I don’t often post traveling videos

this special  one, featuring mostly very funny  smiling animals, guarantees human lip movements, too. 

Explains John Vonderlin:Hi June,

   In a bit of serendipity this 60 second video was in my Inbox this morning. I thought you might enjoy the message or song, even if you’re not a pet lover. I belong to several humor rings that send video clips amongst ourselves. While some are stupid and tasteless, many are hilarious or beautiful or inspiring. 
If you’d like me to forward the quality ones let me know. They often start my day with a laugh, a smile or a cluck and head shake.  Enjoy. John
To watch the video, you need to turn the sound ON your computer because there’s music that goes with the images.
To see the video called “Smile,” please click HERE
June adds: I love animals. I was the type who picked up strays all the time, you know, I was one of them in my “yoot.”I gave them to loving “parents” and now have two cats, Tami, the eelder, and Murray (also known as Cat) who is nearly a year old.

Comment: Those Swine Flu Masks Sure Remind Me of the 1919 Influence Pandemic

Gee, I don’t mean to be funny, but I hope they aren’t recycling those masks from the 1919 Influenza Pandemic.

They wore similar masks in San Francisco and San Mateo. (The opera was closed, schools, too) People flocked (flocked? you know what I mean.) I don’t have the accurate numbers although the SMC Health Dept  “may”–I think I wrote them at one point, and i I can find the reply I’ll post it).

In 1919, though, nobody wanted to wear the masks. Nobody believed they would save them from the deadly influenza which came back from aboard with the soldiers in WWII. Statred on the East Coast then moved West. Thank goodness, here in the Bay Area, we were hit the least.

They were ugly, too, the masks, and definitely unfashionable for the fashionable woman although some newspaper ads showed women in working clothes wearing a pretty hat and the ugly mask compared to a pig snout. 

(Today I talked to a doctor in Burlingame. He said he thinks they make the masks better today. At least you can paint and put sequins on them. He also said swine flu and influenza pandemic were very different but I was there when a patient called to find out if it was okay to take a cruise to Mexico and stay on the ship. It was decided that anybody who got off the ship could get it and give it to everybody on the ship.)

OOPS: I was not around in 1919, okay? But you can find info in the old papers and there are a couple of excellent books I have cited elsewhere on this site that mention all parts of the country, including the usual power grabbing—-in San Francisco and San Mateo.

I don’t know if the similarities are real but isn’t anybody more original these days? The Influenza Pandemic (which means worldwide, took the lives of millions, more than 20 million). And it wasn’t the old people who died. It was young. Turned out the silly masks protected nobody.

More from former Coastsider Katie, Now in Guatamala

 

Dear June

I took care of Les’ mother for the last four years of her life until she passed three years ago, so I have a (small) idea of what you’ve been through; that’s how I ended up at Lake Atitlan in Guatemala. It’s been three years of “coming back to life” there for me, and it couldn’t have been better.

As far as the piano goes, I always had a baby grand piano with me wherever I lived, but I never played for money, so many people don’t even know I played. I’ve played all my life, and rarely talked about it since it’s such a part of me, so I was very surprised to find out that people didn’t know..

I decided to finally make a recording of this incredibly beautiful music that just “flows like the River” in the Silver Stream, before it’s too late and it’s gone… I’ve played all over the world and wherever I play, and in whatever language people have been using, they ask me “what was that song you just played; I heard it when I was a child.” This always brings tears to my eyes, especially since I don’t read music and the music just comes….

Let me know how you are and what you’ve been doing since you called me in Paris. You were working for some big magazine or publisher, I think, in S.F. back in the mid to late ’80’s when I lived in France. I’ve been back in NC ever since 1990, until I went to Guatemala in 2006, then it’s been back and forth. It’s great. Hope you can visit sometime; it’s the perfect place to regain one’s energy, health and sanity……

It was great reading about English Richard the plumber; he was always such a good-looking guy. Haven’t talked to them in years (called his girlfriend some years back; can’t think of her name right off), but think about the old days quite often. 

🙂 smile!

Your friend, Katie

Anglo Misthos & John Vonderlin Talk NEW OSRR

 

Hi Angelo,

   Your mentioning of the OSR building a road along the Waddell Bluffs, thinking it would absorb landslides and leave the rail line clear, was a new set of facts for me. I found this article that makes mention of this project, but not the road’s secondary usefulness for the railroad. This is from “The San Francisco Call,” on June 16th, 1905. Enjoy. John  

If it’s Sunday, it’s DREAMY MACHINES AT THE HISTORIC HMB AIRPORT

car3(Image. That’s photographer Deb Wong with Barbara Senz, the too-modest woman behind Bob Senz, both longtime Coastsiders who helped started the “Dream Machine” show for a local non-profit..

 Mr. Senz has helped a lot of Coastsiders, including me, without being asked. That’s a REAL MAN. He has the right to be called not only “the Man,” but “Mr. Coastsider.” He should have shelves of REAL GOLD  awards–and so should his sweet wife, Barbara.

Photo b the great photographer Michael Wong. (I can’t help it: there really are “great” Coastsiders–come and find out.)

—–

More Princeton Pix (Dream Machine,” including The Man, Bob Senz, please click here http://princetonbytheseamemories.com/  I am not forgetting about my old friends Chad Hooker, his artist-wife January Hooker,  and James Rudolph, and his life-partner the jeweler, Kathy,(whose work can be seen at FX on Main Street in Half Moon Bay) who all  selflessly have  given their time to make the Dream Machines a good thing for our community. (I’m not sure I like the planes flying over my house though,guys.)

Also I’ve included some ideas for adventures in Princeton, entirely up to you. The idea is to have fun and laugh and enjoy life.

The Heart of the Coastside: Thank You El Granada Post Office

Almost every post office I have been (in other places), I have found them cold, unfunny and frankly I wanted to get out. The El Granada Post Office people may have their bad days but they are almost always smiling and making jokes (and you know who I mean about “making jokes”). I honestly often leave laughing myself. After leaving the post office!

(Image: A signed sympathy card from my post office.)

forest23

 

The card reads: “Death cannot separate hearts that knew true love. How fortunate you were to have shared each other’s lives.

Signed by Judy, Tom, Kathy and Rowena

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My Opinion…..Ok?

If all of our money is gone, not because of anything we did, then haven’t the rules changed completely, too? Are there any rules? 

They used that boring cliche (“think outside the box”) to jar imaginations that had been stilled for years.  I hated “think outside the box”, pathetic.

Doesn’t it make more sense to completely forget “what was” and start all ovr and do it your way this time? I keep saying this Coastside is so special and has so much to offer, in many ways, not just to lucky us who live here but the tourists, sure, but we can also grow food  for ourselves here. We can eat.

Do you think those folks stuck in the suburban tracts have agricultural land around their homes? Do they have the ocean? Do they have apple tree orchards? Do they have people who make cheese and cow’s milk? 

If things get worse—-and from what I understand all those people who could not pay for their homes cannot pay their credit cards either. Guess what? We are a consumer economy. The last frontier before….I hate to say it…..

But we’re on the Coastside. We really don’t have to have the same problems. We still have cows and goats and beef and fresh veggies.. We can grow food here if need be. Not just Victory Gardens, I mean real food for Coastsiders.

I cannot think of another place to live that is better during what could be toughER economic times than the San Mateo Coastside. There are plenty of natural leaders here–you may not like who they are, but they are leaders. They can make decisions, good decisions.

Even President Obama has been hinting at this last disaster—-the default on the credit cards. He knows exactly what that means, that it could get a lot worse. Try to buy stuff here so our business people can stay in business. Let the “over the hill” folks support their businesses. 

Coastside: it does not have to be “worse” for us. We have all the natural resources and the best people and the farmers and the restaurateurs and on on.

The Coastside Thrives…..New Ideas New Ideas New Ideas The Rules Have Changed There Are No Rules

We still have a lot to fix up, and are getting small jobs already. Tammy Trejo is one of our best clients, and was thrilled to learn that we are now right down the street from our gallery.  We had a couple of other jobs. Michael shot a wedding today, and has more for the year.  He takes a break from everything when he goes on his climb in September (Yosemite’s Matterhorn, and Whorl Mountains).
 
I have continual eBay and Amazon sales, and just completed a job doing 90 scans for a photographer that he will use for his own note cards.  I still have ongoing website assignments, one with Tom Monaghan, whose Golden Gate Abalone is getting more business – many restaurants are now serving his product.  I am also doing a website for Half Moon Bay photographer Bill Rhodes (just started that one).  So, we are paying the bills, but it has been slower than usual, due to the economy. We’re not alone, in other words.  We really appreciate your publicizing our new location. We were also surprised to learn that the Review had a bit about it in the paper. We’ve had a lot of visitors so far.  Apparently, it is easier to access our Main Street location than Shoreline Station.
 
This move has consumed us, and will continue for another couple of weeks. We had SO much to do – put up frame samples & photos. We still have to clear a few things out of the old location.    I posted a bunch of photos of the Past & Present of Spring Mountain Gallery on my MySpace (I am on there, at the invitation of my niece – it’s how many of my family & I communicate). I sent you an invite via MySpace. 
 
More later – Michael just finished working on the wedding photos. Now I make the CD label, & add a few to the wedding site.