John Vonderlin: Pilarcitos Honey was the “Bee’s Knees”

Story by John Vonderlin

Email John: [email protected]

Hi June,
Pilarcitos’ Honey was the Bee’s Knees or at least this March 3rd, 1888, article from the “Pacific Rural Press,” thought so. Enjoy. John
San Mateo. Pilarcitos Products —Redwood Times and Gazette:
Pilarcitos valley has become noted for its meats, butter, fruits and honey. Our beef is of excellent quality; S. F. butchers assert that the best beef they get comes from the hill lands of the coast. The luxuriant growth of bunch-grass and evergreen grasses and shrubs serve to keep our stock in good condition, while stock in the open valley lands have to depend entirely on the fodder they get from the barn. Consequently when spring opens the stock in the foothills are already beginning to fatten. Many kinds of fruit can be raised to perfection; the most prominent are the apple, pear, plum and cherry; among the smaller fruits are strawberries, blackberries, currants, gooseberries and raspberries. The leading orchards are those of H. M. Jewell and Mr. Gilchrist. That of J. Fillmore is a very thriving young orchard. Bee-culture is a promising industry in this locality. The honey raised in the foothills is superior to much of that so-called southern honey; the mild climate makes it unnecessary to give the bees any extra protection in winter, and as a general rule the apiaries yield a handsome interest on the capital invested. Among leading apiarists are M. Knopf, H. M. Jewell and M. Diggs.”
In the 1920s it was fashionable to devise nonsense terms for excellence – ‘the snake’s hips’, ‘the kipper’s knickers”, ‘the cat’s pajamas’, ‘the sardine’s whiskers’ etc. Of these examples of “Flapper Talk”, the bee’s knees and cat’s pajamas are the only ones still used, at least by me.

John Vonderlin: 1871 Pacific Rural Press: Notes on Half Moon Bay

Story by John Vonderlin

Email John: [email protected]

Hi June,

Mr. Carter was back just a few weeks later on July 8, 1871, in the “Pacific Rural Press,” with another in his series of reports on crops on the Coastside. Dan Quail must have been the headline writer for this one. Enjoy. John
Notes on Half Moon Bay.—No. 3.
Potatoe(sic) Culture.
The potato is a good crop with us, and occupies a prominent place among our products. Planting commences as early as December, and continues till about June. Digging commences the last of April and continues late in the fall. The yield of the earliest planted is generally light; in many cases not amounting to anything. This spring has been unusually severe upon such, owing to continued cold north winds—being almost entirely destroyed where not well sheltered. The land has, however, been again planted with late potatoes, or sown to English mustard or buckwheat; so the use of it will not be lost, the later planting is now coming in, and is a good crop. Two crops are usually made on early potato ground. After the potatoes are dug, the land is plowed and beans dropped and covered in the furrows; sometimes mustard or buckwheat is substituted. In either case it is as good as a summer fallow for a grain crop the year following. The best potatoes are raised in the sandy bottom lands—alluvial deposits—but as such lands are of small area, most of the potatoes are raised in the black sandy loam; even to the top of the hills.
Seed Potatoes.
Considerable inquiry is made every planting season for potato seed; no one appears satisfied to replant their own, they want something better; they even want something better than their neighbors. Quite a lot of Humboldts have been planted this season. Humboldts having a good reputation, were thought to be the best change of seed to be had. With some who have tried them heretofore they are no favorites, not doing with them any better than our own seed; at least not till planted two seasons. Some say they do not do so well. As there are doubtless worthless Humboldts, as well as of other kinds, the fault was probably in the brand they tried. I have seen some hard looking ones come here for seed. The best brand of Pescadoro, two or three years from Humboldt seed, appear to all do better and have been planted extensively. But with all that no such potatoes are now raised as were eight or nine years ago—neither in quantity nor quality. The San Francisco dealer knows that a real good potato is hard to get, and that the good ones are confined to a very few brands. It cannot be said that the land runs out, for land equally rich is broken up every year. We know that the potato country changes from place to place. Union City and Centerville, were all the go in the early days; then came Bodega, Tomales, Humboldts, Lone Bay, etc. The best now come from the last three named, and even there, the prime article is confined to a very few brands. How long they will hold the sceptre remains to be seen. They have held it longer than the others, probably for the reason that with the fate of their predecessors before their eyes, they have taken more pains with the cultivation, and more particularly in the selection of their seed. I refer to the late potatoes. The cultivation of the earlies has increased very rapidly with us, and no better potatoes find their way into market early in the season than those from Half Moon Bay. The seed potatoes introduced direct from the States, by the Americans, in their first settlement of this country, astonished the natives by their great yield and superior quality. They had been planting their potatoes here, over and over again, till they were small potatoes indeed. I am inclined to believe that we are following in their footsteps, and unless we change about, we shall also, soon get into the small potato business.
New Varieties.
In the Eastern States the great value of the potato crop is well understood, and more attention is being given to maintain a high standard of excellence. New varieties are introduced every year to take the place of those inclined to run out or which have proved of no value. We have not the experience, and may I say—not the time or means to originate new varieties; but we should by all means introduce into our State from the East, the new varieties, as they are proved valuable. There is no fear that they will suffer by the change; per contra they are most likely to improve.
With the facilities of the railroad, it is no trouble to have any variety one chooses to try at very short notice, and it might prove one of the most satisfactory experiments on the farm. Among the early varieties, the Early Rose was tried here, but being exposed to the cold winds was destroyed. A few of the ” King of the Earlies,” a successor to the Early Rose, have been planted and appear to do well. Potatoes the size of a turkey egg were on the vines at the expiration of eight weeks from planting. They are a white potato, with very small vines, appearing to run to tubers rather than to tops. Another potato, a great favorite in the East, called the ” Peerless,” a late variety, is being tried on a small scale by a few. They look very well, have a finer, softer foliage than the old stock, of a lighter green, and, as a stock fancier would say, show more of the thoroughbred. One objection to these potatoes is that they are white, the favorite color at the East; while with us the red has the preference. I will send you an item in regard to these potatoes when they are dug, and let you know how they do.
Irrigation for Potafoes.
I saw an extensive field of potatoes being irrigated last week —the only circumstance of the kind I have known on the coast. What it was irrigated for I cannot tell, a finer looking or more thrifty field I never saw. It gave evidence of the want of anything but water. The owners were Portugese, who probably hold the idea that the more moisture, the better the potato. I must keep track of that field, and see if it proves any better than its neighbors. In my opinion it will not improve the quality of the potato, although it may the bulk, and I should be afraid they would take a second growth. They were planted about the Ist of March. The best crop of early potatoes I have seen this spring was from Humboldt seed, planted the last of January and dug about June Ist. G.W.T.C.

John Vonderlin: 1871 Pacific Rural Press: George Carter’s “Notes on Half Moon Bay”

Story by John Vonderlin

Email John: [email protected]

Hi June,

This is from the June 24th, 1871, issue of the “Pacific Rural Press,” The author is George Carter, (G.W.T.C.) who was a regular correspondent from the Coastside for the paper. There is some great stuff, not all of it agricultural-oriented, coming up, just from what I collected today. Meg forwarded the “Suspension Chute” story to some Pigeon Point docents, who were very excited by its contents. Who knows, it might be found on an exhibit there soon. I’ve got to go back over it, while looking at the few pictures that I have of the chute, to get it all straight in my mind. A California invention?, no less. Enjoy. John
Notes on Half Moon Bay.—No. 2.
Editors Press:—ln the valleys, water is obtained from the streams for stock and household purposes, it being in some cases raised by hydraulic rams. On the hills, springs abound in such profusion that a farm of almost any size can be had with plenty of water. Artesian well boring has been tried in several localities, but without success. A heavy growth of timber, principally redwood, covers the coast range, and extends well down some of the ridges and valleys, furnishing an abundance of lumber, fencing and wood. Lumber sells at the mills from $14 to $20 per M., according to the proximity of the mill to the settlement. Split redwood pickets, six feet long, of which most of the fencing is made, sell at from $10 to $15 per M., according to locality. We have four sawmills and one grist-mill. A large double circular sawmill has just been put in operation on the Purrissima, by Messrs. Borden and Hatch, to take the place of their old water mill that has been in use since 1853, but which is too slow for these times. A great many changes have taken place here since that old mill first started, which can only be realized by those residing here at that time. With the exception of the Denniston and the Johnston ranches, and a very few small tracts, the entire country has changed hands, most of it twice and three times. Some who lusted for the flesh-pots of other lands departed, but were well satisfied to find themselves back into the fog again.
Cultivation of Oats.
The natural production of this coast is oats, which will stand more exposure, more wet or dry, and more miserable, slipshod farming than anything else that grows, except weeds. They seem bound to make a crop, no matter how mean it looks, as late as June. They have been sown on the tops of the hills, past the middle of April, and without a drop of rain have turned out over,  four tons of hay to the acre; the ordinary yield is about 60 bushels; although a yield of 75 or 80 bushels is not unusual. I had a field of over 100 acres that averaged 100 bushels per acre some years ago. Four-fifths of the grain raised is oats. The large white English oats were tried to a considerable extent, but were not found to answer, on account of the straw falling so badly, making it too expensive in harvesting. The Norway oats are being tried by a number this year, and in such different localities and soils as will prove their profit and adaptibility to this climate. They are making big, rank straw, very deep green and healthy-looking, and they look as though they would fall down upon small provocation; but as we are told that they do not lodge, we hope such is not the case. After harvest I will send you the results. [We shall look with interest for the fulfillment of the promise.—Eds. Press.]
Cultivation of Barley.
Barley is a grain that demands better culture than oats to insure a crop. As a crop it has not been very successful here, nor much of a favorite. Barley fields began to be scarce; but as its cultivation is being better understood, it will be raised more extensively. The yield has usually been light, although a crop now and then yielded so enormously as to stagger belief; but went to show that our climate was not in fault; that the trouble was in the cultivation. A field near Spanishtown, some years ago, yielded 150 bushels per acre of common barley! Last year a field of 50 acres of Chevelier barley yielded 66 tons of hay, besides 2,340 bushels of grain. On the John Pitcher farm, last year, 76 sacks of Chevelier barley, weighing 109 pounds each, were taken from one acre. Mr. P. admits having made a pet of it; but it shows how well land likes to be petted.
Benefit of Rotation of Crops.
These yields were by many attributed to chance; but the condition of the soil had the most to do with it. The fields were miles apart, and the land not above the average. The first-named was preceded by a crop of beans, the next by a crop of English mustard, and the last by potatoes; in each case the soil was left in fine condition. The showing of the barley fields this year promise two sacks of grain on every acre sowed, following the above named crops to one on land sowed last year to grain! There are a few exceptions to this, but very few indeed.
A close observation of the fields this season will satisfy any farmer that if he wants a heavy orop of barley he must sow upon land not in grain the previous year; and if not able to do this, to plow twice or three times. If he cannot do this, he had better let it alone and sow oats.
The Cultivation of Wheat
Has also been on the decrease for some years, for the reason that it did not do well generally, and that a heavy crop of oats could be taken off where only a light yield of wheat could be had. I have heard farmers say they could raise oats enough on one acre to buy the product of two in wheat. This was true enough so far as they were concerned; but the trouble is the same as with the barley, the plant not taking kindly to the climate. It requires better culture than oats, and does not get it. The finest piece of wheat in this valley, and the only real heavy piece that such soil as ours should produce, is in a field now under cultivation for fifteen years, till the crops began to look shabby for the want of rotation. Last year this field was sowed late for English mustard, but failing to come well, the field was plowed up, put in order and left to produce the handsomest field of grain in the valley this year. G.W.T.C..

Barry Parr: On Politics

Story by Barry Parr

Recount called off in GSD election http://coastsider.com/index.php/site/news/4028/

Lisa McCaffrey has called off the recount of ballots in the Granada Sanitary District election after less than one day of counting. Ric Lohman, Gael Erickson, and Leonard Woren have won the election.

Because the recount was not completed, the original count for the election stands, according County Elections Manager David Tom.

On the road in New Zealand: Water the color of Aquamarine

I’ve tried hard to put a name on the color of the glacier water in the lakes and rivers. It’s extraordinary. Turquoise, bird’s nest blue, opal….perhaps aquamarine matches the remarkable fantasy, paintbox color that I’ve had the pleasure to see -2-1-3 Here’s the “Roaring Meg,” the “turbulent streams that drives Te Wai a Korokio,” a hydro electric power station.  There’s a legend about how the stream was named the “Roaring Meg,” involving a noisy barmaid who was carried across it by two men–Meg was with her friend Annie, a shy girl, and the stream next door is appropriately called the “Quiet Annie.”

[more coming]

Angelo Mithos explains what “side trestles” are

Story by John Vonderlin & Angelo Mithos

Email John: [email protected]

Hi June,

Angelo sent me these pictures, clarifying what a sidehill trestle looks like. Before the Montara Flood question was resolved, this is what I had assumed must have been supporting the “strangerails” before being washed away. As San Pedro Point pictures they are pretty cool too. I look at those and can’t help but think of LANDSLIDE!!! Enjoy. John

————

John, you recently asked about side hill trestles. Here are three attachments depicting  examples:

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#1 (“OSRR – Another View of Pedro Pt. Tunnel”) is of the south side of the Pedro Point Tunnel showing the first such trestle on that side; it also shows the Ransome Construction Co.’s gravel bunker on the outermost track of the tunnel.

-2

#2 (“OSRR at Pedro Point”) is of the same scene, probably later, with the step trestle filled in.

-3

#3 (“NWP R.R. at Scotia Bluffs”)  is of a  Northwestern Pacific passenger train on the Scotia Bluffs near Eureka. (My wife and I took this route some years ago from Willits–very scenic along the Eel River with tunnels galore–when the NWP-Eureka Southern had excursion trains before the line was shut down for safety reasons.)
Hopefully you can see that the inner part of the track rested solidly on the mountain side while the outer part rested on built-up trestle work.   Angelo

John Vonderlin: The Rainmaker

Story by John Vonderlin

Email John: [email protected]

Hi June,
In  investigating the Montara photo my analysis was thrown off by the size of the Montara Watershed. How could a flood so severe, as to wash a trestle from underneath the rails, leaving them suspended in the air, spanning the gap, have occurred in such a small watershed? The watershed is only about 1,085 acres, reaching just about 800 feet in altitude, not a height subject to the heaviest rainfall from orographic lifting. It just didn’t seem possible.
John Schmale’s explanation of the clogged culvert during a heavy rainstorm and the subsequent dynamiting answered those questions. It also gave me a date for the event, January 13, 1916. Unfortunately, the newspaper archives all end at 1910, so they can’t provide an article about this. But, I did some other research and it turns out there is an interesting  “Rest of the Story.”
By using the date as part of the Search terms I discovered that it might have been Charles Hatfield and pluviculture that were responsible. Most of us know of pluviculturists under the common name of “Rainmakers,” though Mr. Hatfield, probably the most famous one of all, called himself a “Rain Accelerator.”
Here’s a newspaper headline and article from the October 19th, 1907 issue of the Los Angeles Herald, that give us some insight into his highly successful career that went on for decades, claiming 500 successes.
RAIN MAKER RENEWS HIS
CONTRACTS IN NORTH
Charles Hatfield Guaranteed Three
Thousand Dollars for Twelve
Inches Precipitation In Five Months
“Charles Hatfield, rain producer, is again under contract to bring a downpour in Stanislaus, Merced and San Joaquin counties. This is the third contract of that nature Mr. Hatfield has undertaken, and each previous time was successful. His agreement is that he will bring twelve inches of rain between November 15 and April 15. If he succeeds this year he will receive $3000, which has been guaranteed by the ranchers.
After operating at Crow’s Landing Hatfield will go to Sherman county, Ore., where he has a second contract. The rainmaker is using a much stronger plant this year and says he has no doubt but that he will be successful.”
Jumping forward a decade to Dec. 1915, Mr. Hatfield sent the following letter to the Common Council in Southern California:
I will fill the Morena Reservoir to overflowing between now and next December 20th, 1916, for the sum of ten thousand dollars, in default of which I ask no compensation; or I will deliver at the Morena Reservoir thirty inches of rain free of charge, you to pay me $500 per inch from the thirtieth to the fiftieth inch–all above fifty inches to be free, on or before the 1st of June, 1916. Or I will forty inches (sic) during the next twelve months, free of charge, provided you pay me $1000 per inch for all between forty and fifty inches, all above fifty inches free.”
The Charles Hatfield article at Wikipedia summarizes what happened next in this excerpt:
“In 1915 the San Diego city council, pressured by the San Diego Wide Awake Improvement Club, approached Hatfield to produce rain to fill the Morena Dam reservoir. Hatfield offered to produce rain for free, then charge $1,000 per inch ($393.7 per centimetre) for between forty to fifty inches (1.02 to 1.27 m) and free again over fifty inches (1.27 m). The council voted four to one for a $10,000 fee, payable when the reservoir was filled. Hatfield, with his brother, built a 20-foot (6 m) tower beside Lake Morena and was ready early in the New Year.
On January 5, 1916 heavy rain began – and grew gradually heavier day by day. Dry riverbeds filled to the point of flooding. Worsening floods destroyed bridges, marooned trains and cut phone cables – not to mention flooding homes and farms. Two dams, Sweetwater Dam and one at Lower Otay Lake, overflowed. Rain stopped January 20 but resumed two days later.”
This string of storms produced flooding from Canada to Mexico, including the Great Montara Flood shown in the old photo you shared. Someday I’ll get a chance to read what local papers had to say about the events of that January. But, Richard Pourade, at the San Diego Historical Society website has written a fascinating essay about all the characters and events at the center of this storm. I was especially intrigued by the failure of local authorities to heed the lesson  taught in the Pied Piper of Hamlin story, leading them to stiff Mr. Hatfield for his successfully completed contract, calling it an Act of God.
Whether Mr. Hatfield’s efforts were just coincidental to the peak of California’s rainy season, I can’t say, but being too successful shouldn’t be reason for welching on a deal. Enjoy. John P.S. Recently pluviculture has been getting some press. Hugo Chavez announced plans to employ rainmakers to fight a Venezuelan drought. And I’ve heard in “SuperFreakenomics,” the author, Levitt, mentioned the concept of transporting relatively small amounts of sulphur up a tether to a geosynchronous satellite to be dispersed in the higher reaches of our atmosphere to fight global warming. This seemingly far-fetched idea complements the recent N.A.S.A. prize award for $900,000 given to a team who developed a robot capable of climbing a one kilometer tether in four minutes or so, using laser beams from the ground to power its solar cells. They are interested in transporting mass as far away as possible from Earth’s overwhelming gravity by having robots climb a hundred mile carbon nanotube cable and also being able to send enormous amounts of photovoltaic energy earthward safely from huge solar arrays.
By the way, pluviculture comes from the Latin word, “pluvia,” meaning rain. I wasn’t familiar with the root, but should have guessed, as “lluvia,” is Spanish for rain.
Hi June,
Here’s the background stuff for this posting.
David Starr Jordan, 1926 Science article, “The Art of Pluviculture”

4.

Montara Creek watershed is approximately 1,085 acres. Montara Creek is fed by

several springs at its headwaters with a flow of about 70 GPM. The headwater streams

are in a steep and rugged portion of a canyon; it is estimated that these streams are at

an elevation of 800 feet. The upper portion of Montara Creek has two branches. The

North fork has a watershed area of 290 acres and consists of a small stream. Montara

Creek has discontinuous summer flows through a swale or very shallow alluvial channel

with relatively undifferentiated banks for about 1,000 feet on the valley bottom. The

valley bottom of the north canyon of Montara creek is farmed, except for a spring fed 1.5

acre wetland, directly west of Montara Creek at 350 feet elevation, and riparian corridor

along the Creek. Downstream from the wetland, Montara Creek channel becomes

increasingly evident and articulated, eventually incising about 10 feet into the floor of the

valley. From this point downstream, the creek flows continuously during summers and

winter dry spells, likely gaining flow from alluvial seepage as it descends (about 50

vertical feet over a distance of 900 lateral feet) to where the north fork joins the south

fork of Montara Creek. Downstream of this confluence, the channel is well defined.

About 2800 feet downstream of the confluence, a florist operates an on-line permanent

dam and small reservoir (agricultural pond) (Balance 2005).
————————-
Charles Mallory Hatfield (c. 1875 – 12 January 1958) was an Americanrainmaker“. He was born in Fort Scott, Kansas in 1875 or 1876. His family moved to southern California in the 1880s. As an adult, he became a salesman for the New Home Sewing Machine Company. In 1904 he moved to Glendale, California.
In his free time he read about “pluviculture” and began to develop his own methods for producing rain. By 1902 he had created a secret mixture of 23 chemicals in large galvanized evaporating tanks that, he claimed, attracted rain. Hatfield called himself a “moisture accelerator”.
In 1904, promoter Fred Binney began a public relations campaign for Hatfield. A number of Los Angeles ranchers saw his ads in newspapers and promised Hatfield $50 to produce rain. In April, Hatfield and his brother Paul climbed to Mount Lowe and built a tower where Hatfield stood and released his mixture into the air. Hatfield’s apparent attempt was successful, so the ranchers paid him $100.
Contemporary Weather Bureau reports stated that the rain had been a small part of a storm that was already coming but Hatfield’s supporters disregarded this. He began to receive more job offers. He promised Los Angeles 18 inches (46 centimetres) of rain, apparently succeeded, and collected a fee of $1000. For this effort, Hatfield had built his tower on the grounds of the Esperanza Sanitarium in Altadena, near Rubio Canyon.
In 1906 Hatfield was invited to Alaska, where he agreed to provide rain for $10,000. This attempt was unsuccessful and Hatfield slipped out after he had collected $1100 for his expenses. This failure did not deter his supporters.
In 1915 the San Diego city council, pressured by the San Diego Wide Awake Improvement Club, approached Hatfield to produce rain to fill the Morena Dam reservoir. Hatfield offered to produce rain for free, then charge $1,000 per inch ($393.7 per centimetre) for between forty to fifty inches (1.02 to 1.27 m) and free again over fifty inches (1.27 m). The council voted four to one for a $10,000 fee, payable when the reservoir was filled. Hatfield, with his brother, built a 20-foot (6 m) tower beside Lake Morena and was ready early in the New Year.
On January 5, 1916 heavy rain began – and grew gradually heavier day by day. Dry riverbeds filled to the point of flooding. Worsening floods destroyed bridges, marooned trains and cut phone cables – not to mention flooding homes and farms. Two dams, Sweetwater Dam and one at Lower Otay Lake, overflowed. Rain stopped January 20 but resumed two days later. On January 27 Lower Otay Dam broke, increasing the devastation and reportedly causing about 20 deaths (accounts vary on the exact number).
Hatfield talked to the press on February 4 and said that the damage was not his fault and that the city should have taken adequate precautions. Hatfield had fulfilled the requirements of his contract – filling the reservoir – but the city council refused to pay the money unless Hatfield would accept liability for damages; there were already claims worth $3.5 million. Besides, there was no written contract. Hatfield tried to settle for $4000 and then sued the council. In two trials, the rain was ruled an act of God but Hatfield continued the suit until 1938 when the court threw the case out.
Hatfield’s fame only grew and he received more contracts for rainmaking. Among other things, in 1929 he tried to stop a forest fire in Honduras. Later the Bear Valley Mutual Water Company wanted to fill Big Bear Lake. However, during the Great Depression he had to return to his work as a sewing machine salesman. His wife divorced him.
Charles Hatfield died January 12, 1958 and took his chemical formula with him to his grave in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
Hatfield claimed at least 500 successes. According to later commentators, Hatfield’s successes were mainly due to his meteorological skill and sense of timing, selecting periods where there was a high probability of rain anyway.
1916: January 13, Lakeside lost 21 houses besides barns, silos, water tanks and out-buildings.  Railroad tracks from Santee to Lakeside were washed out, and the railroad and wagon road were gone from Lakeside to Foster.  The Cuyamaca Flume lost about six miles of flume.  Mr. Gay of the Lakeside Inn opened doors to homeless flood victims.  The second storm hit January 26.  The rainfall total from January 13 through January 27 was 16 inches;

Kelly Street Gallery: Gala Holiday Sale

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Gala Holiday Sale and
First Anniversary Celebration! With December comes colder weather and festive holiday celebrations. This month also marks Kelly Street Gallery’s first anniversary and, to celebrate, you’re all invited to our holiday-themed sale! The sale takes place on Sunday, December 6 from 2 to 5 in the afternoon and will feature the artist’s signature work in addition to cards, silk scarves, books, posters and ornament creations designed to match the holiday season. We will also be providing homemade treats, warm apple cider and wine of course! The gallery’s located at 751 Kelly Street in Half Moon Bay (one block east of Main and Kelly streets). Remember, we are open every Sunday from 12 to 5 so stop by and see us!

Deborah Brown Penrose

Susan Friedman

Jennifer Clark   Susan Friedman’s “Wings and Hooves” Last month, Susan’s opening drew a large crowd of horse lovers, artists and art aficionados. Gallery visitors showed particular interested in Susan’s latest short film. Work on the five-minute feature on horse motion is still in progress, but Susan says she hopes to have it installed in a museum and will keep us updated on her progress.   Art & horse lovers peruse Susan’s work at her recent show “Wings and Hooves.”
Susan Friedman (right) chats with gallery visitors at the opening reception.
Artist Jan Tiura will be leaving the gallery by the end of the year. She will be greatly missed!

Text & Images by Carina Woudenberg Ornament design by Deborah Brown Penrose