Ocean Kayak Fishing in Santa Cruz

I saw this rig yesterday, and pulled over to shoot a photo. Steve told me he’d pulled the rig from his home to the yacht harbor at 8 AM, maybe 2 miles, gone out and caught 10 rockfish (stowed neatly away) and was on his way home. It was rigged intelligently, rods, rod holders, etc. Steve has thought it through.This isn’t just fishing, it’s eco fishing. He’s going from home to the water — no gasoline — propelling himself around the ocean by hand (paddle) — no gasoline — getting back home with high quality fresh food. Perfect.

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Incredible Evening of Music

OK, I’m not going to say it was the best musical event I’ve ever attended. (Even if it was.) No.

   I got back from skateboarding (on 2 new skateboards) on some nice down-sloping neighborhood streets in Soquel with a new friend, Tim (another story, was it fun!) about 6:45 last night.

   I saw in the local paper that Hills to Hollers, a group of three women, was playing that night at the Kuumbawa Club – – “American roots music.” Moreover, it started at 7 PM, my kinda time for a musical event. I hustled over to the club and heard the sweetest 3-part harmony as I walked in. It was an utterly magnificent evening of music, a rare time when every single person in the packed room was on the same wave length.

   The women, (l-r in pic) Barbara Higbie, Linda Tillery, and Laurie Lewis are unbelievably skilled musicians. Fiddles, mandolin, guitar, banjo and a jazz/blues piano solo by Barbara (fiddler at left) above, that left everyone stunned.

   Bluegrass, blues, spirituals (as opposed to gospels), soul, every single song brilliant. Linda, at drums, grew up in Texas, said that when she was a little girl, her mom played Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” over and over, and Linda did a unique cover, channeling Hank’s poetry and pain into a gorgeous rendition.

  There were times when the harmonies were so beautiful, I’d close my eyes and breathe deeply and feel like I was about to go airborne. Really.

   They talked about roots stuff. Like in the 1700s, hand drumming was outlawed (in every state but Louisiana), so the slaves transferred the rhythm of the drums to vocals. That spirituals quote the bible whereas gospel is a 20th century invention. Jesus is not referred to in spirituals. Then they did “Let Your Hammer Ring.” The group is so new they’re not to be found online. I don’t know where they might play next, but there’s an event in Berkeley on June 12th to raise money for Linda’s knee operation, with Linda and a bunch of other musicians: https://www.freightandsalvage.org/linda-tillerys-new-knee-fundraiser

   I got out of there at 9, went to Bookstore Santa Cruz, then got a root beer float at the Penny Ice Creamery, was back at motel by 10 PM.

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Shelter Booth at Maker Faire

Evan and Lew at our booth. Lew set the whole thing up by himself Friday afternoon. (I’m at Verve barista center in Santa Cruz Monday morning, going back over photos from last few days. all shot with my new Canon Powershot S100, as well as a Sony Cybershot panoramic-enabled Exmoor.)

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Mini Books for Mini People

Is this fun! I’ve been walking around the Maker Faire handing out the mini Tiny Homes books (2″ x 2″) to kids. I search the crowds for kids with life, or light in their eyes, and hand them one. Bingo! Delight.

   This is Tristan, who came to our booth riding on his dad’s shoulders. I asked dad if OK to put on blog and he said, “Sure, he’s already a model for Pottery Barn.

   I also search out people who look alive, especially like surfer and skater dudes, or builders or gardeners. Everyone gets it.

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Tumbleweed Tiny House a Hit at Maker Faire

There were long lines all day at Tumbleweed’s tiny home. The Maker Faire (2012, San Mateo) has good vibes this year. Huge crowds, sunny skies, an instant village of creative people for 2 days. I had a great crowd for my tiny homes talk last night, doing another one tonight. The speakers before me were talking about backyard chickens and they had a sellout crowd. Who would’ve thought (40 years ago) that all these Whole Earth Catalog concepts would take such root today…

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