Hi June, I see Peter [Adams] is a busy boy. (Saw him last Sat. at the HMB Brewery when I was playing w/ the successor to “Free & Easy”: “Blame it on the Dog”)
Just a clarification. The photo of F&E playing Peter’s Dad’s BD party is captioned incorrectly. (“1970s: Coastside musicians….”) That is Karin on my left and Sharon on my right. (From the viewer’s prospective). Karin did not play guitar.
Love your site. So many memories. (Duh) Kevon Cottrell
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Original email from Peter Adams
About the image:L-R: Sharon Zugay, Kevon Cottrell, Karin Zugay. Peter Adams says the pix was shot at a ceremony celebrating the renewal of his Mom & Dad’s marriage vows. The beautiful Zugay twins once posed in Playboy. (I gotta say, I can’t really see Kevon, Sharon and Karin in the pix…but they are there, in the background playing guitar and singing. All I can say is: Look hard!)
Says Peter Adams: Did you know kevon cottrell –he was with sharon zugay (free & easy band) while i was with her twin karin? kevon and his wife, karen, stayed over on their way back from their annual windsurfing session in baja.
We didn’t know about Burt’s passing until I read your blog. I am so, so sorry! I have no doubt that you lose a part of yourself with your loss – how can you not? I would be lost without Michael, completely out of commission., forget it, no way to cope. There should be more support systems for those left behind.
Can we call you sometime, take you out to eat, visit, anything? Even though we are in the midst of our move, we can take some time out. When you are up to it, come by the new gallery at 790 Main street (maybe when we’ve cleaned up – the place is a disaster right now). Here we are with our newly installed signs:
I agree with you about the t.v. news, by the way. Mostly bad stuff, how terrible the world is (with a few light moments). I don’t think that it is natural for us to know about what is going on with people around the world in such a way. George Carlin called the news: “Gossip Gone Wild”.
Ahhh, Burt. What a cool guy. Such a character. One of those “big spirits”. Tom Monaghan called me last week, asking about you, and I said that your partner was ill, and that you were taking care of him.
We have to go now – clearing out the rest of the old gallery, & setting up the new one. Please take care of yourself, and give us a call when you are up to it. No pressure. Love, Deb & Mike
To get some much needed rest and a massage, I drove alone to Napa (and got lost; I just can’t multi-task yet, ((the much ballyhooed talent, multi-tasking, attributed to women, well isn’t that phrase becoming tired and old, don’t you think? Even if it is true?)
3 nights in the Napa Valley in the 90- degree heat. My gift to myself.
Don’t be jealous but I stayed at the upscale Auberge Soleil which had a gallery the last time I visited several years ago. Since, it has moved.
Why the Auberge? Because I had been through hell (my Burt’s death) and I didn’t know it but I desperately needed a getaway. For a woman by herself the security at Auberge was excellent.
But I also like Rockaway Beach (in Pacifica). Sensational ocean views, wonderful walking trails. It’s not 1900 when nobody lived on the Coastside; it’s 2009, when there are zillions of people (who have heard of the wonders of freedom in the USA) and want to experience the fresh energy of the Pacific Ocean and the waves.
Once I found Napa, I also recalled that our own very well known artist, Susan Friedman, (one of those artists who can do everything top- of- the -line: movies, photos, paintings, etc) had some lovely pieces for sale at the same gallery where I was staying. But I. Wolk Gallery had since moved to St. Helena.
When I discovered that the gallery had moved, I called and asked if Susan Friedman’s pieces were still there.
Yes, the owner said as he described several of her works. I bought an unusual piece she had painted two years ago called “Water.” Because I could not multi-task, drive and look at directions at the same time, “Water” was delivered directly to me.
Onward. (This whole experience was very special for me, really, which is why I am sharing it with you. It’s the adventure and the experience that’s important.
Next day Susan Friedman, the artist (she used to work out of a wonderful, weathered barn south of Pescadero, and still lives somewhere on the Coastside or on the mountain.) That’s (the barn) where I met her for the first time; she was busily working and chatting in the natural studio located somewhere near the mushroom farm on the South Coast. John Vonderlin territory.
Turned out she was in Napa because she was opening a new show at the same gallery I had called the day before to purchase the fascinating “Water” piece.
The NEW show is based on her sensational photography book called Equus.
Beautiful images of horses, many from around here, the Coastside. And Woodside, etc.
Meanwhile, the owner of the gallery was telling Susan that this lady called June bought “Water.” And then as he’s telling her the story, the phone rings and it’s me on the other end. I had a question.
I do not know Susan well; I met her in that barn 30 years ago, but, of course, I know of her fame. Didn’t her movie about Pescadero show at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco?
There are a lot of seats in the Palace of Fine Arts originally built for the Pan American International Exhibition held in San Francisco in the Marina District. I think it was 1915. A purpose for the international exhibition, with the Palace being one of the remaining original buildings, was to show the world that San Francisco had survived the 1906 Earthquake and Fire. To show off the beautiful NEW city of San Francisco.
Susan did remember me and we talked briefly via the gallery phone. She was with another artist but the connection was poor and I could not hear his name clearly. She believed I knew him, but if you can’t understand the name, well….my apologies.
The sequence of events were truly extraordinary for me, the “Queen of the Eclectic” as John Vonderlin has anointed me. Remember, I am also the female version of Hunter Thompson…..And sometimes, according to Terry Baldwin of the incomparable Mill Rose B&B in Half Moon Bay, I am straightforward. That is certainly Burt’s influence.
The final question remains: Did Susan Friedman follow me to Napa? Or did I follow her?
Congratulations, Susan, on your new show, called Equus. I wish I could have stayed one more day to attend the opening.
The information re: Susan’s new show is below. It’s worth a day trip; you can visit the wineries and the gallery during the week when driving is more pleasant. But go anytime. Go today. Be adventurous. And send me a photo of Susan!
Somali Pirates (from some other century.When was the last time you honestly heard the word “pirate” used? In the USA we use George Orville’s description of Soma and big screen tvs; that keeps everything under control. I suggest we give the same to the “pirates.”
Chris Matthews, whom I once truly admired, is really losing it. What is going on with him, anyway? Many of his co-workers are Irish. When is somebody going to write a book about it? Why are so many of them Irish? And do they have a personal agenda? And if so, what is it. Why don’t they tell us.
I have nothing again Irish journalists but he has an awful lot of them on their show, MSNBC. And the questions they ask. Usually the person interviewed has already answered the question and the “journalist” asks it again. So embarrassing when you catch it and it happens all the time.
I have no comment on Fox. Other than their political differences there’s not that much to make them any different, although they do point out things that MSNBC forgets about.
Here’s another one: President Obama traveling in his fancy jet all over the world so he can see every country he has never seen before (can I go?) Can you imagine what the inside of that plane looks like? Air Force One? The bed sheets must be made of the finest silk, certainly the best material available. Everyone on board can walk about at will while we poor souls have to take our SOMA and remain strapped in.
I am so sick of the news. And the same old news people. No originality. Or very little. They don’t even ask important questions. We are in big trouble. Lives are being ruined. Businesses are closing down. And what do they talk about? Car companies going belly up. What about the stage coaches? Did they make such a fuss about that?
I am just not sure that visiting foreign exotic countries is going to help our real economic problem.
I do not have the answer. I don’t. But we need a new media.
You all know Sushi Main Street (on famous Mill St. is going through a metamorphosis, a major remodel to enlarge what is already one of the most popular restaurants on Main Street in HMB (Half Moon Bay). Just across across the historic concrete bridge, turn right at Mill, the next street.
Apologies if I got her name wrong, but I believe it is the talented “Sharon” who worked on the special decor of the original Sushi Main Street, and who is now running the show which will expand the bldg to Main Street front and center. She creates wonders. She creates beauty. It will affect your take on life.
“Sharon” also did the smaller venue, the one which is expanding. I liked it small but wish them all GREAT SUCCESS on the new addition. Sushi Main Street is like no other Japanese restaurant I have seen. The care, the creativity. “Sharon” knows her craft. She’s visited Asia, all of the countries and she as the “The Eye “we al wish we had.
. And the food—well, every night the place is packed. So they’ve got a winner.
Thought you might like to know the help your website has been to someone:
Ron–
Tale of small world……..
Experiencing bit of home-yearning here in BKK and checking RE in Half Moon Bay near where my daughters live cam across reference to your quest there for perfect coffee……
Travel to Oz once a year on biz and occasionallycome across Tasman for a few days. Now I have a directory for coffee sources thanks to your efforts
Keep up great work–frankly a bit inspired by your effort there.
My cousin, Ruth, lived in New York (she’s gone now) and Ruth and husband Harry traveled a lot. Here are the sights he told me not to miss in Germany. (Harry, a sophisticated intellectual, also lived in Shanghai and worked for Shell Oil in an even earlier life.)
“…Good for you that you decided to go to Europe again and to see something of Germany. If you go again, which you are likely to do, include some of the small towns in your itinerary such as Rothennurg,Goslar, Celle, Hann, Muenden, Fritzlar, and the like….
“Now to the cities you will visit. Frankfurt no longer is the charming city (that is the old core) it once was. The new Frankfurt is lively but architecturally fairly humdrum. The “Staedelsche Museum” is definitely worth a visit, the Liebig House (sculpture) only if you have time on your hands.
In Berlin you will no doubt want to explore the city to get a feel for the places where your parents spent their youth. For the tourist Berlin offers the great impression of great vitality, museums, theater.
Architecturally, the Charlottenburger Schlose is foremost in West Berlin with the apartments as an added attraction and the paintings in the rooms (two famous Watteaus among them.)
Across from the Schloss are two smaller buildings, one on each corner. Each warrants an hour’s visit. One is the Egyptian collection; head of Nefretete” and the Green Head.”
The other one is the Antiken Museum where the main attraction is in the basement : antique gold (Mediterranean, Scythian, etc.) and an amazing set of silverware from a Roman officers’ mess near Hildensheim.
By far the most important museum, however, is in Dahlem with one of the greatest collections of paintings in this world, good sculpture, remarkable frescoes from Central Asia, etc. etc.
The third museum worth a visit is in East Berlin: the Pergamon Museum.
The others are not worth a visit the time on a few days’ but you will presumably want to stroll through “Unter den Linden” etc. Take a look at the fare in the theaters, if your German is good enough for taking in a play.
Remember this is 1988, when “the Wall” was still up. And as the romantic I am, I loved the Wall and going through the checkpoints with the young boys in soldier’s uniforms checking my documents. I was alone so I strolled about and was attracted more than once with deals to change my money from one currency to another. I had a lovely lunch with waiters wearing tails (dirty) and I most enjoyed the wilted cabbages in the windows of the barely stocked grocery stores. I felt like I was in novel but my character (me) did not want to suddenly disappear so my “adventure” had limits.)
Whether to travel by plane or train to Nuremberg may depend on the schedule (I have no idea how much time would be involved.). Scenically, the trip is hardly rewarding. Safety and reasonable comfort should be no problem. Nuremberg is worth strolling even though the old town is largely a reconstruction–some of the feel and atmosphere is still there. Three churches are a must : St. Lorenz, St. Sebald and Frauenkirche (Our Lady’s Church.) On the square in front of the last one is the Schoene Brunnen. The “Germanische Museum” contains excellent sculpture of the 15 and 16th cent. and some good paintings and Munich offers architecture. , art in several museums and in the surrounding countryside. A stroll through the town without visiting any of the churches and palaces is generally enough with the===following exceptions:
Frauenkirchen in the cathedral and the symbol of Munich and the symbol of Munich but the interior was gutted in the last war. The most important church is the small Asam Church exterior and interior, delightful Rococco.
The Court Theater us the best part of the Residenz and worth a visit. The :Alte Pinajokothek” is an outsanding collection of art