Sunday Gravy Recipe, Plus a Tasting Event to Benefit Cancer

Wait a minute, is it September already?

I was just getting the hang of summer, those splendid harvests filling the farmers markets, fog-kissed mornings and glowing afternoons. But the light has already begun quickening its pace, shortening the days, and even the deer know enough to graze fast while thereโ€™s still enough spring water and tender greens.

Speaking of grazing, one of the signs that itโ€™s truly September is the 2016 installment of Grazing on the Green, ready to spread its tents at Aptos Village Park on Saturday, Sept. 24. Iโ€™m telling you early so you can get in on the Early Bird ticket price of $65 per grazer. It all starts at noon (ends at 4 p.m.), and your admission includes special souvenir wine glass and an afternoon of food, wine and beer tasting. Why is this event special? Any event out on the meadow laden with artisanal foods, craft beers, and the finest in our local wines has got to be special. Sponsors Coke Farm and New Leaf Community Markets have provided lots of goodies, along with specialties from top chefs and varietals from more than 70 wineries. Those stats should have your attention. Some donโ€™t miss pit-stops: Cremer House, Laura Chenel, Shadowbrook, Zameen, and sipping from Bargetto, Discretion Brewing, Hallcrest, Muns Vineyard, Odonata, Uncommon Brewers, Santa Cruz Mountain Vineyardโ€”this is an action-packed afternoon for late-harvest tastebuds. Foodies must not miss! And it all goes to support the Santa Cruz Cancer Benefit Group (SCCBG). $65 adv/$70 door.

Purchase tickets at sccbg.org or New Leafย  Community Markets.


Nonnaโ€™s Sunday Gravy

A full-bodied grazie to Santa Cruz author Leslie Karst, whose culinary mystery novel Dying for a Taste provides (in addition to a classic whodunnit caper) a few authentic Italian recipes from her family treasury. Well, as a 100-percent Scots/Irish Norwegian (non-Italian) gal, I decided to take the challenge, and last week I opened Karstโ€™s book to the two-page recipe for Nonnaโ€™s Sunday Gravy. Mmm, baby, this was going to be good. ย I started chopping up onions, garlic, herbs, pork chops, short ribs and Italian sausages to form the basic structure of this colossal pasta sauce. A true East Coast-style Sunday Gravy, this recipe is absolutely loaded with the kind of serious beef and pork that will simmer into splendor. There are many other ingredients, as wellโ€”but for those youโ€™ll need to consult Karstโ€™s book itself. So after I browned all of the ingredients, I let the deep crimson sauce bubble for three-and-a-half hours. The house smelled positively Mediterranean. Then I added a crucial step: I put the sauce in the refrigerator so that the next morning the fat could be skimmed from the top.

Thus defatted, the sauce was slowly heated up a second time. Now comes the most surprising part of what turned out to be a memorable dinner: I actually made gluten-free spaghetti as the foundation for the sauce. Made from rice flour, the pasta was from Jovial brand (rated tops by Americaโ€™s Test Kitchen). The results blew us away and had completely authentic textureโ€”though there was a missing je ne sais quoi, a third dimension in the pastaโ€™s flavor that remained fugitive. Cโ€™e niente! The dish was fabulous, loaded with fork-tender bits of meat, and aromatic with lots of garlic and herbs. The recipe made enough for two dinners, and three more for the freezer, so it was worth a morning of chopping, cutting, browningโ€”righteous kitchen activity. Grazie tanto Leslieโ€”and to your nonna as well. lesliekarstauthor.com.

Cool Treats at Ritaโ€™s

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Ice cream and froyo have long dominated the frozen dessert market, but at Ritaโ€™s of Scotts Valley, you can try Italian ice and frozen custard.

Ritaโ€™s is a popular chain on the East Coast, and Lisa Rasmussen opened the first one in Santa Cruz County last year. We spoke with Rasmussen to learn about Ritaโ€™s new line of donuts, and just what, exactly, a Gelati is.

You do a bit of a different take on frozen treats.

LISA RASMUSSEN: Our Italian ice is made without dairy. We have cotton candy flavor, thereโ€™s sour patch kids, root beer. We have ones that we actually pop fresh fruit into once they come out of the machine. We have mango, strawberry, pineapple, orange. We do have a few we put a dairy mix into, which gives it more of that ice cream feel. Cookies โ€™nโ€™ Cream is one. Thatโ€™s one aspect, then we have frozen custard.

What exactly is frozen custard?

Think of high-premium ice cream. It looks like soft serve, but itโ€™s much richer, much creamier, much better tasting. It stays colder longer than a traditional ice cream because it doesnโ€™t melt quickly. I have a machine that can bring out and infuse eight different flavors, and then I have the vanilla, chocolate and the classic twist.

What kind of donuts are selling?

Itโ€™s a standard vanilla cake donut. They are made fresh daily in the back. You can top them with any topping we have in the store. We do maple bacon, fruity pebbles, ย jolly rancher toppings. We have a lot of toppings.

How many flavors of Italian ice do you have?

We can make more than 80 different flavors. We only carry 12. Weโ€™ll always carry cotton candy and mango, because those are just staples. Of the 80 flavors that Ritaโ€™s has, I can change them daily. You can combine our ice and our custard to get what we call a gelati. You take a layer of custard at the bottom, your choice of an ice flavor, and top it with a swirl of custard. Itโ€™s an experience. People love it. You can get a blendini, a mixture of custard, your choice of a topping, and ice. We blend it together so itโ€™s kind of a chunky dessert. Another one is a misto, which is a little bit of liquid custard and ice, and we blend that up into more of a frothy drink.

222 Mt Hermon Road, Scotts Valley. 431-8528.

Pearl of the Ocean Crushes It

Not only is Ayoma Wilen, owner of Pearl of the Ocean, adept at running her Sri Lankan restaurant, she has gone into the wine business as well.

Dining there recently with my husband, we were impressed with Wilenโ€™s White Pearl Chardonnay, which was specially crafted for Pearl of the Ocean restaurant, and bottled by the well-known Pat Paulsen Vineyards in Livermore.

In addition to selling this Chardonnay in her restaurant, Wilen has plans to export it, along with another wine she has had specially madeโ€”Pearl of the Ocean Cabernet Sauvignonโ€”to her homeland of Sri Lanka, said to be the โ€œjewelโ€ of the Indian Ocean. And what could be better than California wine in this exotic countryโ€”known for its world-class teas and spices?

Wilen, a Best Chefs America award winner in 2013, serves superb vegan and vegetarian foodโ€”with some meat and fish offerings as wellโ€”in Pearl of the Oceanโ€™s cozy setting. Itโ€™s well worth a visit, not only for the excellent organic food, but also to try Wilenโ€™s specially made Chardonnay and Cab. They sell for $42 a bottle.

Pearl of the Ocean, 736 Water St., Santa Cruz, 457-2350. pearloftheocean.net.

Picnic in the Vineyard

One of Morgan Wineryโ€™s fun upcoming events is a picnic in the vineyard, from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 10 in the Double L Vineyard. For more info and cost visit morganwinery.com.


Farm to Table Dinner at Chaminade

The next farm to table dinner is Friday, Sept. 9, featuring Everett Family Farm and the wines of Martin Ranch. Visit chaminade.com for more info.


Greek Festival

Iโ€™m not too disappointed about missing the Greek Festival on Sept. 9, 10 and 11 because Iโ€™ll actually be in Greece, eating their incredibly delicious cuisine. But, if you canโ€™t be on Hellenic soil anytime soon, then the next best thing is to head to this annual fest of food, music and dancing to partake of all things Greek. The festivities are to be held in the street outside the Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church in downtown Santa Cruz. Contact Sophie Polyhronakis at 428-1110 or email so****@************ek.com for more info.

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology Sept 7 – 13

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Two 7-year-old girls showed me three tricks I could use to avoid taking myself too seriously and getting too attached to my dignity. Iโ€™m offering these tricks to you just in time for the letting-go phase of your astrological cycle. Trick #1: Speak in a made-up language for at least 10 minutes. Example: โ€œGroftyp hulbnu wivgeeri proot xud amasterulius. Quoshibojor frovid zemplissit.โ€ Trick #2: Put a different kind of shoe and sock on each foot and pretend youโ€™re two people stuck in a single body. Give each side of you a unique nickname. Trick #3: Place an unopened bag of barbecue-flavored potato chips on a table, then bash your fist down on it, detonating a loud popping sound and unleashing a spray of crumbs out the ends of the bag. Donโ€™t clean up the mess for at least an hour.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In accordance with the astrological omens, I suggest you spend less energy dwelling in profane time so you expand your relationship with sacred time. If thatโ€™s of interest to you, consider the following definitions. Profane time happens when youโ€™re engulfed in the daily grind. Swarmed by a relentless flurry of immediate concerns, you are held hostage by the chatter of your monkey mind. Being in sacred time attunes you to the relaxing hum of eternity. It enables you to be in intimate contact with your soulโ€™s deeper agenda, and affords you extra power to transform yourself in harmony with your noble desires and beautiful intentions.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): About 1.7 million years ago, our human ancestors began using primitive hand axes made from rocks. This technology remained in use for more than 60,000 generations before anyone invented more sophisticated tools and implements. Science writer Marcus Chown refers to this period as โ€œthe million years of boredom.โ€ Its slow pace contrasts sharply with technologyโ€™s brisk evolution in the last 140 years. In 1880, there were no cars, planes, electric lights, telephones, TVs, or Internet. I surmise that youโ€™re leaving your own phase of relatively slow progress, Gemini. In the coming months, I expect your transformations will progress with increasing speedโ€”starting soon.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Prediction #1: You will attract truckloads of good luck by working to upgrade and refine the way you communicate. Prediction #2: You will tickle the attention of interesting people who could ultimately provide you with clues you will need to thrive in 2017. #3: You will discover secrets of how to articulate complicated feelings and subtle ideas that have been locked inside you. Prediction #4: Youโ€™ll begin a vibrant conversation that will continue to evolve for a long time.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You know you have a second brain in your gut, right? (If not, read this: http://bit.ly/secondbrain.) During the past three weeks, I have been beaming telepathic instructions toward this smart part of you. Hereโ€™s an edited version of the message Iโ€™ve been sending: โ€œCultivate your tenacity, darling. Build up your stamina, sweetheart. Feed your ability to follow through on what youโ€™ve started, beautiful. Be persistent and spunky and gritty, my dear.โ€ Alas, Iโ€™m not sure my psychic broadcasts have been as effective as Iโ€™d hoped. I think you need further encouragement. So please summon more fortitude and staying power, you gutsy stalwart. Be staunch and dogged and resolute, you stouthearted powerhouse.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Is โ€œBig Bangโ€ the best term we can come up with to reference the beginning of the universe? It sounds violent and messyโ€”like a random, accidental splatter. I would much prefer a term that suggests sublime elegance and playful powerโ€”language that would capture the awe and reverence I feel as I contemplate the sacred mystery we are privileged to inhabit. What if we used a different name for the birth of creation, like the โ€œPrimal Billowโ€ or the โ€œBlooming Ha Haโ€ or the โ€œMajestic Bouquetโ€? By the way, I recommend that you consider those last three terms as being suitable titles for your own personal life story in the coming weeks. A great awakening and activation are imminent.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The last few weeks have been fraught with rich plot twists, naked dates with destiny, and fertile turning points. I expect there will be further intrigue in the near future. A fierce and tender decision at a crossroads? The unexpected arrival of a hot link to the future? A karmic debt thatโ€™s canceled or forgiven? In light of the likelihood that the sweet-and-sour, confusing-and-revelatory drama will continue, I encourage you to keep your levels of relaxed intensity turned up high. More than Iโ€™ve seen in a long time, you have the magic and the opportunity to transform what needs to be transformed.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In the coming days, you will have more than your usual access to help and guidance. Divine interventions are possible. Special dispensations and charmed coincidences, too. If you donโ€™t believe in fairy dust, magic beans, and lucky potions, maybe you should set that prejudice aside for a while. Subtle miracles are more likely to bestow their gifts if your reasonable theories donโ€™t get in the way. Hereโ€™s an additional tip: Donโ€™t get greedy. Use the openings youโ€™re offered with humility and gratitude.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): When my daughter Zoe was growing up, I wanted her to be familiar with the origins of ordinary stuff that she benefited from. Thatโ€™s why I took her to small farms where she could observe the growth and harvest of organic food crops. We visited manufacturing facilities where cars, furniture, toys, and kitchen sinks were built. She saw bootmakers creating boots and professional musicians producing songs in recording studios. And much more. I would love it if you would give yourself comparable experiences in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. Itโ€™s an excellent time to commune with the sources of things that nurture you and make your life better.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Unless you were brought up by a herd of feral donkeys, the coming weeks will be an excellent time to embark on your second childhood. Unless youโ€™re allergic to new ideas, the foreseeable future will bring you strokes of curious luck that inspire you to change and change and change your mind. And unless you are addicted to your same old stale comforts, life will offer you chances to explore frontiers that could expose you to thrilling new comforts.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): These days, my dear, your eccentric beauty is even more unkempt than usual. I like it. It entertains and charms me. And as for your idiosyncratic intelligence: That, too, is messier and cuter and even more interesting than ever before. Iโ€™m inclined to encourage you to milk this unruly streak for all its potential. Maybe it will provoke you to experiment in situations where youโ€™ve been too accepting of the stagnant status quo. And perhaps it will embolden you to look for love and money in more of the right places.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Iโ€™m giving you an ultimatum, Pisces: Within the next 144 hours, I demand that you become at least 33 percent happier. Fifty percent would be even better. Somehow youโ€™ve got to figure out what you can do to enhance your sense of well-being and increase your enjoyment of life. Iโ€™m sort of joking, but on the other hand Iโ€™m completely serious. From my perspective, itโ€™s essential that you feel really good in the coming days. Abundant pleasure is not merely a luxury, but rather a necessity. Do you have any idea how to make this happen? Start here: 1. Identify your four most delightful memories, and re-enact them in your imagination. 2. Go see the people whose influences most thoroughly animate your self-love.

Homework: Look in the mirror and tell yourself an edgy but fun truth youโ€™ve never spoken. If you care to share, write tr**********@***il.com.

Time of the Forerunnerโ€”Navigating a New Future

Itโ€™s September already! Soon it will be Autumn. Then Halloween, Thanksgiving, Advent, winter solstice and Christmas. The leaves are turning yellow, orange, red and brown. Apples are ripening. In the woods one sees different devas and Archangels for different seasons, protecting Earth, our cosmic planet of suffering and Garden of Eden.

The week ahead is challenging. On Wednesday, Venus/Saturn and Venus/Neptune, we ask, โ€œWhere is our money, what are our values, what is our direction?โ€

Friday Jupiter enters Libra. Weโ€™re called to have Right Relations (kindness), creating balance and harmony with all the kingdoms.

Saturday is the third Saturn square Neptune (Sag/Pisces). Thereโ€™s a fourth in 2020 which includes Jupiter. Calling forth courage amidst confusion and the unknown.

Saturnโ€™s themes are discipline, responsibility, the Teacher, structure, time, the Dweller, Earth, ecological action, intelligence. Neptuneโ€™s themes are oil, gas, drugs, poisons, the sea, music and the arts. Neptune is confusion, imagination and dreams. Saturn/Neptune combines science with religion, mind with the heart. Saturn/Neptune dissolves boundariesโ€”thus the vast refugee migrations occurring. Neptune remains in Pisces (sign of the Savior) until 2025.

We are in the time of the Forerunner (preparing for the reappearance of the Christ). It is a time of world purification. We also see great difficulty and resistance to this purification. Humanity is entering an economic reorientation that will change our world. Thus the structures (Saturn) we are used to continue to dissolve (Neptune). We must begin to navigate into a new future. One that we choose. Not one that is chosen for us. Itโ€™s time to seriously consider the alternative. Building actual communities together. How? Beginning with conversations, neighborhood by neighborhood. Who has the courage to initiate this?


ARIES: The seasonโ€™s about to change and so must our health regimes, diets, ways we exercise and plan our day. Through this Virgo Mercury retro, itโ€™s good to begin thinking along new lines, preparing for the coming changes in light, color, sun, shadows. These changes are reflected within ourselves, too. Relationships need extra tending so everyone doesnโ€™t feel cold, alone, withdrawn and left out.

TAURUS: You will be out and about, learning new things, attending lectures, classes, and gathering information. Always your life and its task, illuminating the minds of humanity, are serious and disciplined. It would be good to consider what would be playful for you, bring enjoyment, fun, calling forth your lightness and sense of spontaneity. Perhaps you need to swim.

GEMINI: What constitutes family to you, whether biological, friend, group (esoteric?), colleagues, etc., matters more and more. Something is not complete with someone, or maybe you need to visit someone to bring forth the next stage in relationship(s). Harmonyโ€™s your focus with a touch of compromise (not much). Listening to others until you understand the essential message is a parallel goal. All of this brings love forthโ€”your task.

CANCER: Make contact. These two words have a depth most donโ€™t understand. Making contact releases Love. But it must be true, real and intentional contact. It must be from the heart, connecting heart to heart, Soul-to-Soul. The results are that the Love released creates liberation for everyone. However, you are the one to begin this process. Do this ceaselessly, quietly, with heartfelt intention with all kingdoms. Begin in the garden.

LEO: Thereโ€™s a sense within that you must not only create a new plan concerning finances and resources, but that a new state of values must also come forth. If there are people close to you, you may want to communicate more deeply with them, sharing your values, asking what values they hold and what values are held in common. What are your desires and aspirations for the future, based on these values?

VIRGO: You will want to come out of the shadows and into a greater light. Standing in shadows, perhaps in the shadow of another, is of comfort to you. However, there comes a time when we each must define ourselves, recognize our own self-identity, understand what we initiate, realize that weโ€™re capable, summon our confidence, and seek a new support system. Am I speaking to Virgo or Pisces? Both. For they are the shadow of the other.

LIBRA: This morning I saw a drawing of a sheaf of wheatโ€”a Virgo symbol of nourishment for humanity. I thought of Libra, and what nourishes them. Relationships, beauty, friends, equilibrium, balance, love, sacrifice, art. Itโ€™s the art of the wheat sheaf that caught my eye, and I thought Librans must get back to their art in whatever form interests them. Some paint, some have galleries, some are collectors. What is your art form? Itโ€™s calling to you.

SCORPIO: Do you sense restlessness, that thereโ€™s a group that belongs to you, yet somehow you canโ€™t find it or they you? As you both search for the other, assess your present and future goals (again). Theyโ€™ve changed recently or are in the process. So many of us are on the fence, indecisive about the future. We must summon patience. Speak with those close to you. Ask for their visions and goals. Listen with understanding.

SAGITTARIUS: For one intense month the perfect execution of your creative work is a priority. It always is, but a new dimension has been added. Multiple ideas flow through your mind; youโ€™re being impressed with ideas that may become ideals, and later, goals. Thereโ€™s an inner enthusiasm. Youโ€™re gestating a new reality. Do you sense the need to begin something? Share your ideas with others who love to listen. Diplomacy is paramount.

CAPRICORN: What will you do when autumn begins? Itโ€™s only weeks away. It seems like somethingโ€™s calling you, someone, somewhere. May itโ€™s a garden deva. Perhaps itโ€™s a course of study, something you want (or need) to learn. Is there somewhere you want to visit, travel to, discover? There also may be something you need to say to someone far away. Something lovely your ways comes (soon).

AQUARIUS: Take extra care with your money and resources. Use this time to discriminate between what is needed and what is not. Give away what is no longer useful and then give more away. Giving provides us with meaning, a true sense of service. Giving liberates and allows everyone involved to move forward in their lives. Give to yourself, then give of yourself. With love.

PISCES: We are to do our best wherever we find ourselves. Many of us are uncertain these days, on the fence (uncomfortable), unable to know where weโ€™re going, what to do when we donโ€™t know what to do, and how to provide our gifts when opportunities donโ€™t seem to exist. Again, we (especially Pisces at this time) are to work at our best in the place we find ourselves. Relationships need a bit of compromise. A bit of surrender. You understand.

Opinion August 31, 2016

EDITOR’S NOTE

In one of our news stories this week, by Kara Guzman, Soquel Creek Water District board member Bruce Daniels talks about a study that suggests that California has a greater than 80 percent chance of facing a multi-decade megadrought by the end of the century. โ€œWhat will happen if we get 30-year droughts?โ€ he asks. โ€œWeโ€™re going to have to make changes if weโ€™re going to survive this thing.โ€

Not all of those changes will come by choice. I thought of that while reading Lily Stoicheffโ€™s cover story about the devastation of the local olallieberry crop. It took a perfect storm of complications to take one of Santa Cruzโ€™s most iconic berry crops down, to be sure, including a fungus whose origin and even identity no one has yet figured out. But a key factor has been our last two abnormally warm winters, which led to sharply shortened seasons for the normally robust berry. Thatโ€™s just one small example of the extreme weather fluctuations weโ€™re in for if even a fraction of what Daniels is talking about comes to pass. Now, consider that berries make up 65 percent of the ag economy in Santa Cruz. We could be in for some huge shake-ups in our landscape, and we need to be paying more attention to stories like this that seem at first like small shiftsโ€”one type of berry out, another one there to take its placeโ€”but have much larger implications for our future.

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

Repeal Prop. 47

Re: โ€œIs Prop. 47 Broken?โ€ (GT, 8/25): Many people with experience working in the criminal justice system thought Prop. 47 was a poor idea with the potential for negative unintended consequences. No one should be surprised that Prop. 47 has resulted in an increase in property crime. Decriminalizing drug offenses leading to lesser legal consequences without requiring mental health and substance abuse treatment = continued drug addiction and resultant increased property crime. People have to pay for their drugs, and they primarily do that by dealing and stealing. You only have to look on the Next Door app for your neighborhood to see multiple complaints about increased property crime and break-ins. Because of the nature of addiction, most addicts will not seek treatment voluntarily. The only way to encourage addicts to seek treatment is to make the alternative to treatment less desirable than the treatment itself. If we donโ€™t hold people accountable for their actions, we are basically permitting the drug addicts to continue their addictions. We donโ€™t need another expensive study to determine that this flawed law was a bad idea from the start. Letโ€™s repeal Proposition 47 and letโ€™s hold criminals accountable when they victimize our neighbors and our neighborhoods.

Steven McCarty

Santa Cruz

Diversity Talk

Iโ€™d like to suggest that you diversify the printed opinions in Local Talk. Over the years, Iโ€™ve noticed how more often than not, each weekโ€™s Local Talk showcases the opinions of only white folks, though the ages generally have a wider range, from college age to retiree. There is a lack of visibility for people of color.

I recently read up on the platform of Drew Glover, who will be running for city council. As an African-American man and Santa Cruz native, he recounted feeling alienated and wants Santa Cruzโ€™s culture and politics to reflect the histories and realities of the multicultural and multiracial communities here. It resonated with me as Iโ€™ve noticed the overwhelming whiteness of the local opinions printed in GT, even in such a casual โ€œchatterโ€ section. Iโ€™d like for our local publications to also reflect our racially diverse community.

I enjoy your publication, especially the features of Geoffrey Dunn, who often writes about the forgotten communities of color who lived in this area and also the often forgotten racism that has occurred on this land. After reading one of Mr. Dunnโ€™s illuminating features about Santa Cruzโ€™s old Chinatown or the work of Filipino migrant workers whoโ€™ve helped build Santa Cruz, Iโ€™ve felt slighted by the lack of visibility of people of color in Good Times. We are here and we are contemporary.

In recent years, Iโ€™ve been pleased by GT tackling more newsworthy and perhaps โ€œcontroversialโ€ topics in its features, such as transgender visibility. For some publications, these may be controversial topics, but in my opinion, these stories are our community stories. I imagine Iโ€™m not alone in wanting change. Recent shifts in local culture also include the MAHโ€™s hosting of a meeting for Stand Up For Racial Justice (SURJ).

Please consider diversifying the Local Talk section to reflect the racial diversity of Santa Cruz and examine other sections. Weโ€™re out here, too, and we are a part of the local community.

Louise Leong

Santa Cruz


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

Submit to ph****@*******es.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250dpi.


GOOD IDEA

LOOKING BACK
In celebration of Santa Cruzรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs 150th birthday, the city has launched an online timeline chronicling some of its biggest moments. Go back to the areaรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs first land survey in 1847, or the day we made it official in 1866. No DeLorean required! For more information, visit cityofsantacruz.com/150anniversary.


GOOD WORK

TAKING CARE
Community Bridges received a grant last week that should make 70 low-income seniors more comfortable and happy every day. A local Medi-Cal nonprofit awarded the group $35,000 to upgrade equipment and technology at Elderday Adult Day Health Care, which is located in Santa Cruzรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs Harvey West area. Empowering local seniors to remain mobile and independent, itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs the only program of its kind in the area.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

รขโ‚ฌล“Better than any argument is to rise at dawn and pick dew-wet red berries in a cup.รขโ‚ฌย

-Wendell Berry

What do you think of Burning Man?

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“Itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs a living, breathing mandala of art, fun, hedonism, creativity and evolution of culture. ”

Adrian Kyle

Santa Cruz
Massage Therapist

“Itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs a really great spot for radical self-expression.”

Alanna Stock

Santa Cruz
Nanny

“I donรขโ‚ฌโ„ขt need Burning Man, because I will rebel anywhere at any time.”

Melissa Smileworthy

Boulder Creek
Laughter Therapist

“I think itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs a fun getaway. [But] I think itรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs too loud, and the รขโ‚ฌล“leave no traceรขโ‚ฌย doesnรขโ‚ฌโ„ขt actually happen. ”

Rhiannon Henry

Santa Cruz
Business Owner

“Burning Man is dead, but we can still party on his charred remains.”

Sparkle Stallion

Scotts Valley
Contrarian

Music Picks Aug 31โ€”Sept 6

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THURSDAY 9/1

BLUEGRASS/TRIBUTE

TOMMY: A BLUEGRASS OPRY

What do you get when you take Tommy, the Whoโ€™s classic rock opera about the โ€œdeaf, dumb and blind boy,โ€ replace the electric instruments with acoustic ones, speed up the tunes a bit, and give them the bounce and drive of bluegrass? Why, A Bluegrass Opry, of course. Yes, Tommy has been reworked for the roots crowd thanks to the HillBenders, a group out of Springfield, Missouri. Complete with โ€œPinball Wizard,โ€ โ€œGo to the Mirror,โ€ โ€œIโ€™m Freeโ€ and more, the opry promises to bridge worlds and challenge musical preconceptions. CAT JOHNSON
INFO: 7:30 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $10. 335-2800.

JAZZ

JON DRYDEN TRIO FEATURING REN GEISICK

Santa Cruz area pianist/composer Jon Dryden leads a formidable young band with drummer Ben Ring, bassist Max Schwartz and rising vocalist Ren Geisick, as part of Kuumbwaโ€™s โ€œLive & Localโ€ series. A rising artist steeped in jazz but drawn to a vast array of songs from Motown and Nashville to Tin Pan Alley and Austin, Geisick is a singer who is all the more exciting for being a work in progress. Berkeley-reared Schwartz is already a sought-after accompanist with top jazz and bluegrass artists, and Dryden, an Aptos High grad, has performed with heavyweights like drummer Lenny White, violinist Regina Carter, and singer Norah Jones. ANDREW GILBERT
INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 427-2227.

REGGAE-POP

ETHAN TUCKER

Ethan Tucker, a singer-songwriter from the Pacific Northwest, spent the better part of four years touring and gigging relentlessly before releasing his breezy reggae pop album Misunderstood last year. The album came about after Tucker gave Michael Franti an impromptu backstage performanceโ€”Franti loved it so much, he brought him to his San Francisco studio to record him. You can see the appeal; Tucker strikes a balance that is equal parts Jimmy Cliff and Jack Johnson. Reggae may have a reputation as laid-back, but Tuckerโ€™s music is really, really mellow. What he plays is not always strictly reggae, but thereโ€™s always a hint of the genre to give his tunes a little bounce. AARON CARNES
INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $10/adv, $12/door. 429-4135.
 

FRIDAY 9/2

COUNTRY/AMERICANA

HONKY-TONK DANCE PARTY

Santa Cruz country and honky-tonk is alive and well, with a growing number of American roots bands making their presence known on our rich and diverse music scene. On Thursday, three standout local acts join forces for a celebration of roots, honky-tonk, Americana and classic country. On the bill are hard-driving honky-tonkers Miss Lonely Hearts, classic country crooner Jesse Daniel and his band the Slow Learners, and Americana powerhouse vocalist Jaime Wyatt. CJ
INFO: 8:30 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $10/adv, $12/door. 335-2800.

REGGAE

LUCIANO

Second-generation roots reggae artist Lucianoโ€™s religious music focuses on his Rastafarian faith and uplifting messages of love and acceptance. Born Jepther Washington McClymont, Luciano is the seventh of nine children, the son of two musicians. He taught himself how to play music on his fatherโ€™s handmade guitar while growing up in 1970s Jamaica. Lucianoโ€™s moniker is a nod to world-renowned operatic tenor Luciano Pavarottiโ€™s influence, and bears symbolic significance as well: โ€œLuciโ€ means โ€œbearer of lightโ€ in Latin. Throughout his career, the prolific artist has released a minimum of three albums every year, with his entire catalog boasting more than 40 complete records. KATIE SMALL
INFO: 9 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 479-1854.

WORLD/JAZZ

MEHMET POLAT TRIO

Born and raised in Urfa, Turkey, oud player and composer Mehmet Polat studied music in Istanbul and then Amsterdam, where he collaborated with a wide variety of musicians. The experience deepened his spiritual connection to music and inspired the Mehmet Polat Trio, a cross-cultural group comprising Polat, Victor Sams on ngoni and percussion, and Pelin BaลŸar on ney. The resulting sound is a celebration of joy, peace, unity, spirituality and human connectedness. CJ
INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 427-2227.

PUNK

TERRY MALTS

On the surface, San Francisco trio Terry Malts is a run-of-the-mill pop-punk band. Its scuzzy guitars and punchy hooks seem almost paint-by-number in their punk rock precision. But underneath the obvious identifiers, this is a group with deadpan apathy and a self-defeating, bizarre sense of humor, which makes everything they do seem a bit off. Even their website is set up to look like a lawyerโ€™s home page, with few indications that it is actually Terry Malts, the band, not Terry Malts, some douchebag โ€™70s lawyer. Whatever level theyโ€™re taking on, these are some catchy, fun punk songs with a creeping darkness. AC
INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $8. 429-6994.
 

SUNDAY 9/04

HIP-HOP

PROBLEM

Jason Martin, known more widely by his stage name, Problem, is genuinely straight outta Compton, where he broke into the hip-hop scene after a major collaboration with Snoop Dogg in 2007. Problemโ€™s rap career immediately took off and included further collaborations with notables Kendrick Lamar, 9th Wonder, Wiz Khalifa, Childish Gambino, John Legend and others. The rapper and producer has released several mix-tapes in the last decade, but made his first solo album in late 2013, Understand Me. Since then, Problem has signed on to headline L.A.-based record label Diamond Lane Music Group, in collaboration with lyricist Bad Lucc. The Santa Cruz show is Problemโ€™s last stop on the #litlife summer tour. KS
INFO: 8:30 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 429-4135.
 

WEDNESDAY 9/7

ACOUSTIC

JASON NEWSTED AND THE CHOPHOUSE BAND

Captain Obvious here: Jason Newsted is a metal icon. He replaced original Metallica bassist Cliff Burton, and played on some of the groupโ€™s biggest records. That being said, donโ€™t expect any metal riffs from Newstedโ€™s newest project, the Chophouse Band. This is strictly an acoustic ensemble. Newsted is a fervent opponent of social media, and generally stays out of the spotlight whenever possible. One of the few artifacts from the band online is a fan-shot video in which they perform Woodie Guthrieโ€™s โ€œThis Land Is Your Land.โ€ Newsted and group are sitting down, singing their hearts out, getting the whole audience to sing along. Itโ€™s a great performance. AC
INFO: 8:30 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 479-1854.


IN THE QUEUE

ROD MACDONALD & JIM BRUNO

Singer-songwriter double-bill. Wednesday at Ugly Mug

METALACHI

Heavy metal Mariachi. Friday at Catalyst

MERMEN

Legendary Santa Cruz-based psychedelic surf rockers. Saturday at Moeโ€™s Alley

THANKS BUDDY

Local alt-country-punk band. Saturday at Crepe Place

LAUREN JUNE

Ben Lomond born and raised singer-songwriter. Sunday at Don Quixoteโ€™s

Whatโ€™s Happening to Santa Cruzโ€™s Olallieberries

Noah Gizdich, a fourth-generation South County farmer, climbs out of his truck and walks toward a gently sloping field where young olallieberries are being trellised. From a distance, the neat rows and woven vines could be mistaken for a vineyard, until you get close enough to see the spiky leaves and fine, soft thorns.
The olallieberriesโ€™ brief season has come and gone, and there are no dark, sweet berries to be picked on these tender vines. This year, there were far, far fewer than expected.
Gizdich reaches into the trellis and pulls out a dried, rust-colored branch, at the end of which clings a single gray, desiccated berry. This, he says, is what became of more than 50 percent of his crop this year, when a powdery mildew struck the berries just as they were ready to be picked, drying them on the vine and rendering them inedible.
That this as-yet-unidentified mildew would strike olallieberries is unprecedentedโ€”no such blight has ever hit cane fruit in the area before. No one could tell what it was at first, and within a few days, there was nothing they could do.
โ€œWe werenโ€™t able to fight it off,โ€ says Vincent Gizdich, Noahโ€™s father. Vincentโ€™s grandfather established Gizdich Ranch outside of Watsonville in 1937, and his family has been growing olallieberries since they became commercially available in the 1950s. Earlier this spring, a similar plague and several other factors led Swanton Berry Farm to remove all of their plants, making Gizdich Ranch the last major commercial grower of olallieberries in Santa Cruz County. After years of market decline, drought and ever-weakening plants, a part of Santa Cruzโ€™s agricultural heritage is fading away.
The mildew was brought on by an unusually warm winter, followed by rain during the critical bloom time in late April and early May. Usually, says Gizdich, farmers are worried about frost striking the berries at this critical point, but last winter was unseasonably warm.
โ€œItโ€™s a bad thing to have a warm winter. When itโ€™s time to bloom, youโ€™ll have a lethargic bloom, and the plants have a hard time pollinating because the flowers arenโ€™t blooming at the same time, which leads to staggered fruit size and ripeness,โ€ he explains.
Cane fruit like olallieberries need a cold winter, which kills wintering insect eggs, makes for a hardier plant and puts the bush into a more dormant state. Instead, consecutive drought years and rising temperatures have weakened crops and exposed them to new, unprecedented dangers.
โ€œYou have to be optimistic,โ€ says Gizdich, his voice matter-of-fact. โ€œThatโ€™s farmers. Most farmers are hoping our weather will return to a more normal pattern with colder winters. We want to see the water in the dog bowl frozen in the morning. We havenโ€™t seen that in a long time.โ€
 

GROWTH INDUSTRY

Olallieberries, whose name simply means โ€œberryโ€ in Chinook, are a cross between loganberries, which were first cultivated in Santa Cruz County at the turn of the last century, and youngberries. Originally bred to grow in Oregon, ironically theyโ€™ve never done well there, but have flourished in Californiaโ€”especially on the coast, where chilly, moist winters and warm days allow their distinct flavor to develop.

olallieberry vines Gizdich Ranch
STARTING VINE Young olallieberry vines at Gizdich Ranch will be closely monitored for signs of the powdery mildew that decimated over half of their 2016 harvest. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Olallieberries were grown widely in Santa Cruz County for most of the second half of the 20th century, and have established themselves as part of our local identity. Vincent Gizdichโ€™s father and uncle grew more than 50 acres of olallieberries in the 1960s, one of the largest cultivations in the area, and could hardly keep their olallieberry pies, preserves and desserts on the shelves. Itโ€™s still their most beloved product.
โ€œWhen we make olallieberry pie, people really go for it, and olallieberry is the best-selling jam. We donโ€™t have to say itโ€™s the best selling. They buy it and come back. Itโ€™s that good,โ€ says Vincent Gizdich. At one point, he says, the berries were so plentiful they were harvested mechanically. โ€œYou had to operate the machines at night, when the berryโ€™s connection to the cane became more brittle. During the day, the vibrating fingers didnโ€™t have as much effect on the pliable stem,โ€ he explains. Local packers and freezers processed the berries and transported them to farther locales. They became the herald of summer, arriving before blackberries and lasting throughout the season in the form of pies, preserves and baked goods.
After a high point in the โ€™80s and early โ€™90s, production of olallieberries began to decline as raspberries and blackberries became the preferred local cane fruit cultivars. Although they were arguably more delicious, olallieberries had one harvest in the spring; blackberries and raspberries had a second in the fall. Also, the delicate berries couldnโ€™t be shipped fresh. As Gizdich puts it, โ€œYou could hardly truck them across town to the market without them bruising.โ€ Because theyโ€™re difficult to transport, the vast majority of olallieberries are processed by either freezing or incorporating them into another product. But farmers can make considerably more money by selling fresh berries, and one by one they replaced their olallie bushes with something that was better suited to end up in a plastic clamshell.
 

BEGINNING OF THE END

In addition, the blackberry season in Mexico overlapped with the olallieberry season and local proprietary breeding programs began pushing olallieberries out of the market. As a result, nurseries stopped the crucial practice of producing new, healthy plant stock, or โ€œrefreshing the line.โ€ That, according to Mark Bolda, the Strawberry and Caneberry Farm Advisor for Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Benito counties, was the real beginning of the end for the olallieberry.

olallieberries
SWEET SORROW Beloved for their intense flavor, olallieberries were once grown widely throughout Santa Cruz County. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER

Bolda explains that plants, like all living things, have a lifespan, and as they get older theyโ€™re more susceptible to diseases. With cane fruit, itโ€™s a common practice for farmers to tear out the older plants every few years and replant with young, disease-free starts. These starts are created at nurseries through a meristem culture, which involves taking a single, defect-free cell and growing a new plant.
However, with lower demand from farmers for olallieberry starts, the market became too small for nurseries to make a return on the costly meristem process. They stopped hitting the refresh button, and farmers started noticing their plants werenโ€™t as robust as they used to be, and were producing smaller fruitโ€”as low as four to five grams instead of 12 to 15.
As a result, claims Bolda, โ€œIf youโ€™d had strong, vigorous plants, this mildew wouldnโ€™t have been half as serious an issue. And thatโ€™s not a knock on the farmers. They know what theyโ€™re doing. Theyโ€™ve been doing it a long time.โ€
Nesh Dhillon, Operations Manager for the Santa Cruz County Farmers Markets, says heโ€™s sorry to see olallieberries fading from Santa Cruz fields.
โ€œItโ€™s not something that you see a lot of places, and it has just a unique, sweet/tart flavor,โ€ says Dhillon. โ€œIt was a significant crop for the people who grew it. It takes a special touch.โ€
 

CLIMATE CHANGES

Berries are the most substantial agricultural commodity in Santa Cruz County by far. According to the Santa Cruz County 2015 Crop Report, production of strawberries, raspberries and other berries brought in $404,665,000 last year, making up more than 65 percent of the local ag industry. The coastal fog creates the perfect environment for berriesโ€”not too hot and not too coldโ€”and has allowed them to flourish here for more than a century.
But the last two winters have been significantly warmer than usual, with temperatures into the 80s and 90s in February and March when they should be in the 40s and 50s. The increased temperatures confuse olallieberries into thinking there wasnโ€™t a winter at all, disrupting their normal rhythms. Like a student who pulls an all-nighter before a big test, without a resting period, olallieberries underperform. And for a crop that has a single, brief harvest in a competitive market, every berry counts.

“Most farmers are hoping our weather will return to a more normal pattern with colder winters. We want to see the water in the dog bowl frozen in the morning. We havenโ€™t seen that in a long time.โ€ โ€” Vincent Gizdich

Olallieberries arenโ€™t the only crop that has been negatively affected by changing weather patterns. Apple production has fallen by almost half since 2013, from $11.9 million to $6.3 million, in part because the trees require a certain number of โ€œchill hoursโ€ to store up energy and produce fruit. The drought has also deprived their deep roots from getting enough water. In 2014 and 2015, the plants barely registered a winter season.
โ€œClimate change is real,โ€ states Noah Gizdich as he looks out at the new olallieberries. โ€œYou just have to hope this isnโ€™t the new normal.โ€
According to Gary Griggs, distinguished professor of earth sciences at UCSC and co-author of the 2011 City of Santa Cruz Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment, itโ€™s difficult to determine if farmers can expect more of the same in terms of weather, but he doubts it.
โ€œItโ€™s very difficult to take one year, two years, or even five years and come to a sound scientific conclusion, at least on a local scale,โ€ says Griggs. โ€œCertainly the farmers and water purveyors feel and notice the effects before most people, but itโ€™s difficult to look at even 145 years of precipitation and try to arrive at a simple conclusion. The drought has been severe, but not unique.โ€
Bolda agrees that although the weather of the last few years has not been kind to some crops, thereโ€™s no reason that farmers shouldnโ€™t be optimistic as they look toward the future. โ€œLast year, for example, for apples was awful, but this year, owing to an abundance of not only chill but also lots of rain to wash away built up salts, things are looking much better,โ€ says Bolda. โ€œFarmers should not expect the same, nor would they be in business for long if they fought change. One needs to adapt to the conditions on the ground.โ€
 

LAST BERRIES

Just north of Davenport, the half mile leading up to the turnout for Swanton Berry Farmโ€™s Coastways Ranch U-Pick is marked by colorful hand-painted signs luring travelers to stop and pick organic strawberries, kiwis and blackberries. Until recently, drivers might have slowed after seeing a sign for olallieberries, the rarity or simple curiosity factor too tempting to resist. Where they would have once been greeted by rows of trellised vines now lies a freshly tilled field, gaping like a missing tooth, surrounded by row upon row of ripe tayberries (a cross between a blackberry and a red raspberry) and strawberries, and rimmed by coastal redwoods.
After 25 years, 2016 was the last season for organic Swanton olallieberries, making Gizdich Ranch the last major grower of olallieberries in Santa Cruz County. The devastation from the powdery mildew in spring was so complete and immediate that Swanton farmers opted to remove all of their plants, lest the mildew spread to nearby blackberries and strawberries. To add insult to injury, they were barely able to harvest 10 percent of the fruit before the mildew obliterated the rest of their crop.
Sam Lustig, a baker at Swanton for 10 years, talks about this decision with the even tone of someone who has come to terms with bad news. In some ways, he says, they were lucky. While such a considerable lossโ€”$70,000 by his estimateโ€”would have devastated other small farms, Swantonโ€™s pioneering Employee Stock Ownership Program, which allows employees to purchase shares in the company, ensured that none of the full-time staff suffered from the loss.
Still, it feels like the end of an era. This year, for the first time in a generation, the organic olallieberry U-Pick never opened. Next year, there will be no backstock of frozen olallieberries to become award-winning pies, and within six months Lustig anticipates that the olallieberry preserves will be gone from their shelvesโ€”even with the price raised from $12 to $15.
Within a half an hour on a bustling Tuesday afternoon, three different parties ask Lustig, โ€œWhatโ€™s an o-lay-lee berry?โ€ After they leave, he says half-jokingly, โ€œHonestly, I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™ll do when I donโ€™t have to answer this question any more.โ€
The silver lining for Swanton, he believes, are their tayberries, which were first patented in 1979 in Scotland and named after its longest river. Another blackberry-raspberry cross, their large, ruby fruits arenโ€™t harvested until theyโ€™re practically falling off the vine, making them too delicate for commercial production, but their sweet, enigmatic flavor has created a passionate following. โ€œI think tayberries are the most delicious berries in the world. Theyโ€™re the berries of royalty,โ€ Lustig says passionately. โ€œI think the memory of olallieberries will fade from Santa Cruz memory once tayberries take the spotlight.โ€
 

From Tech to Climate Change Crusade

0

Bruce Daniels likes analogies.
For example, the 67-year-old Capitola resident says his most-recent life changeโ€”leaving his tech career at age 59 and entering a UCSC doctorate program in hydroclimatologyโ€”was like โ€œjumping into a swimming pool.โ€
All of a sudden, he had to do calculus again, and it had been 30 years since heโ€™d taken a math class.
At the time, Daniels was a successful software engineer. He began his career at Hewlett-Packard, then moved to Apple in the 1980s, where he wrote code for Appleโ€™s early computers, the Lisa and its successor, the Macintosh. He then launched a startup that was bought by Borland, worked for Oracle, and later, for Sun Microsystems. He was considering a job offer from Google when he decided to take the plungeโ€”quitting his line of work to study how the climate affects water supplies.
โ€œI started getting a little antsy about that kind of work,โ€ says Daniels. โ€œCertainly going from the Macintosh and the Lisa to any other kind of job is a letdown. I mean, youโ€™re doing a project that has some value and some interest, but itโ€™s not like creating this new revolution in computing. I started thinking, โ€˜Well, is this really what I want to do?โ€™โ€
Daniels was interested in water, and while working full-time in Silicon Valley, he had begun serving on Soquel Creek Water Districtโ€™s board in 2000. He also served on a regional water quality control board.
He already knew UCSC earth science professors Andy Fisher and Lisa Sloan, who encouraged him to apply, and eventually became his advisers.
โ€œI really wanted to do [the Ph.D], so I put lots of time and effort into it, and persevered. I wanted to do something that was important, something that wasnโ€™t being done very much,โ€ he says. โ€œClimatologists can tell you about climate, precipitation and forecasts. But then thereโ€™s very few people who can relate that precipitation to groundwater recharge, and itโ€™s not a simple relationship.โ€
 

Bigger Picture

Daniels is now Soquel Creek Water Districtโ€™s board president, and spends most of his time traveling and speaking publicly about climate change and water. He wants to show people the science behind how warming temperatures threaten water supplies. He uses analogies to explain the complexities, of courseโ€”and they work.
He starts by describing the Earthโ€™s atmosphere as a โ€œlittle box.โ€ It can hold a certain amount of water, known as humidity.
โ€œYou have to fill the box up completely, and then a little bit more before you get clouds, and then it has to fill up a little bit more to get rain. Then, essentially, when that happens, that box empties,โ€ says Daniels.
Research shows that Californiaโ€™s rainy season, which currently runs from December to March, will shorten to an intense two-month season. The stateโ€™s weather patterns will become feast-or-famineโ€”the storm seasons will be stormier and the dry seasons even drier, experts have said.
Thatโ€™s because the Earth is warming. As humans burn fossil fuels, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere increases. Itโ€™s like sleeping with an extra blanket on the bedโ€”you get hot, Daniels says.
โ€œThatโ€™s kind of whatโ€™s happening on Earth. Weโ€™re putting extra blankets on the Earth. And that has to cause the planet to warm up, because more energy is being kept inside the Earth than is leaving the Earth, so thereโ€™s an imbalance,โ€ he says.
As the planet warms, more water in the atmosphere evaporates into steam, like a kettle on a flame. That makes rain less likely.
Back to the atmospheric box analogy: โ€œIn the future, the box gets bigger. Often you donโ€™t get enough water in the box to get rain,โ€ Daniels says. โ€œWhen you have rain, the box is now bigger, so that rain is more intense.โ€
 

Water Supply at Risk

The crux of why this matters, says Daniels, is that Californiaโ€™s groundwaterโ€”the water-bearing soil and rock from which wells drawโ€”will not recharge like it once did. The ground can only soak in a certain amount. So when the storms hit harder in a shorter amount of time, more rainwater will run off and be lost, says Daniels.
He wants to sound the alarm that everyone in California needs to figure out how to make a sustainable water supply, and climate change needs to be factored into the solution. Since last year, heโ€™s given dozens of talks to national groundwater associations, local water agencies and nonprofits.
One study that Daniels refers to in his talks shows that the Southwest, including California, has a more than 80 percent chance of experiencing a 35-year megadrought by the centuryโ€™s end.
โ€œCalifornia is a big agricultural state. What will happen if we get 30-year droughts? Weโ€™re going to have to make big changes if weโ€™re going to survive this thing, and if our descendants are going to survive this thing,โ€ Daniels says.
The water business must adjust, he says.
โ€œA lot of the people who are working in the field donโ€™t really understand this connection. They kind of know that climate probably impacts the water, but they donโ€™t know the details. They donโ€™t know the numbers behind it,โ€ Daniels says.
Daniels, who wrote his dissertation on Californiaโ€™s rainfall records, says the stateโ€™s weather patterns began to come off the tracks around the year 2000. Between 1900 and 2000, only 30 years were considered โ€œdry years.โ€ But now, out of the past 15 years, 11 years have been dry. Thatโ€™s a huge increase, Daniels says.
โ€œItโ€™s almost like someone snapped their fingers and the world started working differently. Thereโ€™s a lot of research going on exactly to that effectโ€”itโ€™s called Arctic amplification. Basically, as the Arctic warms up, the temperature difference between where we are and the North Pole is less, and itโ€™s that difference that drives the jet streams,โ€ says Daniels.
โ€œAnd if the jet stream is driven less energetically, the jet stream slows down. Just like a river, it meanders more, and it may tend to get stuck in a particular pattern.โ€
Daniels stresses the need to understand the problem.
โ€œThere are all these surprising things that are happening out there, and most of them arenโ€™t good,โ€ he says. โ€œWe need to start thinking about how we deal with it.โ€

Sunday Gravy Recipe, Plus a Tasting Event to Benefit Cancer

Leslie Karst in the kitchen
An East Coast-style Sunday gravy from local author Leslie Karst, plus Grazing on the Green

Cool Treats at Ritaโ€™s

Rita's ice cream
Scotts Valley spot offers a different kind of frozen dessert

Pearl of the Ocean Crushes It

Pearl of the Ocean wines
Sri Lankan restaurant offers its own boutique wine

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology Sept 7 – 13

Astrology, Horoscope, Stars, Zodiac Signs
Free Will Astrology for the week of September 7, 2016

Time of the Forerunnerโ€”Navigating a New Future

risa d'angeles
Esoteric & Astrological Studies & Research Institute for week of Sept. 7, 2016

Opinion August 31, 2016

olallieberry pie
Including Letters to the Editor

What do you think of Burning Man?

Local Talk for the week of August 31, 2016

Music Picks Aug 31โ€”Sept 6

Luciano reggae artist
Live music in Santa Cruz County for the week of August 31, 2016

Whatโ€™s Happening to Santa Cruzโ€™s Olallieberries

Gizdich Ranch olallieberries
Santa Cruz Countyโ€™s agricultural heritage takes a hit as shifting weather patterns and mysterious fungus cripple the crop

From Tech to Climate Change Crusade

Why Bruce Daniels of the Soquel Creek Water District board is on a mission
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