplies Frequent buyer & discount programs 3 OFF $ TRUCKEE / NORTH SHORE / WEST SHORE / SQUAW / RENO 20%ValidOFF Cleaning through June for one cleaning. Business & Office Cleaning End of Ski Lease Licensed in Construction Clean-up Close of Escrow Second Homes & Vacation Rentals Eco-friendly and Passionate about It Your Local Source for Great Prices! Any $25 Purchase or More With coupon. Not valid with any other offers. Expires 6/12/13 530.582.5044 530.546.2725 10344 Donner Pass Rd Truckee, CA 96161 8675 North Lake Blvd Kings Beach, CA 96143 Serving Truckee with local, reliable, quality cleaning since 2002. Call today for an estimate 530.587.0700 [email protected] GerberHomeCleaning.com Licensed/Bonded/Insured CA LIC#871335 STEALS, DEALS & AFFORDABLE MEALS Tahoe’s Local Pet Store GET on the Moonshine Ink COUPON PAGES 1/8 PG COUPON FOR ONLY $ 125 (4.75” x 2.65”) or 1/4 PG COUPON FOR ONLY $230 • Full color ads • Cover callout • Readers love coupons (4.75” x 5.55”) Truckee/North Lake Tahoe’s Independent Newspaper [email protected] • (530) 587-3607 10% OFF South Tahoe 530-542-6210 Truckee 530-550-7329 any single item with this coupon Offer Good Through June 13, 2013 530-581-4100 Tahoe City 775-831-3100 Incline Village www.tahoepetstation.com Come in and check out our low prices! Bodywise Massage Polly Triplat c.m.t./Well-Being Facilitator * Therapeutic Massage * Visionary Craniosacral Work * EARTHSPIRIT QUESTS: Wilderness Rites of Passage Journeys DAY QUEST May 25 $150 incl. 1 night lodging FOUR SHEILDS QUEST June 23-25 $250 incl. 2 nights camping To Register contact Polly at (530) 412-0774 With coupon. Not valid with any other offers. Expires 6/12/2013 Read. Discuss. Contribute. MENTION THIS AD FOR A $20 DISCOUNT ON QuestsMove www.bodywisemassagetruckee.com MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 49 Steals, Deals & Affordable Meals Feel Good Story The Couple Who Never Fights Andy and Naomi Berendsen (above) married 16 years ago on New Year’s Eve. Courtesy photo. Today, they are still madly in love (right) and claim they have made their marriage work without one day of fighting. Photo by Lauren Shearer/Moonshine Ink The elated couple stood side-by-side, holding each other’s hands by only their pinkies. This was the moment when they said “I do” and pinky swore to be honest and faithful to each other every day. That was 16 years ago for Truckee residents Andy and Naomi Berendsen, and that pinky promise has never been broken. Andy and Naomi both claim that they have never once been in a fight with each other. This is an extraordinary thing to have in a world where fighting is understood as a necessary part of marriage and many marriages end in divorce. “Life’s too short to fight,” Andy, 49, said. “We took our vows seriously, even before marriage.” Both Andy and Naomi vow that they married the smartest person they have ever met, and both enjoy the intellectual side of life together. They share a love for movies, and often recite movie lines in their daily conversations. Andy will tell you they are similar because they are both nice, good looking, and care for each other. They met 21 years ago in Cupertino, Calif. Andy mixed drinks at an establishment where bartenders also danced on top of the bar. Naomi was a patron and Andy danced his way into her heart. Recently divorced, Naomi had moved back to California from Colorado only a week prior to meeting her future husband. After just two months of dating, they moved in together, bringing along children from previous marriages; Naomi had two teenage girls and Andy had a young daughter. Both Andy and Naomi had thought they would never get married again, but after dating for a few years, they made their way to a Reno courthouse on New Year’s Eve in 1997 and got married. “It was a neat thing to do a legally binding thing,” Andy said. “We were making a promise forever.” Flash forward to the present. Andy and Naomi are happy and still in love. In 16 years of marriage, only twice have they spent more than two days apart. “We aren’t clingy or obsessive, we just naturally prefer to be together,” Naomi, 58, said. Andy currently works at Sugar Bowl and Naomi works for Alpine Chimney and Stove. After the workday ends, they often meet downtown for an afternoon stroll and a nightcap. Andy and Naomi said the secret to their successful marriage is simple: Don’t lie, not even little lies, pay attention, and trust each other. ~ Karin Carrasco/Moonshine Ink Chris Richards, MD SPRING SPECIAL: Women’s Health-Gynecology-Women’s Surgery Buy any bottle of sparkling or rosé, get a free bar of Chocolove chocolate 10075 JIBBOOM STREET, TRUCKEE (530) 550-9664 OPEN 11 A.M. TO 7 P.M. DAILY The relationship didn’t start out easy. The couple decided to always have one parent at home with the children to provide stability for their newly blended family. Naomi and Andy both worked different shifts five days a week, Naomi in the hotel industry and Andy, a former pro-skateboarder, at the bar. He was also attending school. Seeing each other for only an hour a day was hard, but they made it work, and now they rarely spend time apart. DISCOU N T FOR U N IN SURED PAT I ENTS 25% Off ALL OF YOUR NEEDS IN ONE PLACE! Check out our cheeses, crackers, olives and more... And of course, wine for every occasion. First or Next Office Visit for Patients without Health Insurance* * Requires payment at time of service. Does not apply to supplies, outside lab tests or outside services. Not to be used Expires 6/13/2013 in conjunction with any other offer. Please bring coupon. 530 587-7919 | tahoegynecology.com ~ or ~ [email protected] Tahoe Forest Medical Offices-10956 Donner Pass Rd, Suite 360, Truckee 50 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 MoonshineInk.com Tahoe/Truckee Independent Newspaper Steals, Deals & Affordable Meals Sierra Conscious Dance First Time FREE Every Friday 7-9pm Y DANCE SE W E E K L…to inspire connection, S S I O N S FUNKY FASHIONS community, and love of movement and music. InnerRhythms Dance Centre • Truckee • sierraconsciousdance.com FROM AROUND THE WORLD ALL YOUR Burning Man SUMMER SPECIAL DESIRES Now Through June 30 th Retro—Vintage Purchase 3 months of any RATC Membership for $225 Get Ready for Summer Fu n Viviane’s Vintage & Vogue 10 Off $ OPEN New members only On a Purchase of $50 or More Tuesday–Saturday · 11:30am–6pm Expires July 11, 2013 (Call to confirm hours) · · · · · 10925 WEST RIVER STREET · TRUCKEE, CA · (530) 582-8484 · · · · · (530) 448-5346 | 11357-C Deerfield Dr. | Truckee www.RevolutionAthleticsTrainingCenter.com 1/2 mile from Hwy 89 / Free Parking What can a writing coach do for you? Refine your message + Cure writer’s block Website Content · Student Writing College Application Essays · Dissertations Memoirs · Creative Projects Novels · Blogs CLASSES 5/21: Write a Better Blog 10 OFF $ interior design COACHING · R ESIDENTIAL · · N EW C ONSTRUCTION · · R EMODEL · College Application Essays: 6/22: 6/4: Call for Coaching Penning Feedback Poetry Workshop For more classes – view web site TANGLED ROOTS WRITING CALL FOR CONSULTATION We love our new space! Please come visit. Buy One, Get One FREE (free hour of consultation) Karen A. Terrey, M.F.A. [email protected] • 530-386-3901 • karenaterrey.blogspot.com 530-587-3922 · [email protected] · www.DiNalloDesigns.com LOCALS’ SALE Ends June 24 Up to % 45 450 Pieces OFF 20% off Lake Tahoe Pendants “Be Unique” Read. Discuss. Contribute. & WINE TRUCKEE 530-582-0429 TAHOE CITY 530-581-4298 www.bluestonetahoe.com MoonshineInk.com 10 MAy – 13 June 2013 51