Dear June

I stumbled on your web site yesterday and greatly enjoyed many of your pieces about the Half Moon Bay area and it’s history. As a young boy I spent a great deal of time at the airport while my dad flew his airplane. The airport had quite a history from WW@ and it’s use as an alternate to SF Intl. I also remember a couple of very good restaurants Torres’ just north of the airport and another one at Montara. I think they were two brothers.

There was also a great reef just north of the airport that I used to walk out on at low tide.

I currently live in the Chicago area but enjoy reminiscing about the san Francisco area.

John F.

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Hotels in Outer Space & Phil Salin & the Rocket Co. in RWC

I am a big believer in outer space as the next real frontier. And I notice that billionaire businessman Robert Bigelow (see his website at http://www.bigelowaerospace.com/multiverse/biography.php) is investing in a real hotel in outer space–as well as other space “widgets.”

Which reminded me of the Bach Dancing & Dynamite Society and some of the fascinating people who attended the Sunday jazz concerts in the 1970s– I was especially thinking of the brilliant Phil Salin, politically pure libertarian, and who with his equally brilliant friends set up the privately owned Rocket Company in Redwood City. His goal was to launch his own satellite at a time when only the government was doing it.

Phil Salin and his innovative friends relaxed at the Sunday jazz concerts at the Bach Dancing & Dynamite Society. Pete Douglas, the “father” of the BDDS, always used to tell me about the physicists and engineers and big brains who came to hear the music and Phil was one of the them.

They were a non-drinking crowd who favored Pepsi and mineral water.

I never met Phil Salin; he died of cancer young after fighting for his life with everything he could find including alternative cures in Japan. I did meet his wife Gayle Pergamit, along with K. Eric Drexler and Chris Peterson, the authors of “Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology Revolution” (Morrow: 1991). Gayle took me in hand and I spent two days learning all about nanotechnology. She was teaching me; I don’t know if I was such a great student, though….

Gayle told me that Phil was a very smart visionary guy who loved challenges and was always steps ahead of everybody else. He was gregarioius; he was tall, 6’4″, 230 pounds. He talked with his hands as he grew enthusiastic about new ideas and projects.

One of Salin’s “rocket company” people, Kathy McGrade, was a metallurgist, who lived next door to the Bach. One of her jobs was to buy lots of big mixing bowls and large bags of sugar. When perplexed store clerks asked her what she was up to, she told them the truth: “We’re mixing rocket fuel.” They laughed but nobody believed she was serious.

Well, she was serious.

Phil Salin and the Rocket Co. people found a warehouse near the former Pacific Telephone tower, a local landmark in a little industrial area, predominantly welding and machine shops. Nearby there was a community of single family homes, a shopping center, a corner bar.

The Rocket Co. needed a place with very tall ceilings to accomodate a 55-foot tall vertical rocket. They wanted a barn but the warehouse they rented turned out to be perfect.

Members of the company introduced themselves to the authorities, to the fire marshall, and they gave tours.

When word spread about the rocket company, the locals said, “Building rockets in Redwood City?” People were concerned about hazardous materials–but Kathy McGrace assured the authorities that the common kitchen had mroe dangerous materials. The most dangerous stuff they had was paint, she said.

Still, you couldn’t blame the neighbors for wanting to see samples of the fuel, to have it tested, to see what was in it. They were terrified that the building was going to blow up.

[I will be adding more to this story. There were other interviews I want to add. Meanwhile see the email I received below.]

Hello June,

I’m not sure if this email address will work for you, since I am writing about an older article.

I just read the musings you wrote about my dear brother Phil, and his rocket company. I happened to google his name, since I have been thinking about him. It was his birthday earlier this month. I spotted your article- it was a very sweet read for me, and it was kind of you to write about him.

Thanks so much,

Pat Salin Huston

Why? Why? Why?

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Why is it that everything that makes the Coastside “the Coastside”–the place that is (and has been) so different from other places….Why is it that everything that makes the Coastside unique has to go?

I am reminded of the giant Cypress tree on Hwy 92 that used to greet us as we drove into Half Moon Bay…it wasn’t just a tree, a Cypress tree; it was a genuine landmark, warm and welcoming, dependable. Around the corner on Main Street, near the concrete bridge (built in 1900; the first of its kind) there used to be a classic barn…it belonged to Pablo Vasquez, the son of Tiburcio, who once “owned” all the land from around the bridge to Miramar. It was an old, old barn that hadn’t been taken care of but it had character, lots of personality.

Both the grand Cypress tree and the Half Moon Bay barn are gone…

Now I hear the goats I so enjoyed seeing going back and forth on Highway 92 have been evicted (and some say they are headed for the slaughterhouse). I understand the goats were kept there rent-free and the owner of the goats had a lucky break== but the goats grazing in their green patch of pasture also made the Coastside “the Coastside.”

And that’s what attracts people to the Coastside and why many of them want to live here.

But why such a rush to erase every special thing that makes the Coastside “the Coastside”?

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That’s me–sipping coffee in the magician and his wife’s comfy waterbed….in the Moss Beach house…photo by Sunset magazine to show off the beautiful wood cabinetry and “pull-out” bed tray. Cool. Late 1970s.

Michael Powers Plays In His New Dome (1970s)

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Where did this come from? Not very clear, is it–but you get the idea…I had old 8mm film transferred onto DVDs but I have a mac and it turned out that the dvd was not supported by my video software. Then I found an interesting free download at the mac site–with “snapshot” capability and that’s what you see here. Blurry photos of some of the frames.

I Hear From Jim Rafferty

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Jim Rafferty surfed and worked on the Coastside in the 1970s. He was from Woodside and went to school there but Half Moon Bay was a frequent destination. Later he moved here working in construction and for awhile he owned an antique business in an old home on Highway 1–and he grabbed every opportunity to enjoy the waves. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen Jim–he now lives in Astoria, Oregon (where he is an RN).

“We recently got back from a month in India,” he emailed me, “where [my partner] Gail’s daughter, an exchange student there from Swarthmore was studying classical Indian music and theatre. I surfed my way up the west coast of Southern India. Even though there can be good surf there and the beaches are beautiful surfing is almost unheard of. I am also involved in our Blues festival up here \â€?Blues by the Sea\â€? I am involved with musicians in Portland and Seattle.”

Horses Wait In A Peaceful El Granada Field (1970s)

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Until fences started appearing on the Coastside, putting up barriers where they had been none before, former trappers like Joe Feldman regularly rode his horse from Half Moon Bay to Montara and back. The fences struck a big blow to the freedom of his travels in the once rural landscape where he had been born.