Central Coast’s Taylor Newton Crowned Eco-King

TaylorNewtonCommunity TaylorNewtonGGClogoThe City of Morro Bay incorporated July 17, 1964. Throughout 2014 a citizens’ committee plans to celebrate established events while developing some new activities. Posted updates are at www.morrobay50th. At the kick-off dinner in January several individuals and groups were recognized for decades of contributions. Taylor Newton at 35 the youngest to be recognized, might be considered representative of Morro Bay’s future.

Native Morro Bayan, Cara Crye emceed the evening’s presentations. She announced, “Taylor has a love for community, environment, and beautification. He organized the Morro Bay Guerrilla Gardening Club which offers work and mentoring opportunities to youth in the community. They work with city, private enterprise and nonprofits to beautify the community and educate about recycling.”

A graduate of Cal Poly, Newton describes the GGC as a 501c3 nonprofit educational program that “allows young street-wise men and women over fifteen an opportunity to learn about plants, biology, and community through the learn-by-doing process.” He says the members are “youth who have fallen down in life and we need to teach them how to get up again and survive every challenge.”

Club dues consist of members volunteering to provide labor, planting, maintenance, composting, and waste management at festivals and events. In exchange members qualify for housing, food, clothing, education and employment opportunities.

“Everybody has value,” stated Newton. “We teach our members that when they pay their dues, they can participate in their community. We’re not here to change society, but how to get through life by making one’s space livable. We’re fighting against drug abuse, violence, profiling, and the revolving cycle of imprisonment.”

Justin Porter and Dylan Barker have been active members for about eight months. Barker appreciated “having people who accept you without being perfect.” Porter acknowledged, “GGC has given me a different outlook – chances I’d never seen before.”

GGC has created a demonstration garden with sustainable landscaping and a wholesale nursery at St.Timothy’s Catholic Church on Kennedy Way. The club contracts public and private landscaping projects and is developing an Urban Farming Facility. Contact them at http:/www.mbggc.blogspot.com or http://www.facebook.com/MorroBayGuerrillaGardeningClub.

Newton is president and a founding member of Eco-Rotary. He was featured in the international Rotarian Magazine for his development of GGC and a zero-waste program that encourages many San Luis Obispo county festivals and events to use recycled materials. Members of GGC are contracted to complete clean-up, thus, creating zero-waste events. In June, Eco-Rotary will present a second Eco-Faire showcasing area sustainable products and businesses.

Newton is a member of the Morro Bay Lions and serves on the Morro Bay Tree Committee and is growing 50+ trees to be planted in 2014 to beautify Morro Bay during the Morro Bay 50th celebration. He leads by example and gives and gives back to his community while his family-time with Jeni Randolf Taylor and the kids is golden. Note: Jeni is his rock with GGC and the family!

Pictures feature Taylor with former Councilwoman Carla Borchard and fellow Eco-Rotarian….and current Councilwoman Nancy Johnson…and Morro Bay Guerrilla Gardening Logo.

Sheryl & Lou Barbich: Home is Bakersfield, Cayucos or Worldwide

               If “home is where the heart is” then the “world is an oyster” for Lou and Sheryl Barbich until they “park their boots” in Cayucos and Bakersfield where “it’s a wonderful life.”  In between tax-prep time for his accountancy firm and her consultancy business, the couple travels the world to exotic and favorite places.

               “We enjoy learning the history and culture wherever we travel,” said Sheryl. “While on safari we went to a school in Tanzania. While talking to the teacher, we noticed a letter on the wall. It was a thank you from Cayucos Elementary School students. We are all connected in so many ways.”  

               Sheryl got her wanderlust while in college traveling Europe. They enjoy New York City a couple times a year as investors in Broadway shows like Hairspray and Smokey Joe’s Café and annually plan additional worldwide adventures.

               “We always wanted a home at the beach,” said Lou, a past president of the California Society of CPAs. “We were actually looking at La Jolla when I visited clients on the coast. I was reminded of summers with my uncle in Cayucos and fishing off the pier.”  They decided to look at real estate and found their dream home in North Cayucos. “When we could look through the front door and see the ocean, we knew this was our home.” They spend three to four days in Cayucos each week and then back to their Bakersfield offices.”

After Lou served in Viet Nam the couple settled in Bakersfield where he quickly became a partner in an accounting firm that grew into today’s Barbich Hooper King Dill Hoffman Accountancy Corporation. Lou’s focus is agriculture and regularly met with clients in Kern, Tulare, and San Luis County. “With today’s technology, we can work anywhere.”

Author of two industry nonfiction titles, Sheryl says her business, Barbich Consulting, focuses on strategic planning for businesses and nonprofits. Her current avocation is “nuttin’ but fun.” As a board member of the Kern County Museum, she co-chairs the inaugural Kern County Nut Festival at the museum on June 15.  “Bakersfield didn’t have a festival. Since nuts – almonds, pistachios and walnuts — combine to be the number one crop, we created the Nut Festival to help local nonprofits, create industry and community awareness and bring visitors to Bakersfield.”    

               Two familiar Central Coast names at the festival will be Leonard Gentieu, owner of Morro Bay’s Papagallo II and Craig and Nancy Stoller, owners of Sextant Winery. Sheryl touted food demos all day, “nutty” activities for the children, 35 nut-related food booths with restaurants and nonprofits collaborating, and nut industry trade booths demonstrating the production of Central Valley nuts.

Director’s Invitation: Join me at the 29th Central Coast Writers’ Conference September 20-21, 2013

My 4th Director’s Message by Judy Salamacha…More Details and online registration at http://www.communityprograms.net and Facebook/Central Coast Writers Conference

The 29th Central Coast Writers’ Conference will stand out forever in my memory for professional and personal reasons. Professionally, the 2013 conference offers the best mix of presenters in a variety of genres for readers, aspiring writers and published authors. This year it is all about perfecting our craft in order to tell the story.

Personally, the 2013 conference resolves a quest started and completed within the four years I have been associated as a first year attendee then the director. Finally, all that I gleaned listening and applying what our presenters have taught us helped me fulfill my bucket list dream. My debut interpretative history book was published in April, 2013.

WHY WE WRITE is the title Rebecca Rasmussen chose for her keynote address. She is the author of The Bird Sisters and if I were still teaching high school English, I would challenge the list of required reading and incorporate this debut novel into my curriculum. Let me go out on a limb and state emphatically that Rasmussen achieved what most of us seek — “the great American novel.”

The Bird Sisters is crafted with memorable characters blended perfectly to their setting. These two ladies are bound and challenged by the mores of their mid-western rural heartland. We are introduced to spinster sisters, yet the story focus answers the question how they became “the bird sisters” one summer in their teens. Thus, the target reading audience spans the young adult seeking “coming of age” insights; the female adult looking for romance in her literature; seniors seeking peer adventures or reflection of times gone by. Male adults learn to understand the impact they might have on the female psyche and a family is put to the test of living through the drama between siblings and parents and extended kinfolk.  I hope everyone will read it before coming to the conference. You will wonder and ask as I did how Rebecca got into the heads and hearts of these two intriguing, richly developed characters.

With your guidance through evaluations and the insights of my advisory committee, I think we’ve found the perfect “closer.” We all want to squeeze one more nugget of process into our brains, but by the time we’ve crammed four workshops worth of training, we also need something light and fun. Joel Friedlander is all that, including being the best authority on what makes a great book cover that sells online or in the book store.

Whether it is fiction, short fiction, children’s, YA, poetry, nonfiction, word usage, setting, character or platform development, audio books, writing a query letter, finding an agent or preparing your manuscript for a publisher, you’ll find amazing presenters to answer your questions. My apologies now for making you choose. I know it will be next to impossible because you’ll want to hear from all of them. Here’s an option! Pick their brains at lunch. We’ve collapsed Table Talks into a Power Lunch with our presenters. Don’t forget to savor your time with them by ordering your box lunch ahead!

Seriously! If you have an idea for your bucket list or next book concept, 2013 is the time to invest in yourself and take advantage of the all new Manuscript Critique and Face Time. For a minimal add-on expense, you can submit your first 10 pages, your picture book text, or a couple of shorter poems to the professional editors our coordinator, Susanne Lakin, has assembled. You submit by August 16, we assign based on your genre, they return an in-depth critique by conference time and we schedule 15 minutes of Face Time for you and them to meet during the conference – to discuss it more or discuss another first page or your query to get your manuscript to the next step. I totally verify that if you listen to an experienced editor, you will produce a product that will be published to your satisfaction.

I’ll even share a secret…since I had a co-author, we submitted our 10 pages three years in a row under her name and avoided abusing a conflict of interest rule I set up for myself as director. It worked! We had to change our concept and focus a couple of times to get the right product and now it is a much better book thanks to the professionals that helped us.

Thanks to PG&E we’ve come a long way with our PG&E Teen Writers Program. For four years scholarships were offered for at least 25 students, who have learned to hone lifetime skills and appreciate reading and writing from our presenters. In 2013 we introduce the Chevron Teachable Moments Series to give our San Luis Obispo teachers the same opportunity we have given to their students – to learn from the professionals what expectations there are today in the world of writers and publishers, thus the world of work.

Jump out there in 2013 and enter the Lillian Dean Writing Competition. Former director Cathe Olson chairs the competition. Check out the rules and guidelines for submission on the website. The worst thing that can happen is you’ll get feedback on your submission for a very tiny add-on fee. The best, of course, is winning the trophy, certificate or review of your query letter submission by Foreword Literary and reading it to the rest of us at Saturday’s General Assembly.

And what a special year to share with Dave Congalton, San Luis Obispo’s favorite talk show host and friend and former director of the Central Coast Writers’ Conference. We’re so excited for Dave and Charlotte as they live the dream Rebecca Rasmussen will talk about in her keynote. It’s still a bumpy ride, but Dave understands why he was compelled to give screenwriting time and attention again. Indeed it is WHY WE WRITE! You won’t want to miss our celebration of Dave’s Success Story.

Whether you want to hang out with writers and see how we tick or have a dream to write and publish your memoir for posterity, chapbook of poetry, how-to book to get it right, or great American novel, please, join us September 20-21. We won’t disappoint your Great Expectations.

 

Judy Salamacha

Director’s Message: Join Me at the 29th Central Coast Writers’ Conference at Cuest College

               The 29th Central Coast Writers’ Conference will stand out forever in my memory for professional and personal reasons. Professionally, the 2013 conference offers the best mix of presenters in a variety of genres for readers, aspiring writers and published authors. This year it is all about perfecting our craft in order to tell the story.

Personally, the 2013 conference resolves a quest started and completed within the four years I have been associated as a first year attendee then the director. Finally, all that I gleaned listening and applying what our presenters have taught us helped me fulfill my bucket list dream. My debut interpretative history book was published in April, 2013. 

               WHY WE WRITE is the title Rebecca Rasmussen chose for her keynote address. She is the author of The Bird Sisters and if I were still teaching high school English, I would challenge the list of required reading and incorporate this debut novel into my curriculum. Let me go out on a limb and state emphatically that Rasmussen achieved what most of us seek — “the great American novel.”

The Bird Sisters is crafted with memorable characters blended perfectly to their setting. These two ladies are bound and challenged by the mores of their mid-western rural heartland. We are introduced to spinster sisters, yet the story focus answers the question how they became “the bird sisters” one summer in their teens. Thus, the target reading audience spans the young adult seeking “coming of age” insights; the female adult looking for romance in her literature; seniors seeking peer adventures or reflection of times gone by. Male adults learn to understand the impact they might have on the female psyche and a family is put to the test of living through the drama between siblings and parents and extended kinfolk.  I hope everyone will read it before coming to the conference. You will wonder and ask as I did how Rebecca got into the heads and hearts of these two intriguing, richly developed characters.  

               With your guidance through evaluations and the insights of my advisory committee, I think we’ve found the perfect “closer.” We all want to squeeze one more nugget of process into our brains, but by the time we’ve crammed four workshops worth of training, we also need something light and fun. Joel Friedlander is all that, including being the best authority on what makes a great book cover that sells online or in the book store.

               Whether it is fiction, short fiction, children’s, YA, poetry, nonfiction, word usage, setting, character or platform development, audio books, writing a query letter, finding an agent or preparing your manuscript for a publisher, you’ll find amazing presenters to answer your questions. My apologies now for making you choose. I know it will be next to impossible because you’ll want to hear from all of them. Here’s an option! Pick their brains at lunch. We’ve collapsed Table Talks into a Power Lunch with our presenters. Don’t forget to savor your time with them by ordering your box lunch ahead!

               Seriously! If you have an idea for your bucket list or next book concept, 2013 is the time to invest in yourself and take advantage of the all new Manuscript Critique and Face Time. For a minimal add-on expense, you can submit your first 10 pages, your picture book text, or a couple of shorter poems to the professional editors our coordinator, Susanne Lakin, has assembled. You submit by August 16, we assign based on your genre, they return an in-depth critique by conference time and we schedule 15 minutes of Face Time for you and them to meet during the conference – to discuss it more or discuss another first page or your query to get your manuscript to the next step. I totally verify that if you listen to an experienced editor, you will produce a product that will be published to your satisfaction.

I’ll even share a secret…since I had a co-author, we submitted our 10 pages three years in a row under her name and avoided abusing a conflict of interest rule I set up for myself as director. It worked! We had to change our concept and focus a couple of times to get the right product and now it is a much better book thanks to the professionals that helped us.

Thanks to PG&E we’ve come a long way with our PG&E Teen Writers Program. For four years scholarships were offered for at least 25 students, who have learned to hone lifetime skills and appreciate reading and writing from our presenters. In 2013 we introduce the Chevron Teachable Moments Series to give our San Luis Obispo teachers the same opportunity we have given to their students – to learn from the professionals what expectations there are today in the world of writers and publishers, thus the world of work.

Jump out there in 2013 and enter the Lillian Dean Writing Competition. Former director Cathe Olson chairs the competition. Check out the rules and guidelines for submission on the website. The worst thing that can happen is you’ll get feedback on your submission for a very tiny add-on fee. The best, of course, is winning the trophy, certificate or review of your query letter submission by Foreword Literary and reading it to the rest of us at Saturday’s General Assembly.             

               And what a special year to share with Dave Congalton, San Luis Obispo’s favorite talk show host and friend and former director of the Central Coast Writers’ Conference. We’re so excited for Dave and Charlotte as they live the dream Rebecca Rasmussen will talk about in her keynote. It’s still a bumpy ride, but Dave understands why he was compelled to give screenwriting time and attention again. Indeed it is WHY WE WRITE! You won’t want to miss our celebration of Dave’s Success Story.

               Whether you want to hang out with writers and see how we tick or have a dream to write and publish your memoir for posterity, chapbook of poetry, how-to book to get it right, or great American novel, please, join us September 20-21. We won’t disappoint your Great Expectations.    

 

                                                                                                                                                     

Director’s Message by Judy Salamacha…

               The 29th Central Coast Writers’ Conference will stand out forever in my memory for professional and personal reasons. Professionally, the 2013 conference offers the best mix of presenters in a variety of genres for readers, aspiring writers and published authors. This year it is all about perfecting our craft in order to tell the story.

Personally, the 2013 conference resolves a quest started and completed within the four years I have been associated as a first year attendee then the director. Finally, all that I gleaned listening and applying what our presenters have taught us helped me fulfill my bucket list dream. My debut interpretative history book was published in April, 2013. 

               WHY WE WRITE is the title Rebecca Rasmussen chose for her keynote address. She is the author of The Bird Sisters and if I were still teaching high school English, I would challenge the list of required reading and incorporate this debut novel into my curriculum. Let me go out on a limb and state emphatically that Rasmussen achieved what most of us seek — “the great American novel.”

The Bird Sisters is crafted with memorable characters blended perfectly to their setting. These two ladies are bound and challenged by the mores of their mid-western rural heartland. We are introduced to spinster sisters, yet the story focus answers the question how they became “the bird sisters” one summer in their teens. Thus, the target reading audience spans the young adult seeking “coming of age” insights; the female adult looking for romance in her literature; seniors seeking peer adventures or reflection of times gone by. Male adults learn to understand the impact they might have on the female psyche and a family is put to the test of living through the drama between siblings and parents and extended kinfolk.  I hope everyone will read it before coming to the conference. You will wonder and ask as I did how Rebecca got into the heads and hearts of these two intriguing, richly developed characters.  

               With your guidance through evaluations and the insights of my advisory committee, I think we’ve found the perfect “closer.” We all want to squeeze one more nugget of process into our brains, but by the time we’ve crammed four workshops worth of training, we also need something light and fun. Joel Friedlander is all that, including being the best authority on what makes a great book cover that sells online or in the book store.

               Whether it is fiction, short fiction, children’s, YA, poetry, nonfiction, word usage, setting, character or platform development, audio books, writing a query letter, finding an agent or preparing your manuscript for a publisher, you’ll find amazing presenters to answer your questions. My apologies now for making you choose. I know it will be next to impossible because you’ll want to hear from all of them. Here’s an option! Pick their brains at lunch. We’ve collapsed Table Talks into a Power Lunch with our presenters. Don’t forget to savor your time with them by ordering your box lunch ahead!

               Seriously! If you have an idea for your bucket list or next book concept, 2013 is the time to invest in yourself and take advantage of the all new Manuscript Critique and Face Time. For a minimal add-on expense, you can submit your first 10 pages, your picture book text, or a couple of shorter poems to the professional editors our coordinator, Susanne Lakin, has assembled. You submit by August 16, we assign based on your genre, they return an in-depth critique by conference time and we schedule 15 minutes of Face Time for you and them to meet during the conference – to discuss it more or discuss another first page or your query to get your manuscript to the next step. I totally verify that if you listen to an experienced editor, you will produce a product that will be published to your satisfaction.

I’ll even share a secret…since I had a co-author, we submitted our 10 pages three years in a row under her name and avoided abusing a conflict of interest rule I set up for myself as director. It worked! We had to change our concept and focus a couple of times to get the right product and now it is a much better book thanks to the professionals that helped us.

Thanks to PG&E we’ve come a long way with our PG&E Teen Writers Program. For four years scholarships were offered for at least 25 students, who have learned to hone lifetime skills and appreciate reading and writing from our presenters. In 2013 we introduce the Chevron Teachable Moments Series to give our San Luis Obispo teachers the same opportunity we have given to their students – to learn from the professionals what expectations there are today in the world of writers and publishers, thus the world of work.

Jump out there in 2013 and enter the Lillian Dean Writing Competition. Former director Cathe Olson chairs the competition. Check out the rules and guidelines for submission on the website. The worst thing that can happen is you’ll get feedback on your submission for a very tiny add-on fee. The best, of course, is winning the trophy, certificate or review of your query letter submission by Foreword Literary and reading it to the rest of us at Saturday’s General Assembly.             

               And what a special year to share with Dave Congalton, San Luis Obispo’s favorite talk show host and friend and former director of the Central Coast Writers’ Conference. We’re so excited for Dave and Charlotte as they live the dream Rebecca Rasmussen will talk about in her keynote. It’s still a bumpy ride, but Dave understands why he was compelled to give screenwriting time and attention again. Indeed it is WHY WE WRITE! You won’t want to miss our celebration of Dave’s Success Story.

               Whether you want to hang out with writers and see how we tick or have a dream to write and publish your memoir for posterity, chapbook of poetry, how-to book to get it right, or great American novel, please, join us September 20-21. We won’t disappoint your Great Expectations.    

 

                                                                                                              

Don Maruska: Be Your Best By Making Good Decisions

“Unlock the great in yourself and others,” is the catalyst offered in Don Maruska’s latest book, Take Charge of Your Talent, co-written with Jay Perry. And if further explanation about “three keys to thriving in career, organization, and life” is desired, Maruska’s office has been in Morro Bay for 19 years. He loves demonstrating his concepts. Recently he presented to Morro Bay Rotarians and SLO NightWriters.

“You have a treasure chest of talent…Every high achiever has 30-40% of untapped talent…Encourage self-motivation…Power through the obstacles…Power up your talent story…If you want to play the banjo, don’t put it in the closet…,” are just a few Maruska insights he invites readers and audiences to ponder.

“What gives me joy is bringing out the best in people,” said Maruska. “My first book, How Great Decisions Get Made, taught people how to solve tough issues together. This book encourages the individual to seek his/her passion. It is written for anyone, anytime, anywhere to take charge and be the hero of their talent story.”

Maruska took his own advice when his family deliberated about a move to the Central Coast. Wife Liz was diagnosed with urban-air allergies. Her doctor advised living by the water. His consulting business allowed them to test out Morro Bay for a month, which was all it took to give up the “Silicon Valley vortex.”

Since 1993, Maruska, a Master Certified Coach, has helped corporations, colleges and clients maximize their potential. But first he experienced his own life lessons. After Harvard, he learned he was better suited for the private sector while serving as a legislative assistant for a political neophyte and consulting for HUD on the 1974 Housing Act.

“It was an exciting time during the Viet Nam War balancing late nights researching and writing legislation and daytime meetings with Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda and random invites to Georgetown’s exclusive Jockey Club.”

He left Washington for Stanford and MBA and JD degrees. Following the ideals of motivators like Tom Peters (In Search of Excellence) and James Collins (Good to Great), Maruska was recruited to be Vice President of E*Trade and challenged to “rethink” how brokerage houses did business. Helping hospitals become profitable while consulting for Health Advantage was his next success story. Then the emerging entrepreneur decided to coach and consult for a start-up firm, Don Maruska & Company, Inc. When clients kept asking when he would put theories into a book, he ultimately added author to his portfolio.

The Maruska-Perry team has a goal encouraged by “think big” motivator, James Collins. Discover their “Take Charge 20/20 Vision” by reading the book or better yet, invite the authors to share their hopes. Contact Don@DonMaruska.com.

Colonel Baker’s Field Revisited: Bakersfield Welcome New Biography

She’s Bacccckkkkkkk! That’s how it feels to be seeing friends and supporters in Bakersfield.

May 15th was Chapter 2 in the COLONEL BAKER’S FIELD: AN AMERICAN PIONEER STORY saga. Just as Chris Brewer dedicated a lifetime researching the biography of his great-great grandfather, Colonel Thomas Baker, and then graciously shared his insights with Sandy Mittelsteadt, Jody Salamacha-Hollier and I, I want to chronicle our journey as we offer our interpretation of the life and times of Colonel Baker and Chris Brewer to Bakersfield, Visalia, maybe Iowa, America and my hometown Morro Bay and San Luis Obispo County.

Mayor Harvey Hall encouraged us to present at the Bakersfield City Council Meeting. First I learned Bakersfield has changed their council meeting times since I moved away. They start early….probably so they can end at a decent time for all concerned…so we were there at 4:30 to be sure we were on time at 5:30 to present at public comment. We provided a signed copy for each of the council members and in 3 minutes I read from Chapter 1 where Chris at 10 years old is asking his dad why Bakersfield has a large statue of his great-great grandfather in front of City Hall. It is the dedication scene after the 1952 earthquake and Chris remembered it well. Sandy then told the reality of California going bankrupt in the 1860s due to the flooding, which is why it was critical for our state that Colonel Baker focused on draining the swampland. Did you know he traveled from Visalia to Bakersfield the very first time by boat…that’s how much water was soaking our future ag land. The council members were gracious and welcoming and Mayor Hall couldn’t have been more positive about the quality of the book and supportive encouraging great sales for our future. Thank you, one and all.

Earlier in the day we had a chance to meet with Kern County Museum Board Member and co-chair of the upcoming Nut Festival on June 15 at the museum. We had a wonderful reunion visit and an invitation to do a book signing in the Museum store…where our book is currently on sale!…during the Nut Festival. Hope you will all join us there.

We also delivered 6 copies of our book to Bakersfield Rubber Stamp. Robert McKelvey was a classmate of mine at Garces High and called to say he’d just returned from vacationing and had learned all about the history of the place they visited (sorry, Robert, I forgot where you went!) and when he heard about our book he thought he should be learning more about his own home town…so for his own birthday, he bought himself and all his siblings a copy of our book…signed, of course. Thanks, so much Robert.

Sandy and I went by KGET-TV 17 to thank John Pelios and Michael Trihey for their terrific coverage when we came to Bakersfield the first time. They were busy uncovering news about the Sheriff Dept. and a shooting incident..and cell phone photos.

We also met with Steve Sanders at the Kern County Superintendents office…he’s chief of staff now and incoming Bakersfield Downtown Rotary president. Previous research said one thing about Colonel Baker and Sandy and Chris have proven otherwise. Steve was very receptive to adapt the website version to the correct information. We’re also looking at a future date to present to Rotary.

We’ll be at West Rotary, however, June 26. Thanks, guys and gals.

And Sandy and I just had to visit Tony at Russo’s and see how he was showcasing our book with the posters Jody has designed and provided….WOW…billboard outside the store, front window display and front of store display….Thank you sooooo much.

And thanks all who have purchased so far…would love your feedback, questions, comments, insights…..

Next up is May 31 for another edition of the Scott Cox Show, lunch with the winner of our book give-away from the Cal State 60+ presentation, meetings with numerous people and BIG, BIG day on June 1….11am is presentation and book signing at the Beale Memorial Library Tejon Room…then 1-3pm is book signing at Russo’s. Hope to see you all at both or at least one of our events.

And my goal was just to get us on the shelf at the Beale!!! We’re already there! Thanks, Bakersfield. pixSandy&IatMarketplaceRussosBakerPoster

 

 

 

 

Meet Morro Bay’s Jack Smith….

…Starring Jack Smith

               In 1978 professional skateboarder Jack Smith squeezed stomach-first into the domed Vetter streamline skatecar designed by Cal Poly’s Mechanical Engineering students to race in the World Speed Championships at Signal Hill in Long Beach, CA. Would his 60-mph downhill run win? Amazing he was one of the lucky one’s to survive the run. The movie Signal Hill Speed Run was featured during the SLO Film Festival in March, 2013 and is available at the Morro Bay Skate Museum.

Thirty-five years later, Smith can’t believe he did it, yet the 90-minute documentary demonstrates his survival during the wild, early years of skateboarding before safety was a consideration. Now an icon in the sport, Smith hopes Craig Vetter and Professor Steve Blair will join him and director, Mike Horelick at Saturday’s showing. Immediately following, Smith invites all to the official opening of his newest exhibit “Anything But Wood” at the Morro Bay Skateboard Museum in Marina Square with skateboards on loan from Stephen Pizzo’s collection.

The museum opened in November, 2010. “I wanted to share the history and culture of skateboarding.”  Smith documents the evolution of skateboarding showing boards from the era. His first board was made by his dad. He shows the steel wheels of the 1960’s and sophisticated modifieds like the skatecar. He talks about his boards used in Skateboarding Across America. Many are autographed by notables.

In the 1960s skateboarding began as a kid’s toy “steel wheels stolen from your sister’s roller skates.” In the 1970s Urethane boards morfed skateboarding from a fad to risky recreation. Once skaters discovered empty swimming pools to challenge their skills, today’s extreme sport was born.

“The coolest is Stacy Peralta’s trophy when he won Skateboarder Magazine’s poll as “Skateboarder of the Year.” He’s an award winning film director now,” said Smith. “My favorite board pictures my son, Jack Marshall Smith, who died of Lowe Syndrome. We dedicated our 2003 Skateboarding Across America in his memory.”

Smith started skateboarding seriously after graduating from Morro Bay High School. “We used to do it after dark, because we were embarrassed it was still considered a kid’s thing.” He made the finals in his first competition at the Del Mar Nationals in 1975. That summer he produced the first of ten competitions for Morro Bay, several World and National Championships. Taking time off in 1976 as Sun Bulletin Circulation Manager/Sports Writer, Smith, Jeff French and Mike Filben completed Smith’s first Skateboarding Across America. In 1984 it benefitted Multiple Sclerosis. In 2003 it memorialized his son. Coming up in 2013, the tour raises funds for Alzheimer’s.

Smith, the consummate entrepreneur, publishes skateboarder’s Journal and had a small part in Lords of Dog Town with Heath Ledger.

Jack would love a visit from locals and visitors at the Morro Bay Skateboard Museum and he’s looking for sponsorship for his next cross country adventure to benefit Alzheimer’s. He leaving July 4th and information can be found on his Facebook page for the Morro Bay Skateboard Museum.

And speaking of Morro Bay 4th….BIG – Delish – annual event that helps fund fireworks in Morro Bay…Tognazzini’s Dockside 2 does an Oysters & Beer Event this Saturday May 18, Six huge barbecued oysters and a pitch of beer for only $20…lots of fun people and good food…all for fireworks in Morro Bay.

Bakersfield Welcomes Authors of New Book COLONEL BAKER’S FIELD, AN AMERICAN PIONEER by Judy Salamacha & Sandra Mittelsteadt with Chris Brewer and illustrated by Jody Salamacha-Hollier 

Col Bakers Field CoverApril2013FinalPrintWhat a wonderful reception we had everywhere in Bakersfield for our book, COLONEL BAKER’S FIELD. We started with Congressman Kevin McCarthy, since he and Judy provided a comment about the importance of Colonel Baker to Bakersfield. We also met with others who gave us a comment. They are actually featured in the book with a comment, bio and pictures…so thanks to Kevin, Mayor Hall, George Martin, Morgan Clayton, Holly Culhane, Blanca Cavozos, and Ken Carter.

I’ve been part of many wonderful things both in Bakersfield and Morro Bay, but I have to see this was a wow! Launching our book with my good friend and co-author Sandra Mittelsteadt, our new best friend and publisher (Bear State Books) Chris Brewer, and our talented illustrator/graphic artist who just happens to be my daughter…was totally amazing. I just wanted to see our book in the Kern County Library….but it was so much more.

Chris said it is the first book in 40 years about Colonel Baker! Wow! He also said it was the only book out there that corrected some of the inaccuracies that have been told about his great-great grandfather, Colonel Thomas Baker. He also said it was a fun read. So high praise from our publisher.

We had a great receoption in Bakersfield and I want to thank and document it here on my blog even though I did a huge post…Jody hates that!…on Facebook. Let me recount the other people we met with.

We met Roger Perez at the Kern County Museum and yeah!!! our book is in the book store. We loved Roger’s positive attitude about the museum and creating living histoy…and a motorsports room, too!

We met with Christopher Livingston at the Beale and our book will be in the research room and history room and Chris set up a presentation and book signing at the Beale for June 1 at 11am in the Tejon Room.

Morgan Clayton and family was jetting to Hawaii for their annual family trip but he was excited to get our book with 6 hours of reading time ahead of him. He also bought 10 more to send to teachers…

Over and over we heard this book needs to get to our children and in the schools…We sure would love that.

George Martin told us a wonderful story about he would always put his children to bed with a night time story….or go on trips with stories…he would make sure they were true stories sprinkled with fiction so they had to fact check and ask questions…well, he is not only the best promoter we know of Bakersfield but he certainly understands that history is fluid and it all depends on who is telling the story and how they remember the facts. We have provided Chapter notes so you can check us on the facts and the fiction in the book!! We had to interpret some missing pieces!!

Scott Cox…wow…how gracious…yes, I said Scott Cox was gracious and interested and always fun and we had a great interview with him and Jeff Lemucchi on First Look and he asked us back for May 31…

Camille Gavin wrote a more than fair review of the book. We are so pleased she would do the article and provide as much information as she did. Thanks, Camille!

The catalyst for coming to Bakersfield May 1-2 was to talk about our book with Cal State’s 60+ Club…how much fun that was…Chris Brewer already had a program scheduled and he shared it with Sandy, Jody and I. What a gracious, interesting group. We loved presenting to them and they seemed to love us because they bought lots of books we got to autograph.

We needed to set up our bank account to deposit all our sales, but we also wanted to link with Ben Hanson of Wells Fargo because 1860s was the era of the stage coach and Wells Fargo owned the stage coach market with the Cadillac of stage coaches, the Concord. We have two chapters that reference stage coaching and loved meeting with Ben and our new customer service rep at Wells Fargo Heynner Garcia. He got us to the museum on time!! And our bank account opened, too.

And Mike Trihey!! your reporter was more than nice…what a gentleman and he got the story, too! 5,6, and 11 wow!! KGET gave us terrific coverage. Thank you so much.

Bakersfield Rotary was my original club and meets onThursday so Jody and I had lunch with my fellow Rotarians and they even let me pitch the book. Thanks, President Paul. They have a fund raising lunch, May 16, coming up and we donated a book and lunch with the authors for the cause!!

And my good friend, Chamber Exec Cindy Pollard took time to empty her marketing brain of all the places we should be taking our book for sales and promos. We’ll get there Cindy…and thanks for your help. If you want to see the book…the Chamber has a couple copies for preview, but you have to buy them at Russo’s Books or Kern County Museum.

I’ve been gone almost 12 years and who would have thunk-it…the city council meets at 5:15 not 7pm….so I missed a golden opportunity….but guess, what, Mayor Hall invited me back on May 15…so see you again Bakersfield City Council on May 15 at 5:15….or even earlier!!

Thanks, Bakersfield for such a warm reception.

Colonel Baker’s Field, An American Pioneer Story (Bear State Books) April, 2013

Col Bakers Field CoverApril2013FinalPrintTypically, I write about others in my Central Coast Blog, but today I need to crow a bit about myself and my collaborators in a new book recently released by Bear State Books. While booking the schedule for our media launch next week, May 1-2, in Bakersfield, I told John Pilios, News Director for KGET-TV(NBC), where I used to work and Mike Allen, KERNTALK Radio, where I used to always listen, I wasn’t sure if COLONEL BAKER’S FIELD, our book, was my swan song or the beginning of a another new career relationship in Bakersfield. Adding author to my wonderful life is such an honor and a dream come true since I was in the 4th grade. And to work with Sandra Mittelsteadt, Chris Brewer, and my daughter, Jody Salamacha-Hollier  on this project has been exciting, challenging, glorious, frustrating, and we’re bonded now forevermore. Here’s how it all came about…

Sandy taught at East Bakersfield High and started the Career Academies in the Kern High School District system. She can tell you so much more about herself. She left temporarily to spread the academy concepts to other national school districts. She used to divide her time between Washington, DC and Bakersfield. I taught at Bakersfield High School and retired to have my children, Jeremy and Jody and then went into the media business at KMPC-Radio, then Ralph Edwards’ talk radio, KNTB, and then interned at KBAK-TV, landed a job with Ray Watson at KGET-TV and with the help of my good friend Sheryl Barbich (Vision Bakersfield 2020 and more), I went corporate with Castle & Cooke, then independent with Salamacha PR Strategies with Future Bakersfield and Mesa Marin Raceway my biggest clients. Love jobs all…but when my husband, Bob, wanted to retire to Morro Bay, I had to go.

Sandy and I were introduced by Morgan Clayton. He knew we were soul-sisters waiting to work together. She asked me to help her with Morgan’s Leaders in Life Conference since she was traveling to DC. I always try to work with Jody when she is available because of her graphic artistry, computer talents, photography and supportive organization skills compliment my craziness. She helped out with Leaders in Life and Sandy loved working with her as well. Then while I was enjoying my life and career at Mesa Marin Raceway, Sandy had funding that perfectly matched the Mesa Marin Raceway High School Racing Program. We couldn’t have done it without her support.

Down the road while Sandy continued to be successful with two books as an education consultant in DC, our friend Andrea set up a lunch for us at at Mexicali. Sandy was an author and I had a column in the San Luis Obispo Tribune. She suggested we write a book together…so we did! Colonel Baker’s story had been told in “coffee table” history books but his entire story…barring one or a couple elements he was still researching…was waiting for publication by his great-great grandson Chris Brewer. According to Sandy, it was God’s plan to have a collaboration by all four of us to complete the biography of Bakersfield’s namesake, Colonel Thomas Baker. Chris Brewer graciously shared his research to help us document the history and authenticate where we have enhanced the scenes with fictional dialogue. He also offered us his entire library of original art and photography for Jody to place and/or illustrate and in some cases restore pieces of his collection for the book.

COLONEL BAKER’S FIELD once started as a creative nonfiction children’s story targeted for middle grade, but ultimately evolved into the biography of Colonel Baker and the story of a lifetime of research by Chris Brewer. The goal was to tell their story in period historical scenes. Chris allowed us the license to create dialogue we could not document, but checked it all against the facts and based on the historical research he had discovered through the years. Yes, we wanted it historical…but we wanted to tell the story that we knew was interesting and inspiring.

Colonel Baker lived by a code…a dreamer who worked hard and never dreamed harder than he worked to make things happen for his family and his community.

It’s been a wonderful project and the book is out after three years in the making. I just got word from Sandy that Russo’s Books in Castle & Cooke’s Marketplace will carry the books and sell at $24.95. We will have a book signing at the story from 1-3pm Saturday, June 1. But next week we officially launch it in Bakersfield. May 1-2 we start with meetings with our fellow Rotarians and “testimonial” partners. Wednesday evening at 7pm we will present at the Bakersfield City Council meeting to Mayor Harvey Hall. Mayor Hall provided one of the commentaries about why Colonel Baker was important to Bakersfield. We wanted to invite more to participate, but only had so many pages we could include in the book. We selected individuals that complimented the many careers Colonel Thomas Baker had….legislator, lawyer, real estate broker, educator, entrepreneur, and promoter of Bakersfield. Mayor Hall graciously offered his comment.

Thursday, May 2 we start off with the Scott Cox Show at 8am on KERNTALK Radio, then more meetings, my former Downtown Rotary Club which is offsite at the Petroleum Club and then at 2:o0 is a presentation at the Cal State’s 60+ Club where KGET-TV will provide coverage and Russo’s Books will have books available to sell…and we’ll even autograph. And I’m so honored that after a career of friendship, journalist/columnist Camille Gavin of The Bakersfield Californian will tell our story on Sunday, May 5.

We can’t wait to see everyone in Bakersfield including our testimonial partners, Congressman Kevin McCarthy, Mayor Hall, Holly Culhane, Blanca Cavasos, Morgan Clayton, Ken Carter, and George Martin. Life and career begins again…one step at a time….another step…this is a big one for me! Could it be fulfillment?

Los Osos: A Little Bit of Irish & Alot of Scottish Thursday, March 14

Dinner to Support People Help People: The Luck of Los Osos: Good Times, Good Cause, Great Price

 

Just a wee bit of cash will buy you supper and song at the 2nd annual Scottish Irish Night Thursday, March 14 at the South Bay Community Center. Scottish meat pies with Irish mashed potatoes and peas, salad and dessert are only $8. After supper the Gillie Weesels (www.centralcoastceltic.com) will croon Irish and Scottish ditties and ballads while Duncan McQueen, donned in his finest kilt, might be convinced to play his musical saw. But the best Irish luck is every penny for these pleasures benefits People Helping People (PHP) of Los Osos.

PHP began in 1972 when Los Osos, Baywood Park, and Cuesta-by-the-Sea seniors created the non-profit to help special needs seniors. A “senior center” was intended when they sold their lot on 4th Street for $38,000 and continued fundraising. Then the leadership realized the entire community had special needs, so PHP donated the seed money of $58,000 to construct the South Bay Community Center.

Today Jim Quesenberry, 1st Vice-President and coordinator of the food distribution program reports PHP averages 50 to 70 people daily at the Community Center and volunteers have stepped forward to help with distribution. “Our relationship with the Baywood Farmers Market renewed so we have fresh produce. The Food Bank and USDA provide the staples and proteins. We have a good time and thanks to board Secretary, Lynn Wise, donuts and coffee are available.”

Beverly Ford volunteers in the office and admits they could use more help weekday mornings. She helps provide medical, housing and tax referral information and checks out the medical equipment PHP can loan for a nominal deposit.

Newly elected board president Richard Margetson anticipated the pending remodel at the Community Center that will offer more efficiency in operations to both the center and PHP. He explained, “The cost to expand space behind the stage area will cost approximately $56,000 and most is already donated by area businesses and tradesmen. The community center started as a grassroots endeavor and it continues to gather support. After all, it belongs to the community.”

Margetson succeeds Jerri Walsh as president of the board. “Throughout my life I’ve volunteered for homeless issues. I’m not sure how People Helping People captured my interest but I’ve been involved ten years. Jerri will be past president, Linda Owens is 2nd Vice-President and Carol Cribbs is treasurer.”

Scottish Irish Night tickets are limited to approximately 120 and must be picked in advance at the PHP office in the Los Osos Community Center, 2180 Palisades, Monday thru Friday from 9 to 1 pm. For more info call 528-2626.