December 2015/January 2016 - Sacramento Walking Sticks
Transcription
December 2015/January 2016 - Sacramento Walking Sticks
Sacramento Walking Sticks The No Sweat Gazette D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 5 President’s Greeting “For a new year to bring you something new, make a move, Like a butterfly tearing its cocoon! make a move!” Mehmet Murat Ildan Greetings Sticks Members, The Sacramento Walking Sticks Club continues to change, evolve, and grow, thanks to all of our members. We keep trying out new concepts, and yet we continue to keep our core consistent and true. As an example, we’re hosting our membership meetings on the 2nd Thursday of the month (consistent), but we are changing up the location of the meetings (new) because your current President (me) likes to move them around town. Don’t you love all the group walking choices offered to you every month? December is filled with wonderful offerings above and beyond our usual Tues/Thurs/Fri morning and Wed evening walks. The Sticks have three different Christmas lights night walks that are crowd favorites every year—the Fab 40’s, T Street, and Old Sac’s Theater of Lights. Everyone’s welcome to join in, and we’ll be walking rain or shine. It’s a perfect opportunity for all of us to invite friends, family, and coworkers to join us and see what we’re all about. I’ll be sending out information soon about our upcoming New Year’s Eve and Day events. Nancy Alex has designed new routes for both days, so it’ll be fun to go exploring again. We’ll be hosting our events again out of the Pioneer Congregational Church, and we’ll continue to offer a potluck dinner, breakfast, and lunch to all who come to walk with us. If you have any ideas or suggestions to help make our event even better or easier to facilitate, please share them with us. We have so much to be thankful for with our walking club—it gives us all a great opportunity to walk/bike ride for better health, and it offers friendship and emotional wellness as well. It allows us to travel and see the world around us in new ways, and our Book Club gives us a consistent list of new titles to enjoy and learn from. People pay big bucks for this kind of wellbeing, and we get it virtually for pennies. Thank you everyone who donates their free time to make all this happen so that we can all enjoy and participate, whether as a group or as individuals. We are truly so much more than just a walking club! Keep in touch, Barbara Nuss 916.283.4650 [email protected] President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Publicity Newsletter Barbara Nuss Gail Samcoff Judy Gregory Steve Hughart Barbara Nuss Kris Ericson-Cano Sacramento Walking Sticks • P.O. Box 277303 • Sacramento, California 95827 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Changes to the Newsletter Message from the Editor W elcome to our mini transition newsletter. John McLaughlin and I have been working with you to produce the No Sweat Gazette on a bimonthly schedule since the August/September 2014 issue. We have always strived to make the newsletter interesting and relevant to you, trying out different features like the “Roving Reporter” questions in our earlier issues and the more recent “Spotlight on AVA Friends” in the last two issues. We have no problems chucking a feature if it does not appear to resonate with you, the club members. We want to make the newsletter something you look forward to receiving. tistics regarding newsletter readership. It appears that less than one third of you are actually opening the newsletter. Many of you have told us that you receive so many mailings from the different organizations with which you are involved that you do not have time to read them all. We get that. Therefore, we believe it is time to change to a quarterly format, beginning with the Winter 2016 issue that will be distributed midJanuary. This current issue is simply a transition newsletter to provide you with timesensitive information. We are saving any articles already submitted for the Winter 2016 edition. MailChimp, our club email service, provides us with sta- In the meantime, we ask for your comments and sugges- tions for making the newsletter something you look forward to receiving. Please email either or both of us. Or you are welcome to filter your comments through Barbara Nuss. We are producing this newsletter for you and need your continuing feedback. Thank you! Kris E-C Kris Ericson-Cano, [email protected] John McLaughlin, [email protected] Barbara Nuss, [email protected] Two Fun Ways to Give Back to the Sticks ...and exercise your brain cells at the same time! Chief Chimp for MailChimp Maestro of the Website Calendar If you like using the computer, learning new things, and being creative, you will enjoy MailChimp. MailChimp can be as simple or as involved as you would like to make it. It takes minimal time each week updating the mail list and periodically helping with mailings. The current POC will provide training and there are excellent on-line training videos. You don't need super duper computer skills to add, delete, and maintain the Sticks on-line calendar. The only prerequisite is a willingness to learn. For more info, contact: Kris E-C, [email protected] or Barbara Nuss, [email protected] For more info, contact: Joy Calkin, [email protected] or Barbara Nuss, [email protected] December 2015 Click the calendar icon to check it out on the Sticks webpage. Page 2 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Walking Book Club Priscilla Fife, Book Walk Coordinator 916.616.6003 • [email protected] Sunday, December 6, 2015 10:00 am Walk: Sacramento MIdtown/ East Sac 5K Start point: McKinley Rose Garden, 33rd and H Streets Discussion to follow walk at Cafe Bernardo - Midtown, 2726 Capitol Avenue, Sacramento 95816 John Sutter: A Life on the North American Frontier by Albert Hurtado Description from Amazon.com: "In the history of the American frontier, John Sutter (1803–1880) looms large. A Swiss expatriate who attempted to create a personal empire in California’s Sacramento Valley, he founded New Helvetia, a cosmopolitan settlement whose economy depended on Indian slaves and free laborers. New Helvetia drew overland immigrants to California in the 1840s and then—after gold was discovered by Sutter’s employees—a flood of fortune seekers. Sutter was poised to become one of the richest men in the West, but rapacious settlers and his own poor business sense sent his dreams crashing. Albert L. Hurtado has written the definitive biography of Sutter, mining a wealth of sources to create the first fully documented account of the man and his times. John Sutter explores Sutter’s life in the broader context of America’s rush for westward expansion while plumbing the inner dynamics of this erstwhile empire-builder. Sutter was a quintessential outsider driven by anxiety over status—a man of talent, vision, and heroic ambitions who nevertheless became the victim of his own inadequacies as a businessman and his inability to adjust to a rapidly changing frontier. Sutter was full of contradictions. While building a reputation as a humanitarian friend of destitute immigrants, he callously exploited Indians. Nevertheless, this penniless dreamer became one of the most important men in California and a major player in the American conquest of the West." book, Albert L. Hurtado focuses on the Indians who survived this harrowing time. Hurtado considers the ways in which native life and culture persisted, how the survivors integrated their lives with white society, and how the now-dominant whites related to the Indians living and working with them. 7 copies available from Sacramento Public Library First book walk in 2016 will be Sunday, January 10, 2016 10:00 am. Or Indian Survival on the California Frontier by Albert Hurtado Description from Yale University Press: During the middle decades of the nineteenth century, when vast numbers of whites poured into California, the native Indian population was decimated through disease, starvation, homicide, and a declining birth rate. In this prize-winning Winner of the 1989 Ray Allen Billington Prize awarded by the Organization of American Historians for the best book in American frontier history." 4 copies available from Sacramento Public Library. Both books are available in hardcover and paperback from online vendors The book is: On Gold Mountain: The One-Hundred-Year Odyssey of My Chinese-American Family by Lisa See. We will be doing a portion of the Capitol Walk with a side trip into what is left of Sacramento's China Town where Lisa See's great-great grandfather sold herbal remedies. Here is a synopsis from Amazon.com: "In 1867, Lisa See's greatgreat-grandfather arrived in America, where he prescribed herbal remedies to immigrant laborers who were treated little better than slaves. His son Fong See later built a mercantile empire and married a Caucasian woman, in spite of laws Click here for Carpool Guidelines: http://www.sacramentowalkingsticks.org/docs/CarpoolGuidelinesWestSacParkRide.pdf December 2015 Page 3 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Walking Book Club (cont.) prohibiting interracial marriage. Lisa herself grew up playing in her family's antiques store in Los Angeles's Chinatown, listening to stories of missionaries and prostitutes, movie stars and Chinese baseball teams. With these stories and her own years of research, Lisa See chronicles the one-hundred-year-odyssey of her Chinese-American family, a history that encompasses racism, romance, secret marriages, entrepreneurial genius, and much more, as two distinctly different cultures meet in a new world." 13 copies available from Sacramento Public Library. Available in paperback, Nook and Kindle formats from online vendors. Celebrate New Year’s Eve and Day with the Walking Sticks! START LOCATION: Pioneer Congregational Church 2700 L Street, Sacramento, CA 95816 START/FINISH TIMES: Eve: Start from 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm and finish by 9:00 pm Day: Start from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon and finish by 3:30 pm DESCRIPTION: Eve: Both 5 and 10K goes through lively Midtown to the wonderful holiday light displays in the Fab 40s. Day: The Day walk goes through some classical Sacramento Residential neighborhoods including Boulevard Park and Mansion Flats. It passes by two of the notorious Dorothea Puente houses. The 10K will wind through additional neighborhoods chosen for their architectural and historic interest. Limited edition Commemorative Patch (design at left) available for $4.00 each. December 2015 Page 4 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Upcoming Walks for December Tuesday Dec 1 10:00 am Auburn (9:00 am carpool) Wednesday Thursday Friday Dec 2 Dec 3 Dec 4 6:15 pm 10:00 am 9:00 am Sacramento - Land Park Roseville - New Balance Fountains Rancho Cordova - Lake Natoma Saturday Sunday Tuesday Dec 5 Dec 6 Dec 8 9:15 am 10:00 am 10:00 am Sutter Creek - Food & Antiques (Friendship Walk) Sacramento - Midtown/East Sac (Book Walk) Sacramento - Arden Park Wednesday Thursday Thursday Dec 9 Dec 10 Dec 10 6:00 pm 10:00 am 9:15 am Sticks Christmas Party! Davis - University (9:30 am carpool) Sacramento - American River Tour (Bicycle) Friday Dec 11 6:00 pm Sacramento - Elmhurst to East Sac (Christmas Lights) Saturday Dec 12 9:15 am Sonoma (Friendship Walk) Tuesday Wednesday Dec 15 Dec 16 10:00 am 6:15 pm West Sacramento - Clarksburg Branch Line Trail Sacramento - Ashton Park Thursday Friday Dec 17 Dec 18 10:00 am 6:00 pm Citrus Heights - Stock Ranch Sacramento - The Fab 40s (Christmas Lights) Saturday Dec 19 9:15 am Elk Grove - Quail Ranch & Britschgi Ranch (Friendship 6:30 pm Walk) West Sacramento - River Walk Sunday Dec 20 Tuesday Wednesday Dec 22 Dec 23 10:00 am 6:15 pm (Christmas Lights) Sacramento - Natomas West Sacramento - River Walk Thursday Saturday Tuesday Dec 24 Dec 26 Dec 29 10:00 am 9:15 am 10:00 am Sacramento - Sac State Grass Valley - Historic Town (Friendship Walk) Lodi (8:00 am carpool) Wednesday Thursday Dec 30 Dec 31 6:15 pm 5:00 pm Sacramento - Curtis Park Sacramento - New Year’s Eve For more information about the walks, including start locations, please check the Calendar of Events on the Sticks website: www.SacramentoWalkingSticks.org or the weekly Walk Alerts. December 2015 Page 5 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Upcoming Walks for January Friday Jan 1 9:00 am Sacramento - New Year’s Day Saturday Tuesday Wednesday Jan 2 Jan 5 Jan 6 9:15 am 10:00 am 6:15 pm Carmichael Sacramento - Land Park Historic Woodland Thursday Thursday Saturday Jan 7 Jan 7 Jan 9 10:00 am 9:15 am 9:15 am Rancho - Lake Natoma Sacramento - Arden (bicycle) Lodi Sunday Tuesday Wednesday Jan 10 Jan 12 Jan 13 10:00 10:00 am 6:15 pm Sacramento - Capitol Walk (book walk) Davis - Southeast Citrus Heights Thursday Thursday Jan 14 Jan 14 10:00 am 6:30 pm Roseville - Mall to Mall Sticks Membership Meeting , Arcade Public Library Saturday Jan 16 9:15 am Roseville - Bea Griffin Tuesday Wednesday Jan 19 Jan 20 10:00 am 6:15 pm Sacramento - Curtis Park Sacramento - Sac State Thursday Thursday Saturday Jan 21 Jan 21 Jan 23 10:00 am 9:15 am 8:30-Noon Historic Benicia (9:00 am carpool) Lincoln (bicycle) San Francisco - Moraga Steps Tuesday Jan 26 10:00 am Jackson - Town Walk (8:45 am carpool) Wednesday Thursday Jan 27 Jan 28 6:15 pm 10:00 am Elk Grove - Watershed Historic Folsom Saturday Jan 30 9:15 am Elk Grove - East Recreation Trails For more information about the walks, including start locations, please check the Calendar of Events on the Sticks website: www.SacramentoWalkingSticks.org or the weekly Walk Alerts. Sticks Apparel The Anchor Group http://swsapparel.anchor-group.com/ Land’s End LandsEnd.com/business December 2015 For more information (including Land’s End Customer/Logo Numbers), visit: http://www.sacramentowalkingsticks.org/Store.html Page 6 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Welcome New Members! Marie Aguirre Julie Baumhoff Deborah Davidson Carol Edgar Linda Haan Diane Holloway-Rider Nancy Jewhurst Carey Krantz Bob Murta Donna Murta Stuart Noda Russell Rider Happy Birthday! December: 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 7 8 9 10 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 14 14 15 15 15 17 17 18 Randall Williams Adam Dayton Joan Lamoreau Anne-Louise Radimsky Russell Rider Dorothy Cousins Jean Davis Kate Simpson Linda Sullivan Susan Davis Karen Owen Sue Gaston Anne Jauernig Al Gravitz Karen Lopes Kris Ericson-Cano Martha Jolley Karen Williams Charles Dayton Chris Highsmith Joyce Backus Fred Bohmfalk Gisela Parker Jeannette Hogan Chris Schmidle Carolyn Chamberlain Marilyn Ferguson Ana Garza Kaye Lochridge Lori Tomita Cynthia Hearden December 2015 19 20 23 23 24 24 25 25 26 27 27 27 28 29 30 30 31 Frances Fehrman Gary Gilmore Suzanne Mazzera Janet Whetstone Bob Thomas Jim Tischer Margo Schulter Carol Voxland Mary Donnis Terri Pennello Carol Pollard Patricia Rahrer Edward Flores Carol O'Brien Diane Coffman Monika Dulay Clare Norris January: 2 2 2 3 3 3 6 6 6 7 7 7 8 Jan Jerabek John Joseph Mike Vogel Carol Black Camille Derrick Steve Purcell Pat Hamilton Shirley Kinnett Darlene Smith Sally Barton Dennis Ledbetter Parul Purohit Amnon Igra 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 13 16 16 17 19 19 19 20 20 23 23 24 24 25 25 26 26 27 28 29 30 31 Virginia Jelinek Betsy Rowell Renee Spain Janis Williams Janeece Killingsworth Mary McMonegal Matthew Calkins Martha Korff Gloria Boyd Don Crane Sally Watkins Mike Fosgett Otto Saltenberger Terry Wieder Diane Delancey Joanna Tabarez Kristi Wakefield Barbara Duggen Michael Shapiro Eileen Herrin Teri Steinman Richard Donnis Susan Waldo Barbara Seidman Dorothy Spangler Michiyo Ellingson Johanne Owens Margaret Williams Maryellen Nommensen Philip Curra Liz Kono Sharon McZeek Page 7 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Congratulations on your Sticks Anniversary! 27 years: Joseph Fournier 26 Years: Myrna Jackson 13 Years: Yvonne Brandon 12 Years: Heidi Foster 11 Years: Elisa Ungerman Diane Younglove Gary Younglove Rolf Zschoernig 10 Years: Bev Davis Gayle Green John Joseph Marty Langley Karen Lopes Mary McMonegal Steve Oesterreicher Qeldas Pickett Otto Saltenberger Elizabeth Shelatz Bud Simmons Jill Simmons Betty Staley Leonard Strickland Mike Vogel Ann Whitehead 9 Years: Kymberly Andrews Lenore Blaauw Dwight Esch Zori Friedrich Pat Hamilton Sharon Young 8 Years: Fred Bohmfalk December 2015 David Harzoff Alan Leach Anthony Rangel Cristina Rangel Jennifer Stanley Susan Z'berg 7 Years: Margaret Ravo 6 Years: Sue Barela Julie Bohmfalk Diana Bosley Chris Boyd Edward Flores Ana Garza Janeece Killingsworth Joan Lamoreau Pat Mason Pat Piotrowski Joanna Watzig Aaron Wintersmith Cassandra Wintersmith Christal Wintersmith 5 Years: Arleen Bowman Bob Chaplin Pat Drouin Patricia Elliott Carol Gallardo Nikki Hall Tracy Harrison Jeannette Hogan Carol O'Brien Gene O'Brien Dorie Oca-Schmunk Julie Osborne Heather Reynolds Russ Schmunk Kate Simpson Roy Simpson Marilyn van Loben Sels 4 Years: Barbara Alston Pamela Cameron Steve Cameron Dara Candy Bernard Cody Anita Davies Shu Davies Mike Drouin Owen Johnson Georgianne Kelly Carol Kerton Holly Lakatos John McLaughlin Kaia McLaughlin Ron Riseman Susan Riseman Pam Saltenberger Michael Shapiro Rosella Shapiro Jerry Sherman Esther Weaver Miles Wichelns Phyllis Wichelns Nancy Wiertel 3 Years: Peggy Briggs Bonnie Chatfield LeRoy Chatfield Linda Duran Jennifer Forester Ted Hussey Martha Jolley Barbara Leach Janice Lew Chris Loupy Cathleen Madge Gretchen Moffat Anne Ofsink Connie Ramos-Haugen Caitlin Robb Marie Robb Paul Robb Chris Smith Julia Smith Pam St.Martin Steve St.Martin Doug Thompson Stephanie Turner Christina Wagner Linda White Karen Williams Scot Williams 2 Year: Don Crane Patty Crane Mary Donnis Richard Donnis Teresa Licholai Sharyn Lieth Ann McCandless Cheryl McDonald Lee McDonald 1 Year: Bonnie Apple Judy Baumann Kay Bennett Pete Bennett Judy Christen Sharon Grunow Barbara Hodges Bryan Jacobi Mary Jacobi Dale Johnson Jill Mantraga Suzanne Mazzera Larry Meyer Ruth Meyer Katie Mulock Marilyn Planzer Neil Sander Sandy Sander Candace Schmidle Chris Schmidle Mary Scott Gary Szydelko Janice Warta Marvin Warta Jaci Young Page 8 Sacramento Walking Sticks • The No Sweat Gazette Renewal Heroes by Steve Hughart This club asks its members to renew based on the month in which they first joined. Many clubs renew their members once a year. Since the Sticks has over 550 members, having a renewal drive once a year would overwhelm the all-volunteer Membership Committee. Our membership renewal process is fully explained on a new web page. First go to the Membership page and then follow the link at the top of the page (Get all the details on the Membership Renewal Process here.) . In an effort to reduce the time our volunteers spend on processing renewals, we encourage everyone to renew early and to renew for more than one year. The folks who have done this in the past are clearly “Renewal Heroes,” especially to the Membership Committee. Renewal Super-Heroes: More than 1 year renewal AND renewed via email Kymberly Andrews Zori Friedrich Owen Johnson Marty Langley Teresa Licholai John McLaughlin Kaia McLaughlin Gretchen Moffat Anthony Rangel Cristina Rangel Bud Simmons Jill Simmons Mike Vogel Miles Wichelns Phyllis Wichelns Rolf Zschoernig Multiyear Heroes: More than 1 year renewal Email Renewal Heroes: Responded to email (1 year renewal) Jeff Bucher Tina Campbell Virginia Jelinek Deborah Ondricka Janine Orsi Lana Paulhamus Patricia Rahrer Andy (Kuo) Yu Marcela Yu Bob Chaplin Diane Coffman Katherine Dashiell Ted Hussey Myrna Jackson Dale Johnson Carol Kerton Cathleen Madge Bettie Mah Julie Osborne Gail Samcoff Greg Samcoff Michael Shapiro Rosella Shapiro Janice Warta Marvin Warta Joanna Watzig Terry Way Change-Ups Change-up to our Fair Oaks-Suburban YRE: Fleet Feet has been our start location for many years and they're closing the store Oct 31st. The Sticks have moved that box to our other Fair Oaks-Historic location until Dec 31, 2015 when we will officially close the YRE down. POC Fred Bohmfalk has redesigned the route for our enjoyment. Fred will be retiring as the Fair Oaks December 2015 POC soon and we welcome Marcia Maurer to the position instead. Change-up to the Sacramento-American River as well as the Sacramento-Ashton Park & SacramentoSierra Oaks Vista YRE's as far as POC is concerned. Carole Soenke is retiring and Beverly Bales will take the position instead. Page 9
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